This familial house history of one extended middle class Victorian household in North Andover, Massachusetts, ends as the last daughter prepares her home to become a house museum. When her long, long life absorbs the needed funds to do so, author Susan Montgomery helped all parties concerned to find homes for its many contents.
Maybe Wisteria House, Life in a New England Home, 1839-2000 could be written in some other corner of the country, but I doubt it. Thousands of objects, clothing, papers and ephemera found new homes in dozens of New England local museums and regional institutions better endowed to protect and interpret them for future generations. Wisteria House now guarantees each of those collections will be as well understood as they are protected.
This well written family story speaks both to those who think we have too many house museums and others who understand such places are a focal point for creating local history. This third alternative shows how solid historical research and curatorial analysis can place the past in new hands while still honoring the donor’s wishes.
— Richard M. Candee, professor emeritus, American & New England studies, Boston University
Susan Montgomery takes us on an adventure, centered on a house--a home--based on more than a century’s worth of everyday items. Wisteria House unwraps ‘a remarkable time capsule’ created by Sarah Moore Field when she made the decision to preserve the history of her extended family and their friends. Using the thousands of family pieces, including the most intimate correspondence, photographs and diaries, Ms. Montgomery paints a vivid picture of individuals living in or connected to the house. She successfully reflects life in small but distinctly American towns, here and across America, in this thoroughly engaging narrative. A must have for all students of material culture, social history, museum studies and anyone who enjoys ‘the story of ordinary lives, extraordinarily preserved’.
— Carol J. Majahad, former executive director, North Andover Historical Society
Susan Montgomery brings Wisteria House to life using the letters, documents, and artifacts of the Field Family of North Andover, Massachusetts. Sallie Moore Field is at the heart of the story born there in 1885; she died at home 103 years later. Miss Field preserved the family’s history, the home, and landscape intending it to be a house museum. This was not to be but a dedicated group of historians and overseers worked to preserve the family’s history and the house. This publication is that engrossing story.
— Kenneth C. Turino, manager of community partnerships and resource development, Historic New England and Tufts University, museum studies