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Grandmother's House

Paul Curtis House
Grandfather's House, Medford, Massachusetts.JPG
Grandfather's House is located in Massachusetts
Grandfather's House
Grandfather's House is located in the US
Grandfather's House
Location Medford, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°25′2.6″N 71°7′0.6″W / 42.417389°N 71.116833°W / 42.417389; -71.116833Coordinates: 42°25′2.6″N 71°7′0.6″W / 42.417389°N 71.116833°W / 42.417389; -71.116833
Built 1839
Architect Unknown
Architectural style Greek Revival
NRHP Reference #

75000272

Added to NRHP May 6, 1975

75000272

Grandfather's house, also known as the Paul Curtis House, is a historic house at 114 South Street in Medford, Massachusetts. It is claimed to be the original house named in the American poem "Over the River and through the Wood" by Lydia Maria Child. Although many people sing "to grandmother's house we go," the original edition shows that the author's words were "to grandfather's house."

The house, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, is also the best preserved example of Greek Revival architecture in Medford, and is noted for its association with Paul Curtis, a prominent local shipbuilder.

The rear portion of the modern house was built as a small farmhouse in the early 19th century. Lydia Maria Child (1802–1880) recalled the farmhouse when she wrote of her childhood visits to her grandfather's house in the poem "Over the River and through the Woods", published in 1844. The house is located near the Mystic River, which is believed to be the river referred to in the poem. The referenced woods have long since been replaced by residential housing.

About 1839, Paul Curtis greatly enlarged the house and gave it the two-story Ionic portico. In 1975, the house was added to the National Register of Historic Places. In 1976, Tufts University purchased and restored the house. In 2013 the house was sold to a developer who divided the lot the house sits on in order to build a duplex next door. In 2014 the house was again sold without its former yard to a private individual.

In the 19th century, ships were built across the street. A painting hung in the house shows a ship being built, with the house across the river, and Ballou Hall (the original Tufts building) on top of the hill in the distance, with no other development in between.


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