1915
Nutting Collection: New Hampshire: Portsmouth: Wentworth Gardner House
GUSN-195414
This interior view shows the Nichols bedchamber, or dining room chamber, of the Georgian-style Wentworth-Gardner House on Mechanic Street in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Mrs. Elizabeth Rindge Wentworth built the house in 1760 as a wedding gift for her son Thomas, who died in 1768. In 1793, Major William Gardner bought the house and lived there until he died in 1833. In 1915, Wallace Nutting purchased the house, restored the building, and added it as one of the five sites in his for-profit enterprise, the Wallace Nutting Chain of Colonial Pictorial Houses.
bedrooms
houses
Georgian (British Renaissance-Baroque style)
interior views
dwellings
sleeping and reclining furniture
beds (furniture)
rugs
black-and-white prints (photographs)
photographs
[Dining room chamber] / South west (handwritten)
DigitalID 000539
AccessID 758
Other identifier HNEDID-000539
Nutting studio number 9054
1 photographic print : black-and-white ; 8 x 10 inches
PC039
Wallace Nutting photographic collection, 1910s-1930s
1916-04-26
PC039.USNH.03.020
Museum Purchase
Copyright date listed as 1915 in Richard M. Candee. Wallace Nutting's Portsmouth, 59.
8 x 10 (HxW)(inches)
Portsmouth (Rockingham county, New Hampshire)
Nutting, Wallace, 1861-1941 (photographer)
black-and-white prints (photographs)
photographs
Wentworth, Elizabeth Rindge
Wentworth, Thomas, 1740-1768
Gardner, William, 1751-1834
Wallace Nutting Chain of Colonial Pictorial Houses
Mechanic Street (Portsmouth, N.H.)
Architectural photography
New Nutting studio number listed as 9054 in Richard M. Candee. Wallace Nutting's Portsmouth, 59.
Item
Nutting Collection: New Hampshire: Portsmouth: Wentworth Gardner House
Historic New England is committed to implementing reparative language description for existing collections and creating respectful and inclusive language description for new collections. If you encounter language in Historic England's Collections Access Portal that is harmful or offensive, or you find materials that would benefit from a content warning, please contact info@historicnewengland.org.
Loading...