Manning House frame
1692–1693
Object PlaceIpswich, Massachusetts
Medium/TechniqueOak, larch
Credit LineJohn Lowell Gardner Fund
Accession number25.552
On View
On viewClassificationsArchitectural elements
Collections
The architectural framework in this gallery has been assembled from the second-floor framing of a house built in Ipswich about 1692. According to land deeds, the first house on the property stood as early as 1672. William Stewart, a merchant, bought the house and converted it into a two-story, central-chimney structure. In later generations, the building was used as an almshouse and a shoe factory. When the house was razed, in 1925, the timber frame was removed and installed at the Museum. Here, the frame has been reinstalled as a freestanding, joined frame without the plaster walls and reproduction windows added to the 1928 installation. In the original house, this space was divided into at least two rooms separated by a stairhall, with interior walls located between the third and fourth bays.
ProvenanceAcquired by the MFA October 1925 as part of Manning House and Brown Pearl Hall purchase for $5,334.16.about 1704
15th century