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86e2e524576af1dd9f8724c5db924a58
PDF Text
Text
23 Beach Avenue
Built for
Susan S. Noble
Wife of Edward H. Noble
Clerk
c. 1885
Research by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
July 2021
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2021
�CHAIN OF TITLE, 23 BEACH AVENUE, SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
Date of
Transaction
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Eliza Sutton, widow, and
Hazen & Serena Ayer, all of
Peabody
Daniel B. Gardner Jr. of
Salem
$21,000.00
June 10, 1876
Daniel B. Gardner Jr. of
Salem
Serena D. Ayer, wife of
Hazen Ayer, of Peabody
$2,600.00
January 9, 1877
March 1, 1877
Serena D. Ayer, widow, of
Peabody
Eliza D. Clement, wife of
John B. Clement, of
Peabody
"one dollar"
May 28, 1879
March 4, 1880
Eliza D. Clement, widow, of
Peabody
Daniel B. Gardner of Salem
$2,375.00
March 27, 1880
March 30, 1880
Daniel B. Gardner of Salem
The Salem Yacht Club
House Association
$1,400.00
November 6, 1885
November 10, 1885
The Salem Yacht Club
House Association
Susan S. Noble, wife of
Edward H. Noble, of Salem
May 23, 1900
May 24, 1900
Edward H. & Susan S. Noble Sarah G. Beach, wife of
of Beverly
Charles H. Beach, of Salem
July 14, 1909
July 23, 1909
William W. Coolidge of
Salem, executor of the will
of Sarah G. Beach, late of
Salem
Lizzie E. Quinn, wife of
Joseph F. Quinn, of Salem
June 6, 1919
July 2, 1919
Joseph F. & Lizzie E. Quinn
of Salem
Katherine M. Chase, wife of
Herbert A. Chase, of
Haverhill
October 10, 1935
October 10, 1935
Herbert A. & Katherine M.
Chase of Haverhill
Rebecca H. C. Reeve of
Salem
June 13, 1952
June 13, 1952
Rebecca H. C. Reeve of
Salem
Boleslaus J. & Josephine A.
Szczesny of Manchester
September 24, 1875
November 6, 1875
June 9, 1876
"one dollar and
other valuable
considerations"
Conveyance of
"a parcel of land formerly called Allen's Farm situated
in said Salem partly on the Neck, so called, and partly
on Winter Island, so called, and containing about forty
five acres more or less . . . bounded generally Easterly
by the sea shore and Northerly, Northwesterly,
Southwesterly, and Southerly by land of the City of
Salem. . . "
"four certain lots of land with the buildings thereon
situate on Juniper Point, so called, in said Salem and
being lots numbered sixteen (16) seventeen (17)
eighteen (18) and nineteen (19) on a plan of lots
entitled Plan of House Lots Juniper Point on Salem
Neck C. A. Putnam Surveyor Nov. 1875 and recorded
with Essex Deeds South District . . . said lots being
bounded southerly on Beach Avenue."
"four lots of land, with the buildings thereon situated
on Juniper Point, so called, in said Salem . . . "
Source
Book / Page
Essex County
Registry of Deeds
(ECRD)
941 / 233
ECRD
955 / 82
ECRD
971 / 249
"four lots of land, with the buildings thereon, situated
ECRD
on Juniper Point, so called, in said Salem . . . "
"a certain tract or parcel of land with the buildings
thereon situate & lying in that part of Salem commonly
ECRD
known as Juniper Point and bounded and described
as follows, to wit: being lots numbered eighteen (18)
and nineteen (19) . . . "
"a certain lot of land and all buildings thereon to the
Grantor belonging situate in said Salem bounded and
described as follows . . . "
"one dollar and
"a certain lot of land and all buildings thereon situate
other valuable
in said Salem bounded and described as follows . . . "
considerations paid"
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon
situate in that part of said Salem known as Juniper
Point, bounded and described as follows. Beginning at
a point on Beach avenue at land now or late of
Johnson, thence running southeasterly on said avenue
"one dollar and
fifty feet; thence turning and running northeasterly fifty
other valuable
feet to the easterly corner of lot 19 . . . thence turning
considerations"
and running northwesterly fifty feet to said land now or
late of Johnson; thence turning and running
southwesterly by said land now or late of Johnson fifty
feet to said Beach avenue and the point of beginning.
Being lot numbered 19 and part of lot 18 . . . "
"the land in that part of said SALEM known as
"consideration paid" JUNIPER POINT, with the buildings thereon, bounded
and described as follows . . . "
"the land in that part of said Salem known as Juniper
"consideration paid" Point, with the buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows . . . "
"the land in that part of said Salem known as Juniper
"consideration paid" Point, with the buildings thereon bounded and
described as follows . . . "
Notes
1032 / 217
1033 / 186
ECRD
1161 / 255
ECRD
1609 / 266
ECRD
1975 / 300
ECRD
2419 / 109
ECRD
3051 / 182
ECRD
3902 / 250
Evidence suggests
that the Nobles had
the house built about
1885.
�CHAIN OF TITLE, 23 BEACH AVENUE, SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
Date of
Transaction
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
August 30, 1963
August 30, 1963
Boleslaus J. & Josephine A.
Szczesny of Salem
Evelyn M. Ohm of
Marblehead
August 30, 1963
August 30, 1963
Evelyn M. Ohm of
Marblehead
Boleslaus J. & Josephine A.
Szczesny of Salem
October 20, 1978
October 20, 1978
Boleslaus J. & Josephine A.
Szczesny of Florida
Joseph F. & Carole N.
Grayton of Salem
February 11, 1983
February 11, 1983
Joseph F. & Carole N.
Grayton of Salem
John F. Tierney and Robert I.
