Advanced Search
Structural Frame
Manning House frame
Structural Frame
1692–1693
Object Place: Ipswich, Massachusetts
Medium/Technique
Oak, larch
Credit Line
John Lowell Gardner Fund
Accession Number25.552
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsArchitectural elements
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.
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.