Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Bessie Monroe House

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Location
  
Salem, Massachusetts

MPS
  
Downtown Salem MRA

Opened
  
1811

Architectural style
  
Federal architecture

Built
  
1811

NRHP Reference #
  
83000580

Area
  
404.7 m²

Added to NRHP
  
29 July 1983

Bessie Monroe House

Similar
  
Rufus Choate House, Winter Island, Hawthorne Hotel, Nathaniel Hawthorne Birthplace, YMCA

The Bessie Monroe House is a historic house at 7 Ash Street in Salem, Massachusetts. It is notable as a good example of a Federal style house, and for its survival from planned demolition during Salem's urban renewal of the area in the 1970s. The house, a modest two story brick house located just north of Salem's downtown, was built in 1811 for Thomas Perkins, a local merchant whose brother was its first occupant. When the city began urban renewal planning for the area in the 1960s, the building was occupied by an elderly lady named Bessie Monroe. Out of concerns for her health the city allowed her to remain in the property after its taking, and proceeded with plans that included the demolition of many surrounding properties. However, the delay occasioned by her occupation until her death in 1975 was accompanied by a shift in attitude in the city toward restoring such properties, and it was eventually sold to owners prepared to rehabilitate the property.

The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

References

Bessie Monroe House Wikipedia