Brewster Homestead


The Brewster Homestead is a historic house at 306 Preston Road in Griswold, Connecticut. Built about 1740, it is one of the oldest surviving buildings in the town. The house was owned by six generations of the Brewster family, and originally was the centerpiece of a farmstead of. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

Description and history

The Brewster Homestead is located in western Griswold, at the northeast corner of Preston and Brewster Roads. It is a -story wood-frame structure, five bays wide, with two small interior chimneys. It is finished in vinyl siding, although its original clapboards are underneath. A -story ell extends to the rear of the house. The main facade is five bays wide, with the main entrance at the center, sheltered by a late 19th-century hip-roofed porch. The interior retains a number of original features, including plaster walls, gunstock posts in the framing, and paneled fireplace surrounds. The basement includes the foundational remains of a large chimney, which was removed in the 19th century, at the same time the original main staircase was replaced.
The homestead stands on what is now a fragmentary remnant of a large property given to Johnathon Brewster, son of William Brewster, a founding elder of the Plymouth Colony, by Uncas, sachem of the Mohegan people. Simon Brewster, a great-great-grandson of William Brewster, developed a parcel as a farm beginning in 1740, probably building this house near its center at that time. The house remained in the hands of Brewster's descendants until 1996. A portion of the estate was sold of in the 20th century, and is now the site of a golf club across Preston Road; the house is now associated with, much of it open land.