CATALOGUE. 45 



Cabot House. Water color, by Ross Turner. Essex In- 

 stitute. 



House built by Joseph Cabot about 1748 showing good example of gambrel roof. 

 A fine illustration of the colonial type. 



Nichols House. Water color, by Ross Turner. Essex 

 Institute. 



Colonial house designed by Mclntire, local architect. 



Emmerton House. Pastel, by Ross Turner. Essex In- 

 stitute. 



House built 1817, and remodelled in 1886, shows good example of colonial spirit 

 In modern architecture. 



Roger Williams (Witch House) . Water color, by Ross 

 Turner. Essex Institute. 



Owned in 1635-6 by Roger Williams. Familiarly called "Old Witch House," it 

 being occupied in 1692 by Jonathan Corwin one of the judges in the witchcraft trials, 

 and tradition has it that preliminary examinations of witnesses were held here. It 

 is the oldest house in Salem or vicinity. 



Derby Mansion. Heliotype. Loaned by Mr. F. H. Lee. 



House built in 1799 by Elias Haskett Derby the eminent merchant. Present mar- 

 ket house now stands on its site. 



East Church. Lithograph. Loaned by Mr. F. H. Lee. 



Building in which the famous Dr. William Bentley preached from 1783 to 1819. 



East Church, interior. Lithograph. Loaned by Mr. 

 F. H. Lee. 



Pickraan House. Lithograph. Loaned by Mr. F. H. 

 Lee. 



Kuilt by Col. Benjamin Pickman , 1750. Still standing though defaced by shops in 

 front. It is said that the term "Codfish Aristocracy" arose from the fact that the 

 end of each stair in the hall of this house was ornamented with gilded codfish, Col. 

 Pickman's fortune being derived from the fisheries. 



Derby House, Washington St. Lithograph. Loaned by 

 Mr. F. H. Lee. 



House built in 1764. John P. Derby the humorist, and John Rogers, sculptor, 

 both born in this house. 



A corner in old Salem. Charcoal. Loaned by the artist. 

 Miss S. E. O. Oliver. 



View on Summer St. giving a characteristic bit of some of the old types of 

 houses now fast disappearing. 



Stairway in Cook House. Charcoal. Loaned by the 

 artist, Miss /S. E. C. Oliver. 



House on Federal St. owned by Capt. Samuel Cook, a noted sea captain. The 

 figure, winding the clock, is that of Henry K. Oliver the well kuown educator and 

 writer. 



