Description
We are centrally located between the Lakes and White Mountains Regions in Plymouth, New Hampshire and just minutes from Plymouth State University, Holderness School and over a dozen Summer Camps. Built in 1835, our inn offers luxury guest rooms with queen size beds, private baths and air conditioning as wEscape to the warmth, hospitality and good cheer of the Federal House Inn of New
Hampshire. We are centrally located between the Lakes and White Mountains Regions in Plymouth, New Hampshire and just minutes from Plymouth State University, Holderness School and over a dozen Summer Camps. Built in 1835, our inn offers luxury guest rooms with queen size beds, private baths and air conditioning as well as featuring 300 thread count linens, white goose down comforters, plush towels and robes, Bose radio alarm clocks, chocolates on your pillow (!) and a basket of eco-friendly toiletries. We now proudly feature luxury Hypo-Allergenic White Goose Down Comforters from DOWNLITE in each of our rooms. In the Gathering Room, we offer our renowned Gourmet Breakfasts, warmed by the ambiance of our antique coal/wood-burning stove. The Library is a relaxing place to chat with fellow travelers, play a game, watch television or DVD’s. An outdoor heated spa, two landscaped acres, charming brick patio, complimentary hospitality bar, and afternoon/evening snacks complete the experience. The Federal House Inn is truly that special place you've been looking for in New Hampshire. We invite you to experience the Federal House Inn! See More
General Information
If the walls of this Federal-style home could talk, it would speak of over 170 years of New England hospitality. It all began in 1835 when John Adams and his wife Sally Currier Adams built this beautiful home in their twilight years. Here, they ran a large and prosperous farm, living out the remaining years of their long lives and passing it on to their youngest son, Thomas Jefferson Adams in 1860. Like many homes on stagecoach routes, the Adams’ would welcome weary travelers when hotels were filled to capacity. In fact, stagecoaches and mail carriers regularly stopped here, as a Tavern and Post Office existed directly across the street. The family and their descendents owned and occupied the property until it was purchased in the 1970’s and refurbished to become a Bed and Breakfast known as the Crab Apple Inn. Along the way, the name has changed but the tradition of hospitality continues, as weary travelers, vacationers, & guests continue to flock to the Federal House Inn.