Bertram K. and Nina Fletcher Little

Bertram K. and Nina Fletcher Little were prominent collectors of American folk art and active historians. The couple married in 1925 and in 1928 they purchased a home in Hudson, Massachusetts, for a weekend and summer retreat. Then in 1937 purchased a 165-acre property in Essex, Massachusetts, carefully restoring the 1738 farmhouse, preserving original finishes while documenting their work. They named it Cogswell's Grant, after John Cogswell, the original 1636 land receipt. The couple collected and decorated their house with various "country arts" until 1984 when Mrs. Little transferred property ownership over to Society for the Preservation Of New England Antiquities, reserving life tenancy rights for herself and her family. The property is now a historic house museum which is owned and o

Bertram K. and Nina Fletcher Little

Bertram K. and Nina Fletcher Little were prominent collectors of American folk art and active historians. The couple married in 1925 and in 1928 they purchased a home in Hudson, Massachusetts, for a weekend and summer retreat. Then in 1937 purchased a 165-acre property in Essex, Massachusetts, carefully restoring the 1738 farmhouse, preserving original finishes while documenting their work. They named it Cogswell's Grant, after John Cogswell, the original 1636 land receipt. The couple collected and decorated their house with various "country arts" until 1984 when Mrs. Little transferred property ownership over to Society for the Preservation Of New England Antiquities, reserving life tenancy rights for herself and her family. The property is now a historic house museum which is owned and o