Cushing House Museum and Garden

The Cushing House Museum and Garden (circa 1808), also known as the Caleb Cushing House, is a Federal style mansion with a fine garden located at 98 High Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts, United States. It was a home of diplomat Caleb Cushing and is a National Historic Landmark.

Caleb Cushing House
Cushing House Museum, Newburyport, Massachusetts
Location98 High Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°48′24″N 70°52′16″W
Builtca. 1808
Architectural styleFederal
Part ofNewburyport Historic District (ID84002411)
NRHP reference No.73000327
Significant dates
Added to NRHPNovember 7, 1973[1]
Designated NHLNovember 7, 1973[2]
Designated CPAugust 2, 1984

The house is a center entrance four-story brick mansion in the Federal style, with entrances at both the front and sides, and two chimneys on each side. In shape it is a flattened cube, with five windows arranged symmetrically across both front and sides. Its main entry is crowned with a modest fanlight, echoed by a fan-shaped wooden motif atop the window above it. On the grounds, visitors will find a nineteenth-century garden, fruit trees, a privy, cobbled yard and carriage house.

Within the house are fine collections of silver, furniture, portraits, clocks, needlework, antique fans, hatboxes, nineteenth century toys, and more from New England, Asia, and Europe. The China Trade Room displays early China Trade decorative arts including four Chinese coastal Hong paintings. An extensive clock collection includes examples made by local master clockmakers David Wood and Daniel Balch. In the canopy bedroom stands a carved seventeenth-century Dutch cradle and a three-sided crib. Many oil portrait paintings hang in the house, including a Cecilia Beaux portrait of Margaret Cushing and 1801 paintings by John Brewster, Jr., of Newburyport's Prince family. The museum also maintains a collection of area maps, photographs, and genealogical references.

It is now the home of the Historical Society of Old Newbury and guided tours are offered between Memorial Day and Columbus Day.

The house was declared a National Historic Landmark and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973,[1] and included in the Newburyport Historic District in 1984.[3] The house is deemed nationally significant for its association with Cushing, a 19th-century diplomat whose defining achievement was the Treaty of Wanghia, negotiated in 1844 with the Qing dynasty of China. This treaty was the first in which the United States secured equivalent rights to those of traditional colonial powers (in this case, the United Kingdom).[4]

Vintage postcard of the front door of Cushing House, Newburyport, Massachusetts.

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. "Caleb Cushing House". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on 2009-06-06. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
  3. "MACRIS inventory record for Caleb Cushing House". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  4. "NHL nomination for Caleb Cushing House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-02-25.
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