The National Trust for Historic Preservation defines heritage tourism as “traveling to experience the places that authentically represent the stories and people of the past and present.” The historic neighborhoods of Meeting House Green, High Street, the East End, and the South Green offer well-preserved streetscapes of 17th to 20th century homes. Walking tours of historic Ipswich are led by local historian Gordon Harris, who tells the stories of the town’s historic houses and the people who lived in them. The calendar below also includes the Ipswich Museum Sunday Strolls.
Scheduled, group & family tours
Tours are scheduled during the warmer months, and can be joined through open signup. View the tour calendar above. The charge for scheduled tours is $10 per person,
Tours by request are minimum $100 for a requested group or family tour. The charge for custom and genealogy tours is $150 for the group, regardless of size. View tour choices below.
TO RESERVE: Email Ipswich historian Gordon Harris at gordonharris2@gmail.com or call / text (978) 979-6598. Please indicate which of the tours below you are requesting, and a way to contact you,
Walking tour from Meeting House Green
This is our most popular tour, and begins at Meeting House Green. It visits North Main Street and the East End (East, Summer, Water, and County Streets), and includes views of First Period houses and the River. The distance is about 1.2 miles and generally takes an hour and a half.
Start location: The garden across from the Ipswich Public Library, 25 N Main St. View at Google Maps.
Walking tours from the Ipswich Visitor Center
Two-hour tour: This comprehensive historic Ipswich tour touches on the South Green, and follows the River to Water, Summer, County East Streets, Meeting House Green, North Main and South Main Streets, with a total distance of 1.5 miles. This tour takes a full two hours, and is designed for participants who can walk at a faster pace.
South End tour: This tour includes the South Green Historic District, the exterior of the Whipple House, the Old South Cemetery and parts of South Main Street. This leisurely tour takes a full hour.
Start location: In front of the Ipswich Visitor Center at 36 South Main St. View location.
Tour of the Old North Burying Ground
The Old North Burying Ground has some of the oldest gravestones in New England dating back to the late 17th Century, which are considered to be early American folk art. This leisurely walk in the Old North Burying Ground in Ipswich includes up to a hundred tombstones carved between 1673 and the late 1700s. Ipswich historian Gordon Harris shares the stories of the interred, and tells where their houses still stand. Carvings include the death heads of William Mumford, the Essex/Merrimac style of John Hartshorne and the Leighton family, and the elaborate gravestones carved by the Park family. We visit the tombstones of the town’s earliest and most influential families, as well as other individual or family tombstones by request.
This tour is conducted in the late afternoon in the spring and fall when the position of the sun casts shadows that make the inscriptions easier to read. Group size for each tour will be limited to about a dozen people.
Duration: 1 hr. +
Start Location: Front gate at the Ipswich Old North Burying Ground at 63 High St. Limited parking is available on High St., but additional parking is usually available at the Payne School at Lord Square.
Reserve a private tour
To request group or family tours, please email gordonharris2@gmail.com or call / text (978) 979-6598. Please indicate which tour you are requesting, the number in your group and provide your email address. . The charge for private standard tours is $100 for the group, regardless of size.
Custom ancestry and architectural tours by request
Ipswich is the country’s best-preserved Puritan town, and its residents have been the proud custodians of its history. Many people trace their roots back through several generations to Ipswich, one of the earliest towns in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Local historian Gordon Harris leads customized tours for people wishing to “walk in the footsteps of their forefathers,” in which we visit the neighborhoods, houses and gravestones of early settlers and their descendants. Custom tours were recently provided for descendants of Isaac Cummings, William Fellows, Reginald Foster, William Story, Richard Kimball, and John and Judith Perkins.
To reserve: Email Gordon Harris at gordonharris2@gmail.com or call / text (978) 979-6598. Please indicate your ancestry or architectural interest, and a way to contact you. The charge for private custom tours is $150 for the group, regardless of size.
Self-guided tours: Download a comprehensive 4-mile tour of historic Ipswich as a PDF document

If you have a chance, take Gordon’s tour! Even as an Ipswich resident, I learned so much about our town and our history. Take the tour, you will be glad you did!
