User:Knowledgekid87/First period houses in Massachusetts (1700)
Appearance
Name | Image | Location | First Built | Short summary |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alden House | Duxbury | 1700 c. | A National Historic Landmark, dating to ca. 1700 via dendrochronology.[1][dead link] | |
Solomon Kimball House | Wenham | 1700 c.[2] | Although the house is named for its nineteenth- and early twentieth-century owner Solomon Kimball, it was built by Thomas and Mary (Solart) Kilham (or Killam). The date of construction is based on a March 6, 1695/6 timber grant to Thomas Kilham by the town of Wenham, of enough pine timber to yield 700 boards.[3] | |
Hatch Homestead | Marshfield | 1700 c.[4] | Purportedly the oldest continuously occupied house in Massachusetts. | |
Rebecca Nurse Homestead | Danvers | 1700 c. | This house was built around ca. 1700.[5] | |
John Humphreys House | Swampscott | 1700 c.[6] | ||
Dickinson-Pillsbury-Witham House | Georgetown | 1700 c. | The Dickinson-Pillsbury-Witham House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. | |
Parkman Tavern | Concord | 1700 c.[7] | Cited source estimates date of late 17th or early 18th century | |
Nathaniel Felton Sr. House | Peabody[a] | 1700 c.[8] | Date estimate by Peabody Historical Society, owner | |
Dustin House | Haverhill | 1700 c. | [1] |
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "National Historic Landmark Nomination, page 4" (PDF).
- ^ "MACRIS Details". mhc-macris.net. Retrieved 2018-01-11.
- ^ Wenham Historical Society, Wenham Town Records, 1642–1706 (Salem, Massachusetts: Newcomb & Gauss, 1930), 1:130.
- ^ "MACRIS Details". mhc-macris.net. Retrieved 2018-01-10.
- ^ Cummings, Abbott (1979). The Framed Houses of Massachusetts Bay 1625-1725. Belknap. p. 123.
- ^ "MACRIS".
- ^ "MACRIS Details". mhc-macris.net. Retrieved 2020-04-27.
- ^ "Properties". Peabody Historical Society. Retrieved 2021-06-12.