Governor John Langdon House, 1784
A National Historic Landmark
143 Pleasant Street
Portsmouth, N.H. 03801
(603) 436-3205
LangdonHouse@HistoricNewEngland.org
Directions
Open: June 1 through October 15
Friday through Sunday
Tours at 11 a.m., noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m., 3 p.m. and 4 p.m.
Admission: $6, Historic New England members and Portsmouth residents free
The grounds may be rented for weddings and other occasions.
John Langdon rose from modest origins to become a merchant,
shipbuilder, Revolutionary leader, signer of the United States
Constitution, and three-term governor of New Hampshire.
The house he built for his family expresses his status as
Portsmouth's leading citizen and was praised by George Washington,
who visited there in 1789. Its reception rooms -- of a grand scale
suited to ceremonial occasions -- are ornamented by elaborate wood
carving in the rococo style.
After Langdon's death in 1819, the house was occupied by other
leading families. At the end of the 19th century, Langdon descendants
purchased the house and restored it to its 18th-century glory, adding
on a substantial wing designed by McKim, Mead, and White to house
modern conveniences.
The
handsome garden, dating from the same era, features restored perennial
beds, a rose and grape arbor, and a pavilion.
There are two other Historic New England house museums in Portsmouth: the Rundlet-May House and the
Jackson House, New Hampshire's oldest house. Also nearby in the Piscataqua region are
Hamilton House, Sarah Orne Jewett House,
Gilman Garrison House, and Sayward-Wheeler House.
Directions: Take I-95 to Exit 7 (Market Street). Bear right after the
railroad tracks. Turn right onto Deer Street. Turn left onto Maplewood Avenue. Turn left
onto State Street. Turn right onto Pleasant Street. Langdon House is one block down
on the left.