Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Mothers' and Daughters' Club House

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Built
  
1901 (1901)

Opened
  
1901

Added to NRHP
  
11 March 1982

NRHP Reference #
  
82001697

Area
  
400 m²

Architect
  
Charles A. Platt

Mothers' and Daughters' Club House

Location
  
Main St., Plainfield, New Hampshire

Similar
  
Freer Gallery of Art, The Causeway, Gwinn Estate, Astor Court Building, Washington Irving Memorial

The Mothers' and Daughters' Club House is a historic social club building on Main Street (New Hampshire Route 12A) in Plainfield, New Hampshire. It is a single story wood frame structure, five bays wide and one deep, with a pyramidal hipped roof. A small woodshed is attached to the east (rear) end of the building, and there is a trellised front porch, added shortly after the building's construction. The building was designed by noted New Yorkc City architect Charles A. Platt and built in 1901; it is one of the oldest clubhouses for women in the country. The social club for which it was built was part of a social movement involving a renaissance of handicraft, in this instance predominantly involved in the creation of hooked rugs.

The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

References

Mothers' and Daughters' Club House Wikipedia