Ballantine house

Ballantine house

Built in 1885 for Jeannette and John Holme Ballantine of the celebrated Newark beer-brewing family, this brick and limestone mansion originally had 27 rooms, including eight bedrooms and three bathrooms. Part of The Newark Museum since 1937, the house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1985.

Two floors of the Ballantine House are interpreted as a suite of galleries called “House & Home,” which includes eight period rooms, two hallways and six thematic galleries—all filled with things that might have been found in people’s homes from the 1650s to the present.

The spring of 1891, nearly six years after the Ballantines moved in, is the time to which the period rooms are restored. Together they represent a “case study” of what the “ideal home” meant in America over a century ago. The first-floor rooms include the Billiard Room, the Parlor, the Reception Room, the Library and the Dining Room. The Music Room offers an interactive experience called Make Yourself at Home.

Upstairs, three private family rooms have been restored to their Victorian look: the Master Bedroom, Mrs. Ballantine’s Boudoir and Alice Ballantine’s Bedroom.

Other rooms on this floor are used as galleries. In these galleries, objects from the Museum’s decorative arts holdings illustrate various themes relating to the changing idea of “home” from the 1650s to the present.

The Ballantine House is a wing of the Newark Museum and is open as part of the museum during regular museum hours.

 

 

Source Credit: This article originally appeared on Wall Street International by . Read the original article - https://www.meer.com/en/41126-ballantine-house