Kalis, Trustees of the Amicus
Trust of Salem
Consideration
Conveyance of
"the land in said Salem, in that part thereof known as
"consideration paid" Juniper Point, with the buildings thereon, bounded
and described as follows . . . "
"the land in said Salem, in that part thereof known as
"consideration paid" Juniper Point, with the buildings thereon, bounded
and described as follows . . . "
"the land in that part of said Salem known as Juniper
Point, with the buildings thereon bounded and
$130,000.00
described as follows . . . "
$187,000.00
"the land in that part of said Salem known as Juniper
Point, with the buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows . . . "
Source
Book / Page
ECRD
5098 / 512
ECRD
5098 / 513
ECRD
6530 / 330
ECRD
7049 / 84
Notes
Tierney and Kalis
converted the
building into condos
in 1983.
�SALEM ATLAS 1874
�SALEM ATLAS 1897
�SALEM ATLAS 1911
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���������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Beach Avenue
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
23 Beach Avenue, Salem, MA, 10970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Susan S. Noble
Wife of Edward H. Noble
Clerk
c. 1885
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built circa 1885
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1885
2021
23 Beach Avenue
clerk
Massachusetts
Noble
Salem
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/c1e7da1909df15b559731b150003183e.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=iDehCwCCqR2gwsDj4oD4s03tV7N8u0g9VPGPyxHIbC6Ffg4lsMwK6czZyKWve2Q-gKd21-KCc-c8D7ZFmCutbmxQLFBo-2Idmik5J8lZXCVm2Xhw1lMqBsE2SdphNLDHA5z5RQgnoCPs%7ETTddgRKykG5GQs09jnD3ff5%7EyAygSeLzQ3uPBFTVMvGckgxIlVarvHXRFk9drKai57rQQDQLQLIiA2GKyB0Jfzp50IUjmzywwj6N7Lq39Pt8eMlGm1hHutWlOD4Nl0w6NnAUdd7e9BAERSuPlSDipaN8EoaHPQZDkq9aielB7TAJmHeiZavGpGtgH%7EPtRZUZKa8GC0TsQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
8ebdfa483f0713266c31dfcc6be0d25a
PDF Text
Text
92 Bay View Avenue
Built for
Edward W. Clark
Conductor
Built 1897
Researched and written by Amelia Zurcher
2021
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2021
�House first appears on the atlas map in 1897 and is first listed in the City Directory in 1899.?
Date Purchased
Homeowner
Years of Ownership
Number of Years
Purchase Price
Documents
Referenced
December 1,
1875
Clark E. Caswell
Lizzie S. Caswell
1875-1891
16
$255
March 8, 1891
Edward W. Clark
1891-1906
15
$2,400.00
October 15,
1906
Andrew Fitz
1906-1908
2
1843:291
December 6,
1908
Joseph E. Bush
Ellen M. Bush
1908-1916
8
$1.00 “and other
valuable
considerations paid”
2339:490
Inherited from father,
Andrew Fitz.
August 21, 1916
Susie J. Fitz
Daniel C. Fitz
1916-1923
7
“Consideration paid”
2339:490
May 7, 1923
Mary Ethel Hinkley
Harry W. Hinkley
1923-1925
2
“Consideration paid”
2550:288
The street, formerly known
as Central Avenue, is
renamed to Bay View
Avenue.
February 24,
1925
Alberta W. Allen
Harvey G. Allen
1925-1965
40
“Consideration paid”
August 3, 1966
Gloria A. Wallis
Linzee Wallis
1966-2018
52
“Consideration paid”
March 21, 2018
Susan Eisenhaur
2018
1
“Less than 100
dollars”
2631:365
4477:317
3429:529
18607:115
5382:384
10100:60
36594:164
June 29, 2018
Jeffrey MacBurnie
Dawn MacBurnie
2018-2019
2
$627,500.00
36831:316
July 10, 2019
Nicholas V. Burwell
2019-2020
2
$820,000.00
37653:147
947:14
947.15
1208:190
1371:117
1843:290
Notes
Originally purchased plot
called “Lot 9” in 1875 and a
portion of “Lot 10” added.
Originally 30 Central
Avenue.
A plot of land called “Lot
11” was added to the
property in 1958.
Inherited from father
Harvey G. Allen
Inherited from mother
Gloria Wallis
�March 20, 2020
Alan Lempereur
Michele PekarLempereur
2020+
1+
$785,000.00
38353:013
����������������������1875 Plan Book: Book 1 Plan 15, “Plan of Cottage Lots Belonging to Danial B. Goodwin Jr. At Juniper Point Salem Neck”.
�1897 Atlas Map, Plate 7
�MACRIS SAL.3490 “Caswell – Clark House”
�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Bay View Avenue
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
92 Bay View Avenue, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for Edward W. Clark
Conductor
Built 1897
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built 1897
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amelia Zurcher
Language
A language of the resource
English
1897
2021
92 Bay View Avenue
Clark
conductor
Massachusetts
Salem
-
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048cb73648ed1e5684ffcf18bd09ab2b
PDF Text
Text
1 Emerton Street
Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Built 1891
by Charles B. Balcomb, carpenter, and William E. Bates, mason
Researched and Written by David Moffat – December 2021
�Date
Conveyed by
Conveyed to
Property
Amount
Doc
Book
Page
8 Oct
1891
James A. Gillis
Charles B.
Balcomb and
William E. Bates
“A certain
parcel of
land”
$1,400
Deed
1323
470
4 Feb
1892
Charles B. Balcomb and John P. Bates
William E. Bates
“A certain
parcel of
land with
new
dwelling
house
thereon”
$2,000
Deed
1334
105
6 Oct
1906
John P. Bates
Florence H.
