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From Stone House to Glass House: Connecticut’s House Museums

by Karin Peterson, Museum Director, Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism

 

New England is well known for its many historic house museums and Connecticut alone has over 200. The Commission of Culture & Tourism invites the public to view an exhibit on Connecticut’s historic houses, “From Stone House to Glass House” in its gallery at One Constitution Plaza (second floor), Hartford during business hours. The exhibit opens April 1 with a special viewing between 3:00 and 7:00 p.m. and continues through May 28. This exhibit tells the collective story of the state’s historic house museums by focusing on the opening of select museum houses and linking them to personalities, organizations and legislation.

            Women’s groups led the earliest efforts to save historic houses from uncertain futures. Town chapters of the Daughters of the American Revolution began forming in Connecticut in 1892 and the National Society of Colonial Dames, led by Elizabeth Colt, established a Connecticut Society in 1893. These fledging organizations were especially active in the first part of the 20th century. Their preservation efforts focused on saving old buildings associated with illustrious citizens or events.

            The Henry Whitfield Museum in Guilford was one of their successes and the museum house starts the exhibit time line. Long recognized as an important relic from the past, it seemed to many that the house should be publicly owned and preserved forever. In response to a petition from the Colonial Dames, the Connecticut General Assembly passed a resolution in 1899 naming it the State Historical Museum. Shortly thereafter, a group of concerned citizens purchased the Knapp Tavern or “Putnam Cottage,” in Greenwich, the 1779 headquarters of General Israel Putnam, to save it from demolition. Connecticut’s historic house museum movement was on its way.

            Historical societies also were early involved with historic house making as they sought to preserve landmarks important to their story. In 1907 the New London County Historical Society undertook a fund drive to purchase the Shaw Mansion and all its contents from the last family member living there. The house had been the headquarters for Connecticut’s navy during the American Revolution and among the house’s treasures was a tea table taken as prize from a privateer in 1778. There was such support and widespread interest that the newspaper daily reported the amount raised. Similarly, in 1929, the Litchfield Historical Society purchased the home of its best known resident, Tapping Reeve, who established American’s first law school.

            Early preservation activities tended to be local. The exception was the establishment of the statewide Antiquarian and Landmarks Society in 1936. Although begun with the intent to stimulate interest in Connecticut history after the heightened awareness generated by the Tercentenary, A&L soon found itself being offered—and accepting—historic houses to be museums.  Its first museum house, Nathan Hale Homestead in Coventry, opened in 1948. Its second museum house, Buttolph-Williams in Wethersfield, which opened two years later, reflected a shift in preservation criteria to architectural merit and integrity with less emphasis on a famous owner.

            Connecticut preservation received a big boost with the establishment of the Connecticut Historical Commission (now part of the Commission on Culture & Tourism) in 1955. However, the state allotted only limited funds until 1966, when the National Historic Preservation Act required each state to have a State Historic Preservation Office. Thus, the CHC was able to assume oversight of the Henry Whitfield house and acquire the Prudence Crandall house, now an historic house museum, to save it from demolition. In 1971 the CHC provided funds to assist the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (now Historic New England) with the purchase of Roseland Cottage in Woodstock. Its acquisition signaled another milestone—the recognition by architectural historians and the public of the value and need to preserve Victorian houses.

            While some historic houses joined the public domain effortlessly by gift, by bequest, or by purchase, others required years of struggle and legal battles. Katherine Seymour Day led the fight to save the Hartford house where Samuel Clemens wrote some of his most famous books after it was sold to a developer in 1921. Although no longer threatened with demolition, there were no funds for restoration or operation as a museum. The house was used as a public library with rented apartments. It was not restored and opened to the public as the Mark Twain House until 1974. One of the grandest residences in the Connecticut, the Lockwood-Mathews Mansion was being used by the City of Norwalk as its public works garage. A grassroots movement formed to save it from demolition in 1962. The bitter fight included a citywide referendum and a legal battle which went all the way to the Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors.

            The Glass House, seminal example of the Modernist architectural style, brings the story of Connecticut historic house museums to the present. Built in 1949 by architect Philip Johnson, it was bequeathed to the National Trust for Historic Preservation and opened to the public in 2007.

 

For more information about the exhibit, visit www.cultureandtourism.org or call 860-278-2800.

 

PHOTOGRAPH

caption:  Tour guides at Gillette Castle State Park, circa 1950.

credit: Courtesy of DEP, Division of State Parks and Public Outreach