This is one of the best walking tours I’ve been on. Gordon’s knowledge of the history of Ipswich allowed us to understand the daily life of Ipswich resdents from the time the town was established through the Revolutionary War and beyond. We learned things the history books omit. It is worth your time to take this tour!
Great job, Gordon! Thanks for all your work on this.
Fantastic !
My mom’s family has been in Ipswich and Rowley since the Great Migration and we lived there back in the early 70s. I need to head up that way and take this tour.
As a descendent of early pioneer Isaac Cummings, it was a special moment to be standing on land he owned as his life in Ipswich was described. Gordon made history come alive for a tour bus of descendents. Thank you Gordon.
Regarding the Walking Tours – highly recommended! If you want to learn why they built the way they did, Gordon knows his stuff. These people were practical, orderly and committed. They had town rules for building and for respecting the land. To top it off, seeing a home that was built by, or belonged to, your own ancestor is really exciting. I love this town, and I’m so thankful it has been preserved. Thanks to Ipswich and all those who have worked, and continue to work, for this amazing history.
Annie , Do you know when your family came over. “our” Kimball ancestors came in 1634 , Richard & family came from Suffolk ,England and he was a wheelwright–just curious -kevin
Mr. Harris was kind enough to arrange a private tour for me and my father. We walked for hours through Ipswich — we were given the option to drive but declined — as Mr. Harris gave us an enthralling orientation to Ipswich history. He took us to numerous sites of note to the Fellows family and expounded some of the reasons for their importance. I encourage anyone interested in Ipswich to schedule a tour with Mr. Harris; it is a real treat to hear someone discourse avidly and expertly on a subject about which he is passionate, especially if the fate of one’s family is tied into that subject.
We had a delightful, informative, entertaining walking tour of Ipswich. Gordon had the history, humor and time to do it justice. Great take!
Thank you Gordon, for the great tour of Ipswich on Aug. 4th. With Daniel Hovey, the immigrant, being my 9th great-grandfather, and us being the only ones on the tour that day, you were able to spend a little more time on various Hovey homes around town. And yes, I think we did find the original site of Daniel’s house on Tansey Lane. It is a long trip from Arizona, but we will be back, very soon, hw hope. Thank you again for making the history come alive. It was a great day for both of us.
I went on a tour with Mr. Harris this July. As one whose family is derived from Ipswich but who had never visited, it was a true privelege to hear Mr. Harris speak with passion and erudition on the history of a town that is now very dear to me. Those with even the faintest interest in history should avail themselves of the opportunity to hear a real authority on Ipswich by scheduling a tour.
Just spent a lovely afternoon on a historic walking tour, narrated by Gordon Harris. This is a must for every resident. You will be filled with pride as a result of your enriched understanding of the role our great town and it’s citizens have played in American history. You will also gain a perspective of how history impacts current issues, such a town planning and development. Gordon’s passion for history and research, is our win, as he literally is able to answer all questions. His gift as a storyteller, makes the experience one to remember.
My husband and I took a Gordon tour in Sept. 2019 and it was wonderful. If I lived closer, I would do it again. He is an excellent guide and has a wonderful knowledge of the town of Ipswich.
A friend and I took the historic tour yesterday and enjoyed it very much.
Mr. Harris’ knowledge of Ipswich was astounding and much to our
benefit as was, his friendly ease of delivery.
Thank you also to the owners of the John Wesley Dow house
for welcoming us into their home which they have maintained
as faithfully as humanly possible to the period.
I am a descendent of the CALDWELL’s. Is this tour offered year round? Would love to make arrangements to take the tour in the Fall 2022. I’m from Colorado.
I lead open signup tours only occasionally, but as long as the weather is reasonably comfortable I am available to provide a custom tour at your request. There’s a lot of Caldwell history in Ipswich. https://historicipswich.org/?s=caldwell
One of the most informative items I have is The Essex Genealogist Volume 14 1994 pages 172, 173 by Ann Dobbs Touhy published and printed and available.
Who was Philip Call of Amesbury, Husband of Sarah Trussell?
In this article you will learn about Philip and Mary Smith Call of Ipswich, Ma and their son, Philip Call and his illegitimate son Philip Call, whose mother is Elizabeth Colby.
Later she married Ephraim Weed.
There are 7 Philip Calls in a row and I hail from the first 4.