Lefavour
“A certain Consider
parcel of ation paid
land with
and $1
the
buildings
thereon”
Deed
1843
510
2 Aug
1919
Florence H. Lefavour,
Widow of William J.
Lefavour
Edward V. Tracy
“The land Consider
in said ation paid
Salem,
with the
buildings
thereon”
Deed
2419
593
21
Nov
1925
Edward V. Tracy
Veronica
Grabowska
“The land Consider
in said ation Paid
Salem,
with the
buildings
thereon”
Deed
2664
38
Deed
2744
187
29 Oct Veronica Grabowska
1927
Harvey
Gastonguay
“The land
in said
Salem,
with the
Consider
ation Paid
�buildings
thereon”
5 Aug
1942
Harvey Gastonguay
Rosa
Gastonguay
“The land
in said
Salem,
with the
buildings
thereon”
Consider
ation Paid
Deed
3308
25
Deed
6322
348
3 Feb Harvey E. Gastonguay
1977
Claire M.
Gastonguay
“The land
in said
Salem”
etc.
$32,000
20
May
2005
Claire M. Blanchette
FKA Claire M.
Castonguay
1 Emerton
Realty Trust
“The
premises
known as
1 Emerton
St.” etc.
$10
Deed 25819
245
15
Sep
2020
Susan M. Quinn,
Susan M. Quinn
Successor Trustee of the
1 Emerton Realty Trust
“The Consider
premises ation Paid
known as
and $10
1 Emerton
St.” etc.
Deed 39166
480
Other Notes:
-No MACRIS file.
Emerton Street named for James Emerton, apothecary, though it was Rebecca Emerton was was
living at 6 East Street in 1850 and 1851.
In the 1884 directory, Emerton Street ran from 24 Forrester to Webb, and contained only 4
houses, all on the left side:
1. Wm. H. Hart
7. Columbus N. Rogers
James S. Nelson
13. Henry B. Phillips
William K. Tebbetts
In 1891 Directory, 1 Emerton is William H. Hart and Henry E. Gosselin.
�In 1893, Frank Bates is listed at #1, and William H. Hart at #3.
William H. Hart, plumber at 8 Central, house 1 Emerton Street (1884, p. 182)
1874: Miss E.P. Richardson
1897: J.P. Bates
1890-1891 Directory: Charles B. Balcomb, carpenter, 281 Bridge, h. 18 Symonds
William E. Bates, of Bates & Touret (Benjamin A. Touret) 163 Derby Street, Masons. h. 13
Arbella.
�Future site of Emerton Street in 1851, note the home of J. Emerton
�1 Emerton Street in 1874
1 Emerton Street in 1897
�1 Emerton in 1903
�1 Emerton Street in 1911
�1 Emerton Street in 1938
���������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Emerton Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
1 Emerton Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built 1891
by Charles B. Balcomb, carpenter, and William E. Bates, mason
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built 1891
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
David Moffat
Language
A language of the resource
English
1 Emerton Street
1891
2021
Balcomb
Bates
Carpenter
mason
Massachusetts
Salem
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/835555af9bb11f09b9b4f23a2945d4c1.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=klBU-QWNHEBKuGvvbeTtyqClGKaHjosRLDq8Dytzo82WGSpcWz9PPTTeuubokM%7EE41ujMq6ZCpwXql5EodoKgcYXtnh%7E2%7EAPiKknAHlTV4Yxgny%7E7X20KhPWCiXbK5%7E--3uVvu9ohKxhFnnXW062egeZ-ggEUYIBbTVFTbuItnGDgwC50rsc0D5wr82LPVwC%7E-DhW6M0C1YSx7BwHitv-4QfkBETnGs9VVa425PKkokwsB37ZI9bnkoxfc7g6FSgBjLgYaV-dhioiheUl%7ENOcV7LeHg0csxoiMm-ESsE7WGsrYWazTkgtSXnt8kBX8FifvOZcK2N0iZHOufkGDOXOQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
178a2401fe3deb28f135ab0bed97727a
PDF Text
Text
358 - 358 ½ Essex Street
Built for
Joseph Neal
Cordwainer
c. 1729
Research by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
December 2021
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2021
�CHAIN OF TITLE, 358 - 358 1/2 ESSEX STREET, SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
Date of
Transaction
October 10, 1724
July 25, 1752
Date Recorded
October 12, 1724
Grantor(s)
Hanah Croade of Salem,
daughter of Richard
Croade, deceased
May 3, 1753
–
Grantee(s)
Joseph Neale,
cordwainer, of Salem
Mary (Neale) Foster &
John Foster, mariner, of
Salem
Eunice (Neale) Bacon &
Benjamin Bacon, periwigmaker, of Salem
Consideration
56 pounds
Conveyance of
Book /
Page
Notes
43 / 270
An old house already stood on the
property when it was purchased by
Joseph Neal(e) in 1724, but,
according to historian Sidney
Perley, the house burned down in
1729. Neal presumably built the
house that now stands on the
property around the same time.
According to Bryant Tolles, timbers
from the original seventeenthcentury dwelling were reused in the
construction of the current house.
ECRD
99 / 233
This document is an "Indenture of
Division & Partition" of the real
estate of Joseph Neale, deceased,
between his daughters Mary and
Eunice. It divided the house into
two halves.
ECRD
124 / 214
Deed of Mortgage
ECRD
126 / 32
ECRD
141 / 231
ECRD
148 / 150
ECRD
1478 / 140
Source
"an old dwelling house & about twenty nine Poles of Land be it more or
Less being part of the Homestead of the sd Richard Croade decd
bounded Southerly on the main street where it measures three poles &
Eleven feet in the front & northerly in the Rear on the Land of Mr. Robert Essex County
Kitchin decd where it measures four poles & 7 feet & 7 Inches & on the Registry of
Deeds (ECRD)
Easterly side by Matthew Estes decd measuring seven Pole & seven
feet & on the westerly side by the Land of the sd Joseph Neale which
he bought of the widow Croade where it measures seven Pole & two
feet . . . "
The western half of the dwelling house and land of the late Joseph
Neal.
