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Jul 01 2026

America250: Stories from Home | The Kitchen Table at the Joseph Dewey House

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Two hundred and fifty years ago, someone was sitting at a kitchen table inside the Joseph Dewey House on South Maple Street in Westfield. The house still stands today, quietly watching over a city that has changed in ways its first occupants could never have imagined.

As we celebrate Independence Day during America’s 250th anniversary, I couldn’t help wondering what life looked like inside these walls in the summer of 1776.

We don’t know exactly who was gathered around that table on a warm summer day in 1776. Perhaps Joseph Dewey’s family was finishing the morning’s chores while a meal simmered over the hearth. Children may have been coming and going through the doorway as someone repaired a tool or talked about the crops. Like families in every generation, they were probably thinking about the everyday concerns of home—whether the harvest would be good, how the children were growing, and what tomorrow might bring.

On July 4, 1776, as delegates in Philadelphia approved the Declaration of Independence, the people living here had no way of knowing that their lives were about to become part of one of the most important chapters in American history. News didn’t arrive in an instant. It traveled by horseback, wagon, and conversation, taking days to reach communities like Westfield. Life didn’t stop while history was unfolding. Families were still tending fields, repairing fences, raising children, and preparing for another New England winter.

They couldn’t have imagined that 250 years later, we would still be telling their story.

Walking around the house today, another surprise awaits. Behind the painted clapboards on one side are massive hand-hewn timbers, still bearing the marks of the tools that shaped them nearly three centuries ago. Those beams remind us that this isn’t simply a historic landmark. It is a home that has endured, quietly carrying the stories of the families who lived within its walls while generations came and went outside.

Over the coming year, as our nation commemorates the 250th anniversary of its founding, I’d like to share some of the stories that unfolded throughout Western Massachusetts and Northwestern Connecticut. Some will introduce remarkable people, while others will explore homes that have stood for centuries, the roads that carried soldiers and supplies, and the quiet places where history unfolded far from the spotlight. Together, I hope they’ll remind us that the American story wasn’t written only in Philadelphia, Boston, or Lexington. It was also written in the villages, farms, meeting houses, and family homes that still shape our communities today.

History isn’t found only in textbooks or at famous landmarks. Sometimes it’s waiting in a house we’ve driven past a hundred times, without realizing that long before there was a Fourth of July to celebrate, a family gathered around a kitchen table there and unknowingly witnessed the birth of a nation.

A Little More History

The Joseph Dewey House, located at 87 South Maple Street in Westfield, was built around 1735 and is one of the city’s few surviving pre-Revolutionary War homes. Today, it is maintained by the Western Hampden Historical Society and serves as a reminder of what daily life was like in colonial New England.

One of the things I love most about living and working in Western Massachusetts and Northwestern Connecticut is that history isn’t confined to museums. It’s woven into the places we pass every day. The Joseph Dewey House is one remarkable example, but it isn’t alone. If this story sparked your curiosity, take a drive across the border to Granby, Connecticut, where several homes that were already standing during the Revolutionary War continue to watch over their communities nearly 250 years later.

Continue reading: Historic Homes of Granby, Connecticut: Standing Since the American Revolution

Beyond the Story…

If you visit the Joseph Dewey House, take a walk around to the back of the property. One of the original millstones from the Dewey family’s gristmill is still embedded in the ground, offering a quiet reminder that this wasn’t simply a home—it was once part of the daily work and commerce of colonial Westfield.

The house also isn’t standing exactly where Joseph Dewey built it. A little-known fact: In 1972, the Joseph Dewey House was threatened with demolition. Rather than lose one of Westfield’s oldest surviving homes, the Western Hampden Historical Society stepped in, relocating the house about 200 feet to its present location before carefully restoring it. Thanks to that effort, visitors can still experience a home that has stood since around 1735.

About America250: Stories from Home

America250: Stories from Home is an ongoing series exploring the people, places, and moments that shaped Western Massachusetts and Northwestern Connecticut during America’s first 250 years.

If you’d like to learn more, these are excellent resources:

  • Western Hampden Historical Society
  • Joseph Dewey House
  • Westfield Athenaeum Local History Collection
  • Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism – America250

As a Realtor serving Western Massachusetts and Northwestern Connecticut, I spend a lot of time helping people discover where they belong. This series is about discovering the stories that made those places home long before any of us arrived.

Written by Lesley Lambert · Categorized: Lesley's Life, Towns of Western Massachusetts, Westfield, MA · Tagged: america 250, historical homes, Westfield

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