Construction began in 1855 and was essentially complete when on July 7, 1857, the building contractor, John Brandon, settled his account with the owner, Leonidas Carrington. This was fewer than 20 years after Austin was founded. The building has served many purposes. From 1857 to 1870 it was the residence of Leonidas D. Carrington, his wife Martha née Hickman Hill, and their five children. M.L. Hemphill bought the property in May 1870 and died five years later; apparently his family continued living there until 1881. John Fields bought the house in 1881, but whether he ever resided there is not known. Fields rented the house in 1893 to a charity sponsored an Austin women's group, and from that time until 1898 it served as the "Texas Eye, Ear, and Throat Hospital." The clinic operated "on the principle that two-thirds of its patients should be charity cases and the other third paying patients who contributed the funds for keeping the clinic in operation". From 1903 to 1936 the house was the residence of the Covert family, which opened the first car dealership in central Texas in 1909 and in 2014 is still in business in Austin.
Texas Historical Commission marker text
Leonidas D. Carrington and his wife, Martha Hill Carrington came to Austin from Mississippi in 1852. He began to accumulatereal estate and on Sept. 15, 1853, bought this block from James M. W. Hall, Austin hotelman, and ten days later opened a mercantile store on Congress Avenue. In 1856 Carrington hired John Brandon, a local architect-contractor, to build on this site a vernacular Greek revival home, constructed of rough limestoneashlar. The house was completed in the spring of 1857. The property was purchased by M. L. Hemphill in 1870 and by the John Fields family in 1881. Fields leased the building, 1893–1898, to the "Texas Eyes, Ear, and Throat Hospital," directed by Dr. Henry L. Hilgartner, and in 1903, sold this site to Frank M. Covert, the head of a prominent Austin family, who lived here until 1936. Later owners rented the structure as a boarding house, residence, and nursery until it was purchased by the State of Texas in 1968. The Texas Historical Commission restored the house in 1972. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark-1962