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  1. Elizabeth Porter Phelps (17471817) was a member of the eighteenth-century rural gentry in western Massachusetts; she is also recognized as an important diarist from late 18th century and early 19th century in Hadley, Massachusetts (USA).

    • Elizabeth Phelps

      Elizabeth Phelps may refer to: Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward...

  2. Elizabeth Porter Phelps lived at Forty Acres from its construction in 1752 until her death in 1817. In that time, she met and married her husband Charles Phelps, endured multiple wars, and raised her two children Betsy and Porter, as well as her adopted daughter Thankful.

  3. The PorterPhelps–Huntington House, known historically as Forty Acres, is a historic house museum at 130 River Drive in Hadley, Massachusetts. It is open seasonally, from May to October.

  4. Over the course of Elizabeth Porter and Charles Phelps’ tenure at Forty Acres, dairying and other types of specialized farm activity came to define the land stewardship needs of the homestead from the end of the eighteenth century to the beginning decades of the nineteenth.

  5. Elizabeth Phelps may refer to: Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward (1844–1911), early feminist American author and intellectual. Elizabeth Porter Phelps (1747–1817), diarist from Hadley, Massachusetts.

  6. Nov 24, 2017 · On this day in 1747, Elizabeth Porter was born in the Connecticut River Valley village of Hadley. Five years later, her father built the first house outside the town center. He called it Forty Acres.

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  8. Aug 10, 2021 · Elizabeth Pitkin Porter was remarkably well educated for the mid-eighteenth century and passed such qualities down on to her daughter, Elizabeth Porter Phelps, whose ability to read and write permitted her meticulous diaries which have, in turn, been integral in shaping the Museum and the stories it tells.