Avery-Copp Museum

History

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Here you will find a brief history of the museum, including photos of the estate. 
 
Please feel free to click on any picture to open a new window.

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Avery Copp House 1880s

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Carriage House 1890s

The Avery Copp House was built c.1800 by Rufus Avery, right next door to his own home.  It served as the home of his two sons and their wives, and was later sold to a cousin named Latham Avery. Latham Avery had gone to sea as a young man and after a successful career as a merchant seaman he returned to his hometown of Groton to marry and raise a family.

One of his daughters, Mary Jane Avery Ramsdell, inherited the house and Victorianized it in the 1860s. She did not have children, and the house was passed on to her niece, Betsey Avery Copp. Betsey and Belton Copp came to live here in 1895 with their three children, Allyn, Emily, and Joe.
 
Joe Copp took over the responsibility for the house after his parents died in 1930. Joe kept the house virtually unchanged. He left it as his parents had it, taking nothing out and bringing very little in. His Yankee frugality and his sentimentality for the past kept the house as a "time capsule" that reflected daily life of the family prior to 1930.
 
Joe Copp died in 1991, at the age of 101. His nieces and nephews who inherited the house recognized the importance of preserving this unique example of Groton's History

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Sitting Room 1880s

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Dining Room 1880s

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Parlor 1880s

Avery Copp House Museum, Inc.
154 Thames Street
Groton, CT 06340

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