Noyes-Parris House


The Noyes-Parris House is a historic First Period house located at 196 Old Connecticut Path in Wayland, Massachusetts.

Description and history

The oldest portion of this house is a "single cell", three bays wide and two stories high, with what is now the central chimney of the house. It was built c. 1669, and extended to its present size, five bays wide, c. 1790. Peter Noyes, the builder, was one of Wayland's early settlers; his daughter, Dorothy, became the second wife of Rev. Samuel Parris, a major figure in the Salem witch trials.
The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 9, 1990.