The Ephraim Chapin House, a.k.a the ”Landlord Abel House” was built in Chicopee c. 1725. In 1979 this handsome home & tavern was dismantled and relocated to Southfield. There it was re-erected upon a new foundation atop a hill, where it now resides on a 51-acre estate straddling the banks of Konkapot River. Once the beloved retreat of an artist and a serious collector of early American art and antiques this 3-story 4-bedroom home has been painstakingly rebuilt and restored.Original wainscoting in the ”keeping room” is a rare example of interior decorative painting by the Scroll Painter, a documented but unnamed American decorative artist active the 1790’s. Other details include original floorboards & exposed chestnut beams, center chimney with 6 brick fireplaces… (See ”More”.)