Joseph Reynolds House

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Joseph Reynolds House
Joseph Reynolds House, Bristol, RI.jpg
Front elevation and south profile of house, 2008
Joseph Reynolds House is located in Rhode Island
Joseph Reynolds House
Location Bristol, Rhode Island
Nearest city Providence
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Built 1700
Architectural style Colonial
NRHP Reference # 72000017
Significant dates
Added to NRHP May 31, 1972[1]
Designated NHL July 28, 1983[2]

The Joseph Reynolds House, also known as "Willowmere", is a historic house at 950 Hope Street (RI 114) in Bristol, Rhode Island. Built c. 1698–1700, the three story wood frame house is one of the oldest buildings in Bristol. It is the oldest known three-story building in Rhode Island, and exhibits distinctive well-preserved First Period features not found in other houses, despite an extensive history of adaptive alterations. It is further significant for its use by the Marquis de Lafayette as a headquarters during the American Revolutionary War. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1983.

Description

The main block of the house is five bays wide, and three deep, and is built using braced-stud construction. The roof extends lower to the rear, giving the house a classic New England saltbox appearance. The front roof line is decorated with a rare plaster cove cornice. An ell, originally 1½ stories but raised to two stories in 1790, extends to the rear of the house.[3]

The interior of the house follows a center hall plan, with four rooms on each floor, two on either side of the central hall and stairwell. Two rooms on the north side of the house have wood panels with bolection molding and a marbleized finish, some of which was reproduced after fire damage sustained in 1976. The main block of the house originally had two internal chimneys, but the one on the north side was removed at an unknown date. The original south chimney was replaced c. 1820 with a smaller one. Other alterations at the same time included changes to the kitchen space in the rear ell.[3]

History

Nathaniel Reynolds was one of the original settler of Bristol in 1680, when it was part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. His son Joseph built this house, and also operated a tannery and gristmill on his land. It was during the ownership of the house by Joseph's son, Joseph II, that the Marquis de Lafayette occupied the north parlor chamber. From September 7 to 23, 1778, Lafayette, a general in the Continental Army, was responsible for the defense of Bristol and Warren during failed military operations to drive the British from occupied Newport.[3]

The house remained in Reynolds family hands until 1927. In the 1950s its owners converted the building into apartments, but subsequent owners restored it to single-family use, and began to restore the property.[3]

See also

References

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External links