Nantucket In-Town Historic Home Vacation Rental
Nantucket Island, MA
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In-Town Historic Home
This 1824 five bedroom, three and a half bath Nantucket home has been thoughtfully renovated and beautifully maintained to provide you with a comfortable vacation retreat. Come experience the antique architectural features of an original Nantucket house while enjoying modern conveniences including central air conditioning and wireless internet. The house is located off Main Street just around the corner from the famous Three Bricks. It is a short walk to the heart of downtown Nantucket with its many restaurants and shops, Whaling Museum and Nantucket Harbor.
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This typical four bay Nantucket house is furnished with a mix of traditional and antique pieces to compliment the original woodwork and wide pine floors. The living room is shown at the upper left. The armoire in the living room has cable TV, DVD and audio equipment. Wireless Internet is provided. A bay window looks out to the spacious side yard. The front hall is shown at the upper right. |
The dining room seats eight comfortably. A large antique desk graces one corner. | |
The large eat-in kitchen, recently renovated, has a gas stove. The kitchen table seats six. Table linens, sets of dishes, glassware, and cookware fully stock the kitchen. First floor laundry room and a bath with shower are located in back of the kitchen. Bed linens, bath and beach towels are provided. |
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Large yard with mature
plantings and surrounded by privet hedge is shown at left. Adjacent to the yard is off-street
parking for two cars. On the opposite side of the house is a deck and brick patio, with grill, surrounded by hedges, hydrangeas, holly bushes and flowers. |
A Brief History of Four and Eight Gardner Street Properties:
Four Gardner Street, built in 1824 for Caleb Allen, is a fine example of the Quaker influenced architecture of Nantucket. The two and a half story, four-bayed front, with central chimney and cedar shingles graying naturally in the salt air, are the characteristics of a traditional Nantucket house.
Eight Gardner Street is a Greek Revival style building with pilasters at the corners and a pediment façade. It was moved from the front yard of 4 Howard Street in the 1800s.
William Bartlett, Paul Merrithew’s grandfather, left the family farm to live in town and pursue the life of a fisherman. He bought Four and Eight Gardner Street in 1904 to meet the needs of his growing family. Four Gardner Street was the residence. Paul’s mother, Lillian, was born there in 1907. She was the youngest of eight children. Eight Gardner Street was used for storage or rented through the years to serve as a shop for a tailor, the headquarters for the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, the neighborhood grocery store for the A & P (when the front was painted a bright red), and the meeting place for the Christian Science Society. Eight Gardner Street was converted to a residence in 1992.
Next to Eight Gardner Street, on the corner of Gardner Street and Howard Street, is the Fire Hose-Cart House, built in 1886. After Nantucket’s Great Fire of 1846, several structures like this were built around the town of Nantucket to house hand-pumped hose-carts to allow volunteer firefighters to respond quickly. This historic building, the last structure of its kind, was donated by Edith M. Bartlett (Paul Merrithew’s Aunt Ede) to the Nantucket Historical Association to serve as an exhibition room for antique fire equipment.
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