Widow Haviland's Tavern

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LocationPurchase St., Rye, New York
Coordinates40°58′55″N 73°41′5″W / 40.98194°N 73.68472°W / 40.98194; -73.68472
Area0.3 acres (0.12 ha)
Builtc. 1730
Widow Haviland's Tavern
Widow Haviland's Tavern, July 2010
Widow Haviland's Tavern is located in New York
Widow Haviland's Tavern
Widow Haviland's Tavern is located in the United States
Widow Haviland's Tavern
LocationPurchase St., Rye, New York
Coordinates40°58′55″N 73°41′5″W / 40.98194°N 73.68472°W / 40.98194; -73.68472
Area0.3 acres (0.12 ha)
Builtc. 1730
NRHP reference No.74001322 [1]
Added to NRHPApril 16, 1974

Widow Haviland's Tavern, also known as Square House Museum, is a historic inn and tavern building located at Rye, Westchester County, New York. It is a frame, gambrel roofed building with portions believed to date to the early 18th century, about 1730.

It opened as a tavern about 1760. Operating as an inn during the American Revolution under Dr. Ebenezer Haviland—a leader of local Patriots and Continental Army surgeon—it served both as a lodging for travelers and as a meeting place for supporters of the Continental Congress. John Adams and Samuel Adams (1774), George Washington (1789), and General Lafayette (1824) are among the well-known customers.

It ceased use as a public house about 1830, then was a private residence until 1903, after which it became the Rye municipal hall. It has been used since 1964 as a local history museum.[2] As a museum, the building is interpreted as a 1770s–1780s tavern operated by Dr. Haviland and later his widow, Tamar Haviland.[3]

It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.[1]

References

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