Location Providence, RI NRHP Reference # 70000022 Designated NHLDCP November 10, 1970 Area 2,024 m² Architecture firm Hopkins Architects | Built 1708 or 1742 Designated NHL November 11, 1978 Opened 1976 Phone +1 401-421-0694 Added to NRHP 3 April 1970 | |
![]() | ||
Address 15 Hopkins St, Providence, RI 02903, USA Hours Closed today FridayClosedSaturday10AM–4PMSundayClosedMondayClosedTuesdayClosedWednesdayClosedThursdayClosed Similar John Brown House, Governor Henry Lippitt Ho, Providence Athenaeum, First Baptist Church in America, Old State House |
Governor stephen hopkins house providence
The Governor Stephen Hopkins House is a museum and National Historic Landmark at 15 Hopkins Street in Providence, Rhode Island. The house was the home of Stephen Hopkins, a governor of Rhode Island and signatory of the Declaration of Independence.
Contents
Governor stephen hopkins house providence
Description
The Stephen Hopkins House is an L-shaped 2-1/2 story wood-frame structure, whose main block was built in 1742-43 for Stephen Hopkins, with an attached two-story ell whose first floor dates to 1707. The main block is four bays wide and two deep, with the main entrance in the second bay from the left. This entry is a 20th-century alteration; the original main entrance was through a doorway on the west side of the ell.
The interior of the main block has the main parlor on the right, and Governor Hopkins' study on the left, flanking a central hallway with stair. Behind the parlor is a keeping room, with a small bedchamber behind the study. There are five bedrooms on the second floor, two with fireplaces. The downstairs fireplace mantels are paneled, with that in the parlor slightly more elaborate.
History
The 1707 house was purchased by Stephen Hopkins in 1742 and enlarged into its present size. It served as his home until his death in 1785. During these years he served in the colonial assembly, as a justice (first associate, then chief) of the colonial high court, and as colonial governor of the province from 1755 to 1757. The house is the only significant structure associated with Hopkins' life.
In the late 1920s the house was carefully restored by Norman Isham. The house is now owned and managed by the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America, and is a museum open to the public.
The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, and declared a National Historic Landmark in 1978.