–
The eastern half of the dwelling house and land of the late Joseph
Neal.
WESTERN HALF OF HOUSE & LAND
October 29, 1765
October 29, 1765
John Foster, yeoman, of
Manchester
Benjamin Pickman, Esq. of
Salem
5 shillings
January 16, 1769
January 20, 1769
Benjamin Pickman, Esq.
of Salem
Francis & Elizabeth Grant
240 pounds
Francis Grant,
September 13, 1784 September 14, 1784 shopkeeper, & Elizabeth
Grant of Salem
April 17, 1787
March 27, 1896
March 27, 1896
May 22, 1787
May 1, 1896
May 1, 1896
William Gray Jr.,
merchant, of Salem
William Gray of Salem
John Clarke, mariner, of
Salem
1 shilling
260 pounds
Alfred Stone of
Providence, RI and David
Moore of Salem,
Lucy P. Morgan of Salem
executors under the last
will of William Mack, late
of Salem
$385.63
Alfred Stone of
Providence, RI, trustee of
Lucy P. Morgan
the last will of Esther C.
Mack, late of Salem
$1,156.89
"the west half part of the dwelling House and Land in Salem aforesaid . .
. formerly assigned to me and Mary my wife in a Deed of Partition dated
July the 25th, 1752 as her part of the Estate of Joseph Neal late of said
Salem Deceased."
"The Westerly Part of the Dwelling House and Homestead Land in said
Salem heretofore of Joseph Neal Deceased . . . "
"the westerly half of a dwelling house with the land adjoining and
belonging to said half house lying in Salem aforesaid bounded
Southerly on the main street easterly on the other half of said house &
land belonging to Samuel Grant northerly on land late of Edward
Kitchen Esq. deceased & westerly on land of the heirs of John Ropes
deceased . . . "
"The westerly part of a dwelling house in said Salem & the land thereto
adjoining & belonging the whole of said house & land was formerly the
Estate & Homestead of Joseph Neal deceased . . . "
"one undivided eighth part of a lot of land with one undivided eighth
part of the westerly half of the double house and other buildings
thereon situated on the northerly side of Essex Street in said Salem, and
bounded and described as follows: beginning at the South westerly
corner thereof at land of Johnson and Essex Street, thence running
Easterly on Essex street, about twenty nine feet to land of grantee and
the middle of the front door of said double house, thence Northerly
through said house bounded Easterly by land of said grantee to back of
said house, thence North twenty seven degrees East thirteen and one
half feet, thence North two degrees West to the Northerly end of the
premises, thence Westerly about thirteen feet, thence Southerly one
foot, thence Westerly again about twenty feet to land of Johnson.
thence Southerly about seventy feet seven inches bounded Westerly by
said land of Johnson, thence Westerly about five feet eight inches,
thence Southerly again bounded by said land of Johnson, about sixty
four feet three inches to the point begun at."
"three undivided eighth parts of a certain lot of land on the northerly
side of Essex Street in said Salem, together with three undivided eighth
parts of the westerly half of the double house and other building
thereon, and bounded and described as follows . . . "
Deed of Mortgage
The Clarke/Mack family (John
Clarke's granddaughter Harriet
married Elisha Mack in 1820)
owned the western half of the
property for over a century before
selling it to Lucy Morgan, whose
family had owned the eastern half
of the property since the mid- or
late-nineteenth century.
ECRD
1478 / 141
�property for over a century before
selling it to Lucy Morgan, whose
family had owned the eastern half
of the property since the mid- or
late-nineteenth century.
March 27, 1896
May 1, 1896
Matilda F. Clarke and
Harriet Clarke, both of
Chicago, trustees under
the last will of John F.
Clarke, late of Chicago
Lucy P. Morgan of Salem
$1,542.50
"one undivided half part with the undivided half part of the western half
of the double house and other buildings situate thereon of the following
described premises situated on the northerly side of Essex Street in said
ECRD
Salem, and bounded and described as follows . . . "
1478 / 143
EASTERN HALF OF HOUSE & LAND
October 20, 1778
October 28, 1778
December 29, 1783 December 29, 1783
February 4, 1794
February 5, 1794
Benjamin Bacon, periwigWilliam Pickman,
maker, & Eunice Bacon of
merchant, of Salem
Salem
William Pickman,
merchant, of Salem
Samuel Grant, mariner, of
Salem
Samuel Grant, mariner, of
Salem
Thomas Mason, merchant,
of Salem
760 pounds
360 pounds
209 pounds
"the easterly half of a dwelling house in said Salem situate in the main
street, so called, with the land thereto belonging bounding southerly on
ECRD
said street, easterly on land of said Pickmans, lately Abijah(?) Estes,
northerly on land of Edward Kitchen Turner one pole & twenty four links,
& westerly on the other half of said house & land thereto belonging . . . "
"the easterly half of a dwelling house in said Salem with the land thereto
ECRD
belonging . . . "
"The easterly half part of a certain Dwelling house in Salem aforesaid
ECRD
with the land under & adjoining the same . . . "
137 / 13
137 / 178
157 / 111
According to the Salem Directory,
Mrs. Theodore Morgan lived at 358
Essex Street in 1855. The 1874
Salem Atlas shows that, by that
year, the Morgan family owned the
eastern half of the property.
