Puneet Varma (Editor)

Adams Farm (Harrisville, New Hampshire)

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Built
  
1780 (1780)

NRHP Reference #
  
86003246

Area
  
4,000 m²

MPS
  
Harrisville MRA

Opened
  
1780

Added to NRHP
  
14 January 1988

Adams Farm (Harrisville, New Hampshire)

Location
  
Off MacVeagh Rd. near Fasnacloich, Harrisville, New Hampshire

Architectural style
  
Greek Revival architecture

The Adams Farm is a historic farmhouse on MacVeagh Road in Harrisville, New Hampshire. The farmhouse sits on an extensive farmstead in southern Harrisville with commanding views of Mount Monadnock. The oldest portion of the house, a 1.5 story wood frame structure, dates to c. 1780 and was built by Moses Adams, Jr. This structure was attached to a much larger, three story, wood frame house built in 1862. This house is basically Greek Revival in appearance, although its front door treatment appears to date from later in the 19th century, and its shutters have 20th century Colonial Revival design. The house remained in the hands of Adams descendants until the 1920s, when the property was purchased by Charles MacVeagh, who owned the nearby Fasnacloich estate. MacVeagh used the Adams Farm as an extension of Fasnacloich, stabling horses there and using his farming staff to work the land.

The house and a small plot of land around it were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.

References

Adams Farm (Harrisville, New Hampshire) Wikipedia


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