
Florence Griswold Home: Artistry Encased in Georgian-Style Architecture
The Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme, Connecticut, has served multiple purposes since it was built in 1817. Designed by Hartford, Connecticut architect Samuel Belcher, it originally served as a home where its namesake was born in 1850, but then operated as a Griswold's Home School for Girls and eventually as Miss Florence's Boardinghouse.
The late Georgian-style house with its Federal-style features and surrounded by woods and the serenity of the Lieutenant River provided endless fodder for burgeoning 19th-century artists. As Florence Griswold explained in 1937, 'So, you see, at first the artists adopted Lyme, then Lyme adopted the artists, and now, today, Lyme and art are synonymous.'
The house and the region were known for a time as the Lyme Art Colony, and the house was its centerpiece. The house was filled to the brim with paintings by around 200 artists who gathered there, as well as ornamented with painted wood panels and doors.
Griswold lived there until her death in December 1937; the house became a public museum in 1947 and a National Historic Landmark in 1993. After a $2.5 million restoration, the museum reopened in 2006. The first floor is maintained as it appeared in the early 1900s. The house's second floor showcases a rotating gallery of the museum's permanent collection. On the grounds are restored barns and a restored artist's studio.
The home's parlor served as a gathering place for evening events: Artists sketched and played music on the harp or piano. A variety of seats, including upholstered and woven chairs and an ornately carved Victorian settee, provided ample places for guests to gather comfortably. The piano is set into an arched niche, while the window niches are framed in layered moldings and wood paneling. The decorative mirror is ornamented with a gilded scrolled pediment.
Joe Standart/FloGris Museum
The main floor's interior features a spacious central hallway. The wide arched and paneled opening is topped with a capstone that gives the hallway a classic, sophisticated appearance. Forty-one paintings by artists boarding from the late-19th to early-20th century adorn several areas of the house, including the hallway.
Joe Standart/FloGris Museum
A total of 38 individual panels by 33 artists are presented in the dining room, as well as a frieze over the brick fireplace's mantel. Artists staying at the Griswold house during the turn of the 20th century were responsible for the dining room scenes that depict nature, animals, architecture, and culture.
Joe Standart/FloGris Museum
The Florence Griswold Museum features lush English gardens with a wild array of various-hued perennials in textures and shapes. The flowering bushes and established trees fill in the area at the back of the house and surround the John & Kelly Bill Hartman Education Center. It was built in 1999 as a place to teach art and other creative endeavors.
FloGris Museum
Between the hall and the parlor, Florence Griswold's bedroom was a refuge from the countless boarders that occupied her home when it became a public boardinghouse. In the built-in corner cabinet with doors is a display of painted china by Florence's eldest sister, Louise Augusta. The polished wood sleigh bed coordinates with the multi-drawer dresser and claw-footed round table. Over the paneled mantel is an oil painting of a ship, and on the mantel is Florence's father's brass spyglass. Both memorialize Robert Harper Griswold, a ship captain.
Joe Standart/FloGris Museum
Situated on 12 acres, the Florence Griswold home is in walking distance to the Lieutenant River, which joins the Connecticut River. The river became a favorite subject for artists when Florence Griswold operated her property as public boardinghouse in the early 20th century. Visitors to the property can stroll from the historic house to the river by a maintained trail.
Sean Flynn/FloGris Museum
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