***
ENTIRETY OF HOUSE & LAND
September 24, 1900September 24, 1900
William S. Felton of
Salem, executor of the
will of Lucy P. Morgan,
late of Salem
Susan S. Kimball of Salem
$6,000.00
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in said Salem,
and bounded and described as follows: Beginning at the southeast
corner thereof on Essex street, thence running westerly by said Essex
street sixty-two and fifty-five one hundredths (62.55) feet to land of
Johnson; thence running northerly sixty-seven and fifty-six one
hundredths (67.56) feet thence easterly five and seven tenths (5.7) feet,
thence northerly seventy and seven tenths (70.7) feet all three courses
ECRD
being by said land of Johnson, to land of the Winn estate; thence
running easterly nineteen and seven tenths (19.7) feet, and thence
northerly one and three tenths (1.3) feet both courses being by said
Winn land; thence running easterly by said Winn land and by land of
Saunders forty-five and two tenths (45.2) feet to land of Frye; thence
running southerly by said land of Frye one hundred twenty eight and
fifteen one hundredths (128.15) feet to Essex street, and the point begun
at."
1620 / 242
$1.00
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon in said Salem
ECRD
bounded beginning at the southeast corner thereof on Essex Street . . . "
1707 / 189
June 9, 1903
June 9, 1903
Frank R. Kimball of Salem Andrew Fitz of Salem
June 9, 1903
June 9, 1903
Andrew Fitz of Salem
May 23, 1904
May 23, 1904
March 17, 1937
March 18, 1937
July 24, 1981
July 24, 1981
Rebecca B. Haskell of
Salem
Thomas E. & Elaine T.
Krueger of Salem
$160,000.00
July 11, 2011
July 11, 2011
Thomas E. Krueger of
Salem
Andrew C. Greer
$425,000.00
Eleanor B. Kimball, wife of
$1.00
Frank R. Kimball, of Salem
Rebecca A. Benson, wife "one dollar and
Frank R. Kimball of Salem of Henry P. Benson, of
other valuable
Salem
considerations"
Rebecca B. Haskell, wife
Rebecca A. Benson of
"consideration
of Paul T. Haskell, of
Salem
paid"
Salem
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon in said Salem
bounded beginning at the southeast corner thereof on Essex Street . . . "
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon in said Salem
bounded beginning at the south east corner thereof on Essex Street . . .
"
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon in said SALEM,
bounded: Beginning at the southeast corner thereof on Essex Street . . .
"
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon in said SALEM,
bounded: Beginning at the southeast corner thereof on Essex Street . . .
"
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings thereon, situated at 358
Essex Street, bounded and described as follows . . . Beginning at the
southeast corner thereof on Essex Street . . . "
ECRD
1707 / 190
ECRD
1742 / 431
ECRD
3104 / 49
ECRD
6844 / 148
ECRD
30520 / 7
"see deed from Wm. S. Felton,
Executor, to Susan S. Kimball, my
deceased mother by whom it was
devised to me by will . . . "
The property was officially
condoized in 2012.
�������������������������������������1851 SALEM ATLAS
�1874 SALEM ATLAS
�1897 SALEM ATLAS
�1911 SALEM ATLAS
�VITAL RECORDS OF SALEM V. III
�1855 SALEM DIRECTORY
SALF.M
[M]
DIRECTORY.
Ifl9
Mooney Matthew, shoemaker, house 172 Derby
Moore David, merchant, house 226 Derby
Moore George, carpenter, house rear Aborn
Moore Harriet, widow, house 68 North
Moore James, carpenter, house 14 Whittemore
Moore Mary Mrs. house 224 Derby
Moore Obadiah Mrs. house 10 Ash
Moore Philip, cabinet maker, house 2 Conant
Moore "William, currier, house 20 Boston
Moran Edward, laborer, house 6 Ward
Morasky Patrick, laborer, house 43 Union
Moreland George W. grocer, 44 Essex, house 1 Carlton
(JohnH.) & Dalton (Sephoreno M.), periodicals, 241
Essex, house I May st. court
Moreland John S. shoemaker, house 1 May st. court
IMoreland
Morgan George S. laborer, house 14 Turner
Morgan Henry W. shoemaker, boards Phelps court, e. Vale
Morgan John, laborer, house Parker's court
Morgan John, soap boiler, house 28 Boston
Morgan Lucy Mrs. house 16 Summer
Morgan Martin, currier, boards rear 13 Lynn
Morgan Patrick, laborer, hous" 8 Briggs
Morgan Richard, laborer, house Dodge
Morgan Theodore Mrs. house 358 Essex
Morrill Barnard C. lather, house 8 Peabodv
Morrill (rhebe) & Walker (Mary M.), millinery, 246 Essex
Morris Joseph B. restorator, West place, house 17 Mall
Morris William R. house 1 Ropes
Morrison James, blacksmith, house 18 Carlton
Morse Ebenezer, carpenter, rear 123 Lafayette, house do.
Morse Edward A. currier, house 28 High
.
Morse E. Henry, carpenter, house 19 Dearborn
Morse Enoch, carpenter, house rear 16 Flint
Morse John Mrs. house 28 Broad
Morse Lavinia, millinery, 3 St. Peter, house 10 Church
Morse Lucius B. tanner, 71 Mason, house 188 Federal
Morse Lydia Mrs. house 6 Broad
Morse Mary E. Mrs. house 6 Broad
Morse Nathaniel P. saddler, house 111 Federal
Morse Pavne, shoemaker, house 133 North
Morse William B. mariner, boards 123 Lafayette
Morse William T. tanner, 61 Mason, house 101 do.
Morton Henry, clerk, boards 3144 Essex
Moseley Joseph, captain, house 9 Barr
Moseley Martha Mrs. house 156 Federal
Moseley Martha P. Mrs. house 97 Essex
Motley Rachel, widow, house 163 Federal
�The Essex Antiquarian.
Vol. VII.
Salem,
Mass.,
July,
1903.
No. 3.
