Hallowed House

There have been several Salem houses—houses that are no longer standing—that have haunted me; I get almost desperate to find out as much as I possibly can about them and if and when I do I’m done. If they remain inscrutable, they remain with me. There is one house that I’ve been thinking about for years: I’ve learned quite a bit about it but not enough: I’m not sure I’ll ever learn everything I want to know (at least not now, while I can’t get into the Phillips Library!). I’m posting on this house today just so I can stop thinking about it for a while.

The house in question is (was) the Colonel Benjamin Pickman house, built in either 1740 or 1750 or sometime in the decade between depending on the source, right on Essex Street, adjacent to where the Peabody Essex Museum’s East India Marine Hall now stands. Its former site was the Museum’s Japanese garden, recently transformed into a construction site–which is why I’ve been thinking about the Pickman House: have the workers found any material remains? Or does it just survive on paper–and in pieces? This is a house that was famous in its day, and well after. It was designed by an English architect–previously unknown but possibly identified as Peter Harrison, who also possibly designed the Cabot-Low-Endicott House further along Essex Street and the “King” Hooper Mansion in Marblehead. Whoever the architect or builder was, all agree that it was the client, the Colonel himself, who had carved and gilded codfish affixed to every riser of the house’s central stairway in acknowledgement of the source of his wealth and position, thus inspiring that perfect phrase, “Codfish Aristocracy”. Its elegant furnishing were much commented upon by contemporary observers and diarists, as was its rusticated wooden siding, meant to mimic stone. There’s a long list of prominent diners at the house, including Alexander Hamilton: on June 20, 1800. The house was successively celebrated, lithographed, photographed, obscured, picked-apart, measured and drawn, and ultimately demolished in 1940 or 1941.

Pickman Lithograph Boston Athenaeum

Pickman collage

Pickman Cod

Benjamin Pickman Doorway Cousins

All representations of the Pickman House are based on the c. 1830 lithograph published by Pendleton’s Lithography which shows the house in its pristine eighteenth-century state (courtesy Boston Athenaeum); an amped-up Pickman codfish from Mark Kurlansky’s Cod: a Biography of the Fish that Changed the World; A Frank Cousins photograph of the enclosed doorway which Samuel McIntire added to the house c. 1800. 

We can’t see this famous house for most of its life, which only adds to its air of mystery (and vulnerability). Charles Webber and Winfield Nevins, the authors of Old Naumkeag: An Historical Sketch of the City of Salem and the Towns of  Marblehead, Peabody, Beverly, Danvers, Wenham, Manchester, Topsfield and Middleton (1877) inform us that a certain “Mrs. LeMasters” constructed several low shop buildings in front of the house in the 1870s, and so we only see dormer windows peaking out from above in all the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century views of Essex Street and the East India Marine Hall.  The Pickman family had moved west–into the residential McIntire District–away from the increasingly-busy downtown. A correspondent from the Philadelphia Inquirer who visited Salem in September of 1918 to see all the old storied mansions noted that the charming old house next to to the Peabody Museum has been all but obliterated by the shop front built out over its first and second stories…the gambrel roof, with its picturesque dormer windows, may still be seen overlooking the horrid shops, but all the inside fixtures have been destroyed. Progress is painful!

Pickman 1912

Pickman PEM PC

Pickman 1920s

20170924_180714

You can see the Pickman House dormer windows peaking out from above the storefront on the right of the two postcards and just above the P&Q shop, c. 1920s. These images were sourced for me from the Salem State Archives and Special Collections by Jen Ratliff–thanks! The house is completely invisible in the street- view photograph above from the late 1800s and the Phillips Library–it’s just behind the shops on the left, beginning with the “Importers of Crockery” storefront.

We do get to see the the unobstructed house (or what’s left of it), as a team of architects and photographers from the Historic American Building Survey went in to document it on the eve of its demolition–no doubt inspired by a succession of architects who had made the pilgrimage to Salem to measure and sketch this house, beginning with Arthur Little in 1877. As you can see, the storefronts didn’t just obstruct the house, they cut into it on the first and second stories. From that point on it must have been open season for house parts: an archway and a golden cod went to the Essex Institute, and all the other codfish went to a Pickman descendant’s Newport mansion: I think this one (where there is also a reproduction McIntire summer house) but I’m not certain.

pickman-house-parlor-arthur-little-early-new-england-interiors

Pickman House

Pickman HABS 1

Pickman HABS 2

Pickman HABS 3

Pickman HABS 4

Arthur Little sketch of the Pickman House parlor, Early New England Interiors (1878); William Martin Aiken sketch of Pickman architectural elements, 1883, Lowcountry Digital Archive; HABS MA-332 photographs and drawing, Library of Congress.

