site map - strawbery banke

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A B C D E F G H I J K L 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 CHASE HOUSE PATCH HOUSE ALDRICH HOUSE & GARDEN PITT TAVERN SHAPLEY HOUSE GOOKIN HOUSE SHAPLEY TOWNHOUSE HEIRLOOM APPLE ORCHARD WHEELWRIGHT HOUSE PEACOCK HOUSE CONANT HOUSE RIDER-WOOD HOUSE SHAPIRO HOUSE & GARDEN ETHNOBOTANICAL GARDEN NORTH SOUTH MARDEN-ABBOTT HOUSE, STORE AND GARAGE HOUGH HOUSE COMMUNITY GARDENS JEFFERSON HOUSE CARTER COLLECTIONS CENTER COTTON TENANT HOUSE YEATON HOUSE WINN HOUSE CHICKEN COOP VICTORY GARDEN JACKSON HOUSE ROWLAND GALLERY STABLE YEATON-WALSH HOUSE DUNAWAY/ MOMBO RESTAURANT SHAPLEY-DRISCO HOUSE SHERBURNE HOUSE & GARDEN LOWD HOUSE DINSMORE SHOP JONES HOUSE DISCOVERY CENTER TYCO VISITORS CENTER ENTRANCE EXIT GREENHOUSE PENHALLOW HOUSE WALSH HOUSE GOODWIN GARDEN WEBSTER HOUSE GOV. GOODWIN MANSION STOODLEY'S TAVERN EDUCATION CENTER VICTORIAN CHILDREN'S GARDEN WHIDDEN PLACE ATKINSON STREET MAST LANE HORSE LANE JEFFERSON STREET PUDDLE LANE PUDDLE DOCK Wheelchair Accessible Food Shopping Restrooms SITE MAP Jones House F7 | Family Discovery Center and play yard. 1796–1843 home of Joshua Jones. Built c. 1790. Lowd House I7 | Exhibition. 1824–1837 home of cooper Peter Lowd. Early craftsmen’s tools and trades. Built c. 1810. Marden-Abbott Garage H4 | Exhibition. World War II Homefront. Reconstructed outbuilding. Marden-Abbott House and Store H4 | Furnished house. World War II-era home and family-run grocery store. Built c. 1720. Patch House C2 | Private. Built c. 1820. Peacock House G3 | Private. 1-1/2 story urban dwelling. Built c. 1821, expanded c. 1880 and c. 1940. Penhallow House A7 | Restrooms. 18th-century home of Deacon Samuel Penhallow, moved from Pleasant Street in 1862. Built c. 1750. Pitt Tavern F1 | Furnished building. Revolutionary War-era tavern visited by George Washington, John Hancock and the Marquis de Lafayette. Built c. 1766. (NEW) Puddle Dock E8 | Site of Labrie Family Skate at Puddle Dock Pond, seasonal outdoor skating rink. Rider-Wood House C4 | Furnished house and exhibition. Early 19th-century home of English immigrant and widow Mary Rider. Built c. 1800. Rowland Gallery A6 | Exhibition space for the Museum. Special exhibits highlight pieces from the permanent collection as well as items loaned from other institutions. Built 2007. Shapiro Garden E4 | Recreated vegetable garden of 1919. Shapiro House E4 | Furnished house and exhibition. 20th-century home of the Russian-Jewish immigrant Shapiro family. Built c. 1795. Shapley-Drisco House K7 | Furnished house. Contrasts home life in the 1790s and the 1950s. Built c. 1795. Shapley House G1 | Private. 18th-century workshop/store. Built c. 1790. Shapley Townhouse I1 | Private. Built c. 1814. Sherburne Garden J6 | Recreated Colonial-period, raised-bed kitchen garden and orchard based on archaeobotanical evidence. Sherburne House J7 | Exhibition. 17th-century house construction. Built c. 1695/1703. Stable D6 | Private. Built c. 1890/1920. Stoodley’s Tavern D12 | The Lou and Lutza Smith Youth Learning Center serves as an education center for school groups and Museum offices. Moved from Daniel Street in 1966 to save it from demolition. Built c. 1761. Tyco Visitors Center E8 | Admissions desk, orientation film, lecture hall, café. Built 2005; expanded 2013. Victorian Children’s Garden E11 | A family teaching garden based in the Victorian era. Victory Garden H5 | Restored 1940s victory garden of the Pecunies family. Walsh Garden B9 | Late 18th-century teaching garden. Walsh House G4 | Private. Reserved for special events. Home of sea captain Keyran Walsh in the early 19th century. Built c. 1796. Webster House A11 | Private. 