"LORD TIMOTHY DEXTER.";
Who has not heard of " Lord Timothy
Dexter," a citizen of Newburyport, and
notorious for his extravagancies and fool
ish exhibitions? He was a son of Nathan
and Esther (Brintnall) Dexter, and was
bom in Malden, Mass., Jan. 22, 1746-7.
He wrote, " I was born when great pow
ers ruled,
on Jan. 22, 1747.
On this
day, in the morning, a great snow storm ;
the signs in the seventh house;
whilst
Mars came forward Jupiter stood by to
hold the candle.
I was to be one great
man."
He had limited advantages in the way
of schooling, and at the age of eight
years, May 9, 1755, his father put him
with a farmer in Malden, with whom he
He
remained six years and six months.
then went to Charlestown, the then prin
cipal center of the skin- or leather-dress
ing business of New England, and learned
the trade of a leather-dresser, dressing skins
He
for leather breeches and gloves.
stayed there eleven months and then
went to Boston, where he remained until
he was of age. Fourteen days later, he says,
" I went to Newbury Port with A bondel
in my hand to A plase all noue to me."
He engaged in the business of a leather.
dresser in Newburyport; and in May,
1770, he married a widow, who was nine
This was Elizabeth,
years his senior.
daughter of John Lord of Exeter, N. H.,
and widow of Benjamin Frothingham of
The widow was
Newburyport, a glazier.
industrious and frugal and possessed of a
house and lot on the southern comer of
Merrimack and Green streets. With her,
Timothy Dexter, then twenty-three years
In the base
old, took up his residence.
ment of the house Mrs. Dexter conducted
a shop for the sale of provisions, vegeta
bles and small fruits ; and in the garden
Mr. Dexter dug vats, and continued at his
trade.
He prospered in business ; and entered
into speculation in various ways. Among
the first was his purchase of land at the
and as a proprietor in the
Penobscot,
Ohio company's purchase, being associ
ated in the latter with Dr. Manasseh Cut
He pros
ler and other prominent men.
pered in these land ventures.
At about the same time, he was ad
vised, as a joke, it is said, to buy a large
of public securities when they
quantity
were selling at about thirteen per cent of
He followed the advice,
their face value.
and the adoption of the new constitution,
followed by the Hamilton funding system,
caused the securities to advance in value
It is supposed that he
to nearly par.
profited to the extent of ten thousand
dollars by the rise of the market.
Many are the stories that have been
told during the past century of the ven
tures that seemed at the time utterly
foolish, but which resulted in great profit
He bought a large quan
to Mr. Dexter.
tity of warming-pans, and shipped them
to the West Indies at the instance of
some merchant clerks, as a part of an
The Yankee ingenuity
assorted cargo.
of the young commander of the craft that
carried them to the sunny South was
aroused, and he took off the covers and
The cov
had handles attached to them.
ers were readily sold as skimmers, and
the pans as ladles, to the various sugarmaking establishments at a good profit.
�n6
THE ESSEX ANTIQUARIAN.
PART OF SALEM IN
J700.
NO. J2.
BY SiDNEY PERLEY.
The map on page 1 1 9 comprises the
area bounded by Flint, Essex and Beckford streets and North river. It is based
on actual surveys and title deeds, and is
drawn on a scale of two hundred feet to
an inch.
It shows the location of all
houses standing in 1700.
The braces
" show where Federal street
marked " a
runs ; the brace marked " b " where Mon
"
roe street begins ; and that marked " c
where Andover street begins.
Essex street was first called a highway
in 1657; street, 1664 ; town street, 1678;
the broad street that goes from ye meet
ing house westward to the town's end,
1679; the main street, 1679; je high
street, 1695 ; and Essex street, 1 795.
Flint street was called a lane that leads
to the water side in 1672 ; ye lane yt
leads down to ye North river, 1704; a
lane that leads from ye main street to ye
north river, 1706 ; and Dean's lane, 1770.
Several years ago the name was changed
to Flint street as it was a continuation of
the street then and since known by that
name.
Beckford street was called a lane in
1657; street or lane, 1677 ; street or
highway, 1679 ; lane or highway that leads
from ye main street to ye north river,
1696; Beckford's lane, 1773 ; Kitchen's
lane, 1783; Turner's lane, 1793; and
Beckford street in 1797.
Federal
street was laid out but very
shortly before 1773, when it was called
It was called the new
ye new street.
street laid out between the North river
and the main street in 1774; the new
street called the north street, 1776; the
back or new street, 1781; and Federal
street in 1792.
Monroe street was laid out in 1S01,
It was
when it was called a new street.
called a new street leading from Essex to
Federal streets in 1802 ; Shillaber street,
1 81 4 ; and Monroe street in 1828.
River street was called a way in 1739 ,
road, 1773; private road, 1778; lane,
1782 ; and River street in 1796.
Carpenter street was laid out in 1 800,
when it was called an open way.
It was
called the new way in 1801 ; and Carpen
ter street in 1827.
Andover street was so called in 1802,
having just previously been laid out.
North river was called the north river
in 1657; ye river, 1698; and the river
leading to the great bridge in 1773.
In the sketches that follow, after 1700,
titles and deeds referred to pertain to
the houses and land under and adjoining,
and not always to the whole lot, the design
being, after 1 700, to give the history of
the houses then standing principally.
The lots of Capt. Thomas Flint, Joseph
Douglass, and Thomas Ruck comprised
the homestead estate of Thomas Spooner
before 1664, when his death occurred.
His widow Elizabeth Spooner was his ad
and she conveyed various
ministratrix,
lots as hereafter stated.
Thomas Flint Lot.
This was a part of
the homestead of Thomas Spooner, and
was conveyed
his
administratrix,
by
together with that part of the Joseph
Douglass lot that lies south of the dashes,
Thomas
for twelve pounds,
to Capt.
