The Barnes Museum and Homestead
Christina Volpe
The Barnes Museum and Homestead
Christina Volpe
Victorian Era Treasures
Once the center of bolt manufacturing in the United States, Southington has been affectionately called Connecticut's "City of Progress." At the center of this progress was Amon Bradley, an industrialist and philanthropist whose family legacy remains intact inside the Barnes Museum. Beginning as a six-room Greek Revival-style home, the Barnes Museum was built in 1836 for Amon and Sylvia Bradley and was lived in by the family for 136 years. The opulent seventeen-room homestead remains fully staged with the family's impressive collection of Victorian antiques and more than one thousand pressed-glass goblets. Author and museum curator Christina Volpe reveals their unique collection of Civil War letters, family diaries, photographs and other historic treasures.
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