Pittsfield Colonial By Historic Local Architect
A Georgian Colonial designed in 1929 by noted Berkshire architect Henry Seaver (of Berkshire Museum and Lenox Town Hall fame).
A Georgian Colonial designed in 1929 by noted Berkshire architect Henry Seaver (of Berkshire Museum and Lenox Town Hall fame).
A Pittsfield showpiece with real provenance. The original home at 65 Crofut Street is a Georgian Colonial designed in 1929 by noted Berkshire architect Henry Seaver (of Berkshire Museum and Lenox Town Hall fame), built in 1930, and set well back on 2.5 private acres along one of the city’s most storied streets.
The draw here is the interior’s layered history: the house incorporates exquisite 18th-century architectural details—mantels, wainscoting, and finely crafted woodwork—salvaged from two of Pittsfield’s earliest residences, giving the rooms a kind of old-world gravity.

Past the formal bones, day-to-day life here is pretty plush: 4,948 square feet, 5 bedrooms, 5 baths, and a layout that can swing from dinner-party to quiet winter-weekend without feeling like a museum. The listing calls out twin primary suites, a peaceful sunroom, a cozy study, and a large eat-in kitchen with a Viking range and butler’s pantry.
Outside, there’s a heated in-ground pool, patio space for long afternoons, and enough lawn and mature landscaping to create privacy buffers from every angle—rare for an in-town address.
The home is also being offered fully furnished, and the listing notes a new heating system plus a successful rental history.
65 Crofut Street, Pittsfield is listed by Conor Meehan at Stone House Properties, LLC for $1,350,000.