Flint of Salem, farmer, May n, 1672.*
Captain Flint, who then lived in Salem
village, for thirty pounds, conveyed this
lot to Joseph Dean of Salem, mariner,
The estate then re
May 7, 17o6.f
mained in the Dean family for three
quarters of a century.
That part of
Joseph Douglass House.
the lot lying south of the dashes was a
part of the half-acre conveyed by Mrs.
Spooner to Capt. Thomas Flint May n,
Flint conveyed this
Captain
1672.*
part of his lot (twenty square rods) to
Edmond Bridges of Salem, blacksmith,
March 5, ^78-9. J Mr. Bridges had
Essex Registry
of Deeds,
book
5, leaf 69.
For an affidavit of John Cooke, blacksmith, and
William Reeves, slaughterer, both living on the
south side of the street, and each aged about
sixty years, relative to Captain Flint's quiet pos
session of the premises, see Essex Registry of
Deeds, book 18, leaf 183.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 18, leaf 182.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 7, leaf 35.
t
J
�Registry
Registry
Registry
Registry
Registry
of
of
of
of
of
Deeds,
Deeds,
Deeds,
Deeds,
Deeds,
book
book
book
book
book
5, leaf 89.
9, leaf 198.
35, leaf 125.
3, leaf 150.
5, leaf 69.
it,
about 1679.
Mr. Ruck released his in
terest in the remainder of the estate to
his son Thomas Ruck Dec. 6, 1687,* and
the other
children
released
probably
their interest to Thomas at about the same
time.
Thomas died in July, 1 704, having
devised the estate to his sons John and
Thomas
Ruck. It is described in the
inventory of his estate as " Old Spooners
houfe & 7 acres of Land & Bam in y*
Towne," and was appraised at two hun
dred pounds.
So the old house was
standing in 1 704, but it probably stood
only a few years longer.
The southeastern comer of this lot
within the dashes was the twelve rods of
land on which John Simpson of Salem
erected a dwelling house before May 10,
1672, when Mrs. Elizabeth Spooner, who
then owned the entire lot, conveyed
as
The deed
gift, to Mr. Simpson.
describes the lot as " that peece of ground
in Salem aforesd upon which
sd Symp.
son with my good liking
approbation
hath built him an house uppon
in which
he now dwells, with
gar
yard room
den platt as
now fenced in."f
Mr.
con
Simpson was
husbandman, and
veyed the house and lot to Joshua Buffum of Salem, in exchange for another
etc.
house, orchard,
(on North river
east of Beckford street, see Map No. 13),
Feb. 28, 1686.74
The estate belonged
to Thomas Ruck at the time of his de
cease in July, 1704, being valued in the
of his estate at thirty-five
inventory
pounds. The conveyance was made from
Buflum to Ruck ptobably at the time of
the latter's acquiring
the Spooner house
and estate in 1687.
This house and lot
was devised in Mr. Ruck's will with the
remainder of the Spooner homestead to
his sons John and Thomas Ruck. Thomas
Ruck,the son,does not appear subsequently
as owner of this property.
John Ruck
apparently took down the Spooner house
and this house, and built on the site of
the latter
new house, in which he lived,
ye
&
&
&
ye
it
is
a
Essex Registry of Deeds, book
Essex Registry of Deeds, book
Essex Registry of Deeds, book
7, 3, 8,
Essex
Essex
t Essex
§ Essex
II Essex
t
"7
NO. 12.
a
a house and bam upon the lot before
the deed was drawn.
Philip Cromwell
of Salem, slaughterer, and Mr. Bridges
of John Ruck, who then
purchased
owned the Spooner estate, that part of the
lot lying north of the dashes ; and those
grantees, for seventy pounds,
conveyed
the entire lot (one fourth of an acre),
with the dwelling house and shop there
on, to William Sweatland of Salem, tailor,
In 1693, the title to
Sept. 18, 1680.*
the estate was in Stephen Sewall of Salem,
merchant.
Mr. Sweatland was living in
1 688, but whether he died possessed of the
property or conveyed it before his death
to Mr. Sewall the writer does not know.
Mr. Sewall, for fifty-five pounds, conveyed
the house, leanto and lot to Joseph Doug
lass of Salem, clothworker, Sept. 8, 1693.1
Mr. Douglass removed to Malden and
conveyed the estate to Joshua Hicks of
March 14, 17 18-9. J
Salem, merchant,
Mr. Hicks removed the old house some
years later.
This lot com
Thomas Ruck Houses.
prised nearly the whole of the Spooner
the
estate.
Mrs. Spooner
conveyed
small lot, included within the dashes, at
the southeastern comer, to John Simpson
May 10, 1672 ;§ and the Thomas Flint
lot and the southern part of the Joseph
Douglass lot to Mr. Flint May n, 1672.H
Mrs. Spooner died in 1676, having de
vised the homestead with the exception
of the lots she had sold to her son-in-law
John Ruck for life and remainder to his
five children, whose mother was Hannah,
only child of Mr. and Mrs. Spooner.
Mr. and Mrs. Ruck's children were Eliz
abeth, Hannah, Sarah, John and Thomas.
The house apparently was of considerable
in 1677, a parlor and
size, containing,
kitchen,
etc.
chamber,
hall,
parlor
the
to
father,
Ruck,
conveyed
John
Philip Cromwell and Edmond Bridges the
northern part of the Joseph Douglass lot
17OO.
a
built
IN
t
OF SALEM
X
PART
leaf 166.
leaf 150.
leaf 118.
�n8
THE ESSEX
being a blacksmith. He conveyed the es
tate to Joseph Cook, jr., of Salem, fisher
man, Dec. 26, 1730.*
The lots of
Roger Derby House.