I’m not just interested in wood or architecture; I’m also interested in Colonel Pickman–but he remains pretty inscrutable too. Ultimately the only way to get to know him is through material remnants (like the silver he left to the First Church) or his family: his son Benjamin Pickman Jr. (whom I’ve written about here and here), was a Loyalist who left Salem during the Revolution but managed to easily assimilate into its social and political society upon his return–hence the dinner with Hamilton at the house! The more patriotic Colonel had died in 1773, so he doesn’t figure very prominently in the edited volume of his son’s diary and letters published in 1928. There is a beautiful portrait of the elder Benjamin by John Greenwood in the collection of the Peabody Essex Museum, but I’ve never seen it on display–nor the fluted archway and golden cod that is all that is left in Salem of the beautiful house that was once next door.

Benjamin PIckman collage

Colonel Benjamin Pickman of Salem, 1708-73.


13 responses to “Hallowed House

  • bradaustin

    Thanks for sharing this story and the images, Donna. An entertaining and enlightening read, as always. I imagine that the Dem-Reps in town made a couple of snide comments about the Anglophile Hamilton eating at the home of a Loyalist in 1800.

  • Glenn McDonald

    Thank you for the beautiful piece. I have always wondered what predated that awful Japanese pavilion.

    Does the Reverend Bentley have anything to add?

    Cheers,

    G.

  • Matthew Laramie

    Hello!

    I am so appreciative of your posts! As someone who is new to Salem and Beverly, I am learning a great deal from your historical perspective.

    I am also researching and planning to start a new business in Salem, a historic tavern tour. I’ve done a considerable amount of research to date, but I wondered if I could pick your brain a bit to see if you have relatable information.

    I’ve met with Anya at Salem Historic and she thought it wise to contact you.

    You’re most welcome to call me, 603-678-3443 and let me know if this is something you would be willing to do.

    Best, Matt

    Sent from my iPhone

    >

  • Judy

    I echo the comments above (first two sentences — and enjoyed the third !)
    Thank you for posting such a thorough visual account of such an important vanished house in Salem…. among others from its time and after !

    And thank you for including the image and notice about its owner, Colonel Pickman. I looked for an image of the portrait on the PEM collections website … Maybe they will post it someday. I’ll ask about that. (or maybe I’m just inept at searching….)

    Is there any evidence or indication that Peter Harrison was in Salem or knew the Colonel ? There is (from what I understand, though I may be wrong) no evidence for Harrison and the Hooper Mansion in Marblehead — or in Danvers (which is the Hooper house most often associated with Harrison). Both the Pickman and Hooper houses are a standard type for later Georgian style, c.1750, and, at least for Marblehead / Danvers, the attribution to Harrison is likely slim.

    If Harrison had designed everything attributed to him, he would have been busy indeed !

    It is truly unfortunate that the Pickman house is gone…. Thank you for resurrecting it, and all of its later incarnations, through your always thought-full and entertaining blog !

    • daseger

      Hi Judy, I can never find anything on the PEM’s website; I swear they’re trying to hide all of their collections from us! I took the Harrison attribution from John F. Millar’s book but maybe I should checked with my architectural historian friends first—you are right, Harrison certainly gets credit for designing a lot of buildings! In any case, I really just wanted to put what I know about this house out there in the hopes that people would add to or correct my information–so thanks so much for commenting.

  • Judy

    punctuation correction for the comment above — re: Donna’s informative post and the first comment …

    I echo the comments above (first two sentences) — and enjoyed the third !

  • az1407t

    Very interesting article. I’ve seen sketches and photos over the years of a number of fine Georgian and Federal period houses that once graced Washington and Essex Streets. As Salem grew, these were converted or demolished as this area became Salem’s commercial base. Fortunately, Salem never grew like Boston did. Otherwise, most of what we can still enjoy would be gone too.

  • Glenn McDonald

    Here’s one for Matt Laramie. From, I believe, the Salem Evening News many years ago. Maybe its in their morgue, which is hopefully searchable.

    The building on the Northeast corner of Boston and Grove Streets, (94 Boston ST) was an 18th century inn, and probably included a tavern. This needs some research.

    Also, the parking lot next to the Roasted pepper , 102 Boston street, used to be an ancient candy store (owned?) operated by Mrs. Ruby (Rubini) Spaneas, a very old and very nice Greek woman. I remember the old glass display cases and a very large coal stove that kept the place warm in the Winter. The candy shop was a reliable source of Smith Bros. cough drops on my way from Albion ST. to the Endicott School in the mid-fifties.

    Boy do I wish I had a photo of that building.

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