Raynham Hall Museum


Raynham Hall is in Oyster Bay, New York. Home of the Townsend family, one of the founding families of Oyster Bay, on Long Island, New York, and a member of George Washington's Culper Ring of spies, the house was renamed Raynham Hall after the Townsend seat in Norfolk, England, in 1850 by a grandson of the original owner. The house is now owned by the Town of Oyster Bay and operated as a public museum by the Friends of Raynham Hall Museum, Inc. Raynham Hall is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, a Town of Oyster Bay Landmark, and is a featured site on the Oyster Bay History Walk audio walking tour. It is located at 20 West Main Street, in the heart of Oyster Bay.

Description

Raynham Hall was built in 1738 as a "two by two," or two rooms on the first floor with two rooms above it, with a central chimney. After Samuel Townsend bought the house and moved in, he added onto the home four more rooms, giving the newly dubbed "Homestead" a lean-to addition in the saltbox-style structure. The home remained this way until 1851, when Solomon Townsend remade the house in the Victorian style, adding carpeting, highly decorated wallpaper, ornate furnishings, a central tower onto the house's exterior with a skylight, as well as an entire new wing to the home. Renaming the house "Raynham Hall," Solomon projected his wealth and affluence where his colonial Quaker counterparts lived a much more conservative style.
In 1941, the family no longer had the wealth to retain the house and handed the deed over to the Daughters of the American REVOLUTION'S local chapter in Oyster Bay. The maintenance of the house by the DAR was too much, and finally the home was granted to the Town of Oyster Bay. After deliberation, it was decided that Raynham Hall would continue as a part of Oyster Bay as a historic home and museum to represent the Colonial and Victorian lifestyles of the Townsend family.

History

Before the Revolution

On May 6, 1738, Samuel Townsend purchased the property now known as Raynham Hall from Thomas Weedon for 70 pounds. At that time, the house consisted of four rooms with a large central chimney. It is possible that Weedon, whose trade is listed as a carpenter, may have constructed the original building.
Between 1738 and 1740, Townsend enlarged the property to expand it to eight rooms, making it a story-and-a-half salt box. Although the rooms may seem small to us today, the house was fairly large by 18th century standards. Townsend was a merchant, as well as Justice of the Peace and Town Clerk, and at least one of the front rooms of the house may have been used both as an office and a store.

During the War

The outbreak of the Revolutionary War found Samuel Townsend's sympathies on the side of the Patriots despite the fact that half of Oyster Bay's inhabitants were Loyalists. Townsend went on to become a member of the New York Provincial Congress, which voted to ratify the United States Declaration of Independence on July 9, 1776.
Following the British victory at the Battle of Long Island in the autumn of 1776, the Townsend home became the headquarters for officers of the Queen's Rangers, a Loyalist military unit led by Lieutenant-Colonel John Graves Simcoe. Townsend and his family were forced to make room for Simcoe and his fellow officers. At this time, those members of the Townsend family living at Raynham Hall probably numbered seven, including five children as well as Samuel and his wife Sarah Stoddard. In addition, a census taken in 1781 shows that Samuel owned eight slaves, one man, three women and four children. Samuel's older sons, Solomon, Samuel, and Robert were all engaged in trade and living away from home. The Townsend family seemed to get along quite well with the officers of the Queen's Rangers on a certain level. In fact, on Valentine's Day 1778, Simcoe gave Sally a Valentine, and a number of compliments were etched on panes of glass from the officers to two of the sisters. Even Robert Townsend, who worked as a spy for Washington during the Revolutionary War, remarked when British Major John André was executed by the Americans that he had "never felt more sensibly for the death of a person".
Raynham Hall finds its place in national history through the activities of Robert Townsend. Prior to the outbreak of war, Robert had served as a purchasing agent for his father. However by the late 1770s he was living and working in Manhattan as a merchant and a freelance journalist. Since his business contacts brought him into close contact with many of the British officers then stationed in the city, Abraham Woodhull, known within the New York spy ring as "Culper, Sr.," asked Robert if he would act as a spy in the city. With a certain amount of reluctance Robert accepted the position and became known as "Culper, Jr.," thus completing the circle of communication that went from Manhattan to Setauket across the sound to Connecticut and on the General George Washington's headquarters. From August 1779 until May of the following year, Robert provided George Washington with as much useful information as he could gather regarding British plans and troop movements. In May 1780, Culper, Jr. abruptly stopped work only to resume again in July. One of Robert's Oyster Bay cousins, Samuel Townsend also served the colonial cause as a captain and Paymaster in the New York 5th Regiment of the Continental Line.

