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Shaw House (Ferndale, California)

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Built
  
1854

Opened
  
1854

Phone
  
+1 707-786-9958

NRHP Reference #
  
84000777

Area
  
4,500 m²

Added to NRHP
  
13 September 1984

Shaw House (Ferndale, California)

Location
  
703 Main St., Ferndale, California

Address
  
703 Main St, Ferndale, CA 95536, USA

Architectural styles
  
Similar
  
Fern Cottage, Centerville Beach County P, Ferndale Museum, Firemans Park, Carter House Inn

The Shaw House, also known as the Shaw House Inn, is a historic Carpenter Gothic Victorian style house located at 703 Main Street in Ferndale, Humboldt County, California. It served historically as a courthouse, a post office, and a single-family dwelling.

History

The Shaw House was built in 1854 by Seth Shaw, who with his brother Stephen W. Shaw had arrived by canoe in 1852 to build a cabin, clear some land, claim it and found the town of Ferndale. Despite long-standing local legend, the house was not inspired by Nathaniel Hawthorne's House of the Seven Gables, but rather by the home of Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo in Sonoma, California which had been drawn and painted by Stephen W. Shaw. In the early days, the Shaw House served as the area's first courthouse as well as post office.

The building was owned by the family, vacant for several years at the end, until sold in 1967. Fully restored by two owners, the Shaw House was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 13, 1984.

It remains the oldest house in Ferndale and functions as a bed and breakfast under the Shaw House Inn name. It still features the marble fireplace that Isabella Shaw, Seth's bride, picked out at Gump's in San Francisco.

References

Shaw House (Ferndale, California) Wikipedia


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