View Florence Griswold Museum in a larger map
Visit our Tour Destination: Connecticut page to see the entire tour of the state’s Save America’s Treasures sites.
The Treasure: The Griswold House itself is a treasure, capturing the changing roles of an elegant Connecticut mansion originally built at the peak of Old Lyme ’s prosperity as a maritime
center. As the Florence
Griswold Museum
received two Save America’s Treasures
grants, this is the first of two entries (the second will focus on the art
treasures within the historic house).
Accessibility: The
Florence Griswold Museum
is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 to 5 and Sunday from 1 to 5.
The Griswold House, designed by Samuel Belcher. Photo courtesy of the Florence Griswold Museum. |
The town of Old
Lyme went through a boom period from the American
Revolution through the 1820s. Located at the confluence of the Connecticut River and Long Island Sound, Old Lyme
established itself as a center of the coastal shipping industry, largely
through shipyards that built the great steamships that dominated the seas at
that time. When William Noyes decided that he needed an elegant mansion in the
most fashionable section of town, he turned to the architect Samuel Belcher, who
had a reputation as both a skilled shipwright and a master builder. The
house that Belcher built for Noyes in 1817 was a late Georgian-style exemplar of Connecticut affluence
and respectability.
A young sea captain, Robert Griswold, purchased the 15-acre
estate in 1841. At first, the Griswold family prospered but as times
changed the family failed to maintain its wealth. Old Lyme’s steamboat industry
collapsed as the shipping industry turned away from steam toward wind power. After
several difficult decades of financial struggle, Robert Griswold died in 1882.
He left the estate—and little else—to his wife Helen who now had responsibility
of caring for three unmarried daughters.
One of those daughters, Florence Griswold (1850-1937), would lead the
house into its next phase. At some point in the 1890s, the women began to offer
the estate as an informal summer boardinghouse, accepting payment from urban
residents looking for a bucolic summertime retreat. In 1899, the year that
Helen died, Florence
welcomed Henry Ward Ranger, a tonalist landscape painter, to their
boardinghouse. Ranger was enchanted with the location and proposed the idea to Florence that the
Griswold House might make a fine art colony. The fortunes of the house were
about to rise again…
The hallway restored to its 1910 appearance following the 2005-2006 restoration. Photo by Joe Standart, courtesy of the Florence Griswold Museum. |
Other Recommended
Sites: Like to explore artist homes, studios, and art colonies?
The National Trust for Historic Preservation offers a handy Historic Artist’s Homes and Studios search engine with
information on 30 important arts sites located throughout the country. Connecticut has
three: The Florence Griswold Museum (of
course), the Bush-Holley Historic Site, and Weir Farm National Historic Site.
To explore Connecticut life
long before the Griswold House was built, you can travel eastward down the
coast to Guilford .
The Henry Whitfield State Museum
dates to 1639, making it Connecticut ’s oldest
standing house as well as the oldest stone house in all New
England .
In nearby Old Saybrook, there’s a small museum dedicated to
another strong-minded woman. Katharine Hepburn called this beautiful section of
Connecticut her home, and the Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center
(affectionately called The Kate) is the town’s tribute to her. Its 250-seat theater keeps a
busy schedule and there’s a small museum within it that honors Hepburn’s many
impressive achievements on film and on the stage.
Tour America's History Itinerary
Tuesday’s destination: Florence Griswold Museum: The Panel Paintings
© 2012 Lee and Terry Price
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