Building
|
Image
|
Location
|
Built
|
Notes
|
Henry Whitfield House
|
|
Guilford
|
1639
|
Oldest surviving stone American Colonial house in New England, museum since 1899.[1]
|
Buckingham House
|
|
Milford
|
1640
|
Core dates to 1640 modifications in 1725 and 1753. NRHP. [2][3]
|
Feake-Ferris House
|
|
Greenwich
|
1645
|
Core dates to 1645 modifications in 1689.[4]
|
Thomas Lee House
|
|
East Lyme
|
1660
|
Began as a one-room house, museum since 1897.[5]
|
Deacon John Moore House
|
|
Windsor
|
1664
|
Crossing summer beams. Moore was also a woodworker known for using the foliated vine design, which depicts vines and blossoms carved in shallow relief with flat surfaces. NRHP.[6]
|
Acadian House
|
|
Guilford
|
1670
|
Saltbox named after the Acadians who lived there following 1755 deportation from Canada. NRHP.[7][8]
|
Dr. Philip Turner House
|
|
Norwich
|
1670
|
The house was occupied by American Revolutionary War surgeon Philip Turner.
|
Nehemiah Royce House
|
|
Wallingford
|
1672
|
Saltbox, General George Washington slept here in 1775, once a residence for Choate Rosemary Hall.[9]
|
Leffingwell Inn
|
|
Norwich
|
1675
|
Important meeting place during the American Revolutionary War.
|
Elisha Bushnell House
|
|
Old Saybrook
|
1678
|
The Colonial property includes two contributing buildings, the second being termed the "Slave House".
|
Joshua Hempsted House
|
|
New London
|
1678
|
One of the earliest documented houses in Connecticut, now a museum.[10]
|
Parker House
|
|
Old Saybrook
|
1679
|
Early gambrel roof. The house remained in the Parker family until the 1960s. NRHP
|
John Hollister House
|
|
Glastonbury
|
1680[11]
|
Has hewn overhang with supporting corbels.
|
Thomas Wheeler House
|
|
Bridgeport
|
1680[12]
|
Located in Black Rock, an area with deep colonial maritime history. Core may date to 1644. 22" wide summer beams.
|
Deacon John Graves House
|
|
Madison
|
1681
|
Saltbox saved from demolition and fully restored in 1983 by a private foundation, now a museum in Madison.[13]
|
Ephraim Hawley House
|
|
Stratford
|
1683
|
Core is a 1+1⁄2-story Cape Cod cottage modified into a saltbox, hand-riven oak clapboard in situ in lean-to attic.
|
Ward-Heitman House
|
|
West Haven
|
1684
|
Historic House Museum. NRHP.
|
John Randall House
|
|
Stonington
|
1685
|
Notable for its restoration in the 1930s by early preservationist Norman Isham. NRHP.[14][15]
|
Samuel Harris House
|
|
Middletown
|
1686[16]
|
May be Middletown's oldest building. NRHP.
|
Loomis Homestead
|
|
Windsor
|
1688[17]
|
Part of Loomis Chaffee School, main house dates to 1688, with attached ell dating to some point between 1640 and 1688.[18][19][20]
|
Elisha Pitkin House
|
|
Guilford
|
1690
|
Moved from East Hartford in 1955, interior retains many original 18th-century features. NRHP.[21]
|
Jonathan Murray House
|
|
Madison
|
1690
|
Distinctive roof. NRHP.[22]
|
Meigs-Bishop House
|
|
Guilford
|
1690
|
English tea room in Madison.[23]
|
Putnam Cottage
|
|
Greenwich
|
1690
|
Also known as Knapp Tavern during the American Revolution.[24]
|
Bradford-Huntington House
|
|
Norwich
|
1691
|
Gambrel home of American Revolutionary War officer Jabez Huntington. Claimed Huntington hosted George Washington here.
|
John Whittlesey Jr. House
|
|
Old Saybrook
|
1693
|
Private residence. NRHP.
|
Comfort Starr House
|
|
Guilford
|
1695
|
Original oak clapboard in lean-to attic, residence.[25] Dendrochronology in 2014 confirmed a construction date of 1695.[26]
|
Avery Homestead
|
|
Ledyard
|
1696
|
Begun as a single-story, one-room house and later expanded to a two-story, two-room house by 1726.
