Tag: Nichols House Museum

  • Sunday, December 11, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Nichols House Museum Holiday House Tour

    For over two decades, the Nichols House Museum has organized and hosted the Beacon Hill Holiday House Tour. With a brief hiatus during the height of the pandemic, the event has been a highlight of the Boston holiday season.

    This December 11 event from 12 – 4 offers the public a rare opportunity to experience a select group of remarkable private residences. Each year, the tour showcases outstanding examples of historic preservation, as well as creative modern interpretation and adaptation in a broad range of architectural and interior design styles.

    For ticket information (all tickets must be purchased in advance) visit https://www.nicholshousemuseum.org/events/beacon-hill-holiday-house-tour/

  • Sunday, December 12, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Beacon Hill Holiday Wreath Tour

    Sunday, December 12, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Beacon Hill Holiday Wreath Tour

    Join the Nichols House Museum on December 12 from noon – 4 for its most festive fundraiser of the year, the Beacon Hill Holiday Wreath Tour! Explore the historic and architecturally stunning Beacon Hill neighborhood all decked for the holiday season. The Nichols House Museum and the Colonial Society of Massachusetts will be open for self-guided tours.

    Olde Towne Carolers will be serenading visitors throughout the afternoon. Light refreshments will be included. $55. For more information and tickets, visit Here or email info@nicholshousemuseum.org or call (617) 227-6993

  • Tuesday, May 28, 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm – Gardens of the Arts & Crafts Movement

    In this May 28 illustrated lecture, landscape scholar Judith B. Tankard surveys the inspiration, characteristics, and development of garden design during the Arts & Crafts Movement. Tankard presents a selection of houses and gardens of the era from Britain and the United States, with an emphasis on the diversity of designers who helped forge a truly distinct approach to garden design. Her lecture is the first event in a series of exhibition programming for The Gardens of Rose Standish Nichols, 1890-1935 opening May 16, 2019 at the Nichols House Museum. The lecture, beginning at 6 pm, will take place at the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 Newbury Street in Boston. $20 general admission, $15 students or members of NHM or NEHGS. Register by calling 617-227-6993, or online HERE.

    Judith B. Tankard is a landscape historian, award-winning author, and preservation consultant. She taught at the Landscape Institute of Harvard University for more than twenty years. She is the author or coauthor of ten books on landscape history, including Gardens of the Arts & Crafts Movement, Ellen Shipman and the American Garden and Beatrix Farrand: Private Gardens, Public Landscapes. A popular lecturer in the United States and Britain, Judith is a speaker at symposia and conferences devoted to the preservation of historic landscapes. She is also a member of The Garden Club of the Back Bay.

  • Sunday, December 9, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Nichols House Holiday House Tour

    For over twenty years, the Nichols House Museum has organized and hosted the Holiday House Tour of Beacon Hill. This event offers the public a rare opportunity to experience a select group of remarkable private residences. Each year, the tour showcases outstanding examples of historic preservation, as well as creative modern interpretation and adaptation in a broad range of architectural and interior design styles.

    The Nichols House Museum invites you to explore Season’s Greetings: Highlights from the Rose Standish Nichols Postcard Collection, a pop-up exhibition specially curated for the 2018 Holiday House Tour. Additional information on this exhibition is forthcoming.  The Holiday House Tour generates financial support for the Nichols House Museum’s ongoing preservation and programming needs.

    Reception from 3-5pm at the William Hickling Prescott House. For registration and complete information visit http://www.nicholshousemuseum.org/programs_events.php

    Image result for vintage holiday postcards Rose Standish Nichols

  • Sunday, December 10 – Nichols House Museum Holiday House Tour

    Sunday, December 10 – Nichols House Museum Holiday House Tour

    Join the Nichols House Museum on Sunday, December 10, for the 2017 Nichols House Museum Holiday House Tour, featuring some of the most elegant homes on Beacon Hill. This promises to be one of their most memorable tours. For more information, please contact Nichols House at 617-227-6993, or email info@nicholshousemuseum.org.

  • Sunday, December 11, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Holiday House Tour

    The Nichols House Museum invites you to its annual Holiday House Tour on Sunday, December 11 from 12 – 4.  Visit rarely viewed Beacon Hill houses festively decorated for the season.  Included in the ticket price is a holiday reception from 3 – 5 at the King’s Chapel Parish House, 64 Beacon Street (and when you’re there, look for our Club’s beautifully decorated holiday wreaths.) Tickets are $100 ($75 tax deductible) if purchased in advance, $120 if purchased the day of tour. Please make checks payable to the Nichols House Museum and mail to 55 Mount Vernon Street, Boston, MA 02108. You may also purchase tickets online at http://www.nicholshousemuseum.org.  No photography of home interiors, please. For additional information call 617-227-6993, or email info@nicholshousemuseum.org.img_1680

  • Thursday, June 2, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Nichols House Spring Fete

    Join friends of the Nichols House Museum for cocktails, hors d’oeuvre, and a silent auction at its annual fundraiser on Thursday, June 2nd  from 6 – 9 at the Boston Athenaeum, 10 1/2 Beacon Street in Boston, as we celebrate the arrival of Spring. Proceeds support conservation efforts of the museum. Catered by Great Party Food, there will be a silent auction that includes a weekend stay at a vacation home near Acadia National Park, a private curator-led tour of the MFA, box seats for 20 at Fenway Park, plus one of a kind artwork and jewelry. Tickets are $150 per person, and may be purchased online at http://www.nicholshousemuseum.org/programs_events.php or call 617-227-6993.

