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Of the four rooms on the second floor, two have been restored and furnished as bedrooms and two house exhibit space.

This is the Children's Bedroom. On the east wall, is a sampler made by James and Mary Gage's eldest daughter Catherine that dates to 1816.

Underneath the larger bed in the room sits a trundle bed. This bed would be tucked under the larger bed during the day and at night would be pulled out for sleeping. The support for both beds is constructed of ropes, which had to be pulled tight. On top of those ropes would sit a tick, or mattress that was filled with straw- which was notorious for attracting insects. As a result, the rope support bed was where the saying "sleep tight, don't let the bed bugs bite," originated.

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The Cellar in Battlefield House boasts the original hand hewn log beams. These logs were cut from one tree each and they are rough to the touch due to the marks of the adze used to shape them.

When the Gages lived in the house, the cellar would have been used mainly for food storage, with a dirt or mud floor.

The bricks on the west wall of the cellar staircase date to the 1830s. Bricks from this period were also found underneath the concrete floor and these bricks were more than likely under a wood-burning stove from the time. In many Georgian homes cooking in the summer was done in a small building outside of the main house or in the cellar.