Heisey House

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Heisey House
Heisey House in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania.jpg
Heisey House, January 2010
Location362 East Water Street, Lock Haven, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 41°08′15″N77°26′24″W / 41.13750°N 77.44000°W / 41.13750; -77.44000 Coordinates: 41°08′15″N77°26′24″W / 41.13750°N 77.44000°W / 41.13750; -77.44000 [1]
Built1833
Architectural styleGothic Revival
NRHP reference No. 72001113
Added to NRHPMarch 16, 1972

Heisey House was the first brick dwelling in Lock Haven, county seat of Clinton County, a city built along the West Branch Canal in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. Constructed about 1831, the building served as a tavern and inn in its early days, and the town's founder, Jeremiah Church, boarded there. [1]

Contents

Heisey House was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.

History

The house was built about 1831 by Dr. John Henderson of Huntington County as a brick Federal farmhouse. The bricks were shipped into town on canal boats. [1] Henderson was the son-in-law of local landowner John Fleming. Jerry Church, the founder of Lock Haven lived here when the building was used as a tavern. Roger Develing and his son John who immigrated from Ireland owned the tavern. After Church owned the house, Dr. William J. Henderson purchased it in 1852 and practiced medicine there. [2] The Heisey family owned the stucco-covered house from 1875 through 1960, when ownership passed to the Clinton County Historical Society.

The Clinton County Historical Society maintains its headquarters in the 2.5-story building, which it operates as a museum. Substantially unchanged from its mid-19th-century condition, the Victorian interior of the house includes furniture from that era. [1] Local archaeological artifacts are displayed in the house's ice house. [2]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "National Register of Historic Places InventoryNomination Form: Heisey House" (PDF). National Park Service. August 1, 1971. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  2. 1 2 "Heisey House Museum". Clinton County Historical Society. Retrieved January 28, 2014.