Silas Paddack House, 18 India Street, Nantucket, Nantucket County, MA
Summary
Significance: The house at 18 India Street was built c. 1767 for Silas Paddack, mariner, on land inherited from his wife's family. Silas was a direct descendent of Ichabod Paddack who, in 1690, was brought to Nantucket to instruct islanders in killing whales and extracting their oil. Paddack was one of many Nantucket residents who removed to Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. In 1791, the house was sold to William Barnard. After Barnard's death in 1804, his daughter, Nancy Starbuck and her husband, Josiah, occupied the house. They sold it in 1816 to her brother, Frederic. The house was purchased by Peter G. and Lurana Chase in 1821. The Chase family occupied the dwelling until 1829 when it was sold to George Paddack. His descendants sold to George H. Mackay in 1920. In 1942, the property was purchased by George B. and Grace Yerkes. It has remained in their family since then. Today, the Silas Paddack House is one of only five original gambrel roofed houses on the island. Undocumented stories continue to persist that a rum store once occupied a room in the ground floor's northwest corner.
Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N713
Survey number: HABS MA-1305
Building/structure dates: ca. 1767 Initial Construction
Tags
Date
Contributors
Location
Source
Copyright info