Peak House Heritage Center

Peak House Heritage Center Our mission is to engage, inform and inspire visitors as they learn about this historic house. (Agnes Ord, The Peak House, undated article.) Seth Sr. and Seth Jr.

What Happened To The Peak House Over Time

Benjamin Clark, second son of Joseph and Alice/Alyse (Pepper) Clark, was born 9 Feb 1643 in Dedham, Norfolk, MA. He married 19 Nov 1665 in Dedham Dorcas Morse b. 24 Aug 1645 in Dedham, daughter of Joseph and Hannah (Phillips) Morse. In 1652 Benjamin, his parents, and eight siblings removed to Medfield, Norfolk, MA. In 1668 Benjamin, age 25, obtained “a gr

ant for a house lot ‘near the way as you go out at Nantasket.’ His house was on Main Street, opposite where Pound Street enters it…He was burned out by the Indians in 1676, but rebuilt upon the same spot.” (William Smith Tilden, History of the Town of Medfield Massachusetts 1650-1886, Boston, George Ellis Publisher, 1887, page 348.) Legend has it that the rebuilding year was 1680 and the spot was about 100 feet north of the present Peak House. This rebuilt house became home to twelve persons in Benjamin’s family though not all at the same time. Childhood deaths and marriages reduced their number over time. Benjamin enlarged his second home before 1713 when his youngest son Seth Sr. married Abigail Metcalf. By that date, all of Benjamin and Dorcas’ children had either died or moved out because of marriage. Joined then by his parents, Seth and Abigail and their nine children presumably resided over time in this enlarged home but not all at the same time. Again, childhood deaths and marriages reduced their number over time. died in 1756 and his wife Abigail probably lived in this second Benjamin/Seth Sr. house until her death in 1788. After deeding the house to Seth Jr. in 1743, it appears Seth Sr. lived there until his death in 1756. According to Tilden, Seth Jr. “came into possession of the place belonging to his father and grandfather.” (William Smith Tilden, History of the Town of Medfield Massachusetts 1650-1886, Boston, George Ellis Publisher, 1887, page 355.) When this 1680 house, in which Benjamin and Seth Sr. had all resided at different times, became decayed, it was Seth Jr. who moved a surviving smaller portion to its present location around 1762. (Ibid., page 348.) Abbott Lowell Cummings, a noted architectural historian, gave credence to the house’s subsequent 1762 relocation. “The existing foundation is eighteenth rather than seventeenth century in character which confirms a well-authenticated local tradition that the frame, of single-room plan, a story and a half high, has been moved to this site. It is of further significance that there is no chimney bay in the conventional sense, nor any evidence for its former presence. We may be dealing, therefore, with a portion only of an early house. If erected in the immediate vicinity the builder was probably Benjamin Clark who owned the land and whose original dwelling here was burned when Medfield was fired by the Indians on February 21, 1676… (Abbott Lowell Cummings, Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 1979, Volume 51: Architecture in Colonial Massachusetts, Page 163.) Today the Peak House is revered as an iconic treasure dating from Medfield’s early history. The house’s location beside the Commonwealth’s second busiest undivided highway is a far cry from the Clark’s era when nothing traveled faster than a horse. In 1975, the Peak House was placed on the National Register of Historic Places, an honor befitting its historical legacy.

Join us for Free Saturdays from June through September! Come by on the upcoming second Saturday, June 13th. Hourly sessi...
06/02/2026

Join us for Free Saturdays from June through September! Come by on the upcoming second Saturday, June 13th. Hourly sessions run from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Space is limited, so register your free advance tickets now at www.peakhouseheritagecenter.org.



History is coming back to life in Medfield!Join us at the Peak House Heritage Center on Saturday, May 9 for our 2026 sea...
05/01/2026

History is coming back to life in Medfield!
Join us at the Peak House Heritage Center on Saturday, May 9 for our 2026 season opener! Special guest and Medfield militia man Dan Gipson is bringing the American Revolution to life right here in town.
Event Highlights:
• Historical Demonstrations: Experience authentic Revolutionary War-era equipment and techniques.
• Traditional Craftsmanship: See live demonstrations of scrimshaw art on a soldier’s powder horn.
Space is limited! Free tickets must be reserved on the website to secure a spot.
Get tickets here: www.peakhouseheritagecenter.org
This is a great opportunity to experience local history firsthand!



Admission is free on select Saturdays: the second Saturday (May–Sept) and the third Saturday of October. Hourly sessions...
04/16/2026

Admission is free on select Saturdays: the second Saturday (May–Sept) and the third Saturday of October. Hourly sessions run from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Due to limited capacity, advance tickets are required through our website.

Only six (6) tickets remain for the Cider Press/Pumpkin Contest event on Saturday, October 18th. Book your free tickets ...
10/15/2025

Only six (6) tickets remain for the Cider Press/Pumpkin Contest event on Saturday, October 18th. Book your free tickets now for a most enjoyable time that day, taking a self-guided tour of the "Ancient House" and then pressing apples in an old-fashioned way. Be sure to talk with our re-enactors portraying Seth Clark, Jr. and his wife, Thankful Allen, from the mid-1700s.

Something for visitors of all ages. Choose your arrival time soon.

https://peakhouseheritagecenter.thundertix.com/.../245613...



Not many tickets remain for the Cider Pressing/Pumpkin Giveaway event on Saturday, October 18th. Book your free tickets ...
10/02/2025

Not many tickets remain for the Cider Pressing/Pumpkin Giveaway event on Saturday, October 18th. Book your free tickets now for a most enjoyable time that day, taking a self-guided tour of the "Ancient House" and then pressing apples in an old-fashioned way. Something for visitors of all ages. Choose your arrival time soon.

https://peakhouseheritagecenter.thundertix.com/events/245613?only_one=true



Just a terrific time with a highly-interested group...thanks so much for visiting this Medfield icon. You are welcome to...
09/23/2025

Just a terrific time with a highly-interested group...thanks so much for visiting this Medfield icon. You are welcome to come again. History matters.

During Medfield Day, September 27th, catch the stories at the booth of Early American Restoration, our preservation cons...
09/23/2025

During Medfield Day, September 27th, catch the stories at the booth of Early American Restoration, our preservation consultant and contractor for all authentic projects at the Peak House Heritage Center: Peak House Traveling Trunk, Elizabethan-style leaded windows, display cabinets and more. History matters.

Here's one wee lad trying his skills in landing the ball in the cup during the most recent visitor day. Book your free t...
09/19/2025

Here's one wee lad trying his skills in landing the ball in the cup during the most recent visitor day. Book your free tickets now for the next visitor day, Colonial Apple Pressing, on October 18. Visitors of all ages can join in. A limited number of tickets is still available. Act fast.
https://peakhouseheritagecenter.thundertix.com/events/245613?only_one=true

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347 Main Street
Medfield, MA
02052

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