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Winsor–Swan–Whitman Farm

Houses completed in 1750Houses in Providence, Rhode IslandHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Rhode IslandNational Register of Historic Places in Providence, Rhode Island
416 Eaton Street, Providence RI
416 Eaton Street, Providence RI

The Winsor–Swan–Whitman Farm is an historic house at 416 Eaton Street in Providence, Rhode Island. The farmhouse was built in 1742 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Winsor–Swan–Whitman Farm (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Winsor–Swan–Whitman Farm
Eaton Street, Providence

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.8432 ° E -71.4424 °
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Address

Eaton Street 414
02908 Providence
Rhode Island, United States
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416 Eaton Street, Providence RI
416 Eaton Street, Providence RI
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Nearby Places

Martin Hall (Providence College)
Martin Hall (Providence College)

Martin Hall, also known as the George M. Bradley House is a historic house on the upper campus of Providence College. The house was built in 1850 by architect Thomas Alexander Tefft in an Italian Villa style for Chief Justice Charles S. Bradley, a successful attorney who served on the Rhode Island Supreme Court. In 1926, the house and properties were purchased by Providence College. The house was given a wood-framed dormitory addition to its rear, becoming Guzman Hall, the college's first on-campus dormitory. It continued to be a dormitory, housing pre-ecclesiastical students, until 1962, when a new Guzman Hall was opened on land formerly included in the Good Shepherd property, which had been purchased by the college in 1955. After reconstruction in 2022, there were rumors of the building being renamed to “Morze Hall”. At that time, the house was remodeled to its original configuration and renamed for Saint Martin de Porres. Until 1994 the house was used as the house of the President of Providence College, at which time St. Dominic House, another house which was a part of the Good Shepherd property, became the President's residence. (This was done because the new president, Rev. Philip A. Smith, O.P., had previously lived in St. Dominic House and did not want to move.) After serving several years as a Dominican residence (like St. Dominic House had before), the house was used as the college's Office for Institutional Advancement, and is now home to the College's Mission and Ministry, as well as Information Technology. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.