117:(1776) and owned the house when it allegedly suffered damage from British cannon fire, as evidenced by cannonball marks left on several rafters. James' daughter Hannah inherited the house in the early 1800s. By the mid-1800s Ammi Roswell Ferris (also known as "Ross") (1837-1914) owned the house and ran a tollgate at the causeway to Greenwich Point, possibly collecting "a toll from people who were going to gather scallops and clams at Greenwich Point." In 1951 Laura M. Boles and Bertha Boles acquired the property, and in 1968 Laura Boles' executors sold the house to Elizabeth F. Slater in 1968. In 1971 Elizabeth Slater sold it to the Lueder family who owned the house for "nearly 40 years" before selling it to the Waters family.
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house's age using dendrochronology and record research, the
Greenwich Point Conservancy restored the house in 2018 working together with the private owners, the Waters family, who also constructed a large addition adjacent to the original structure. The house remains privately owned and is possibly the oldest inhabited house in the United States, but is open at least once a year to the public by an
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shape. In 1689 Ferris' son, James Ferris, constructed the final major addition, to the right side of house, leaving the house with a two-over-two form and extended lean-to, and Ferris installed new windows, one of which has survived intact and was discovered during the 2018 restoration. It is one of
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In 2014 before the age of the structure was discovered, the dilapidated house was nearly demolished and replaced with a newer building by a recent buyer, but through the efforts of local preservationists, its history was uncovered, and the demolition process came to a halt. After determining the
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dated to 1610, but due to the lack of sapwood in the sample, the precise date of the beam is unknown (but possibly 1640 or perhaps the 1680s). Historian Missy Wolf researched the land's title history dating back to Feake.
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one-room-over-one-room house on top of the cellar. After the Feakes' divorce, Elizabeth Feake sold the property to
Jeffrey Ferris in 1653. Around 1660 Jeffrey Ferris added a
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141:. The client, Greenwich Point Conservancy (GPC), has not yet released the results of the study, but claims that the west side of the house dates to circa 1645, the north
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addition made by
Jeffrey Ferris to 1660, and the east side and expansion of the lean-to the James Ferris expansion of 1689. According to the Conservancy, as reported in
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405:, June 2, 2016https://greenwichfreepress.com/around-town/spared-from-the-wrecking-ball-elizabeth-feake-house-was-a-hidden-treasure-under-our-noses-65886/
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dug into a hill overlooking
Greenwich Cove possibly serving as a makeshift home for their family. Around 1645, the Feakes constructed a
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The Ferris family owned the house for several centuries. Jeffrey Ferris' great-grandson, James, was a
Revolutionary War veteran of the
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Obituary of Lloyd
Lueders 1938-2020 Published in New Canaan Advertiser & Greenwich Time on Jul. 16, 2020.
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https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/greenwichtime/obituary.aspx?n=lloyd-lueders&pid=196501110&fhid=9027
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90:) from Native American tribe members. Shortly after the purchase the Feakes likely began construction of a
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50:, United States. The building was purportedly built around 1645 and was expanded over time to its present
350:"375th Anniversary Greenwich Connecticut 1640-2015 Neighborhood Tours, Old Greenwich Tour, May 16th"
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401:"Spared from the Wrecking Ball, Elizabeth Feake House was 'A Hidden Treasure under Our Noses,'"
416:"Spared from the Wrecking Ball, Elizabeth Feake House was "A Hidden Treasure under Our Noses""
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That Red Salt Box House on Shore Road By Carl White - Local
History Librarian August 5, 2016
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257:"Founder's Day Features Unveiling of Restored Feake-Ferris House c1645 in Old Greenwich"
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https://www.greenwichlibrary.org/red-salt-box-house-shore-road/
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Feake–Ferris House (right) and modern addition (left)
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the earliest surviving two-sash windows in
America.
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Greenwich, CT Registry of Deeds, Book 2247 Page 109
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Greenwich
Registry of Deeds, Book 776, Page 490-491
130:agreement with the Greenwich Point Conservancy.
74:Recreated period gardens on the side of the home
362:Greenwich Registry of Deeds, Book 478, Page 576
133:The house was tested by dendrochronologists at
46:) is a historic structure at 181 Shore Road in
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311:"Rediscovering the Oldest House in Greenwich"
286:"Rediscovering the Oldest House in Greenwich"
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34:Feake–Ferris House in 2021 after restoration
169:List of the oldest buildings in Connecticut
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233:"The Feake-Ferris House"
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465:73°33′57″W
462:41°01′03″N
426:2019-10-31
320:2019-10-30
295:2019-10-30
267:2019-10-30
242:2019-10-30
213:2019-10-30
175:References
92:fieldstone
158:See also
128:easement
82:and Lt.
78:In 1640
143:lean-to
107:saltbox
103:lean-to
58:History
54:shape.
52:saltbox
95:cellar
38:The
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