Among Rossiter's architectural designs are 25 estate homes, referred to as "summer cottages", and artist's studios in Washington, Connecticut, most in the Queen Anne ("shingle style") and colonial revival styles.[3][5][6][7] Rossiter buildings in Washington include:[3]
Rock Gate, completed in 1885 for Lucius A. Barbour, owner of the Willimantic Linen Company and a Freemason.
His own country home, called the Rocks, which was started in 1882 and built over two decades
The clubhouse of the Washington Club, completed in 1906
The Gunn Memorial Library, opened in 1908. Rossiter donated the design for the building, which was built using fieldstone and wood donated by local farmers and merchants.[8]
The Standish House commissioned by Ruth Standish Bowles Baldwin and completed in 1910. Rossiter purchased the house in 1919 for his own use and renamed it Edgewood.
One or more buildings in Washington Green Historic District, Roughly, along Ferry Bridge, Green Hill, Kirby, Roxbury, Wykeham and Woodbury Rds., Parsonage Ln. and The Green, Washington, CT[9]
In 1889 Rossiter bought about 100 acres (40 ha) of land in the Shepaug River valley in Washington, Connecticut, in order to protect the land from logging. This parcel later became the first piece of the Steep Rock Land Trust, which he established with a 1925 donation of 186 acres (75 ha).[1][2] Through purchases and donations, the land trust's holdings have since increased to 2,700 acres (1,100 ha).[2]
Gallery
The Rossiter-designed St. Michael's Church (Episcopal), Litchfield, Connecticut (consecrated 1921; photos 2013).
Interior of St. Michael's.
The Alders (now Manor House), a Victorian Tudor mansion in Norfolk, Connecticut, 1898