Name
|
Image
|
Location
|
First Built
|
Short summary
|
Alden House
|
|
Duxbury
|
1700 c.
|
A National Historic Landmark, dating to ca. 1700 via dendrochronology.[1][dead link]
|
Solomon Kimball House
|
|
Wenham
|
1700 c.[2]
|
Although the house is named for its nineteenth- and early twentieth-century owner Solomon Kimball, it was built by Thomas and Mary (Solart) Kilham (or Killam). The date of construction is based on a March 6, 1695/6 timber grant to Thomas Kilham by the town of Wenham, of enough pine timber to yield 700 boards.[3]
|
Hatch Homestead
|
|
Marshfield
|
1700 c.[4]
|
Purportedly the oldest continuously occupied house in Massachusetts.
|
Rebecca Nurse Homestead
|
|
Danvers
|
1700 c.
|
This house was built around ca. 1700.[5]
|
John Humphreys House
|
|
Swampscott
|
1700 c.[6]
|
|
Dickinson-Pillsbury-Witham House
|
|
Georgetown
|
1700 c.
|
The Dickinson-Pillsbury-Witham House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.
|
Parkman Tavern
|
|
Concord
|
1700 c.[7]
|
Cited source estimates date of late 17th or early 18th century
|
Nathaniel Felton Sr. House
|
|
Peabody[a]
|
1700 c.[8]
|
Date estimate by Peabody Historical Society, owner
|
Dustin House
|
|
Haverhill
|
1700 c.
|
[1]
|