Tag: Otis House

  • Saturdays, October 5 and 19, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Annual Boston House Museum Alliance Tour

    Admire the exteriors of five landmark historic houses, experience four centuries of architecture, and explore three of
    the city’s iconic neighborhoods on this two-hour walking tour that winds its way across picturesque downtown Boston, making for one special experience. From Colonial to Federal to Victorian, the stylistic intricacies of the Paul Revere House, Otis House, Nichols House, Prescott House, and Gibson House will be highlighted.

    Additionally, show your ticket to receive free admission at all five houses during the month of October. (Please note that the Nichols House Museum will be closed in  October for site management; ticket holders should call the Nichols House Museum at 617-227-6993 to learn how and when they can redeem a tour.) 

    October 5 Guide: Keith Trickett
    A tour guide and educator at Historic New England’s Otis House Museum, Keith is a member of History Alive!, an interactive theater company dedicated to producing plays about the past. He also brings Samuel Adams to life on “Tavern Nights” at the Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum. 

    October 19 Guide: Matthew Dickey
    Matthew Dickey is Communications and Operations Manager with the Boston Preservation Alliance and Co-Leader of the Rust Belt Coalition of Young Preservationists. He has given independent architectural tours of Boston and possesses a deep interest in preservation and creative storytelling. 

    Space is limited. Pre-registration is necessary at EventBrite

  • Tuesday, August 7, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm – Dining Out in Victorian Boston

    Explore the history of drinking and dining in Victorian Boston on a Tuesday evening in August at Otis House, 141 Cambridge Street in Boston. Come early (5:30) for a reception in the courtyard, followed by lecture at 6 pm. Historian Jim O’Connell analyzes historic menus from the Parker House, Union Oyster House, Durgin-Park, Locke-Ober, Café Marliave, Jacob Wirth, and some long-forgotten eateries to explore how nineteenth-century Boston restaurants reflected Victorian culture. Topics include the influence of French and British cooking, ostentatious multi-course banquets, working-class oyster bars and eating houses, ladies’ tea rooms and ice cream parlors, and the emergence of ethnic eateries.

    Cosponsored with the Victorian Society of America/New England Chapter.

    $12 Historic New England and Victorian Society members
    $17 nonmembers

    Advance tickets recommended. Please call 617-994-5920 or buy online at http://shop.historicnewengland.org/HGO-TWILIGHT-8055/  Victorian Society members must call to receive discount.

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  • Saturday, March 8, 11:00 am – 12:30 pm – Ladies of the House – Otis House Tour

    Otis House, owned by Historic New England and located at 141 Cambridge Street in Beacon Hill, is rich with stories of remarkable women, from a wealthy politician’s wife and mother in the late eighteenth century, to an entrepreneur and holistic physician in the 1830s, to four sisters who ran a Victorian boarding house.  On this tour, taking place Saturday, March 8 from 11 – 12:30, discover these stories and relevant social history of women’s lives in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.  A Mercy Otis Warren doll is pictured below.

    $15 fee. Registration is required. Sign up by calling 617-994-5920, or email programinfo@HistoricNewEngland.org.

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  • Tuesday, September 17, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – The Flowering of Regency Style in Boston Furniture

    No, it’s not precisely garden related, but Historic New England will hold a Boston Classical Furniture Lecture on Tuesday, September 17 from 7 – 9 at Otis House, 141 Cambridge Street in Boston, featuring Robert Mussey on The Flowering of Regency Style in Boston Furniture. The first quarter of the nineteenth century produced some of Boston’s most creative and skilled cabinetmakers.  Recent research by independent furniture scholar Robert Mussey has uncovered remarkable survivals and identified key players in the flowering of the early nineteenth century Boston furniture industry.  $14 ($8 for HNE members).  To register, call 617-994-5959.

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  • Saturdays, April 20 and May 18, 1:00 pm, 2:00 pm, and 3:00 pm – The Art of Entertaining

    A House Museum Alliance of Downtown Boston Focus Tour will take place at the Otis House, Nichols House, and Gibson House on Saturday, April 20 and Saturday, May 18, with tours at 1, 2 and 3 pm.  Each tour will take approximately 40 minutes, and admission is $5 at each museum.  Children under 12 free.  Three Boston house museums will draw on their rich collections to illuminate a variety of amusements in 18th, 19th, and 20th century Boston.

    Teas, dinners, musical entertainment and dances were all part of daily life for Boston’s elite in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. For the hosts, entertaining was not just a way to spend time, it was also a way to impress, and to make important social, business and political connections. Learn how Boston mayor Harrison Gray Otis and his endearing wife Sally charmed and entertained guests at their home, including some of their harshest critics.  Tour the public rooms of the Otis House Museum, 141 Cambridge Street in Boston, and explore the splendor and entertaining traditions of the federal era that helped make the Otises one of the most prominent and popular couples in Boston.

    For Rose Standish Nichols, the best form of entertainment was interesting conversation. At her famous salon-style afternoon tea parties at 55 Mount Vernon Street, she hosted artists, intellectuals, writers, politicians, religious leaders, and other accomplished individuals for discussions about current events, the arts, and philosophy. Rose Nichols continued the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century Beacon Hill tradition of women promoting social causes through gatherings in their homes. Come to the Nichols House, 55 Mount Vernon Street, to learn of the fascinating ways women on Beacon Hill, including Rose Nichols, used their homes as gathering places for discussion and activism. After the tour, guests will be able to taste the strong Hu-kwa tea Rose famously served at her tea parties!

    Be charmed by the Gibson family traditions. Learn about the different types of tea gatherings – simple tea and formal tea. At each of these tea ceremonies, the most important aspect was the appearance of the tea table. A well-equipped table was typically adorned with fine china, gleaming silver, and flowers. Tea time was the most fashionable part of the day for women. A formal tea often took place when one wished to invite eighteen to twenty guests but did not want to undertake the trouble or expense of dinner. Drinking tea became more popular as the Victorian era progressed.  Learn more about the Gibson family and the very important social event of tea time. The Gibson House is located at 137 Beacon Street.

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  • Thursday, August 4, 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm – Forest Hills: An Early American Garden Cemetery

    Anthony Mitchell Sammarco, author of Forest Hills Cemetery: 1848 – 2008, discusses the history of the cemetery and explores the rural cemetery movement of the nineteenth century on Thursday, August 4, from 5:30 – 7:30 at Historic New England’s Otis House in Boston.  The reception, co-sponsored with The Victorian Society in America, NE Chapter, begins at 5:30, with the talk commencing at 6:30.  $10 for HNE and Victorian Society members, $12 non-members.  Registration is recommended – call 617-994-5934, or visit www.historicnewengland.org.

  • Saturday, April 24, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Historic New England Birthday Party

    Join Historic New England for a festive evening of live music and dancing.  Enjoy hors d’oeuvres featuring traditional New England favorites on Saturday, April 24, from 6 – 9 pm at Coolidge Hall at the Topsfield Fairgrounds.  In honor of Historic New England’s Centennial Year, admission is $20.10.  Contact events manager Nicole Carelli at 617-994-5934 or email events@HistoricNewEngland.org to reserve a place.  Need a ride to Topsfield?  Reserve your spot on the Birthday Bus departing from Otis House in Boston.  Tickets for the bus ride are $15 per person.

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