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Dorsey-Jones House facts for kids

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Dorsey-Jones House
NorthamptonMA DorseyJonesHouse.jpg
Dorsey-Jones House is located in Massachusetts
Dorsey-Jones House
Location in Massachusetts
Dorsey-Jones House is located in the United States
Dorsey-Jones House
Location in the United States
Location 191 Nonotuck St., Northampton, Massachusetts
Area less than one acre
Built 1849 (1849)
Architectural style Greek Revival
MPS Underground Railroad in Massachusetts MPS
NRHP reference No. 05000931
Added to NRHP September 2, 2005

The Dorsey-Jones House is a historic house located at 191 Nonotuck Street in the Florence area of Northampton, Massachusetts. Built in 1849, it is known to have been owned by two former slaves with well-documented escape histories. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.


Description and history

The Dorsey-Jones House is located south of the village center of Florence, on the north side of Nonotuck Street a short way east of Maple Street. It is a 1-1/2 story wood frame structure, with a gabled roof and clapboarded exterior. It follows a plan known as "upright and wing", a common building plan of the period that was often used for millworker housing in the area. It is an L-shaped structure with a prominent front-facing gable end. The main entrance is in the rightmost of three bays on this section. A single-story ell extends to the right of this section, with an open porch across its front.

The house was built in 1849 for Basil Dorsey, an African American who escaped slavery in 1836 with abolitionist help. The lot on which it was built was purchased from the Bensonville Manufacturing Company, the silkmaking business of abolitionist George Benson. The Dorsey family lived in the house until 1852, when it moved to another Florence house. This house was purchased in 1854 by Mary Jones, the wife of Thomas H. Jones, another escaped slave and antislavery activist. An itinerant preacher, Jones was rarely present, and the family moved from Florence to Worcester in 1859. The escapes from slavery by both Dorsey and Jones are well-documented in contemporary papers of abolitionists and Underground Railroad operatives.

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