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Ropes Mansion and Garden

318 Essex Street Salem, MA

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The stately mansion was home to three generations of the Ropes family​ and is recognized as one of New England’s most significant and thoroughly documented historic houses.

In 1893, three unmarried Ropes sisters living in Cincinnati decided to move to Salem upon learning that the Ropes Mansion, along with a sizable fortune, had been left to them. The sisters conceived an ambitious plan to transform the mansion into a comfortable home for themselves, and make preparations for it to become Salem’s first historic house museum.

The rooms inside the home witnessed birth, death, friendship, celebration and mourning — all of which left a legacy in the objects the family kept and displayed. Filled with original furnishings, this Georgian Colonial house, which was reinvented as a colonial revival mansion at the end of the 19th century, contains superb examples of 18th and 19th-century furniture, ceramics and glass, silver, kitchenwares, textiles and personal objects. After a fire in 2009, the house was completely restored and reopened to the public in 2015 with a new interpretative experience. Today, visitors are invited to freely circulate throughout 15 rooms of the home, exploring the property at their own pace. Hands-on interactive experiences encourage guests to explore the house’s stories layer by layer.

The tranquil Ropes Mansion Garden was designed and laid out in 1912 by John Robinson. It is a Colonial Revival garden that’s open to the public 365 days a year, from dawn to dusk, at no charge. Dogs are most welcome. Nearly 5,000 annual flowers are planted at the Ropes Mansion Garden each year and the garden is maintained according to Robinson’s original notes, including guidance on perennials and annuals. There is also a beautiful historic greenhouse and potting shed nearby.

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