List of the oldest buildings in Massachusetts: Difference between revisions
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| [[Sandwich, Massachusetts]] |
| [[Sandwich, Massachusetts]] |
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| ca. 1637 |
| ca. 1637 |
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| Oldest house on [[Cape Cod]] |
| Oldest house on [[Cape Cod]]. |
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| [[John Humphreys House]] |
| [[John Humphreys House]] |
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| [[Swampscott, Massachusetts]] |
| [[Swampscott, Massachusetts]] |
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| ca. 1637 |
| ca. 1637 |
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| Oldest house in Swampscott |
| Oldest house in Swampscott. |
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| [[Richard Sparrow House]] |
| [[Richard Sparrow House]] |
Revision as of 23:30, 23 March 2011
This article attempts to list the oldest extant buildings surviving in the state of Massachusetts in the United States of America, including the oldest houses in Massachusetts and any other surviving structures. Some dates are approximate and based upon dendochronology, architectural studies, and historical records. Sites on the list are generally from the First Period of American architecture or earlier.
This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. (May 2010) |
Building | Image | Location | First Built | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fairbanks House | Dedham, Massachusetts | ca. 1637 | Oldest wood-frame house in America, dated using dendochronology, and the oldest house in Massachusetts. [1] | |
Hoxie House | Sandwich, Massachusetts | ca. 1637 | Oldest house on Cape Cod. | |
John Humphreys House | Swampscott, Massachusetts | ca. 1637 | Oldest house in Swampscott. | |
Richard Sparrow House | Plymouth, Massachusetts | 1640 | Oldest house in Plymouth. | |
Wing Fort House | East Sandwich, Massachusetts | 1641 | ||
The Witch House | Salem, Massachusetts | 1642 | ||
General Israel Putnam House | Danvers, Massachusetts | 1643 | ||
James Blake House | Dorchester, Massachusetts | 1648 | Oldest house in Boston. | |
James Noyes House | File:Noyes.jpg | Newbury, Massachusetts | 1650 | |
Thomas Atwood House | Wellfleet, Massachusetts | 1650 | ||
Dwight-Derby House | Medfield, Massachusetts | 1651 | ||
Pickering House | Salem, Massachusetts | 1651 | ||
John Alden House | Duxbury, Massachusetts | 1653 | National Historic Landmark, the only building still standing in the United States that was built by, and lived in by Pilgrims. Home of Pilgrim John Alden and Priscilla Mullins. | |
Goodspeed House | Barnstable, Massachusetts | 1653 | ||
Abraham Jaquith House | Billerica, Massachusetts | 1653 | Building moved to New Hampshire. | |
Macy-Colby House | Amesbury, Massachusetts | 1654 | ||
Newman-Fiske-Dodge House | Wenham, Massachusetts | 1658 | ||
Bellingham-Cary House | Chelsea, Massachusetts | 1659 | ||
John Partridge House | Millis, Massachusetts | 1659 | ||
Parkman Tavern | Concord, Massachusetts | 1659 | ||
Reverend James Keith Parsonage | West Bridgewater, Massachusetts | 1662 | Old Bridgewater Historical Society, the oldest parsonage and garrison house in the Americas. | |
Job Lane House | Bedford, Massachusetts | 1664 | ||
Alexander Standish House | Duxbury, Massachusetts | 1666 | Home of the son of Pilgrim Capt. Miles Standish. | |
Peter Bulkeley Esq/Reuben Brown House | Concord, Massachusetts | 1667 | ||
Jabez Howland House | Plymouth, Massachusetts | 1667 | Only extant house in Plymouth occupied by Pilgrims. | |
House of the Seven Gables | Salem, Massachusetts | 1668 | National Historic Landmark, setting of the Nathaniel Hawthorne novel. | |
Chaplin-Clarke House | Rowley, Massachusetts | 1670 | ||
Chandler-Bigsby-Abbot House | Andover, Massachusetts | 1673 | Oldest house in Andover. | |
Jerathmell Bowers House | Lowell, Massachusetts | 1673 | Oldest house in Lowell. | |
