Building
Image
Location
First Built
Notes
Governor Peleg Sanford House
Newport
41°29′27″N 71°18′47″W / 41.49077°N 71.31315°W / 41.49077; -71.31315
c. 1640s –1701
One of the oldest buildings in Newport
Constructed before the death of Gov. Sanford in 1701[ 3]
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
White Horse Tavern
Newport
41°29′30″N 71°18′51″W / 41.491667°N 71.314167°W / 41.491667; -71.314167
1652; 1673
Oldest tavern in America, originally built in 1652 as a residence and expanded into a tavern in 1673, likely including parts of the original structure[ 4]
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Stephen Northup House
North Kingstown
41°33′05″N 71°26′52″W / 41.551389°N 71.447778°W / 41.551389; -71.447778
c. 1660 –1661 (possibly rebuilt in 1670s)
Possibly burned during King Philip's War in the 1670s and rebuilt, later modifications 1712, 1850, 2004
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Newport Tower
Newport
41°29′09″N 71°18′36″W / 41.4858°N 71.3099°W / 41.4858; -71.3099
c. 1670
Purported to be a Viking structure;[ 5] likely the remains of a colonial windmill [ 6]
No roof or floors since the mid-18th century
Radiocarbon dating tests of the tower's mortar suggest a probable date of production of the mortar between 1635 and 1698.[ 7]
Philip Sherman House
Portsmouth
41°35′00″N 71°14′45″W / 41.58340°N 71.24577°W / 41.58340; -71.24577
c. 1670
House of Philip Sherman , one of the founders of Portsmouth, RI
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Thomas Fenner House
Cranston
41°47′27″N 71°29′19″W / 41.790833°N 71.488611°W / 41.790833; -71.488611
1677
Early stone ender
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Edward Searle House
Cranston
41°44′54″N 71°28′56″W / 41.748333°N 71.482222°W / 41.748333; -71.482222
1670–1720
Early stone ender
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Capt. John Mawdsley House
Newport
41°29′03″N 71°18′44″W / 41.484167°N 71.312222°W / 41.484167; -71.312222
c. 1677 –1680
Smith's Castle
Wickford
41°35′00″N 71°27′16″W / 41.583333°N 71.454444°W / 41.583333; -71.454444
1678
Clement Weaver House
East Greenwich
41°39′32″N 71°28′37″W / 41.658889°N 71.476944°W / 41.658889; -71.476944
1679
Early stone ender
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places
John Bliss House
Newport
41°29′59″N 71°18′07″W / 41.49974°N 71.30204°W / 41.49974; -71.30204
c. 1680
Nathaniel Bosworth House
Bristol
41°40′43″N 71°16′42″W / 41.678509°N 71.278333°W / 41.678509; -71.278333
c. 1683
Oldest house in Bristol[ 8]
Forge Farm
Warwick
41°38′19″N 71°27′06″W / 41.638611°N 71.451667°W / 41.638611; -71.451667
1684
Oldest portion of the structure dates to 1684
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Daggett House
Pawtucket
41°53′19″N 71°20′39″W / 41.888667°N 71.344056°W / 41.888667; -71.344056
1685
Oldest house in Pawtucket
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Gorton-Greene House
Warwick
41°39′55″N 71°27′35″W / 41.665179°N 71.45967°W / 41.665179; -71.45967
1685
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Palmer-Northrup House
North Kingstown
41°34′37″N 71°27′40″W / 41.576944°N 71.461111°W / 41.576944; -71.461111
c. 1685
Early stone ender
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Hopelands
Warwick
41°39′29″N 71°25′17″W / 41.65798°N 71.42135°W / 41.65798; -71.42135
c. 1686
Western ell of building dates to 1686, though not yet tested using dendrochronology
Now part of Rocky Hill School
Peleg Arnold Tavern
North Smithfield
41°59′21″N 71°32′02″W / 41.98916°N 71.53388°W / 41.98916; -71.53388
c. 1690
Wilbor House
Little Compton
41°29′43″N 71°11′11″W / 41.495278°N 71.186389°W / 41.495278; -71.186389
1690
Oldest house in Little Compton
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Clemence–Irons House
Johnston
41°50′21″N 71°29′04″W / 41.839167°N 71.484444°W / 41.839167; -71.484444
1691
Primitive stone ender
Oldest house in Rhode Island to be dated using dendrochronology (2005)[ 9]
Samuel Clarke House
Kenyon
41°27′38″N 71°37′29″W / 41.46065°N 71.624775°W / 41.46065; -71.624775
1691
Retains original exterior wide oak weatherboards – on the north side, early 18th-century window sash and frames, a granite central chimney with four fireplaces and original period interior architectural detail
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Eleazer Arnold House
Lincoln
41°54′10″N 71°25′14″W / 41.902778°N 71.420556°W / 41.902778; -71.420556
c. 1693
Valentine Whitman House
Lincoln
41°55′55″N 71°27′24″W / 41.931843°N 71.456664°W / 41.931843; -71.456664
1694
Early stone ender
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Smith-Appleby House
Smithfield
41°54′07″N 71°31′06″W / 41.901944°N 71.518333°W / 41.901944; -71.518333
1696
House Museum
Not yet tested using dendrochronology
Wanton-Lyman-Hazard House
Newport
41°29′27″N 71°18′45″W / 41.49084°N 71.31261°W / 41.49084; -71.31261
1697
One of the oldest houses in Newport
Currently a museum
Dated using dendrochronology in 2005.[ 11]
Joseph Reynolds House
Bristol
41°41′00″N 71°16′43″W / 41.683451°N 71.278543°W / 41.683451; -71.278543
c. 1698 –1700
Great Friends Meeting House
Newport
41°29′31″N 71°18′47″W / 41.492008°N 71.31305°W / 41.492008; -71.31305
1699
Quaker Meeting House
Oldest surviving church building in Rhode Island
Dated in 2005 to 1699 using dendrochronology[ 12]
Portsmouth Friends Meetinghouse
Portsmouth
41°35′28″N 71°15′16″W / 41.591111°N 71.254444°W / 41.591111; -71.254444
1699–1700
Quaker Meeting House and original site of Moses Brown School
Likely the oldest church building in RI used continuously as a church.
