Shaker Village – Holy Hill

The Harvard Shaker Village Holy Hill site, established in 1842, served as an isolated, elevated outdoor sanctuary designed specifically for the community’s intense spiritual rituals and sacred dances. The hilltop area featured a meticulously leveled half-acre clearing enclosed by a fence and lined with beautiful rows of maple trees. At its exact center stood the “Lord’s Stone,” a sacred marble marker that symbolized the spiritual heart of their worship space.

Shaker Village – South Family Sister’s Shop

This large wood-framed stucco building is imposing in its size and interior. A very similar-sized Brother’s Shop was once just behind the Sister’s Shop, but fell into disrepair and was removed in the 1970s.

Shaker Village – Herb Dry House

The Shakers in Harvard became one of the major producers of medicinal herbs in 19th-century America. By the 1840s, the Harvard community alone was selling nearly 200 kinds of medicinal herbs, along with extracts, powders, oils, and patent remedies. This charming building was made of stone due to the disk of fire during the drying process.

Shaker Village – Tailor Shop

Built about 1800, this small building was identified on Village maps as the ministry’s shop or just plain “shop.”

Shaker Village – Square House

The Square House is the cornerstone of the Harvard Shaker Village. Although it predates their arrival, Harvard and visiting Shakers revered it due to its direct connection with Shaker founder Mother Ann Lee.

Shaker Village – Second House

Built in 1795, three years after the first house was constructed, this dormitory dwelling cost about $2,000. It stood along Shaker Road next to the First House and the Sisters’ Shop to the north, and the Brethrens’ Shop on the north side of Maple Lane.

Shaker Village – Office Shop

Traditionally called the Office Shop, and more recently referred to as the Carpenter’s Shop, this building was built in 1878, and adapted for a residence in the 1930s.

Shaker Village – New Office

The New Office is the largest building in the Church Family, and its interior is largely unchanged since the Shakers left in 1918.

Shaker Village – Meetinghouse

The Meetinghouse occupied a central position in the Shaker Village and was one of the earliest buildings constructed. With a clapboard-sheathed exterior, granite steps, and separate entrance separated both by gender and for the elders—the Meetinghouse followed the design established by the Society.