The L'Hommedieu House at Historic Speedwell
The L'Hommedieu-Gwinnup House is a late 18th-century, early 19th-century town house representative of the domestic architecture of the time. This house originally stood on Spring Street in Morristown on the lot owned by Nathaniel L'Hommedieu before the Revolution and acquired by John Gwinnup in 1775. The exact age of the present house has not been determined. Its original section has four rooms on the first floor, four bedrooms on the second floor and a basement kitchen. A narrow central hall, which provides space for the stairs, runs from the front to the rear of the house.
The L'Hommedieu House at Historic Speedwell
The L'Hommedieu-Gwinnup House is a late 18th-century, early 19th-century town house representative of the domestic architecture of the time. This house originally stood on Spring Street in Morristown on the lot owned by Nathaniel L'Hommedieu before the Revolution and acquired by John Gwinnup in 1775. The exact age of the present house has not been determined. Its original section has four rooms on the first floor, four bedrooms on the second floor and a basement kitchen. A narrow central hall, which provides space for the stairs, runs from the front to the rear of the house.