*** Welcome to piglix ***

Franklin Pierce Homestead

Franklin Pierce Homestead
HillsboroughNH FranklinPierceHomestead.jpg
Nearest city Hillsborough, New Hampshire
Coordinates 43°6′59″N 71°57′2″W / 43.11639°N 71.95056°W / 43.11639; -71.95056Coordinates: 43°6′59″N 71°57′2″W / 43.11639°N 71.95056°W / 43.11639; -71.95056
Area 13 acres (5.3 ha)
Built 1804
Website Franklin Pierce Homestead State Historic Site
NRHP Reference # 66000027
Significant dates
Added to NRHP October 15, 1966
Designated NHL July 4, 1961

The Franklin Pierce Homestead is a historic house museum and state park located in Hillsborough, New Hampshire. It was the childhood home of the fourteenth President of the United States, Franklin Pierce.

The house is located on the east side of Washington Road (New Hampshire Route 31), about 100 yards north of its intersection with New Hampshire Route 9, on a 13-acre (5.3 ha) property in the Lower Village area of Hillsborough. It is a two-story hip-roofed wood frame structure whose main block was built in 1804. There are two entries, one on the west (street-facing) facade and one on the south facade. Both are topped by five-light transom windows, and flanked by pilasters which support an entablature and triangular pediment. A two-story wing was added to the rear of the house, probably later in the 19th century. Attached to this wing are a small wellhouse, and a single-story shed connecting the house to a gable-roofed barn.

The interior of the main block has four rooms in the first floor, organized around a central hall and stairs. The parlor is to the left, and the dining room to the right. The kitchen is behind the dining room, and the master bedroom is behind the parlor. On the second floor, the front of the house is taken up by a full-width ballroom, while the back has two bedrooms, each with a dressing room. All of the rooms of the main block were originally decorated with stenciling, some of which has survived. The wing contains a kitchen and laundry below, and bedrooms (presumably for servants) above. Later owners moved a barn to adjoin the house, removed the front yard fence, and added a porch, which was removed by 1929.

The home was built in 1804 by the future President's father, Benjamin Pierce. Benjamin Pierce, who had served during the American Revolution and would later become governor of New Hampshire, bought 200 acres in the Lower Village area of Hillsborough after the new state turnpike opened nearby. In addition to the home, he also built a tavern here. After Benjamin Pierce's death in 1839, the property was transferred to his son-in-law John McNeil Jr., a general during the War of 1812. McNeil had married Pierce's daughter Elizabeth, whose house next door was built in 1807 and today known as the Elizabeth Pierce House, now an antique shop.


...
Wikipedia

...