Rev. John Tufts House Explained

Rev. John Tufts House
Coordinates:42.8081°N -70.9567°W
Built:1714
Architecture:Colonial
Added:March 9, 1990
Mpsub:First Period Buildings of Eastern Massachusetts TR
Refnum:90000270

The Rev. John Tufts House is a historic First Period house in West Newbury, Massachusetts. It was the house of John Tufts (1689–1750), an important early American music educator. The -story central chimney building is framed entirely in oak, and its main block was built all at once (unlike many First Period homes, which were often built in stages) in c. 1715. It is five bays wide, with an enlarged central bay, where the door is located. The doorway is framed by Georgian period pilasters and pedimented entablature. There is a 20th-century saltbox-style addition across part of the back of the house, and a gabled addition on the right that is connected to the main house by a narrow inset section.[1]

The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NRHP nomination for Rev. John Tufts House. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 2014-01-10.