The house was first built sometime between 1690 and 1720. The Alcotts had first moved to Concord in 1840, although they left in 1843 to start
Fruitlands, a
utopian
agrarian commune in nearby
Harvard. The family returned in 1845 and purchased a house named "Hillside," but left again in 1852, selling to
Nathaniel Hawthorne, who renamed it
The Wayside. The Alcotts returned to Concord once again in 1857. At the time of purchase the site included two early eighteenth-century houses on a 12-acre (49,000m2) apple orchard. "'Tis a pretty retreat," Bronson Alcott wrote soon after moving in, "and
ours; a family mansion to take pride in, rescued as it is from deformity and disgrace." Later,
Lydia Maria Child visited the house and recorded her thoughts: "The result is a house full of queer nooks and corners and all manner of juttings in and out. It seems as if the spirit of some old architect had brought it from the Middle Ages and dropped it down in Concord...The whole house leaves a general impression of harmony, of a medieval sort." Orchard House is adjacent to The Wayside on the historic "American Mile" roadway toward
Lexington, and is less than a half-mile from
Bush, the home of
Ralph Waldo Emerson, where
Henry David Thoreau and the Alcotts were frequent visitors. ==The Alcotts in Residence==