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Emily Dickinson Museum

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592: 75: 535: 1206: 486: 95: 2159: 120: 427: 1429: 2171: 1703: 2148: 388:(1775–1838) built the Dickinson Homestead on Main Street, its grandeur reflecting his prominence as a lawyer. His financial affairs, however, were less secure, and by 1817 he had mortgaged the house for $ 2,500. In 1825, he mortgaged the Homestead again, along with other properties, to Oliver Smith for $ 6,000. In 1828, when Samuel Fowler Dickinson went bankrupt, Smith sold the mortgaged properties to John Leland and Nathan Dickinson, Samuel's nephew. 397: 509:
Hampson, and later his widow, Mary Landis Hampson – continued to preserve the house as a "time capsule" of a prosperous nineteenth-century household in a New England town, recognizing the tremendous historical and literary significance of a site left completely intact. In 1991, The Evergreens passed to a private testamentary trust, the Martha Dickinson Bianchi Trust, which began developing the house as a museum.
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architectural features as well as stylish white paint on the facades exposed to more public scrutiny. During his ownership, General Mack "enlarged the attic space by replacing the hip roof with gables, raised the roof line on the north and south sides, and added a second story to the wooden 'office'
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Guided tours of the Emily Dickinson Museum are offered from March through December. The grounds and gardens are open to the public, but the interiors of both houses are only accessible by guided tour. Specially themed tours change periodically. The museum also hosts literary events that vary from
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Emily Dickinson occupied the Homestead for much of her life. The longest absence was between 1840 and 1855, when the family's finances necessitated a move. Beginning in the 1850s she became increasingly secluded from outside contact, although the reasons for this are not entirely clear. She took
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The property included a 1.5-acre (0.61 ha) garden, which was tended by Emily, Lavinia, and their mother, and Emily often sent flowers along with notes to her acquaintances. A large barn stood directly behind the house to shelter the family's horses, cow, and chickens and provide rooms for the
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The longest-lived member of the family was Lavinia, who occupied the Homestead until her death in 1899. At that time, the Homestead was inherited by Austin's daughter, Martha Dickinson Bianchi. She leased the house to tenants until 1916, when she sold it to the Parke family. In 1963 the house was
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In 1833, persistent money troubles forced Edward to sell the Homestead back to Leland and Nathan, who in turn gave the entire property to General David Mack, Jr. Mack's family occupied the western half of the Homestead, while Edward and his family moved into the eastern half. They remained there
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to The Evergreens' landscape. His wife, Susan, tended flower gardens that were held in high regard by townspeople. The lawn between the Homestead and The Evergreens was carefully arranged with an informal distribution of trees and shrubs meant to suggest natural growth, a mix of local and exotic
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The trust's work led to discussions with the college over collaboration between the two on administration of their respective properties. These culminated in the merger of the two efforts in 2003, when the trust transferred ownership of The Evergreens to Amherst College, and the Emily Dickinson
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Next door, Austin and Susan Dickinson lived at The Evergreens until their respective deaths in 1895 and 1913. Martha Dickinson Bianchi, their only surviving child, continued to live in the house, and preserved it, without change, until her own death in 1943. Her heirs – co-editor Alfred Leete
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In the 1860s, Edward and Austin Dickinson planted a low hemlock hedge that spanned the street frontage of both houses. Edward Dickinson died in 1874; his funeral service was held in the Homestead. His wife died, after years of chronic illness and a stroke, in 1882.
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for Emily's exotic plants. He finished the house in an ochre and off-white paint scheme, one that it wore until 1916, when new owners removed all layers of paint through a sandblasting process and painted the woodwork white in accord with early twentieth-century
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Pursuant to Emily's wishes, her sister Lavinia destroyed her correspondence. She found the bulk of Emily's poetry in a locked chest in Emily's room, and immediately recognized the collection's significance. The complete works were first published in 1955.
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Edward Dickinson made extensive interior and exterior alterations to the Homestead in 1855. He built a brick addition for the kitchen and laundry on the back of the house, erected a veranda on the western side, embellished the roof with an
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As Treasurer of Amherst College (1873–1895), Austin Dickinson was also deeply involved in landscaping of the college grounds, cultivating at the same time a close relationship with prominent landscape architects Frederick Law Olmsted and
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house, and was probably the first brick house in Amherst. It was originally painted red to mask the color and texture variations of bricks and mortar. Subsequent changes to the house in the 1830s and 1840s introduced