    vodka-verdant-202-2

  • Sunday, December 13, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – The Beacon Hill Holiday House Tour 2015

    Sunday, December 13, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – The Beacon Hill Holiday House Tour 2015

    The Nichols House Museum invites you to its annual Holiday House Tour.  Visit rarely viewed Beacon Hill Houses festively decorated for the season.  The event takes place Sunday, December 13 from 12 – 4, with a holiday reception at King’s Chapel Parish House, 64 Beacon Street from 3 – 5, and a Handbell Concert at the Nichols House Museum, 55 Mount Vernon Street, from 1 – 3.  Tickets ($100 – $250) may be purchased online at www.nicholshousemuseum.org, or call 617-227-6993. Tickets purchased on the day of tour will be $120.

    image-12262005-56092

  • Wednesday, March 18, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm – Arthur Shurcliff

    The next lecture sponsored by the Massachusetts Historical Society will take place Wednesday, March 18, from 5:30 – 7, on Arthur Shurcliff. In 1928 Boston landscape architect Arthur A. Shurcliff began what became one of the most important examples of the American Colonial Revival landscape—Colonial Williamsburg, a project that stretched into the 1940s and included town and highway planning as well as residential and institutional gardens. A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1894, Shurcliff immediately went back to school at Harvard University where his mentor, Charles Eliot, helped him piece together a program in the Art History Department, the Lawrence Scientific School and the Bussey Institute. Upon graduation with a second Bachelor of Science, he worked in Frederick Law Olmsted’s office for eight years, acquiring a broad and sophisticated knowledge of the profession. When he opened his practice in 1904, Shurcliff emphasized his expertise in town planning. Two decades later, when he was tapped to be Chief Landscape Architect at Colonial Williamsburg, he was a seasoned professional whose commissions included his Boston work, campus design, town planning, and a robust practice in private domestic design. How he utilized the skills he acquired over the years, and how his professional expertise intermingled with his avocational interests in history, craftsmanship, and design is the subject of Cushing’s biography—a story that inexorably sweeps him to his work in the restoration and recreation at Colonial Williamsburg.

    Elizabeth Hope Cushing, Ph.D., is the author of a newly published book about Boston landscape architect Arthur A. Shurcliff (1870–1957), based on her doctoral dissertation for the American and New England Studies program at Boston University. She is also a coauthor, with Keith N. Morgan and Roger Reed, of Community by Design, released in 2013. Cushing is a practicing landscape historian who consults, writes, and lectures on landscape matters. She has written cultural landscape history reports for the Taft Art Museum in Cincinnati, The National Park Service, the Department of Conservation and Recreation of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and other institutions and agencies. Her contributor credits include Pioneers of American Landscape Design (McGraw Hill Companies, 2000), Design with Culture: Claiming America’s Landscape Heritage (University of Virginia Press, 2005), Shaping the American Landscape (University of Virginia Press, 2009), and Drawing Toward Home (Historic New England, 2010). She has received a grant from the Gill Family Foundation to write a biography of Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., which she is currently researching.

    This series has been made possible by the generous underwriting of Stephen Stimson Associates Landscape Architects and is cosponsored by the Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Nichols House Museum.  $10 fee, (no charge for Fellows and Members of the MHS, Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Nichols House Museum) and pre-registration required at https://dnbweb1.blackbaud.com/OPXREPHIL/EventDetail.asp?cguid=76FBBAD5-59FC-442D-8347-A5AE40DBF561&eid=50860&sid=A801527F-4B9A-49B4-9B54-FCBE293D2EFE

  • Wednesday, March 11, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm – The Brookline Troika: Olmsted, Richardson, Sargent and the Planning of a “Model Community”

    The Massachusetts Historical Society presents The Brookline Troika: Olmsted, Richardson, Sargent and the Planning of a “Model Community” on Wednesday, March 11, at their offices at 1154 Boylston Street, with a reception at 5:30 and lecture at 6:00.  Keith Morgan, Director of Architectural Studies at Boston University is the featured speaker.

    Derived from the recently publish book, Community by Design: The Olmsted Office and the Making of Brookline, Massachusetts, this lecture will explore the close and dynamic relationship of the country’s leading landscape architect, architect, and horticulturalist in the evolution of Boston’s premier suburb. These three men lived within easy walking distance of each other in the Green Hill section of Brookline and used their private residences and landscapes as teaching and professional spaces as well. Their friendships and (occasional) conflicts informed the character of the suburban development for a community that called itself “the richest town in the world” and believed that its model was worthy of emulation.

    Keith N. Morgan is a Professor of the History of Art & Architecture and American & New England Studies at Boston University, where he has taught since 1980. He currently direct BU’s Architectural Studies Program and is a former national president of the Society of Architectural Historians. Written in collaboration with Elizabeth Hope Cushing and Roger Reed, Community by Design was published in 2013 by the University of Massachusetts Press for the Library of American Landscape History and received the Ruth Emery Prize of the Victorian Society in America.

    This series has been made possible by the generous underwriting of Stephen Stimson Associates Landscape Architects and is cosponsored by the Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Nichols House Museum. $10 fee (no charge for Fellows and Members of the MHS, Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Nichols House Museum.) Register online at https://dnbweb1.blackbaud.com/OPXREPHIL/EventDetail.asp?cguid=76FBBAD5-59FC-442D-8347-A5AE40DBF561&eid=50859&sid=28E3AC1C-BE75-4D62-BB6E-EC1C9D0EE6AB