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Situated on a 330-year-old, mile long street, Historic Deerfield
preserves and interprets the architecture, artifacts and lifestyle of a
prosperous early New England town. The
extraordinary houses
with their antique furnishings, along with the exhibition galleries and
collections, comprise some of the finest examples of publicly available Americana in the United States.
Historic Deerfield was incorporated in
1952, to sustain the work of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Flynt, of Greenwich, Connecticut. In 1936, the
Flynts enrolled their son at Deerfield Academy, a nationally known
college prep school founded in 1797, located in the center village of Deerfield, Massachusetts. The Flynts were
amazed at the remarkable, but fragile, state of preservation of the old
village. With the encouragement of Deerfield Academy's Headmaster, Frank
Boyden, they began to purchase the old houses along the
street to carefully restore them.
Today, 13 museum houses, built between 1730 and 1850, and the
Flynt Center of Early New England Life display more than 25,000 objects made or
used in America between 1650 and
1850. It is the quality of this collection, the meticulously preserved 18th and
19th century houses in which it is displayed, and the old village itself that
make Historic Deerfield the New England that all travellers
hope to find.
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