This 1938 Cape at 8 Liberty St. is the newest house on the street, constructed in 1938 on the stone foundation of an earlier house owned by J. Russell, according to the 1910 Ipswich map. Concrete walls were poured around that foundation, expanding it to a width of 30″ – 36″. The timber-frame barn shown in the picture may date to the 1700s.

The date and style of the newer house with its gable-end chimney, steeper roof, dormers, and symmetrical lines identify it as a Colonial Revival Cape, a popular and affordable home style in the 1930s and 40s, which borrowed its styling from small New England homes of the 17th Century. The use of an arched roof over the portico was an affordable alternative to a gabled entry.
Liberty Street was accepted by the town in 1900, but in an 1832 map of Ipswich, it is the upper section of Gravel Street. What is now called Washington Street turned east at an old gravel pit and crossed the upper end of Farley’s Brook, with just two or three houses at the end near Lords Square. Tracks for the Eastern Railroad were laid down four years later in 1836, and by 1900, the street was lined with new Victorian-era homes.