Essex National Heritage Area
Glen Magna Farms & Estate
Danvers, Massachusetts
  • Address: Ingersoll Street,
    Danvers, Massachusetts 01923
    978-774-9165
  • Hours: By Appointment
  • Admission: House and Garden Tours $5 per person
  • Website: GlenMagnaFarms.org
  • Map:Map


Glen Magna Farms

The property, which later came to be known as Glen Magna Farms, belonged to the Peabody and Endicott families for 144 years. During the War of 1812, Joseph Peabody, a wealthy merchant, bought a Danvers farm containing a dwelling house and other buildings. Peabody and his descendants enlarged and improved the house and gardens until the Farm no longer resembled a farm, but was a country estate for elegant summer living.

By 1892, the property belonged to Ellen Peabody Endicott, Joseph Peabody's granddaughter, who had the house enlarged and the grounds embellished. Her son, William Crowninshield Endicott, Jr., lavished attention on the Farms, preserving and upgrading the estate. The Endicott family created an award-winning landscape. In 1926, Ellen Endicott received the Hunnewell Award, a prestigious honor granted by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society.The property features several gardens displaying annuals and perennials including geraniums, peonies, lilies, hostas, and roses; a shrubbery garden of rhododendrons, hemlocks, forsythia, azaleas, fringe tree, dogwood and a monumental weeping beech tree; hedges of climbing roses, cedar pergola, buckthorn and barberry; a gazebo and statuary; a barn road, circular drive, and iron bridge; and a carriage road, which is lined with the lush pin oaks that replaced the original graceful, arching elms lost to disease in the 1950s.



Nearby Area Sites

  • Danvers Historical Society
    The Society's collection is housed at Tapley Memorial Hall, 13 Page Street, and represents a large variety of cultural and decorative arts objects.
  • Endicott Park
    Endicott Park is a beautiful one hundred and sixty five acre handicapped accessible park that provides a myriad of recreation and leisure time programs and activities ranging from picnicking and exercising to gardening.
  • Glen Magna Farms & Estate
    Joseph Peabody purchased the farm during the War of 1812 and he and his family transformed it into a sprawling estate featuring several lush gardens.
  • Judge Samuel Holten House
    The house is representative of the architecture of the period from 1670-1832.
  • Rebecca Nurse Homestead
    The site features 27 acres of fields, pasture and woods and is a good representation of New England life during the colonial period.
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Danvers Farms

ENHA Farm Guide

Danvers History

Danvers's inland location and its distinctive landscape features — rivers, hills and ponds — were instrumental in shaping the history of the community from the earliest Native American use of the land to the present.

Prior to European settlement, Danvers was inhabited by members of the Pawtucket group, also known as Penacook. Primary transportation routes during this period were probably along the major rivers with secondary trails along other waterways and inland. These early routes later formed the basis of many presentday roads.

The area known today as Danvers was settled as part of Salem in the 1630s. Initially there were a number of large land grants, including that of Governor John Endecott, which was about 1,000 acres. English settlement remained scattered through the Plantation period (1620-1675), but eventually evolved into several village neighborhoods. In 1752 Salem Village (Danvers) and the Middle Precinct (Peabody) were set apart as the district of Danvers, which was made a township in 1757. Agriculture and animal husbandry continued to provide the primary economic base for the town.

Danvers played an active role in the Revolutionary War. Danvers resident Dr. Samuel Holten was President of the Continental Congress and a signer of the Articles of Confederation, while Israel Putnam became a Brigadier General. At the time of the Revolution, the Danversport area became a shipping and shipbuilding center whose tidal mills provided power for a number of small enterprises. The community was known for its bricks and its leather tanning industry. Danvers grew rapidly during the Federal period (1775-1830), reaching a population of 4,228 in 1830. By the 1830s the Tapleyville section of Danvers became a center for the production of woven carpets made by English and Scottish weavers. In 1855 the two parishes, Danvers and South Parish, split into the independent townships of Danvers and Peabody.

The convenient location between Salem and Boston, and the arrival of the railroad in the 1840s, allowed Danvers to emerge as a prominent 19th century commercial center. The community also maintained an industrial base that relied heavily on carpet making and shoe manufacture. While Danvers became an active commercial center, outlying areas remained rural. Local farms provided produce for nearby cities well into the 20th century and there were many country estates, such as Glen Magna which has been preserved by the town.

Today Danvers is a community of approximately 25,000 with a diversified economy that includes both commercial and industrial activities, as well as limited agricultural areas. It also functions as a bedroom community for the surrounding area. Danvers is home to regionally important civic institutions such as the Peabody Institute Library and Essex Agricultural School. Until it closed in1982, the Danvers State Hospital was among these institutions.

From Danvers Reconnaisance Report, Essex County Landscape Inventory, Massachusetts Heritage Landscape Inventory Program (pdf document)

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