Tag: Parsippany Historical and Preservation Society

Parsippany Historical and Preservation Society/Bowlsby-DeGelleke House                             320 Baldwin Road                                                Parsippany, NJ 07054

Parsippany Historical and Preservation Society/Bowlsby-DeGelleke House 320 Baldwin Road Parsippany, NJ 07054

Parsippany Historical and Preservation Society/Bowlsby-DeGelleke House

320 Baldwin Road

Parsippany, NJ 07054

My review on TripAdvisor:

The Bowlsby/DeGelleke House at 320 Baldwin Avenue

The History of the Parsippany Historical and Preservation Society:

(from the Society website)

The Bowlsby / DeGelleke House is a one and a half story, clapboard-sided farmhouse set on a stone foundation. The house was built by George Bowlsby, Jr., c.1790. Originally constructed as a 3-bay façade, an 1819 2-bay addition to the right of the door resulted in a central entrance appearance. The porch was constructed in the Greek Revival style in the 1850 renovation.

A center hallway runs from the front door to the rear door of the house and contains a mid- Victorian open staircase to the second floor and stairs to the basement. On either side of the hallway are two interconnecting rooms. The left (west) side contains a front parlor with a simplified Greek Revival fireplace and a small back room. The right (east) side of the house contains a dining room and a kitchen. Original floorboards remain, with a replacement floor in the kitchen.

Three second floor bedrooms were added when enlarged in 1819. In c.1920, walls were added to create two more bedrooms. An existing front bedroom was changed to a bathroom. The kitchen was also modernized, but still utilized a hand water pump from a cistern in the cellar.

In 1977, the house was purchased by the Township from the estate of Alethea DeGelleke, to be used as The Parsippany Historical Museum. In 1978, the building was added to the State and National Historic Registers. Restoration was completed in 2008 with grants from the Morris County Historic Preservation Trust and the Township’s Open Space Program.

The historic marker for the house

Mission Statement

(from the Society website)

The purposes of the Parsippany-Troy Hills Historical and Preservation Society are to:

*Encourage an appreciation for, and an understanding of, the history of the Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills by holding meetings at which historical lectures, entertainments, discussions, and other programs are scheduled; by marking historical sites, roads, trails, and building; by publishing work concerned with historical research; by working with school administrators and teachers to encourage the study of local history, and by engaging in other appropriate activities;
*to seek out, to collect, and to collate material which may help to reveal and illustrate the history of the Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills in terms of exploration, settlement, and development;
* to cooperate with public and private agencies in providing for the preservation and for the display of historic sites and materials;
* to conduct or encourage archaeological investigations in the Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills;
* to hold title to real and personal property of historical interest of significance that the Society may acquire;
* to hold title to moneys or instruments acquired for the purpose of furthering and/or maintaining the Society’s properties.
History of the Society

The Society was incorporated on June 8, 1998. Since that time the Society has worked toward the mission of preserving and interpreting the Township’s history and historic structures. The Society works with the Township to open the Township’s historic sites, including the Parsippany Museum, also known as the Bolwsby / DeGelleke House, the Smith / Baldwin House, Old Littleton Schoolhouse and the Forge Pond and Dam property. The Society also sponsors programs that highlight the history of the Township and are held at one of the Townships historic properties.

The Society is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.

The Living Room of the house

I visited the Bowlsby-DeGelleke home during Morris County’s Pathways tour recently and discovered an interesting historic home that had been in the Bowlsby family for many generations while farming hundreds of acres of land in this area. The tour guide explained that while the house may have been small, the influence of this family was felt around the community.

The front sitting area

The fireplace in the room with silver collection and the family tree

The Bowlsby Family tree

You could see by the family tree that house and land stayed in the family from the mid 1700’s to 1910, with the farmland being broken up with each generation inheriting a piece of the overall farm.

The back bedroom and nursery

The back bedroom on the first floor behind the Living Room

The kitchen in the back of the first floor

I thought they did a wonderful job decorating the kitchen to reflect different time periods.

The kitchen wares and items needed for everyday life

Family China and crockery in the kitchen

The China pattern shown here was not the family’s but close to what the family would have owned and entertained with for meals.

Artifacts found on property and at a dig site at an old mansion in town

Native American artifacts and weaved baskets from the local area

Information on the local area and items from the dig

The second floor Children’s room display

I loved the Children’s Room with the vintage toys and furniture. This interpretation would have been for a wealthy or upper middle class child. I loved the selection of dolls and games throughout the room.

The toys and doll display in the second floor room

The toys on display in the second floor room

The second floor bathroom

The second floor farm items of baskets and pots. Item used on the farm.

The baskets and crockery used on a farm

This display reminds visitors that this was still a working farm until up to about a hundred years ago.

Paintings and artwork on display in the house

Artifacts in the hallway from the first to the second floor

The display of local historical homes and their history

Local historical homes

Artifacts at the bottom of the stairs in the foyer as I left

The house had been in the family for almost five generations until it had been sold to another family who in turn owned it for another set of generations. The memory of this family still lives on in this wonderful museum.