Treadwell's Inn

Treadwell’s Inn, 12 N. Main St. (1737)

This location across from the church was historically known as “the old tavern lot” and was for many years confused with the earlier Spark’s Tavern. Captain Nathaniel Treadwell (1700 – 1777) and his wife Hannah opened the inn soon after its construction in 1737 and ran it for four decades, bequeathing it in his will to their son Jacob, who continued the business.

Before the Revolution, John Adams was in Ipswich frequently in his capacity as a lawyer and always stayed at Treadwell’s Inn. About Ipswich, he wrote to his wife Abigail, “This hill, on which stands the meeting-house and court-house, is a fine elevation, and we have here a fine air, and the pleasant prospect of the winding river at the foot of the hill.” But in June 1774 expressed concerns about the colony’s preparedness for independence. On Sept. 6 & 7, a convention of delegates from 67 Essex County towns was held at Treadwell’s “to consider the late acts of Parliament.”

Read more about Treadwell’s Inn at the Historic Ipswich site.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.