Roseledge Farm
Bed and Breakfast
The Roseledge Country Inn and Farm Shoppe in Historic Preston CT
John Meech homestead purchased from Epraim and Joseph Miner in
1694.
This 100 acre farm clearly shows how through the years it has been adapted to
the needs of succeeding generations.
Innkeeper/owner Gail will be celebrating her 20 years of ownership in June
2014. Just the fifth owner to the homestead.
The homestead is located on route 164 in a section that has been
determined to be scenic.
The spot and nature of the homestead lent itself nicely to being a bed and
breakfast.
Architectural features prove that the original house was a one and one-half
story, and raised to have the present story built underneath.
Hewn oak foundation timbers, very wide boards in attic and vertical planks in
place of joists, with roughly split oak laths. Corner posts on the second floor
have a much wider flare then those on the first floor.
There are several batten doors in the Weaving guest room, a fine front door and
stairway. Early butterfly hinges may be seen in the Weaving room as well.
Appearance of the kitchen fireplace would seem to indicate an earlier oven in
the back and that the present oven was added later.
The house was built on a ledge, hence ledge in in the name. The earliest cellar
was hewn from the stone, its walls built from stone cut from it and laid dry.
Only six and a half feet deep, the chimney base. twelve feet square is ledge
built up to the required height with the same stone chinked dry.
One of the four fireplaces
stairs to the bedroom floor
John Meech room
The John Meech room offers a fine hand crafted queen pencil post bed in cherry wood standing between the windows over looking the front gardens.
A bed like this may have been found in this home when the colonial John Meech
resided here. The bed would have been draped with heavy curtains to keep out the
winters chill.
Avery Browning Room
Weaving Room
room in which weaving was done
bed pan chair
traditional wash stand cabinet
the Bed & Breakfast Mug
a pancake breakfast with berries from the farm
Galen and Marlene at Breakfast