This article attempts to list the oldest extant freestanding buildings constructed in the United States of America by Europeans (English, Spanish, Dutch, French, Swedish, Germans), Africans, Native Americans and other immigrants and native born people. The list also includes sites in current states and territories that were not part of the original Thirteen Colonies when the United States of America was founded in 1776. Sites on the list are generally from the First Period of American architecture or earlier.
Building | Image | Location | State | First Built | Use | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ancestral Puebloan communities | New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Utah | NM AZ CO UT |
750 - Pueblo construction begins in AD 750 and continues to present | Villages | Majority of settlements abandoned, but some very well preserved. Buildings have been within the U.S. since 1848, when New Mexico was annexed. | |
Taos Pueblo | north of the modern city of Taos, New Mexico | NM | 1000 - Built between 1000 and 1450 AD | Residential | Said to be the oldest continuously inhabited houses still occupied. Buildings have been within the U.S. since 1848, when New Mexico was annexed.[1] | |
Acoma Pueblo | on top of a 367-foot (112 m) sandstone mesa in Cibola County, New Mexico | NM | 1000- Built between 1000 and 1200 AD | Residential | Said to be the oldest continuously inhabited site in the U.S.. Buildings have been within the U.S. since 1848, when New Mexico was annexed. | |
Cathedral of San Juan Bautista | Old San Juan, Puerto Rico | PR | 1521 | Religious | Part of the San Juan National Historic Site. Oldest church building on US soil (extensive additions and renovations). The Cathedral has been on U.S. territory since Puerto Rico was annexed in 1898. | |
San José Church | Old San Juan, Puerto Rico | PR | 1532 | Religious | Part of the San Juan National Historic Site. Additions and renovations over the centuries. The church has been on U.S. territory since Puerto Rico was annexed in 1898. | |
La Fortaleza | Old San Juan, Puerto Rico | PR | 1533 | Government | Part of the San Juan National Historic Site. Oldest executive mansion in the New World. Extensive reconstructions took place. Building has been within the U.S. since 1898 when Puerto Rico was annexed. | |
Castillo San Felipe del Morro | Old San Juan, Puerto Rico | PR | 1539 | Government | Part of the San Juan National Historic Site. Construction started in 1539, with extensive additions over the centuries. Building has been within the U.S. since 1898 when Puerto Rico was annexed. | |
Porta Coeli | San Germán, Puerto Rico | PR | 1609 | Religious | The church has been on U.S. territory since Puerto Rico was annexed in 1898. | |
Palace of the Governors | Santa Fe, New Mexico | NM | 1610 | Government | Oldest seat of colonial government (Spanish). Building has been within the U.S. since 1848, when New Mexico was annexed.[2] | |
San Miguel Mission | Santa Fe, New Mexico | NM | 1610 | Government | Said to be the oldest church structure built in the USA. The original adobe walls and altar were built by the Tlaxcalan Indians from Mexico, but much of the structure was rebuilt in 1710. Building has been within the U.S. since 1848 when New Mexico was annexed.[3] | |
St. Luke's Church | Smithfield, Virginia | VA | 1632 (or 1682) | Religious | Said to be the oldest church in the United States in one of the thirteen original colonies, National Historic Landmark.[4] | |
Fairbanks House | Dedham, Massachusetts | MA | 1637 | Residential | Oldest house in the United States of timber-frame with date verified using dendrochronology.[5] | |
John Humphreys House | Swampscott, Massachusetts | MA | 1637 circa | Residential | Oldest house in Swampscott; moved in 1891 to present site (99 Paradise Road) from Elmwood Road. | |
C. A. Nothnagle Log House | Gibbstown | NJ | ca. 1638-43 | Residential | Purportedly the oldest surviving log house in the U.S. and the oldest house in New Jersey. | |
