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Shippen House

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Shippen House is a historic home located at Shippensburg in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania . It is a large 2½-story, limestone building, built in three phases.

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7-412: The oldest section of the house was built in about 1750. It measured 28 feet wide and 32 feet deep. The original house was built by Edward Shippen, III (1703-1781), who laid out Shippensburg and occupied the house on periodic visits to his trading companies. This is where Anne Shippen was born in 1763 where her parents William and Alice Shippen lived. William Shippen lectured in anatomy and midwifery in

14-482: A lecture theater which was just by the house. Anne Shippen returned as Mrs Livingston after her arranged marriage failed by 1783 and she then started a journal. A two-bay addition was built in 1785, and a two-story, brick rear addition was built in 1935 as part of a major restoration effort. A classical porch was also added in 1935. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. It

21-658: A member of the first board of trustees, from which he resigned in 1767. He was also a subscriber to the Philadelphia Academy (now the University of Pennsylvania ) and a founder of the Pennsylvania Hospital . He was elected to the revived American Philosophical Society in 1768, alongside his son Edward Shippen IV . He died on September 25, 1781, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania . Shippen was

28-634: Is located in the Shippensburg Historic District . Edward Shippen, III Edward Shippen III (July 9, 1703 – September 25, 1781) was an American merchant and mayor of Philadelphia . He was born on July 9, 1703, in Boston . Shippen entered into mercantile pursuits with James Logan , with whom he was in business from 1732 as the firm of Logan and Shippen. He also transacted some shipping business with famous Philadelphia pewterer Simon Edgell. There are many advertisements in

35-512: The British and provincial forces when they were commanded by General John Forbes , General John Stanwix , and Colonel Bouquet. He was a county judge under both the provincial and state governments. In early life he laid out and founded the town of Shippensburg, Pennsylvania . In 1746 to 1748, he was one of the founders of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University ), of which he was

42-596: The Pennsylvania Gazette mentioning Mssrs Shippen and Edgell. Afterward, he went into the fur trade with Thomas Lawrence , as the firm of Shippen and Lawrence. In 1744 Shippen was elected mayor of Philadelphia . In 1745 and for several years thereafter, he served as a judge of the Court of Common Pleas . In May 1752, he moved to Lancaster, where he was appointed prothonotary , as which he served until 1778. He had large transactions as paymaster for supplies for

49-448: The son of Joseph Shippen (1678–1741), the brother of William Shippen , physician, and the grandson of Edward Shippen , an earlier mayor of Philadelphia. Known as "Neddy," he married Sarah Plumley (born November 8, 1706, Philadelphia; died April 28, 1735, Philadelphia), daughter of Charles Plumly and Rose Budd, on September 20, 1725. Their known children included: In August 1747, he married Mary Gray, daughter of William Gray and Mary; he

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