Boudinot-Bradford House
The Boudinot-Bradford House, located at 207-209 West Broad Street, was
built in 1803 for Elias Boudinot. Boudinot
occupied the house in 1804, accompanied by his daughter
Susan Boudinot Bradford, widow of George
Washington's Attorney General, William Bradford.
The house was originally single mansion standing on 10 acres of land.
Boudinot planted a variety of trees on the grounds, and a pair of Chinese
porcelain lions guarded the entrance. The halls were decorated with
portraits and statuary, and Boudinot maintained an extensive private
library with a marble mantel depicting Apollo and the Muses in
bas-relief.
After Elias Boudinot's death in 1821, Susan Boudinot Bradford occupied
the house until her death in 1851. In more recent years, most of the
land originally purchased with the house was subdivided and sold, and
the house itself has since been divided into two conjoined private
dwellings.
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