Built for whaling Captain Albert Rogers, this Greek Revival-style mansion is filled with Victorian and Edwardian era furnishings donated by citizens of Southampton. There are temporary exhibits on the first floor which include a 1890s parlor and a 1910 dining room. A heraldry exhibit, 1840s bed chamber, 1880s maid’s room, exhibits rooms of toys, silver objects made by Elias Pelletreau (1726-1810), and historic photographs from the hurricane of 1938, can be found on the second floor. Historic structures collected from different areas of Southampton, including a 19th century paint store, blacksmith’s shop, cobbler’s shop, one-room schoolhouse and a Colonial era barn that was seized by British soldiers to lodge their horses during the Revolutionary War, can be found on the grounds in Old Southampton Village behind the mansion.