Harlow Old Fort House | Plymouth, Massachusetts | 1677 | House built using timbers from the Pilgrims' 1621 fort. | |
John Whipple House | Ipswich, Massachusetts | 1677 | National Historic Landmark (NHL) | |
Peter Tufts House | Medford, Massachusetts | 1677-1678, circa | Possibly the oldest brick house in the United States.[2][3] | |
John Balch House | Beverly, Massachusetts | ca. 1678 | ||
Paul Revere House | Boston, Massachusetts | 1680 circa | Oldest building in downtown Boston.[4] | |
Hoar Tavern | Lincoln, Massachusetts | 1680 | Oldest home in Lincoln.[5] | |
Old Ship Church | Hingham, Massachusetts | 1681 | Oldest church building in Massachusetts; only remaining Puritan 17th century meetinghouse in America; oldest church in continuous ecclesiastical use in America. | |
William Butter’s Farmhouse | Wilmington, Massachusetts | 1682 | Oldest building in Wilmington. [2] | |
Pierce House (Dorchester, Massachusetts) | Dorchester, Massachusetts | 1683 | One of the oldest houses in Boston. | |
Old Indian Meeting House | Mashpee, Massachusetts | 1684 | Oldest Native American church building in America. | |
Quincy Homestead | Quincy, Massachusetts | 1686 | Home to four generations of Quincys, including Dorothy Quincy Hancock. Maintained by Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation as well as the National Society of Colonial Dames in America in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. | |
Jethro Coffin House | Nantucket, Massachusetts | 1686 | Oldest house on Nantucket Island. | |
Joseph Willis House | Taunton, Massachusetts | 1688 | Oldest house in Taunton. | |
Spencer-Peirce-Little Farm | Newbury, Massachusetts | 1690 or earlier | One of the oldest stone buildings in New England. | |
Old Jail | Barnstable, Massachusetts | 1690 | Oldest wooden prison in America. | |
Deane Winthrop House | Winthrop, Massachusetts | between 1675 and 1690 | The original building was built about 1637 and was then rebuilt to its present size between 1675 and 1690. It belonged to Deane Winthrop, whose father John Winthrop was the first Governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony. Currently it is owned by the Winthrop Improvement and Historical Association. This building is one of the oldest wood frame houses in the country and it is the oldest continuously lived-in home. Located at 40 Shirley Street, the Deane Winthrop House is a registered National Historic Site. | |
Kimball Tavern | Haverhill, Massachusetts | 1692 | The Kimball Tavern is among the oldest buildings in Massachusetts, and one of the oldest buildings in the city of Haverhill. A plaque identifies it as the site of the founding of Bradford College in 1802. | |
Sarah Cloyce House | Framingham, Massachusetts | 1693 | Fleeing from the horrors of the Salem Witch Trials, Sarah Cloyce (younger sister of Rebecca Nurse and Mary Easty) and her husband Peter fled to a portion of Thomas Danforth's estate via the Old Connecticut Path. After surviving the winter in nearby caves, they built their home in what would become Framingham, Massachusetts. | |
Hart House | Lynnfield, Massachusetts | ca. 1695 | ||
Samuel Brimblecomb House | Marblehead, Massachusetts | Main house dated to 1713, one structural beam dates to 1689. | ||
St. Michael's Church (Marblehead, Massachusetts) | 1714 | Marblehead, Massachusetts | Oldest Episcopal parish church building on its original site in New England. | |
Boston Light | Boston | 1716 / 1783 | First lighthouse established in the USA, 1716. The current tower, built in 1783, is the second oldest existing lighthouse in the USA (after Sandy Hook Light, New Jersey. |
See also
References
- ^ Elsie Lathrop "Historic Houses of Early America" (Kessinger, New York: 2006) pg. 218 (accessed on Google Book Search)
- ^ Coolidge, Ruth Dame. Round About Old Medford, Medford Historical Society, 1934.
- ^ Hooper, John H. “Some Old Medford Houses and Estates” Medford Historic Register. VII:3 (July 1904).
- ^ [1]
- ^ http://www.wickedlocal.com/lincoln/town_info/history/x677442766?img=6 Wicked Local Lincoln article by Barbara Rhines