Phillips House: Difference between revisions
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This Federal style mansion at 34 Chestnut Street is run by Historic New England and open to the public. It contains a family collection that reflects five generations. | This Federal style mansion at 34 Chestnut Street is run by Historic New England and open to the public. It contains a family collection that reflects five generations. | ||
Many articles are from their extensive travel to Fiji and Africa. The carriage house in the rear houses antique carriages and cars. | Many articles are from their extensive travel to Fiji and Africa. The carriage house in the rear houses antique carriages and cars. The home reflects five generations of the | ||
Phillips family as well as the Wheatland, Duncan, Pingree and related ancillary families. | Phillips family as well as the Wheatland, Duncan, Pingree and related ancillary families. | ||
The original home was built in South Danvers in 1800. After a bitter divorce from his wife Elizabeth, Capt. Nathaniel West moved his third of the house to the | |||
up-and coming part of Salem, Chestnut Street. | |||
Ann Wheatland Phillips bought the house in 1911. She and her husband Stephen W. hired architect William Rantoul to remodel the house in the Colonial Revival style. | |||
The house was turned into a museum in 1971, after Stephen W. Phillips, - the son of Anna and Stephen - passed away. It was privately run until 2006, when it became | |||
part of Historic New England. | |||
Revision as of 11:00, 7 January 2011
The Stephen Phillips Trust House is a non-profit house museum dedicated to promoting an understanding of the historic past as a means of enriching the present.
This Federal style mansion at 34 Chestnut Street is run by Historic New England and open to the public. It contains a family collection that reflects five generations. Many articles are from their extensive travel to Fiji and Africa. The carriage house in the rear houses antique carriages and cars. The home reflects five generations of the Phillips family as well as the Wheatland, Duncan, Pingree and related ancillary families.
The original home was built in South Danvers in 1800. After a bitter divorce from his wife Elizabeth, Capt. Nathaniel West moved his third of the house to the up-and coming part of Salem, Chestnut Street.
Ann Wheatland Phillips bought the house in 1911. She and her husband Stephen W. hired architect William Rantoul to remodel the house in the Colonial Revival style.
The house was turned into a museum in 1971, after Stephen W. Phillips, - the son of Anna and Stephen - passed away. It was privately run until 2006, when it became part of Historic New England.
See Also
- Phillips House Historic New England website