William Pulcifer house, 34 North Main St., Ipswich

34 North Main Street, the William Pulcifer House (1836)

William Pulcifer was a dry goods storekeeper who built the combination storefront, office and residence building at 34 North Main Street in 1836. This gable-roof Federal-style building is the only brick residence in the Meetinghouse Green Historic District and one of few pre-Civil War brick buildings remaining in Ipswich.

From MACRIS, the Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System:

William Pulcifer bought this lot in 1836 (293:140) and erected the brick building soon thereafter. The building was called the “new brick block” in the 1830s and it was a beehive of activity. As Waters described the scene (p. 579, vol. II), “In the upper floor the Ipswich Register was printed, and Mr. L.E. Cole, a portrait painter, had rooms. On the street floor were several stores. Samuel Hale, under the startling caption, “Not Dead Yet”, announced that he would make a permanent business in Ipswich, and continued to manufacture boots and shoes “at the sign of the Golden Boot in the New Brick.”

William Pulcifer had a store here and sold broad cloths and satinettes, boots and shoes, and had on hand 5,000 Cape Good Hope sheepskins, “sumac tanned, and a lot of wool suitable for saddlers and upholsterers.”

Sources:

  • Philander Anderson, Map of Ipswich, 1832.
  • T.F. Waters, Ipswich in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, vol. I, p. 349, vol. II, p. 579
  • MACRIS, the Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System
Photo of the William Pulcifer house by the Ipswich Historical Commission, on the MACRIS site.
The William Pulcifer House about 1980

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