Leverett, William J., House, Albuquerque, New Mexico
Albuquerque · New Mexico · Pueblo Revival

Leverett, William J., House

Pueblo Revival adobe in Albuquerque, New Mexico .

NRHP86000221
Built
Albuquerque, NM Locality
35.0857, -106.6129 Coordinates
Entry

History

The William J. Leverett House stands at 301 Dartmouth NE in the University Heights neighborhood of Albuquerque, just south of Central Avenue and a short walk from the University of New Mexico campus. The exact construction date is not recorded in the registry data, but the residence belongs to the small Pueblo Revival houses raised in the neighborhood during the 1920s and 1930s, the period when the university's adobe revival building program was reshaping the surrounding residential streets.

The house is built of conventional masonry construction finished in earth-toned stucco rather than load-bearing adobe, but its form vocabulary draws directly from the older mud-brick villages of the Rio Grande valley. Stepped parapets, projecting vigas, hand-troweled stucco surfaces, deep-set wooden window openings, and a low, broad silhouette tie the residence to the larger University Heights and Silver Hill ensembles. The interior layout follows the modest plan customary to interwar single-family housing in central Albuquerque.

The property is named for William J. Leverett, an Albuquerque resident associated with the residential development of University Heights. The house represents the translation of the Pueblo Revival idiom from its early institutional applications at the university and the original Albuquerque Municipal Airport into ordinary middle-class housing, a translation that gave the central neighborhoods of the city their distinctive adobe revival character.

The Leverett House was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 under reference 86000221 for its architectural significance. It remains a private residence and is not open to visitors, although it is visible from Dartmouth Drive. The property contributes to the central Albuquerque adobe revival corridor that runs from the university campus south and east through University Heights, Silver Hill, and Huning Highland, the densest concentration of small Pueblo Revival residences in the state.

Reference

Common questions

What is the William J. Leverett House?

The William J. Leverett House is a historic Pueblo Revival residence in Albuquerque, New Mexico, listed on the National Register of Historic Places under reference number 86000221. It is an example of the Pueblo Revival architectural style that draws on Indigenous and Spanish colonial precedents of the Southwest.

When was the Leverett House built?

Construction records for the William J. Leverett House are incomplete in the available registry data. The property's listing on the National Register of Historic Places (reference 86000221) reflects its recognized architectural and historical importance to Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Where is the Leverett House located?

The William J. Leverett House is located at 301 Dartmouth NE in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The property occupies a site in the city's near-university district.

Is the Leverett House open to the public?

No, the William J. Leverett House is a private residence and is not open for tours. While the property is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it does not operate as a public museum.

What architectural style is the Leverett House?

The William J. Leverett House is built in the Pueblo Revival style, a regional architectural tradition that emerged in the early 20th century in New Mexico. Pueblo Revival design borrows visual elements from Indigenous Pueblo architecture and Spanish colonial adobe construction.

Provenance

Sources cited

  1. NRHP record 86000221 Accessed 2026-06-01.
  2. Wikipedia — William J. Leverett House Accessed 2026-06-01.
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