
From the earliest times, the land along the south side of the riverbank was known as Turkey Shore, but no one knows why. In the mid-19th Century, it was given the “more proper” name of Prospect Street, but by the 20th Century it had regained its colorful original name.
When Roger Preston arrived in Ipswich, he first purchased a lot along the river near what is now the intersection of Turkey Shore and Labor in Vain roads at or near where the Nathaniel Hodgkins house still stands. Thomas Franklin Waters noted that “evidently the neighborhood did not prove popular” and by 1644 every lot had been transferred. The corner of Poplar Street, and the section of Turkey Shore Rd. from Green St. to Labor in Vain have houses dating to the 17th and 18th Centuries. In the early years, the land from Poplar to Green Streets along the hillside was farmland, originally known as “Appleton’s Lot,” although it seemed to change hands frequently. In 1770, John Heard’s rum distillery, which later became a tannery, was constructed near the intersection with Poplar Street. Hunt’s Wharf, later known as Dodge Wharf, was nearby.
Very few houses are shown in the stretch between Poplar and Green Streets in the 1884 Ipswich map. Land on the hillside and along the river bank began to be sold for development at about the time that ships quit coming into the cove to the industries on County Street. The Green St. bridge was constructed in 1880 as a response to demands from the residents on Turkey Shore, and wholesale development of a late Victorian neighborhood followed. Many of the current houses appear in the 1893 Birdseye map of Ipswich; construction of the new Turkey Shore neighborhood was almost complete in the 1910 village map.






67 Turkey Shore Road, the Stephen Boardman House (1725) - This house is named for Stephen Boardman, the son of Thomas Boardman and Sarah Langley. The wide pine board floors in the house are original, and 4 restored fireplaces share a central chimney.… Continue reading 67 Turkey Shore Road, the Stephen Boardman House (1725)
63 Turkey Shore Road, the Isaac Foss House (1870) - The Foss House is the finest example of the Gothic Revival era in Ipswich. The steep front gables on this home show the influence of a romantic movement in architecture inspired by medieval design, a departure from the classical Federal and Greek Revival styles popular earlier in the century. … Continue reading 63 Turkey Shore Road, the Isaac Foss House (1870)
59 Turkey Shore Road, the Elizabeth and Otis Glover House (c 1870) - Elizabeth Glover, wife of Otis Glover, inherited the property at 59 Turkey Shore Road from her father, Abraham Soward. She moved the old house off the lot and built this large Queen Anne house on the location. Her husband Otis Glover was in the Civil War from 1861 to 1864, and lived until 1903.… Continue reading 59 Turkey Shore Road, the Elizabeth and Otis Glover House (c 1870)
49 Turkey Shore Road, the Austin Measures House (1874) - Austin Measures’ Candy Shop was first located in a small building on North Main Street, and later on Central Street. This house was built in 1874. The low-pitched roof, window hoods and corbels supporting the flat roof portico are of Italianate influence.… Continue reading 49 Turkey Shore Road, the Austin Measures House (1874)
48 Turkey Shore Road, the Nathaniel Hodgkins House (1720) - The house at 48 Turkey Shore Road is believed to have been built by Nathaniel Hodgkins in 1720 on land formerly owned by Daniel Hovey. The gambrel roof indicates early Georgian era construction. A 19th Century rear ell was removed in 2022 and replaced with a modern but compatible addition.… Continue reading 48 Turkey Shore Road, the Nathaniel Hodgkins House (1720)
41 Turkey Shore Road, the William Howard House (c. 1680/1709) - Architectural evidence suggests that William Howard removed the 1638 home of Thomas Emerson and built the left side of the present house about 1680. The right side was added in 1709. … Continue reading 41 Turkey Shore Road, the William Howard House (c. 1680/1709)
2 Turkey Shore, the Heard – Lakeman House (1776) - Nathaniel and John Heard bought this land in 1776 and built the present house. Nathaniel sold the house to Richard Lakeman III in 1795. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, and has a preservation agreement with the Ipswich Historical Commission. … Continue reading 2 Turkey Shore, the Heard – Lakeman House (1776)
17 Turkey Shore, the John Edward Norman House (1895) - Capt. John E. Norman was lost at sea, only twenty-eight years old, leaving a widow and a young family. This house is presumed to have been built by his son, John E. Norman, 2nd.… Continue reading 17 Turkey Shore, the John Edward Norman House (1895)
1 Turkey Shore Road, the Burnham-Patch-Day House c. 1670-1730 - This house has a preservation agreement with the Ipswich Historical Commission. The house was built by Thomas Burnham in 1730 on the foundation of the earlier house he bought in 1667. The large ell on Poplar Street was added in the early nineteenth-century. Abner Day bought the house of the heirs of John Patch in 1814 and kept a well-known tavern.… Continue reading 1 Turkey Shore Road, the Burnham-Patch-Day House c. 1670-1730
24 Turkey Shore Rd. (by 1884) - The lots at 24 and 26 Turkey Shore were once a single lot, There is an unconfirmed tradition that the house at #24 was moved from “the other side of the River.” The first recorded owner of this lot was either Benjamin Grant in 1734 or his neighbor to the south, Isaac Knowlton. (View map).… Continue reading 24 Turkey Shore Rd. (by 1884)
15 Turkey Shore Road, a Queen Anne Classic - The house shown above is at 15 Turkey Shore Rd. The hillside on which it sits had previously been an orchard and was divided into lots in the late 19th century with a commanding view of the Ipswich River. View the 1910 Ipswich map. Queen Anne Free Classic houses of the late 19th and early… Continue reading 15 Turkey Shore Road, a Queen Anne Classic
Arts & Crafts Bungalows at 43 & 51 Turkey Shore Rd. - The identical homes at 43 and 51 Turkey Shore Road were built in the Bungalow Porch Style. This eastern adaptation of California’s Arts and Crafts movement connects the home to the outdoors with an expansive front porch.Further reading:
Thomas Franklin Waters, Ipswich in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Vol. II