The Valentine

In the winter of 1779, Lieutenant Colonel John Simcoe gave a Valentine's Day letter to Sarah 'Sally' Townsend, the daughter of Samuel Townsend and Sarah Stoddard Townsend. The museum claims that this letter is the first recorded Valentine's Day letter in America.

Fairest Maid, where all is fair

Beauty's pride and Nature's care;

To you my heart I must resign

O choose me for your Valentine!



Love, Mighty God! Thou know'st full well

Where all thy Mother's graces dwell,

Where they inhabit and combine

To fix thy power with spells divine;



Thou know'st what powerful magick lies

Within the round of Sarah's eyes,

Or darted thence like lightning fires

And Heaven's own joys around inspires;



Thou know'st my heart will always prove

The shrine of pure unchanging love!

Say; awful God! Since to thy throne

Two ways that lead are only known-



Here gay Variety presides,

And many a youthful circle guides

Through paths where lilies, roses sweet,

Bloom and decay beneath their feet;



Here constancy with sober mein

Regardless of the flowery Scene

With Myrtle crowned that never fades,

In silence seeks the Cypress Shades,



Or fixed near Contemplation's cell,

Chief with the Muses loves to dwell,

Leads those who inward feel and burn

And often clasp the abandon'd urn,--



Say, awful God! Did'st thou not prove

My heart was formed for Constant love?

Thou saw'st me once on every plain

To Delia pour the artless strain -



Thou wept'sd her death and bad'st me change

My happier days no more to range

O'er hill, o're dale, in sweet Employ,

Of singing Delia, Nature's joy;



Thou bad'st me change the pastoral scene

Forget my Crook; with haughty mien

To raise the iron Spear of War,

Victim of Grief and deep Despair:



Say, must I all my joys forego

And still maintain this outward show?

Say, shall this breast that's pained to fell

Be ever clad in horrid steel?



Now swell with other joys than those

Of conquest o'er unworthy foes?

Shall no fair maid with equal fire

Awake the flames of soft desire:



My bosom born, for transport, burn

And raise my thoughts from Delia's urn?

"Fond Youth," the God of Love replies,

"Your answer take from Sarah's eyes."

From the homestead to the hall: the Victorian Era

Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, Raynham Hall was occupied by various members of the Townsend Family. Phebe married Dr. Ebenezer Seely of Norwalk, Connecticut on December 25, 1808, when Phebe was 45 years of age Dr. Seely became the owner of the house in 1812 through a transfer from Sally Townsend. Robert and his sister, Sally, along with the Seelys, spent their adult lives at the "Old Homestead". Robert died in 1838 at the age of 85 and Sally in 1842 at the age of 82.
In 1851, Solomon Townsend, grandson of Samuel, purchased the Townsend home and land from Dr. Seely for $1,300. Solomon transformed the house by adding a rear wing, a water tower and a number of other Victorian architectural features. He then renamed the house Raynham Hall after the baronial great house, begun in 1619, of the famous Townshends in Norfolk, England. Despite some "wishful thinking," the families are not related to one another. It appears that Solomon had spent summers in Oyster Bay until 1861, when he moved there permanently from New York City at the outbreak of the Civil War. Like his father and grandfather before him, Solomon II was also a merchant and importer. By his early twenties he had begun his own business which would eventually be known as Townsend, Clinch and Dike. In 1849, at the age of 44, he married his first cousin Helene DeKay. The couple had six children, five boys and a girl, all of whom were brought up in Raynham Hall. By 1860, he was one of the wealthiest men in Oyster Bay with a personal worth of $97,000.
In keeping with the tradition of public service established by his father and grandfather, Solomon II represented New York Count in the State Legislature and served as a delegate to two State Constitutional Conventions. He also completed two terms as Commissionaire of Education in New York City and after his return to Oyster Bay served as president to the Oyster Bay Board of Education.