In June of 1781, the army of the French general, the comte de Rochambeau, on its way to join George Washington and fight in the Battle of Yorktown, camped at what was later called Rose Farm in Bolton. Between June 21 and 25, 1781, four regiments of the French soldiers spent one night each at the camp, which was the fifth French army encampment of their journey from Newport, Rhode Island to Yorktown, Virginia. The farm was part of the land originally owned by the town’s first minister, Reverend Thomas White and at the time of the Revolutionary War, the property, called the Minister’s Farm, was owned by Reverend George Colton, who was Bolton’s minister from 1764 to 1817. The farm still has numerous stone walls, built by early settlers who initially cleared the land. Many of these walls were noted on a map made by Rochambeau’s engineer. The minister’s house, originally built in 1725 by Rev. White and where Rev. Colton entertained Rochambeau in 1781, has been significantly altered. Once believed to have been replaced by a new Greek Revival-style house, built around 1840 by Reverend James Ely, it is now thought that the core of the later house is the original colonial structure, much altered and added to in later years . The farm was owned by the Rose family in the twentieth century. It was saved from the building of an expressway in 1994 and in 2000, after a campaign to save the land from development, it was purchased by the town of Bolton and is now the Bolton Heritage Farm.

Buy my books: “A Guide to Historic Hartford, Connecticut” and “Vanished Downtown Hartford.” As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Rose Farm House, Bolton (1725)
Tagged on:     

2 thoughts on “Rose Farm House, Bolton (1725)

  • June 11, 2016 at 10:54 am
    Permalink

    I was wondering if you allow tent weddings on the property?

  • August 12, 2021 at 4:55 pm
    Permalink

    Coming across this article is so beautiful. As a child I was friends with a member of the Rose family my age and remember the story telling from her family of the history of the home and land. They were still farming cows on the property for milk and that was the first time I had unprocessed dairy. “Straight from the cow”
    I remember the house was uneven and the large floor flanks dipped and the house was on a slant. So wonderful to see the history of this home published here.

Comments are closed.