The House

  • 105 Brattle Street

    105 Brattle Street

  • Northwest Corner

  • Stairway

  • The Dining Room

  • The Kitchen

  • The Library

  • The Parlor

  • Guest Bedroom

  • Blue Room

  • The Carriage House

NPS Photo/James P. Jones, Photography RI

The History of the Longfellow House

The Longfellow House was built in 1759 by John Vassall, a wealthy loyalist. In 1774, he and his family hastily abandoned their estate and fled to British protection in Boston on the eve of the Revolutionary War. Starting in July 1775, General George Washington used the house as his headquarters for almost nine months during the siege of Boston. During this time he was visited by Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, John Hancock, and other revolutionary leaders.

In 1791 the house was purchased by Andrew Craigie, the Apothecary General during the Revolutionary War. He added the side porches and extended the back of the house. He and his young wife, Elizabeth, became known for their parties. When Andrew died, he was deeply in debt, and Elizabeth had to turn her home into a boarding-house.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the renowned American poet, occupied the house from 1837 to 1882. At first, when he was a professor of languages at Harvard College, he rented rooms in the house. In 1843 he married Frances (“Fanny”) Appleton, and her wealthy father bought the house for them as a wedding present. Fanny wrote to her brother about the house: “...we are full of plans & projects with no desire, however, to change a feature of the old countenance which Washington has rendered sacred.”

The house was a favorite gathering place for many prominent philosophers and writers, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Charles Dickens. Longfellow’s descendants preserved the house and the poet’s furnishings and collections until 1972, when they presented them to the nation. The Longfellow House–Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site is now maintained by the National Park Service.

Downstairs the house is much as it was in Longfellow’s time and offers an exceptional glimpse of intellectual life in the 19th century. Yet we can also imagine the 18th-century visitors to the house, conferring with General Washington in his office. The collections, extensive archives, and historic grounds make this house a unique repository of American history.

 Visitor Information for the Longfellow House–Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site

  • Visit The Site

    Visit The Site

    Stay up-to-date with the happenings at Longfellow House-Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site.

    LONG Building & Grounds Photograph Collection

  • The Garden

    The Garden

    The garden at the Longfellow House–Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site is one of the Friend’s finest contributions to the house.

    NPS Photo

  • Conservation

    Conservation

    Support our Annual Fundraising Appeal to preserve the contents of the house.

    NPS Photo/James P. Jones, Photography RI