Forrester-Peabody House Salem Home for Aged Men // 1818
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Overlooking the Salem Common, this 1818 Federal style dwelling has served as everything from a single-family home to a boarding house and ultimately an assisted living facility, showcasing that old buildings can always be repurposed into new uses. The home was built for Captain John Forrester, son of Simon Forrester, one of Salems most successful merchants. The Forrester Housewas purchased in the 1830s byGeorge Peabody, who added the one-story ballroom wing. Peabody lived in the house until 1892 and the buildinglater housedthe Salem Club, a mens social organization with over two-hundred well-connected members. In the 1920s, it became the Bertram Home for Aged Men, named after Captain John Bertram, who founded the organization in 1877 as a charitable residence providing housing and socialization space for aged men in Salem. The home had fallen into disrepair when it was closed in 1988, to reopen two years later as the first free-standing assisted living community for men and women in Massachusetts, today known as the Bertram House.
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