History comes alive at Squires Tavern

BARKHAMSTED — Squires Tavern, located at 100 East River Road at the edge of People’s State Forest, is not a place to get alcoholic beverages or spend the night.Rather, the building, built some time around 1795, serves as a museum of local history and is operated by the Barkhamsted Historical Society.According to Historical Society President Paul Hart, who volunteers at the tavern along with his niece, Kristina Napolitano, the building itself was owned by local farmer Bela Squire and his family.“We call it Squires Tavern, but the building itself didn’t just serve as a tavern,” Hart said. “The Squire family lived in this building. Squire himself had three wives, of which the first two died. But between his three wives he had thirteen children, so this house probably became crowded at times.”Squires farm was said to be one of the biggest in the area at its peak.“He farmed hay, dairy products, hogs, a real diversity of products,” Napolitano said. “There used to be two to three stagecoaches a day going down the road.”Around 1884 the Ullmann purchased the farm and operated it until the 1920’s.Afterwards, the farm land itself became part of Peoples State Forest.Up until the 1990s, the forest ranger lived in the Squires Tavern building.By the time the forest ranger moved out, the building itself had fallen into a state of disrepair and remained vacant until 2001.In August 2001, the Barkhamsted Historical Society signed a 30 year lease with the state Department of Environmental Protection for $1 a year.Since then, the historical society has worked to preserve and renovate the house.Now it operates as a museum for the historical society and contains many exhibits displaying the history of the area.Exhibits include artifacts from the “Barkhamsted Lighthouse,” antiques displaying the town’s historical past, a collection of Hitchcock chairs and much more.Squires Tavern is located at 100 East River Road and is open on Sundays from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. and Wednesdays from 9 a.m. to noon.For more information call the Barkhamsted Historical Society at 860 738-2456 or visit their website at www.barkhamstedhistory.org

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