On October 7, 1983, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Moses Farnum was born, son of John C. Farnum, Jr of Chockalog(Nipmuc "for dry fox place or burned place") at Uxbridge (then Mendon), Massachusetts Colony, on September 8, 1701, and died September 8, 1770.
Moses Farnum was a prominent landowner in the pre-Revolutionary War era of Colonial Massachusetts.
[3] Quakers from Smithfield, Rhode Island, abolitionists, with ties to Moses Brown whose family had founded Brown University, and some of whom were among the first in America to free slaves, settled here.
This article about a National Register of Historic Places listing in Worcester County, Massachusetts is a stub.