1814–1816 home of statesman Daniel Webster at the beginning of his law career. Moved from High Street in 1961 to save it from demolition. Built c. 1785. Wheelwright House I3 | Hands-on exhibition of life in 1785 and 18th century cooking demonstration. Built c. 1780. Winn House G5 | Exhibition. Late 18th-century home of storekeeper Timothy Winn, brother-in-law to Thales Yeaton. Architectural styles and building construction. Built c. 1795. Yeaton House G4 | Exhibition, “Port of Portsmouth” in the Montrone Family Gallery. Late 18th-century home to shopkeeper and tobacconist Thales Yeaton, brother-in-law to Timothy Winn. Built c. 1795. Yeaton-Walsh House G6 | Under Restoration. Built c. 1795. Aldrich Garden E3 | Colonial Revival garden created in 1908. Aldrich House E2 | Furnished house and exhibition. Victorian novelist, poet, and editor Thomas Bailey Aldrich spent several years of his childhood living here with his grandparents. Built c. 1797. (NEW) Boatshop H7 | Traditional wooden boat-building skills and programs. Carter Collections Center A5 | State-of-the art facility constructed to house the Museum’s important collections of furniture, ceramics, textiles, glass, archaeological artifacts, tools, and works of art on paper. Built 2007. Chase House B2 | Furnished house. Home of Stephen Chase, an early 19 th -century merchant. Portsmouth furniture. Built c. 1762. Chicken Coop H5 | 1950s reproduction with heritage breeds. Conant House A4 | Private. Ongoing restoration. Home of Aaron Conant, a stagecoach driver on the Portsmouth- Boston line in the mid-19th century. Built c. 1791. Cotton Tenant Houses F5 | Crafts demonstrations. North—Weaving, basket crafts demonstrations. South – Heirloom Garden Crafts Center, demonstrations. Built c. 1836. Dinsmore Shop H7 | Coopering demonstration. Moved from Dundee, NH. Built c. 1800. Dunaway House/Mombo Restaurant L6 | Features creative, internationally inspired cuisine. Built 1967. Ethnobotanical Herb Garden F4 | A globe-spanning exploration of herbs used for food, medicine, textiles and flavor. Goodwin Garden B10 | Recreated Victorian garden based on an 1862 landscape plan and Sarah Goodwin’s detailed diary. Interpreted to 1870. Gov. Goodwin Mansion D11 | Furnished house. 1832–1896 home of Civil War governor Ichabod Goodwin and his wife, Sarah Parker Rice Goodwin. Moved from Islington Street in 1963 to save it from demolition. Built c. 1811. Gookin House G1 | Pickwick's at the Banke museum store. Moved to this location in 1878 by Williams Cotton. Used as a warehouse. Built c. 1790. Greenhouse D10 | Victorian era hothouse from Wentworth By the Sea Hotel, featuring period plants. Hough House J3 | Private. Home of Thomas Hough, a ship’s carpenter in the late 19th century. Built c. 1750/1860. Jackson House J5 | Exhibition. Comparison of structural and decorative changes and a look at the lives of various residents of the house over a span of 160 years. Built c. 1790. Jefferson House K4 | Restrooms. Private. Built c. 1816.

