The Clement Weaver–Daniel Howland House is a historic stone-ender timber frame house built in 1679. This rare example of primitive 17th-century architecture is located at 125 Howland Road in East Greenwich, Rhode Island. It is the oldest documented dwelling house in Kent County and the second oldest home in Rhode Island. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.
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| - Clement Weaver–Daniel Howland House (en)
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| - The Clement Weaver–Daniel Howland House is a historic stone-ender timber frame house built in 1679. This rare example of primitive 17th-century architecture is located at 125 Howland Road in East Greenwich, Rhode Island. It is the oldest documented dwelling house in Kent County and the second oldest home in Rhode Island. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. (en)
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| - Clement Weaver–Daniel Howland House (en)
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| - Clement Weaver–Daniel Howland House (en)
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| - Norman Isham; Larry Schneider (en)
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| - Traditional saltbox design (en)
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| - House pictured in 2009 from Howland Road (en)
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| - Clement Weaver House, 125 Howland Road, East Greenwich, Kent County, RI (en)
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| - 41.65888888888889 -71.47694444444444
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| - The Clement Weaver–Daniel Howland House is a historic stone-ender timber frame house built in 1679. This rare example of primitive 17th-century architecture is located at 125 Howland Road in East Greenwich, Rhode Island. It is the oldest documented dwelling house in Kent County and the second oldest home in Rhode Island. Clement Weaver, a native of Newport, Rhode Island, built the house in 1679, after fighting in King Philip's War. His descendants sold the house to Daniel Howland in 1748. Daniel Howland was a grandchild of Henry Howland, who arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1624. Henry was the younger brother of John Howland, one of the original Mayflower Pilgrims of 1620. The house was included in the Historic American Buildings Survey, the first national preservation program, begun in 1933 to document America's architectural heritage. Several years later, Norman Isham, a prominent architect and professor at Brown University, began a comprehensive restoration of the house. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. (en)
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