Pickman House

The Pickman House is located on Charter Street in Salem, Massachusetts, behind the Peabody Essex Museum. The house, built in 1664, abuts the Witch Memorial dedicated in 1992 on the 300th anniversary of the Salem witch trials and is also next to one of the oldest European settler cemeteries in the United States[1]. These properties form part of the Charter Street Historic District.

The Pickman House is from the (First Period) and is located in Salem Massachusetts on Charter Street, 1664

The house was restored by Historic Salem[2] in 1969 and purchased by the Peabody Essex Museum in 1983. The Pickman House is not open to the public.

The Pickman House falls into the category of American colonial architecture from the First Period. The style of the large central brick chimney is an excellent example of First Period craftsmanship.

The Pickman House, Back view that abuts the Salem Witch Memorial

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