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Page 1: SITE MAP - Strawbery Banke

A B C D E F G H I J K L

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2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

CHASE HOUSE

PATCH HOUSEALDRICH HOUSE

& GARDEN

PITT TAVERN SHAPLEY HOUSE

GOOKIN HOUSE

SHAPLEY TOWNHOUSE

HEIRLOOM APPLE ORCHARD

WHEELWRIGHT HOUSE

PEACOCK HOUSE

CONANT HOUSE

RIDER-WOOD HOUSE

SHAPIRO HOUSE & GARDEN

ETHNOBOTANICAL GARDEN

NORTH

SOUTH

MARDEN-ABBOTT HOUSE, STORE AND GARAGE

HOUGH HOUSE

COMMUNITY GARDENS

JEFFERSON HOUSE

CARTER COLLECTIONS

CENTER

COTTON TENANT HOUSE

YEATON HOUSE

WINN HOUSE

CHICKEN COOPVICTORY GARDEN

JACKSON HOUSE

ROWLAND GALLERY

STABLE YEATON-WALSH HOUSE

DUNAWAY/ MOMBO RESTAURANT

SHAPLEY-DRISCO HOUSE

SHERBURNE HOUSE

& GARDEN

LOWD HOUSEDINSMORE SHOPJONES HOUSEDISCOVERY CENTER

TYCO VISITORS CENTER

ENTRANCE

EXIT

GREENHOUSE

PENHALLOW HOUSE

WALSH HOUSE

GOODWIN GARDEN

WEBSTER HOUSE

GOV. GOODWIN MANSION

STOODLEY'S TAVERN EDUCATION CENTER

VICTORIAN CHILDREN'S

GARDEN

WH

IDD

EN

PLA

CE

AT

KIN

SO

N S

TR

EE

T

MA

ST

LA

NE

HO

RS

E L

AN

E

JEFFERSON STREET

PUDDLE LANE

PUDDLE DOCK

Wheelchair Accessible

Food

Shopping

Restrooms

SITE MAP

Jones House F7 | Family Discovery Center and play yard. 1796–1843 home of Joshua Jones. Built c. 1790.

Lowd House I7 | Exhibition. 1824–1837 home of cooper Peter Lowd. Early craftsmen’s tools and trades. Built c. 1810.

Marden-Abbott Garage H4 | Exhibition. World War II Homefront. Reconstructed outbuilding.

Marden-Abbott House and Store H4 | Furnished house. World War II-era home and family-run grocery store. Built c. 1720.

Patch House C2 | Private. Built c. 1820.

Peacock House G3 | Private. 1-1/2 story urban dwelling. Built c. 1821, expanded c. 1880 and c. 1940.

Penhallow House A7 | Restrooms. 18th-century home of Deacon Samuel Penhallow, moved from Pleasant Street in 1862. Built c. 1750.

Pitt Tavern F1 | Furnished building. Revolutionary War-era tavern visited by George Washington, John Hancock and the Marquis de Lafayette. Built c. 1766.

(NEW) Puddle Dock E8 | Site of Labrie Family Skate at Puddle Dock Pond, seasonal outdoor skating rink.

Rider-Wood House C4 | Furnished house and exhibition. Early 19th-century home of English immigrant and widow Mary Rider. Built c. 1800.

Rowland Gallery A6 | Exhibition space for the Museum. Special exhibits highlight pieces from the permanent collection as well as items loaned from other institutions. Built 2007.

Shapiro Garden E4 | Recreated vegetable garden of 1919.

Shapiro House E4 | Furnished house and exhibition. 20th-century home of the Russian-Jewish immigrant Shapiro family. Built c. 1795.

Shapley-Drisco House K7 | Furnished house. Contrasts home life in the 1790s and the 1950s. Built c. 1795.

Shapley House G1 | Private. 18th-century workshop/store. Built c. 1790.

Shapley Townhouse I1 | Private. Built c. 1814.

Sherburne Garden J6 | Recreated Colonial-period, raised-bed kitchen garden and orchard based on archaeobotanical evidence.

Sherburne House J7 | Exhibition. 17th-century house construction. Built c. 1695/1703.