Jamestown Church | Jamestown, Virginia | VA | 1639 | Religious | Oldest building in Jamestown, the first British settlement.[6] | |
Henry Whitfield House | Guilford, Connecticut | CT | 1639 | Residential | Oldest stone American Colonial house;[7] oldest house in Connecticut. | |
Loomis Homestead | Windsor, Connecticut | CT | 1640 | Residential | One of the oldest timber-frame houses in America. The oldest part of the house was built in 1640 by Joseph Loomis, who came to America from England in 1638 [1][2]. Later additions to the Loomis house were made around the turn of the eighteenth century. The house is now adjacent to the Loomis Chaffee school. | |
Sparrow House | Plymouth, Massachusetts | MA | 1640 | Residential | Oldest house in Plymouth, MA. | |
De Vargas Street House | Santa Fe, New Mexico | NM | 1646 | Residential | Previously alleged to be oldest house in the USA and Santa Fe. | |
Old House (Cutchogue) | Cutchogue, New York | NY | 1649 | Residential | One of the oldest houses in the state; moved in 1661 to present site from Southold. | |
Pickering House | Salem | MA | 1651 | Residential | Oldest house in Salem, MA.[8] | |
Wyckoff House | Brooklyn | NY | 1652 | Residential | Oldest house in New York City.[9] | |
Block House | Claymont, Delaware | DE | 1654 | Residential | One of the oldest structures in Delaware, built by the Swedish. | |
Bray House | Kittery Point, Maine | ME | 1662 circa | Residential | Oldest house in Maine. | |
Bronck House | Coxsackie, New York | NY | 1663 | Residential | Oldest house in upstate New York. | |
Richard Jackson House | Portsmouth, New Hampshire | NH | 1664 | Residential | Oldest house in New Hampshire.[10] | |
Bacon's Castle | Surry, Virginia | VA | 1665 | Residential | Oldest building with satisfactorily credible age authentication and in reasonably decent or better condition (i.e., not a ruin) still standing in the Commonwealth of Virginia; also possibly the oldest brick building still standing in the United States. | |
Alexander Standish House | Duxbury, Massachusetts | MA | 1666 | Residential | Home of the son of Pilgrim Capt. Miles Standish. | |
Peter Bulkeley Esq/Reuben Brown House | Concord, Massachusetts | MA | 1667 | Residential | Built in 1725 by the town saddler, Reuben Brown. There is also a strong tradition that the house was the home of Peter Bulkeley, which is why the house is often referred to as the Peter Bulkeley / Reuben Brown House. The date contributed to Peter Bulkeley is 1667, which also marks the date of his marriage to Rebecca Wheeler. The evidence is still unclear whether or not the Bulkeley's did build the house some 300 years ago. What historians can conclude is that the house was either completely updated or built by Reuben Brown in 1725. | |
Jabez Howland House | Plymouth, Massachusetts | MA | 1667 | Residential | Only extant house in Plymouth occupied by Pilgrims. John Howland and his wife, Elizabeth Tilley Howland, who both came over on the Mayflower, spent their winters here with their son, Jabez, one of their 10 children. Also a National Historic Landmark.[11] | |
House of the Seven Gables | Salem, Massachusetts | MA | 1668 | Residential | National Historic Landmark, setting of the Nathaniel Hawthorne novel. | |
Chaplin-Clarke House | Rowley, Massachusetts | MA | 1670 | Residential | ||
Newport Tower | Newport, Rhode Island | RI | 1670 circa (disputed to be older) | Commercial | Colonial windmill.[12] No roof or floors since the mid-18th century. | |
Nehemiah Royce House | Wallingford, Connecticut | CT | 1672 | Residential | A typical saltbox, this house was visited by George Washington in 1775. | |
Castillo de San Marcos | St. Augustine, Florida | FL | 1672-1695 | Government | Oldest masonry fortification in the United States. | |
White Horse Tavern | Newport, Rhode Island | RI | 1673 | Tavern | Oldest tavern in America.[13] | |
Smith's Castle | Wickford, Rhode Island | RI | 1678 | Residential | Possibly the oldest house in Rhode Island, now a museum. | |
