Wright's Ferry Mansion, Colonial-era stone mansion in Columbia, United States.
Wright's Ferry Mansion is a rectangular limestone dwelling with a gable roof that blends English and Germanic building traditions of the colonial period. The structure sits in downtown Columbia and contains multiple rooms arranged around a central entrance.
Built in 1738 for Susanna Wright, an English Quaker poet, the mansion dates to the early settlement period of colonial Pennsylvania. The structure provides insight into how early settlers adapted their traditions to a new environment.
The house holds furnishings and decorative objects from before 1750 that reveal how a prosperous colonial family lived and what they valued in their daily life. Walking through the rooms, visitors get a sense of the domestic routines and tastes of the era.
The mansion is located on South 2nd Street in downtown Columbia and welcomes visitors during the warmer months with guided tours of the interior and grounds. The tours provide a full overview of the house and its collection of period furnishings.
This house stands as Pennsylvania's only Quaker dwelling that displays exclusively objects and furnishings made before 1750. This rare collection offers visitors a direct window into the material world of early colonial families.
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