Puneet Varma (Editor)

Staples Crafts Wiswall Farm

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Built
  
1688

NRHP Reference #
  
86001884

Added to NRHP
  
4 September 1986

MPS
  
Newton MRA

Opened
  
1688

Staples-Crafts-Wiswall Farm

Location
  
1615 Beacon St., Newton, Massachusetts

Architectural style
  
Late Victorian, Georgian, Federal

Address
  
1615 Beacon St, Waban, MA 02468, USA

Similar
  
Six Flags New England, Water Wizz, Salem Willows, Lincoln Park, New England Aquarium

The Deacon John Staples House (also known as the Staples-Crafts-Wiswall Farm) is a historic house at 1615 Beacon Street in the village of Waban in Newton, Massachusetts.

The first house on the site was built in 1688 by Deacon John Staples, a weaver and Newton's first schoolmaster. Staples and his wife had no children of their own, but raised several boys including Moses Craft, a relative of Mrs. Staples. When the Deacon died, Craft inherited the property. Craft rebuilt the house on the original foundation around 1750, constructing a colonial farmhouse two and a half stories high with five windows and two rooms across, and one room wide, with two chimneys running up the back, each serving two rooms. In 1768, he built an addition, adding a kitchen where the original Staples' house kitchen had been. Craft died in 1821 at the age of 85, leaving no will and an estate seriously in debt. As ordered by the judge of probate, the house and surrounding land was sold at auction. Joseph's son, Moses Craft II, won with the winning bid of $5.50. In 1824, Moses Craft II sold the property to his cousin William Wiswall. It is believed that Wiswall was responsible for remodeling the house to give it a Federal ornament. David Kinmonth, a Boston merchant, bought the house in 1858 and remodeled it, giving Victorian overtones to its basic Georgian style. The house was remodeled again during the American Civil War. Ownership of the house changed hands many times during the 20th century. It was last sold in 1983 and continues to be a private residence. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 as the Staples-Craft-Wiswall Farm. Despite the many modifications that it has undergone, the house stands today on the original 1688 stone foundation, which is up to one meter thick in some places.

References

Staples-Crafts-Wiswall Farm Wikipedia


Similar Topics