WHERE THE WORLD FALLS AWAY 227 acres. 227 years. At East Hill Road's summit, East Hill Farm is a fully realized estate where infrastructure, land, and possibility are complete and in place. The 1798 Thomas Shepard House-museum-quality restoration featuring 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, 5 fireplaces, original King's board floors, hand-blown glass windows-awaits your vision for kitchens and baths. Modern additions: radiant heat, elevator, sun-filled library, luminous sunroom overlooking formal gardens and 4-acre spring-fed pond. The 227 acres aren't just land-they're composition. Meadow unfolding to pond positioned where morning & evening light catch it. Mature forest giving way to unbroken views. Trails looping you gently home by blue hour. Stone walls, pool, tennis court, greenhouse. Magnificent 3,550sf hand-hewn barn moved here. Northern land borders State Forest; southern abuts conservation land-permanent privacy. Guest house (6,668sf): 4 residences replete with possibilities-multigenerational living, art studios, writing spaces, media rooms, yoga, creative sanctuary. Cathedral ceilings, fireplaces, soaring light. The quiet money cannot buy: depth of silence settling at dusk, Milky Way stretching clear across valley, no light pollution. Architecture, land, and sky speaking the same language. Where hosting feels like breathing, completely natural. 5 families in 227 years. You'll be 5th. 5 min to dining, 20 min to Great Barrington, 2.5 hrs to Boston/NYC. Complete and irrepla Drive up East Hill Road through Southfield village, and as you climb towards the top ancient sugar maples, older than the house itself, line your approach. Then the house stops your heart: Federal period elegance, 1798, when John Adams was president. Master craftsman Captain John Collar built this with distinctive dentil cornice, sidelight entry, unusually high ceilings announcing substance and permanence. Walk through that front door into the wide center hall. Original wide-plank floors, King's boards, timber so wide it was meant for Royal Navy masts. Twin parlors flooded with southern light. The original keeping room, now dining room, where massive cooking fireplace with beehive oven still drafts perfectly after 227 years. Woodwork throughout original or hand-crafted to match: chair rails, wainscoting, and a myriad of details preserved through meticulous restoration. From 5-acre homestead, current owners reassembled this estate over 50 years, piecing scattered parcels back together with patience & vision. Walk west through formal gardens the mother sketched: heritage roses, peonies, iris, blueberries. Garden shed with slate roof, morning mist rising off the pond. Asparagus & rhubarb returning stronger annually. In spring, Lee Brook roars with snowmelt, forming waterfalls. The barn that makes photographers stop: 3.5 stories of hand-hewn timber because authenticity matters. 4 fenced pastures with water, run-in barns, ready for horses, market garden, orchard, whatever you dream. What looks comparable on paper rarely matches how East Hill lives. This land is edited: meadows framed for views, forest placed for privacy, pond as focal pause. Approaches reveal the house at perfect angles; rooms read like viewfinders. Hosting turnkey: contiguous lawns for tented dinners, terraces for intimate gatherings, trails for morning walks. This isn't potential-it's a finished landscape masterpiece. When daylight softens and the first stars emerge, you understand what makes this place sacred. The kind of stillness that lets you hear your own thoughts, punctuated only by wind through grass, the distant call of sandhill cranes, water moving over stones. Houses and grounds feel woven into the landscape itself, not imposed upon it-every sightline deliberately composed over decades. Years & fortunes can't recreate what decades & devotion built here. Harmony already