Wednesday, September 25, 2024

BRISTOL, RHODE ISLAND: HISTORIC HOUSES TOUR

BRISTOL HISTORICAL & PRESERVATION SOCIETY’S HOUSE TOUR 2024

SEPTEMBER 21, 2024

10AM to 4PM, Rain or shine

BH&PS: 401-253-7223, info@bhpsri.orgbhpsri.org, 48 Court St., Bristol, RI

The Bristol Historical & Preservation Society is excited to announce that its House Tour 2024 will take place on Saturday, September 21 from 10am to 4pm in historic Bristol, Rhode Island.

House Tour 2024 ticket holders are invited to tour 12 private houses whose age and styles span over 300 years of Bristol architectural history. Each unique house offers a glimpse of history and a story of Bristol’s past. Many houses are new to the tour while some have not been open in over 25 years. A few are all-time favorites that are a must to revisit.

“House Tour 2024 participants can expect to visit 12 private homes that show off Bristol’s impressive historic architecture”, says co-chair Janie Dauterive  Adds co-chair Larry Verria, “We are grateful to all our House Tour 2024 homeowners for opening their homes so that the public can learn more about Bristol’s impressive architectural history.”

Included on this year’s tour is the National Historic Landmark Joseph Reynolds House, also known as the “Lafayette House”, which was built in 1698. It is the second oldest structure standing in Bristol today and the oldest known three-story wooden house in New England. In addition to being the home of the Reynolds family, who were prominent in Rhode Island history, it is also where the Marquis de Lafayette based his Revolutionary War headquarters in 1778.

Another outstanding property on the tour is Seven Oaks, designed by New York City architect James Renwick, architect of Saint Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City. This stone Gothic Revival-style home, with turrets, roof, cresting and spires, was built in 1873 for the founder of the National India Rubber company, Augustus O Bourne, who later served as governor of Rhode Island. Gutted in the early 1990s by developers, Seven Oaks was saved and re-created on the interior by a succession of owners, who poured their hearts and souls into the house.

New to the tour this year is the spectacular DeWolf-Guiteras House, which was originally Greek Revival in style, but remodeled by its next owners, Ramon and Elizabeth Guiteras, into the Stick Style, complete with a water powered elevator (since removed). Today, the house serves as a wonderful example of how an historic home can evolve over nearly 200 years to meet the needs of various owners and time periods.

Also new is a Tuscan villa attributed to architect Russell Warren and built for lawyer, judge, and politician Jonathan Russell Bullock. Warren’s use of triple arches is apparent on this structure, and is as remarkable as the patterned slate roof. Fearing that the steeple of the neighboring Methodist Episcopal Church would fall on his house during a storm, Bullock sold it 1871. Ultimately, Bullocks’ fears did come true when winds from the 1938 Hurricane topped the steeple, but it fell on the church itself, leaving the Bullock house unscathed.

Advance tickets are now available and can be purchased at BHPSri.org. Tickets cost $55 on the day of but are $45 if purchased in advance (members of the Bristol Historical & Preservation Society receive a discount). A shuttle will be available throughout the day. For more information, please visit bhpsri.org. You may also call the BHPS at 401-253-7223 or email info@bhpsri.org.

The Bristol Historical & Preservation Society seeks to stimulate interest in the history of Bristol, Rhode Island, through education, research, and the collection and preservation of historic objects. Founded in 1936, the BH&PS headquarters occupies the former Bristol County Jail, an 1828 stone cottage with attached 1859 cell block. The building served as the Town and then the County jail, and as the home of the jailer’s family until 1957. It was acquired by the BH&PS from the State of Rhode Island in the 1970s.

The BH&PS’s newest exhibit is titled Play! and features historic and vintage toys and games from our collections. As viewers will learn, the nature of toys and play can be different when viewed through the lens of history, sociology, anthropology, education, folklore, philosophy, psychology, and even literature. This exhibit also explores how play was often different based on your gender, how play changes as we age and become adults, and features common leisure activities that were popular in Bristol—including a very special “Bristolopoly” that visitors can play for themselves.