Stable D6 | Private. Built c. 1890/1920.

Stoodley’s Tavern D12 | The Lou and Lutza Smith Youth Learning Center serves as an education center for school groups and Museum offices. Moved from Daniel Street in 1966 to save it from demolition. Built c. 1761.

Tyco Visitors Center E8 | Admissions desk, orientation film, lecture hall, café. Built 2005; expanded 2013.

Victorian Children’s Garden E11 | A family teaching garden based in the Victorian era.

Victory Garden H5 | Restored 1940s victory garden of the Pecunies family.

Walsh Garden B9 | Late 18th-century teaching garden.

Walsh House G4 | Private. Reserved for special events. Home of sea captain Keyran Walsh in the early 19th century. Built c. 1796.

Webster House A11 | Private. 1814–1816 home of statesman Daniel Webster at the beginning of his law career. Moved from High Street in 1961 to save it from demolition. Built c. 1785.

Wheelwright House I3 | Hands-on exhibition of life in 1785 and 18th century cooking demonstration. Built c. 1780.

Winn House G5 | Exhibition. Late 18th-century home of storekeeper Timothy Winn, brother-in-law to Thales Yeaton. Architectural styles and building construction. Built c. 1795.

Yeaton House G4 | Exhibition, “Port of Portsmouth” in the Montrone Family Gallery. Late 18th-century home to shopkeeper and tobacconist Thales Yeaton, brother-in-law to Timothy Winn. Built c. 1795.

Yeaton-Walsh House G6 | Under Restoration. Built c. 1795.

Aldrich Garden E3 | Colonial Revival garden created in 1908.

Aldrich House E2 | Furnished house and exhibition. Victorian novelist, poet, and editor Thomas Bailey Aldrich spent several years of his childhood living here with his grandparents. Built c. 1797.

(NEW) Boatshop H7 | Traditional wooden boat-building skills and programs.

Carter Collections Center A5 | State-of-the art facility constructed to house the Museum’s important collections of furniture, ceramics, textiles, glass, archaeological artifacts, tools, and works of art on paper. Built 2007.

Chase House B2 | Furnished house. Home of Stephen Chase, an early 19th-century merchant. Portsmouth furniture. Built c. 1762.

Chicken Coop H5 | 1950s reproduction with heritage breeds.

Conant House A4 | Private. Ongoing restoration. Home of Aaron Conant, a stagecoach driver on the Portsmouth-Boston line in the mid-19th century. Built c. 1791.

Cotton Tenant Houses F5 | Crafts demonstrations. North—Weaving, basket crafts demonstrations. South – Heirloom Garden Crafts Center, demonstrations. Built c. 1836.

Dinsmore Shop H7 | Coopering demonstration. Moved from Dundee, NH. Built c. 1800.

Dunaway House/Mombo Restaurant L6 | Features creative, internationally inspired cuisine. Built 1967.

Ethnobotanical Herb Garden F4 | A globe-spanning exploration of herbs used for food, medicine, textiles and flavor.

Goodwin Garden B10 | Recreated Victorian garden based on an 1862 landscape plan and Sarah Goodwin’s detailed diary. Interpreted to 1870.

Gov. Goodwin Mansion D11 | Furnished house. 1832–1896 home of Civil War governor Ichabod Goodwin and his wife, Sarah Parker Rice Goodwin. Moved from Islington Street in 1963 to save it from demolition. Built c. 1811.

Gookin House G1 | Pickwick's at the Banke museum store. Moved to this location in 1878 by Williams Cotton. Used as a warehouse. Built c. 1790.

Greenhouse D10 | Victorian era hothouse from Wentworth By the Sea Hotel, featuring period plants.

Hough House J3 | Private. Home of Thomas Hough, a ship’s carpenter in the late 19th century. Built c. 1750/1860.

Jackson House J5 | Exhibition. Comparison of structural and decorative changes and a look at the lives of various residents of the house over a span of 160 years. Built c. 1790.

Jefferson House K4 | Restrooms. Private. Built c. 1816.