Clement Weaver House | East Greenwich, Rhode Island | RI | 1679 | Residential | Oldest (privately-owned) house in Rhode Island.[14] | |
John Balch House | Beverly, Massachusetts | MA | 1679 circa | Residential | John Balch received the deed to the land on which the house sits in 1635; the building was constructed by Balch's son and grandson in 1678/1679,[15] and is one of the oldest continuously privately deeded properties in the United States. The original structure in the front dates to 1679, while the back half addition is dated to 1721;[15] these data have been verified using dendrochronology. | |
Paul Revere House | Boston | MA | 1680 circa | Residential | Oldest building in downtown Boston.[16] | |
Old Ship Church | Hingham, Massachusetts | MA | 1681 | Religious | Oldest church in continuous ecclesiastical use in the United States; only remaining 17th century Puritan meeting house in America.[17] | |
Third Haven Meeting House | Talbot County, Maryland | MD | 1682 | Religious | Oldest building in Maryland. Oldest Quaker meeting house in the United States. | |
Caleb Pusey House | Upland, Pennsylvania | PA | 1683 | Residential | Oldest English-built house in Pennsylvania. Only extant building known to have been visited by William Penn. Completed in 1696. | |
Old Indian Meeting House | Mashpee, Massachusetts | MA | 1684 | Religious | Oldest Native American church. | |
Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow | Sleepy Hollow, New York | NY | 1685 | Church | Oldest church in the State of New York. | |
Spencer-Peirce-Little Farm | Newbury, Massachusetts | MA | 1690 circa | Residential | One of the oldest stone buildings in New England, now a nonprofit museum. | |
Old Quaker Meeting House (Flushing, New York) | Flushing, Queens | NY | 1694 | Religious | The only surviving example in New York State of a typical 17th century ecclesiastical frame structure of medieval design.[18] | |
Wren Building | Williamsburg, Virginia | VA | 1695 | School | Oldest school building in America, original The College of William & Mary structure.[19] | |
Merion Friends Meeting House | Merion Station | PA | 1695 | Religious | One of the oldest Quaker meeting houses in America. | |
Gloria Dei (Old Swedes' Church) |
Philadelphia | PA | 1700 | Religious | Oldest surviving church in Philadelphia. | |
Old State House (Boston) | Boston, Massachusetts | MA | 1713 | Government | Oldest surviving public building in Boston. The Bostonian Society Museum. | |
Perth Amboy City Hall | Perth Amboy, New Jersey | NJ | 1714-1717 | Government | Oldest city hall in USA. | |
Gonzalez-Alvarez House | St. Augustine, Florida | FL | 1723 circa | Residential | Oldest house in St. Augustine, the oldest continuously occupied European-established city in the continental United States.[2] [20] | |
Oxford Furnace | Oxford Township, New Jersey | NJ | 1741 | Furnace | First hot blast furnace in United States. | |
Mount Holly Firehouse | Mount Holly, New Jersey | NJ | 1752 | Firehouse | Oldest firehouse in the USA, established by what is now the oldest continuously operating volunteer fire department in the USA.[21][22] | |
Proprietary House | Perth Amboy, New Jersey | NJ | 1762 | Government | Oldest remaining colonial proprietary governor's residence in the original Thirteen States. | |
Touro Synagogue | Newport, Rhode Island | RI | 1763 | Religious | Oldest synagogue building in the United States.[23] | |
Fort Pitt Blockhouse | Pittsburgh | PA | 1764 | Government | Oldest structure in Pittsburgh. One of the oldest colonial structures west of the Allegheny mountains. | |
Sandy Hook Light | Sandy Hook, New Jersey | NJ | 1764 | Lighthouse | Oldest original lighthouse in USA. | |
Mission San Juan Capistrano | San Juan Capistrano, California | CA | 1776 | Mission | Oldest surviving building in California. | |
Burlington County Prison | Mount Holly, New Jersey | NJ | 1811 | Prison | Possibly oldest prison building, which operated from 1811 to 1965. |