|
General David Humphreys House
|
|
Ansonia
|
1698
|
Home of the first U.S. Ambassador, now a museum. Partially rebuilt in 1733. NRHP.
|
Hoyt-Barnum House
|
|
Stamford
|
1699
|
Early Cape Cod Cottage, Stamford Historical Society museum. NRHP.[27]
|
Stanton-Davis Homestead Museum
|
|
Stonington
|
1700
|
A working farm for the last 350 years. NRHP.[28][29]
|
Eells-Stow House
|
|
Milford
|
1700
|
Served as a hospital during Revolutionary War, now a museum.[30]
|
Shelley House
|
|
Madison
|
1700
|
Dated to before 1700 by J. Frederick Kelly. Chamfered summer and girts with lambs-tongue stops[31]
|
Pratt House
|
|
Essex
|
1701
|
Ell dating to 1701, according to museum site. Main block dates to 1732. NRHP.
|
Howd-Linsley House
|
|
North, Branford
|
1705
|
Chamfered summer beams and beaded joists. NRHP
|
Abraham Coult House
|
|
Glastonbury
|
1706
|
Saved from demolition and moved in 1972. NRHP.[32]
|
Clark Homestead
|
|
Lebanon
|
1708
|
Lebanon's oldest building. NRHP.[33]
|
John Glover House
|
|
Newtown
|
1708
|
Private residence. NRHP.[34]
|
Pelatiah Leete House
|
|
Guilford
|
1710
|
Oldest surviving house belonging to Leete family. NRHP.[35]
|
Raymond-Bradford Homestead
|
|
Montville
|
1710
|
Constructed by a woman, Mercy Sands Raymond, in the colonial period. NRHP.[36]
|
Strong House
|
|
Coventry
|
1710
|
Historic house museum. NRHP.[37]
|
John Tyler House
|
|
Branford
|
1710
|
Private residence, NRHP.
|
Buttolph-Williams House
|
|
Wethersfield
|
1711
|
Connecticut Landmark museum.[38]
|
Solomon Goffe House
|
|
Meriden
|
1711
|
Historic house museum, oldest building in Meriden. NRHP.[39]
|
Black Horse Tavern (Old Saybrook, Connecticut)
|
|
Old Saybrook
|
1712
|
Private residence. NRHP.[40][41]
|
Hyland House
|
|
Guilford
|
1713
|
Saltbox with framed overhang and flat plaster ceilings, now a museum.[42] Dendrochronology in 2014 confirmed a 1713 construction date.[43]
|
Keeler Tavern
|
|
Ridgefield
|
1713
|
Fired upon during the Battle of Ridgefield in 1777. NRHP.[44]
|
Norton House
|
|
Branford
|
1715
|
House was built in Madison and moved to Branford in 1940. NRHP.
|
Edward Waldo House
|
|
Scotland
|
1715
|
Occupied by a single family for over 250 years, now owned by the local historical society.
|
Pequotsepos Manor
|
|
Mystic
|
1717
|
House Museum with paired summer beams. Last house restored by architect J. Frederick Kelly[45]
|
Stanley-Whitman House
|
|
Farmington
|
1720
|
Saltbox with framed overhang style with carved pendants, now a museum.[46]
|
Kimberly Mansion
|
|
Glastonbury
|
1720
|
Home of political activists involved in causes including abolitionism and women's suffrage. NRHP.[47]
|
James Hazelton House
|
|
Haddam
|
1720
|
Late First Period house. NRHP.[48]
|
Samuel Huntington Birthplace
|
|
Scotland
|
1723
|
Saltbox home of a signer of the Declaration of Independence and Governor of Connecticut, now a museum.[49]
|
Jared Eliot House
|
|
Guilford
|
1723
|
A well-preserved example of period residential architecture. NRHP.[50]
|
Captain David Judson House
|
|
Stratford
|
1723
|
A fine example of early Georgian Architecture chimney and cellar date to 1638. NRHP.
|
Harrison House
|
|
Branford
|
1724
|
Saltbox with overhang serves as the Branford Historical Society museum.[51]
|