The Chase–Lloyd House is a historic house at 22 Maryland Avenue in Annapolis, Maryland. It continues in this use today. While the upper floors are off limits to visitors, the main floor and the extensive gardens are open to the public.
SITE FEATURES
Surviving Structures
On this site...
Built in 1769–1774, it is one of the first brick three-story Georgian mansions to be built in the Thirteen Colonies, and is one of the finest examples of the style. Its interiors were designed by William Buckland. Its construction was started for Samuel Chase, who would later be a signatory to the Declaration of Independence and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, but Chase sold the building unfinished to Edward Lloyd IV in 1771. Lloyd completed the house in 1774 with assistance from Buckland and another architect, William Noke.
HOME
EST. 1794
The house remained in the Lloyd family until 1847, when it was sold to a relation of Chase. Hester Anne Chase was the daughter of Jeremiah Townley Chase who was Samuel Chase's cousin. When she died, she left the house to her 3 orphan nieces, Francis, Matilda, and Hester. In 1888 the house was bequeathed for use as a home for elderly women by the will of the last living niece, Hester.
HISTORIC PEOPLE
Samuel Chase
Justice