Samuel E. Perry House
South Kingstown
41°22′59″N 71°34′14″W / 41.38298°N 71.57067°W / 41.38298; -71.57067
1696–1716. Foundation purportedly dates from 1661.
Private home located on Matunuck Schoolhouse Rd[ 13]
Nathaniel Daggett House
East Providence
41°50′16″N 71°21′46″W / 41.837778°N 71.362778°W / 41.837778; -71.362778
c. 1700
Likely the oldest house in East Providence
Perry-Carpenter Grist Mill
South Kingstown
41°50′16″N 71°21′46″W / 41.837778°N 71.362778°W / 41.837778; -71.362778
1703
Six Principle Baptist Church
North Kingstown
41°35′34″N 71°29′29″W / 41.592778°N 71.491389°W / 41.592778; -71.491389
1703
Oldest Baptist church building in RI
Possibly the oldest Baptist church building in the U.S.
Saylesville Meetinghouse
Lincoln
41°54′02″N 71°25′06″W / 41.900556°N 71.418333°W / 41.900556; -71.418333
1704
Possibly the oldest church building in Providence County, RI
Old Narragansett Church
Wickford
41°34′21″N 71°26′59″W / 41.5725°N 71.449722°W / 41.5725; -71.449722
1707
Governor Stephen Hopkins House
Providence
41°49′18″N 71°24′12″W / 41.821667°N 71.403333°W / 41.821667; -71.403333
1708, 1742
Oldest extant home in Providence
Dr. Charles Cotton House
Newport
41°29′18″N 71°18′53″W / 41.488333°N 71.314722°W / 41.488333; -71.314722
c. 1720
Dr. Charles Cotton, a great-grandson of Josiah Cotton and surgeon aboard the USS Constitution, owned the house in the early 19th century
Peter Greene House
Warwick
41°42′55″N 71°22′34″W / 41.715278°N 71.376111°W / 41.715278; -71.376111
c. 1720 –1750
Henry Palmer House
South Kingstown
1721
Private home in East Matunuck
Located on Old Succotash Rd[ 13]
Carr-LeValley House
West Warwick
41°43′00″N 71°31′58″W / 41.71673°N 71.53283°W / 41.71673; -71.53283
1722
Possibly the oldest building in West Warwick, RI
Phillip Walker House
East Providence
41°49′49″N 71°21′50″W / 41.830278°N 71.363889°W / 41.830278; -71.363889
1724
Trinity Episcopal Church
Newport
41°29′15″N 71°18′50″W / 41.4875°N 71.313889°W / 41.4875; -71.313889
1726
Antram-Gray House
Providence
41°49′53″N 71°24′39″W / 41.83132°N 71.41071°W / 41.83132; -71.41071
1736
Captain John Warren House
Captain John Warren House (c. 1737)
Newport
41°29′35″N 71°19′16″W / 41.49319°N 71.32108°W / 41.49319; -71.32108
1737
French Navy Artillery Headquarters 1780–1781[ 16]
Gilbert Stuart Birthplace
Saunderstown
41°31′13″N 71°26′41″W / 41.52017°N 71.44469°W / 41.52017; -71.44469
1750
Birthplace of Gilbert Stuart , one of 18th-century America's most noted portrait artists
National Historic Landmark
Willow Dell (Weeden Farm House)
South Kingstown
41°23′48″N 71°33′04″W / 41.39660°N 71.55115°W / 41.39660; -71.55115
1753
Rocky Meadows Farm House
South Kingstown
1754
Rumored to have been a tavern
Private home located on Old Post Road (Route 1)[ 13]
The farm land is now protected by the South Kingstown Land Trust.[ 17]
Henry Marchant House
South Kingstown
41°28′49″N 71°35′47″W / 41.48039°N 71.59650°W / 41.48039; -71.59650
pre 1760
Touro Synagogue
Touro Synagogue, Newport, Rhode Island
Newport
41°29′22″N 71°18′43″W / 41.489444°N 71.311944°W / 41.489444; -71.311944
1759–1763
University Hall
Providence
41°49′34″N 71°24′14″W / 41.826111°N 71.403889°W / 41.826111; -71.403889
1770
Jonathan Treadwell House
Providence
41°49′46″N 71°24′33″W / 41.82935°N 71.40910°W / 41.82935; -71.40910
1783
Private residence on North Court Street
Possible inspiration for the home of Dr. Elihu Whipple in "The Shunned House " by H. P. Lovecraft
Prudence Island Light
Portsmouth(Prudence Island )
41°36′21″N 71°18′13″W / 41.605861°N 71.303528°W / 41.605861; -71.303528
1824
Oldest lighthouse tower in Rhode Island
Moved from original location on Goat Island in Newport to Prudence Island at a later date
Poplar Point Light
North Kingstown
41°34′15″N 71°26′23″W / 41.570833°N 71.439722°W / 41.570833; -71.439722
1832
Oldest wooden lighthouse tower still standing in the United States