The Historic New England season is closing this Columbus/Indigenous People’s Day weekend and as I am up in York Harbor, I went to visit one of HNE’s oldest houses (both in terms of sheer vintage and time under its stewardship): the Jackson House in Portsmouth, built circa 1664. This is an extraordinary house: I’m sorry to be posting at this time when you won’t be able to visit it until next June, because I’d really like to urge everyone reading to go. I had been in it before, but when I was much younger and couldn’t appreciate it properly. But now, wow. I always thought it was a saltbox: it is not. It’s a seventeenth-century two-story small square house which had an elaborate lean-to added a bit later, along with two additions on each side. It is also a lavish display of wood: certainly not from an American perspective, but from an English one, which would have been its builder, Richard Jackson’s perspective. When I was writing my first book, The Practical Renaissance, I was reading treatises written for carpenters and shipbuilders, as well as some more general agricultural pamphlets, all of which made me aware of the increasing concern about the shortage of wood in seventeenth-century England. All the first-growth forests had long been chopped down, so to come to North America and see all this wood must have been something. So for me, the Jackson House was just a great illustration of that abundance. Our guide emphasized this theme adroitly as she described the house’s framing, exterior and interior, and she also illustrated the construction impact of less-abundant woodland in New Hampshire by showing us the attic over the eighteenth-century addition, with its decidedly less-robust timbers. The Jackson House is one of Historic New England’s unfurnished study houses (like the Gedney House in Salem), so the emphasis is decidedly on construction, but we got to learn a fair amount about the family as well, who possessed the house until 1924, when William Sumner Appleton, the founder of the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (now Historic New England) purchased it.










Perfect 17th century parlor and east and west wings, with a patch of preserved wallpaper.
Appleton had apparently been obsessed with the Jackson House since his freshman year at Harvard, when he came up from Cambridge and knocked on the door. A pioneering preservationist and critic of “one property museums,” he began acquiring choice properties after the founding of SPNEA/HNE in 1910. Rather than stripping off the east and west additions of the house, he removed stucco and plaster to reveal its construction. The original property was extensive, fifty acres or so just across the North Mill Pond from downtown Portsmouth, in a neighborhood named Christian Shore. When I was growing up across the Piscataqua River in southern Maine in the 1970s and 1980s, Christian Shore seemed to me a drive-through area with delapidated old houses, but then suddenly appeared The Inn at Christian Shore and I started noticing all the beautiful old houses and now they really are all beautifully restored. Portsmouth is actually growing in this direction, with several hotels built in what were once vacant lots which divided Christian Shore from downtown. But when you look out the windows (replaced by Appleton, but in their original openings) of the house on its slightly elevated lot, you can imagine, and even sort of feel, the aura of its first century.









The replacement windows and upstairs, including some wood-carvings. I knew all about the counter-magical daisy wheel from the M.A. thesis on apotropaic marks by Alyssa Conary at Salem State, so it was fun to see it (a perfect example of how I didn’t “see” on my first visit as I have no memory of it). A watercolor and Detroit Publishing Co. (Library of Congress) photograph of the house before it became a museum.





October 13th, 2025 at 1:32 pm
Great post, Donna! Many connections to the 1668 Turner mansion, built of local lumber. You write about the 1910 founding of SPNEA — and didn’t Caroline Emmerton have a hand in the founding of that preservation org?
Whenever I tour the Gables, I point out the (original) attic beams and remind people of how highly valued wood was to a maritime power, also making people aware of how few old growth forests remain in New England. Exiting, we see a batten-style door reminiscent of the Jackson House door, although ours is a 20th C replica.
Someday we’ll see first period colonialism in a holistic way, so that the ambitions of the Europeans and the lives and deaths of the settled indigenous will have equal weight in the stories we tell.
October 13th, 2025 at 2:27 pm
Indeed, Emmerton was on the first board of trustees along with several other women, including Elizabeth Perkins from my hometown. But it was Appleton’s cousin Alice Longfellow who was the key inspiration I think, and she served as VP. Increasing obsessed with her.
October 13th, 2025 at 2:03 pm
LaDonna ~ really appreciate your overall and detailed photos of this important N E house – so special, indeed!
October 13th, 2025 at 4:03 pm
A wonderful article, Donna! I am in love with that beautiful woodwork!! So good to hear that many of these First Period homes are being rescued and preserved.
October 13th, 2025 at 4:23 pm
A particularly interesting topic. Years ago on a trip to England, with a desire to taste “the nut brown ale” of Robin Hood’s Nottingham. I visited the legendary “Sherwood Forest” and was amazed to see that it had been reduced to what amounted to a small park. The wood had been needed for homes and ships, they said. Recently, after visiting one of the logging areas of Florida, I’d begun gathering information about that business for a possible future article. On a recent road trip to Cedar Key, I’d seen the big logging trucks piiled high with pine and cedar logs.I’ll be watching carefully to see how Florida handles this!