Hensley - Guzman House
Bay City
Year Marker Erected: 1993
Designations: Recorded Texas Historic Landmark
Location: 2120 6th Street, Bay City
Marker Text:
Alexander D. Hensley (1859-1947) purchased land at this site in January
1898. With his wife Maggie (1875-1960), he asked his brother, architect
Henry Hensley, to design this house to catch breezes from any direction.
Built in 1905 by the Alamo Lumber Company, the house is a fine local example
of a Victorian-era residence, with stylistic influences of the Queen Anne
period. It features a distinctive octagonal plan, with porches providing
additional spaces to complete the octagon. Because of its unusual floor
plan, the house's central living room contains eight doors but no windows;
four of the doors open onto the corner porches. Prominent features include
a cross-gable roof with wood shingled gable ends, and decorative wood
brackets at cutaway corners above corner windows. The original wooden
porch floors were replaced with concrete in the 1930s, but the decorative
wood columns and doors remain. Retail salesman James Robert Gusman (1862-1944),
his wife Bettie Amanda Harrington (1864-1948) and their children moved
to Bay City from Weimar in 1911. They bought the house from the Hensley's
in 1919, and it remained in their family for generations. Recorded Texas
Historic Landmark - 1993