The Stevens-Coolidge Place

Walled rose garden, looking from rear towards house.
Perennial garden, looking back from house.
Ash tree beyond the perennial garden, by the hayfields, in winter.

The Stevens-Coolidge Place, formerly known as Ashdale Farm, is a garden and historic home located on 91 acres (37 ha) at 139 Andover Street in North Andover, Massachusetts. Helen Stevens Coolidge's family first acquired the farm in 1729, and from 1914 to 1962 it was her summer home with husband John Gardner Coolidge, diplomat, descendant of Thomas Jefferson, and nephew of Isabella Stewart Gardner. It is now a nonprofit museum operated by The Trustees of Reservations.

Between 1914 and 1918, architect Joseph Everett Chandler remodeled two late-Federal period farmhouses to form today's house. Chandler also enhanced the design of the landscape, which eventually included a perennial garden, a kitch and flower garden, and a rose garden (all in the Colonial Revival style).[1] A potager garden (kitchen garden in the French style) with a brick serpentine wall and a greenhouse complex were also built. The house's collections include Asian artifacts including Chinese porcelain, American furniture, and European decorative arts.

References

  1. Forsyth, p. 131-132.

Bibliography

Coordinates: 42°40′53″N 71°7′5″W / 42.68139°N 71.11806°W / 42.68139; -71.11806


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