Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Golden Ball Tavern

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Location
  
Weston, Massachusetts

NRHP Reference #
  
72000141

Opened
  
1768

Phone
  
+1 781-894-1751

Added to NRHP
  
28 September 1972

Built
  
1768 (1768)

Designated CP
  
February 11. 1983

Area
  
3 ha

Architectural style
  
Georgian architecture

Golden Ball Tavern

Part of
  
Boston Post Road Historic District (#83009783)

Address
  
662 Boston Post Rd, Weston, MA 02493, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–3PMThursday10AM–3PMFriday10AM–3PMSaturdayClosedSunday1–3PMMonday10AM–3PMTuesday10AM–3PMWednesday10AM–3PM

Similar
  
Spellman Museum of Stamps, Cat Rock Park, Weston Historical Museum, Weston Aqueduct, Munroe Tavern

Profiles

The Golden Ball Tavern is a historic tavern, now a museum, located at 662 Boston Post Road in Weston, Massachusetts. Built in 1768, it is one of the town's finest examples of Late Georgian architecture. It also played a pivotal role in local activities during the American Revolution, due to its Loyalist tavern keeper. The tavern was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972, and was included in Weston's Boston Post Road Historic District in 1983.

Contents

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Description

The Golden Ball Tavern stands on the south side of Boston Post Road, near the center of Weston, just east of its junction with Golden Ball Lane. It is a two story wood frame structure, its main section covered by a hip roof and finished in wooden clapboards. A two-story ell, likely an older house, extends to one side, and a single-story ell to the other. The main entrance is at the center of a five-bay facade, flanked by simple pilasters and topped by a modillioned cornice. The property also has a barn that is believed to date to the main house's construction.

History

The tavern was built in 1768 by Captain Isaac Jones, a local shopkeeper. Jones, a Loyalist, gave shelter to British soldiers performing reconnaissance on rebellious activities in 1774. After the Boston Tea Party in December 1773, the tavern was raided by local Patriots, who believed Jones to be serving tea on which hated taxes had been collected. Known locally as the Weston Tea Party, the event consisted of little more than a ransacking of the premises (which had no taxed tea). Later in the Revolution, Jones apparently joined the cause of independence, and regained a position of prominence in the community. His tavern flourished until the early 19th century, when the opening of the Worcester Turnpike siphoned traffic away from the Post Road. The tavern closed about 1805, and was then occupied as a residence by six generations of the Jones family. It then underwent restoration, and has since been opened as a museum.

References

Golden Ball Tavern Wikipedia