Mothers' and Daughters' Club House
Mothers' and Daughters' Club House | |
Mothers' and Daughters' Club House | |
43°32′10″N 72°21′19″W / 43.53611°N 72.35528°W / 43.53611; -72.35528 | |
Area | 0.1 acres (0.040 ha) |
---|---|
Built | 1901 (1901) |
Architect | Charles A. Platt |
NRHP reference No. | 82001697[1] |
Added to NRHP | March 11, 1982 |
The Mothers' and Daughters' Club House is a historic social club building on Main Street (New Hampshire Route 12A) in Plainfield, New Hampshire. Built in 1901 to a design by Charles A. Platt, it is believed to be one of the oldest clubhouses for women in the country.[2] The building, now a historical society museum, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[1]
Description and history
Plainfield's former Mothers' and Daughters' Club House is located in the village of Plainfield, on the east side of Main Street a short way north of Plainfield Town Hall. It is a single story wood-frame structure, five bays wide and one deep, with a pyramidal hipped roof. A kitchen and small woodshed was attached to the east (rear) end of the building, and the woodshed has been converted into an archives room. There is a trellised front porch, added shortly after the building's construction. The interior has a single large chamber, with five bays of windows on the side walls, and a fireplace at its eastern end.[2]
The building was designed by New York City architect Charles A. Platt and built in 1901; Platt was a summer resident of nearby Cornish, and his wife was one of the club's founders. The social club for which it was built was part of a social movement involving a renaissance of handicraft, in this instance predominantly involved in the creation of hooked rugs. The club's large workroom was used both for weaving, and for the final assembly of large rugs and bedspreads sewn together from smaller segments. Profits from the sale of these items supported the club and the participants in the creation of the goods.[2]
See also
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ a b c "NRHP nomination for Mothers' and Daughters' Club House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-07-08.
- v
- t
- e
- Central Business District
- Charlestown Main Street Historic District
- Lower Village District
- Monadnock Mills
- Newport Downtown Historic District
- North Charlestown Historic District
- Washington Common Historic District
- Acworth Silsby Library
- Backside Inn
- Blow-Me-Down Grange
- Charlestown Town Hall
- Claremont City Hall
- Claremont Warehouse No. 34
- Farwell School
- Little Red School House 1835 District No. 7
- Meriden Town Hall
- Mothers' and Daughters' Club House
- Plainfield Town Hall
- Protectworth Tavern
- Richards Free Library
- Richards, Dexter, & Sons Woolen Mill
- Sullivan County Courthouse
- Town Hall and Courthouse
- Unity Town Hall
- Burford House
- Capt. John Gunnison House
- Cote House
- Covit House
- David Dexter House
- Durham House
- Garber House
- Giffin House
- Isaac Reed House
- Janicke House
- Knights-Morey House
- Lear House
- Louis St. Gaudens House and Studio
- Nettleton House
- Pike House
- Purnell House
- Scranton House
- Seavey House
- Stelljes House
- Welcome Acres
- William Rossiter House
- Williamson House
- Windswept Acres-Powers House
worship
- Acworth Congregational Church
- English Church
- First Baptist Church of Cornish
- First Universalist Chapel
- Langdon Meeting House
- Lempster Meetinghouse
- South Congregational Church
- Springfield Town Hall and Howard Memorial Methodist Church
- Trinity Church
Entries in italics have been removed from the register.