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Updated Saturday, February 27: We had a great tour today.  Pictures below.


Private “behind-the-scenes” servants tour of the Gibson House. Thanks to Michelle Coughlin for helping arrange this.

From Michelle:

The Gibson House Museum is treasured for the story it tells about upper-middle-class life in Boston during the late-nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries. Its elegant wallpapers, imported carpets, and abundance of furniture, paintings, silver, and more reveal the lives of three generations of one family living in Boston’s Back Bay from 1860 to 1954. But there’s more to the story, and a special tour offered by the Gibson House features a rare glimpse into the lives of the home’s other inhabitants—its servants—whose “downstairs” experiences were largely played out behind the scenes.

More on the Gibson House, from their site:

Completed in 1860, the Gibson House stands virtually untouched as a historic house museum in Back Bay. In 2001, the National Park Service designated Gibson House as a National Historic Landmark. A unique and unspoiled single-family residence, it retains its kitchen, scullery, butler’s pantry, and water closets, as well as formal rooms and private quarters. Designed in the Italian Renaissance style by noted Boston architect Edward Clarke Cabot, the house is built of brownstone and red brick. The interiors are  filled with the Gibsons’ original furnishings — elegant wallpapers, imported carpets, an abundance of furniture, paintings, sculpture, photographs, silver, porcelain, curios, and other nineteenth-century family heirlooms. Visitors enjoy a glimpse into the lives of a well-to-do Boston family and its domestic staff.

The Gibson family story begins with the pioneering move of the widow Catherine Hammond Gibson and her son, Charles Hammond Gibson, from the top of Beacon Hill to the just-developing flats of the Back Bay. In the 1860s,
Back Bay was in the early stages of transformation from a malodorous marsh to the most fashionable residential neighborhood in the city. The manmade land of the Back Bay was the largest public works project of its time.

The Gibson House Museum exists because of the vision of Charles and Rosamond’s middle child, Charles Jr., a poet, travel writer, horticulturist, and colorful bon vivant. Charles was caught in a changing world, as families moved to the suburbs and left their townhouses to be converted into rooming houses, schools, and dormitories, As early as 1936, Charles Jr. decided to preserve his nineteenth-century townhouse as a museum. The furniture was roped off with gold cord, and guests were invited to sit on the stairs while sipping their tea or martinis (made from his own bathtub gin).

Charles Jr., the last of three generations to live in the house, died in 1954. The Gibson House was officially opened to the public as a museum in 1957.

When

February 27, 2016 at noon

Where

Gibson House Museum, 137 Beacon Street in Boston, between Arlington and Berkeley streets.

Note: Four floors of the house are open; there is no elevator.

Transit

Convenient to both the Arlington Street subway stop on the Green Line and the Charles Street and Park Street subway stops on the Red Line.

Registration is full

Note: This tour was limited to a small group and filled up in a few hours. Many of the remaining monthly History Camp outings for 2016 will be able to handle large groups, and some, much larger groups. To receive advance notice of these subscribe to the History Camp Boston mailing list.

 

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