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so they might meet. She did, however, tend the flower garden, which was locally appreciated, and visited her brother's family next door. She died in 1886, and her funeral service was held in the Homestead's library.
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The houses today are located at 280 Main Street, across the street from the First Congregational Church (constructed in 1739). The property is one block east of the center of town and two blocks north of
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In 2009 the plaster ceiling in the front parlor of the Homestead collapsed into the room. The building was open for tours at the time of the collapse but no injuries were sustained by visitors or staff.
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groundskeeper. Linking the two Dickinson houses was a path described by Emily Dickinson as "just wide enough for two who love," crossing the lawn from the back door of the Homestead to the east
1989: 1964: 1954: 1929: 1882: 1867: 1857: 1841: 1815: 2025: 2020: 1994: 1959: 1944: 1887: 1877: 2281: 1637: 2051: 2046: 2151: 1653: 1630: 385: 616:, The Evergreens was surrounded by cultivated planting beds and looked out to the west over a neighbor's orchard. Austin Dickinson applied the design principles of 575:
In 2004 the Homestead was repainted in its late-nineteenth-century colors to show it as Emily Dickinson knew it. The restoration also removed aging storm windows,
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year to year, including contemporary poetry readings and an annual poetry festival. The museum is a member of
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to interacting with visitors through closed doors, and did not travel unless necessary. In 1868 she wrote to
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purchased the western half of the Homestead for $ 1,500, and moved in with his wife and young son
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until 1840, when they moved to a nearby house on West Street (now North Pleasant), overlooking
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areas of failing masonry, and restored nearly 100 shutters and other architectural elements.
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National Register of Historic Places listings in Hampshire County, Massachusetts
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Participant describes the Museum's annual 19-hour Poetry Marathon event.
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National Register of Historic Places in Hampshire County, Massachusetts
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Museum was formally established to manage the recombined properties.
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colonial settlement of the area. Emily Dickinson's great grandfather
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Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts
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Interactive map showing the location of Emily Dickinson Home Museum
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My Wars Are Laid Away in Books: The Life of Emily Dickinson
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The Dickinson family had a long record of residency in the
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Historic district contributing properties in Massachusetts
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U.S. National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts
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Polly M. Rettig and J. Walter Coleman (February 6, 1975).
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and surveyed the lands around the area including today's
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specimens, and open areas where family members played
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List of National Historic Landmarks in Massachusetts
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In March 1830, Samuel Fowler Dickinson's eldest son
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History of the National Register of Historic Places
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Routledge. pp. 190–192. 887: 49:U.S. National Historic Landmark 1454:Hitchcock Ichnological Cabinet 1188:I heard a Fly buzz—when I died 1174:I like to see it lap the Miles 1047:Emily Dickinson Museum website 878: 869: 860: 851: 842: 816: 303:consisting of two houses: the 253: 1: 1602:Five Colleges Book Depository 1311:Dickinson Electronic Archives 1122:I taste a liquor never brewed 1010: 134:Show map of the United States 1195:There is a pain — so utter — 517:Architecture and landscaping 392:Edward Dickinson's residency 21:United States historic place 7: 2277:Museums established in 2003 2127:National Historic Landmarks 1303:The Emily Dickinson Journal 1285:Dickinson Historic District 1129:Success is Counted Sweetest 680:Dickinson Historic District 673: 492:of Emily Dickinson, c. 1848 459:Emily Dickinson's residency 376:was one of the founders of 350:Dickinson Historic District 241:Dickinson Historic District 10: 2305: 2122:Cape Cod National Seashore 1597:Folger Shakespeare Library 1251:Thomas Wentworth Higginson 1239:Lavinia Norcross Dickinson 1181:Wild Nights – Wild Nights! 1025:. 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Index

U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. National Historic Landmark
U.S. Historic district
Contributing property

Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson Museum is located in Massachusetts
Emily Dickinson Museum is located in the United States
Amherst, Massachusetts
42°22′34″N 72°30′52″W / 42.37611°N 72.51444°W / 42.37611; -72.51444
emilydickinsonmuseum.org
Dickinson Historic District
ID77000182
66000363
historic house museum
American
poet
Emily Dickinson
Edward Dickinson
Austin
Amherst, Massachusetts
National Historic Landmark
Dickinson Historic District
National Register of Historic Places
Connecticut River
English
Nathaniel Dickinson
Hadley, Massachusetts
Amherst, Massachusetts
Samuel Fowler Dickinson

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