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    • Lived alone in the Evergreens

      • She was fiercely devoted to Bianchi, disdained Todd, and—for the next 36 years—lived alone in the Evergreens without so much as replacing the family furniture, the iron cooking stove, or the drooping wallpaper.
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  2. These connections had profound impact on the posthumous publication of Emily Dickinson’s verse. Austin and Susan Dickinson lived at The Evergreens until their respective deaths in 1895 and 1913. Their only surviving child, Martha Dickinson Bianchi, continued to live in the house, and preserved it without change, until her own death in 1943.

  3. The Evergreens was built around an eighteenth-century colonial structure, General Mack's place, and is just West of The Homestead (at this site you can read about Emily Dickinson's home as well as learn more about Susan and Austin Dickinson's home).

  4. The Emily Dickinson Museum is a historic house museum consisting of two houses: the Dickinson Homestead (also known as Emily Dickinson Home or Emily Dickinson House) and the Evergreens. The Dickinson Homestead was the birthplace and home from 1855 to 1886 of 19th-century American poet Emily Dickinson (1830–1886), whose poems were discovered ...

  5. The Emily Dickinson Museum was created in 2003 when ownership of the Evergreens, which had been occupied by Dickinson family heirs until 1988, was transferred to the college. [208] The Dickinson Homestead today, now the Emily Dickinson Museum

  6. The Dickinson Homestead and The Evergreens were constructed as fashionable expressions of the ambitions, achievements, and aesthetic tastes of four generations of Dickinsons. These two homes and their occupants constituted Emily Dickinson’s intimate familial and creative environment.