Darling House Museum

The Darling House Museum is a historic house museum at 1907 Litchfield Turnpike in Woodbridge, Connecticut, and is owned and operated by the Amity & Woodbridge Historical Society. The house is open by appointment and during special events.

Thomas Darling House and Tavern
Darling House Museum is located in Connecticut
Darling House Museum
Darling House Museum is located in the United States
Darling House Museum
Location1907 Litchfield Turnpike, Woodbridge, Connecticut
Coordinates41°21′41″N 72°58′59″W
Built1774
ArchitectAbiel Gray
Architectural styleGeorgian
NRHP reference No.79002639[1]
Added to NRHPJanuary 17, 1979

In the early 1770s, Thomas Darling hired Abiel Gray of West Hartford, Connecticut, to build a new home in Amity Parish, outside of New Haven. Gray took two years (1772–1774) to finish the project. The house has a gambrel roof, is built on a central hall plan and has some unusual features. Paneling and woodwork in the hallway and front rooms are richly detailed under 9-foot, 3-inch ceilings. The influence of 18th-century New York is suggested by the imported tiles of Biblical scenes over one fireplace.[2]

Much of the furniture and many items in the home were owned by the Darling family, which owned the house and surrounding land until 1973, when the property was sold to the town of Woodbridge and the Amity & Woodbridge Historical Society began caring for the structure. The property includes a large 18th-century barn, a 19th-century horse barn, a carriage shed, a chicken coop, a pig house, and a 19th-century privy.

The town maintains several fields near the house, and some easy walking trails skirt the base of West Rock.

The Society has a large collection of farm implements on display in the horse barn. Quilts, linens, and period clothing are also displayed in the house.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. "History" Web page, Amity & Woodbridge Historical Society website. Retrieved February 6, 2007
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