Richard Derby, Joseph
Derby,
Neal, Robert Kitchen and that part of
the lot of John and Rebecca Beckford
west of the dashes constituted the lot of
Richard Bishop in 1657.
Before his
decease, Dec. 30, 1674, he probably con
veyed to John Darling of Salem, the hus
band of his daughter Mary, the Roger
Derby and Richard Derby lots and the
western
part of the Joseph Neal lot.
Mr. Darling, for twenty-seven pounds,
conveyed the Roger Derby and Richard
Derby lots to Roger Derby of Ipswich,
Mr. Derby
chandler, Feb. 8, 1 678-9.1
removed to Salem, and continued his
business here.
He was from Topsham,
Devonshire, England, and died in Salem,
Sept. 26, 1698, having devised the house
and this part of his lot to his wife Eliza
beth for her life and then to his son Sam
uel Derby.
She died in 1740.
Samuel
Derby died at sea prior to 1728. At
became
her decease Samuel's children
owners of the estate.
Oct. 7, 1741, his
surviving sons, Roger Derby of Salem,
sadler, and Samuel Derby of Lynn, cordand
wainer, for three hundred
fifty
pounds, conveyed the land and buildings
to Roger Peele of Salem, shipwright, Oct.
7, 1 74 1. J
By several suits at law, Mr.
Peele lost the house and land adjoining.
On execution, in the suit of Robert Peele
of Salem, tailor, the body of the dwelling
house was set off to him April 20, 1748. §
On execution, in another suit of Robert
Peele, the lean to part of the house, on its
eastern side, was set off to him July 28,
Robert Peele, for two hundred
1748.ll
and twenty-three pounds, conveyed the
house and land to Samuel Ropes, jr., of
Salem, merchant,
by two deeds, one
dated April 27, 1748,11 and the other
Roger
EssexRegistry
Essex Registry
t Essex Registry
§ Essex Registry
II Essex Registry
IT Essex Registry
t
of Deeds, book 61, leaf 226.
of Deeds, book 5, leaf 104.
of Deeds, book 80, leaf 294.
of Deeds, book 91, leaf 149.
of Deeds, book 91, leaf 203.
of Deeds, book 93, leaf 153.
ANTIQUARIAN.
Aug. 3, 1749.*
cordwainer
and
Mr. Ropes became a
and
two hundred
for
sixty-six pounds, conveyed the land and
to Richard Derby of Salem,
buildings
Mr. Derby
merchant, Feb. 9, 1 773-t
conveyed the same estate to Jacob Very
Mr.
of Salem, mariner, April 1, 1795.+
Very probably removed the house the
same year.
Richard Derby Lot.
This lot was a
portion of the lot of land conveyed by
John Darling to Roger Derby Feb. 8,
Mr. Derby died Sept. 26,
1678-9. §
1698, having devised this lot, on which
stood his soaphouse, to his son Richard
Richard
Derby, who was a mariner.
owned the lot for many years subsequent
to 1700.
This lot was
Joseph Neal House.
a part of the lot of Richard Bishop, who
In his nuncupative will,
died in 1674-5.
he devised the front and middle portions
of the lot, as divided by the dashes, to
his granddaughter Mary, daughter of his
daughter Mary Darling, wife of John
Mr. Darling probably erected
Darling.
the house shown on the map in or before
living in it
in
was
He
1676.
Mr.
Bishop
The
lot
devised
by
1678.
to Mary Darling was assigned to her by
metes and bounds by the administrator
She con
of his estate Nov. 7, 168o.||
veyed the central part of the lot, between
the dashes, to Thomas Maule of Salem,
Nov. 19, 1680 ;% and the
merchant,
front part with the house subsequently.
Mr. Maule conveyed the house and front
and middle parts of the lot to Joseph
Neal of Salem, joiner, for sixty- two pounds
July 17, 1 68 1.** Mr. Derby conveyed
to Mr. Neal a strip of land two feet wide
off the eastern end of his lot April 27,
168z.tt
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 93, leaf 152.
of Deeds, book 122, leaf
t Essex Registry
t
Essex Registry of Deeds,
§ Essex Registry of Deeds,
II Essex Registry of Deeds,
II Essex Registry of Deeds,
Essex Registry of Deeds,
tt Essex Registry of Deeds,
book
book
book
book
book
book
159, leaf 54.
5, leaf 104.
6, leaf 29.
5, leaf 101.
6, leaf 27.
10, leaf 42.
�YE
Flint .
NORTH
NORTH
LANE TO
Thomas
RIVER
!
.
RIVER
19 Joseph
Douglass
YE
Ruck
HIGH
.
Thomas
STREET
.
Joseph
urs
O
O
THE
RIVER
:
NORTH
Rover
River
dcorä
PATH
Rebecca
*
,-
.
RIVER
PART
OF
SALEM
NI
1700
PO
NORTH
:
pinch Sgabe
YE
=
fest 200
and
Robert
TO
:
.
.
SITE
OLD
Beckford
תתו
LANE
Le
meel
Robert
Kitchen
Kitchen
Katherine
i
. .
.
Matthew
lei Estes
Joseph
Dean
de
John
Frances
Creado
1
WATTUTT
Neal
�120
THE ESSEX ANTIQUARIAN.
9, leaf 69.
17, leaf 33.
21, leaf 164.
30, leaf
34.
leaf 6.
a
it
it,
a
it
a
&
:
a
ye
ye
ye
ye
:
2
1
&
:
a
ye
y'
&
y'
book
book
book
book
book
&
of Deeds,
of Deeds,
of Deeds,
of Deeds,
of Deeds,
t
Registry
Registry
Registry
Registry
Registry
house and land around
being assigned
to Widow Hannah Croo of Salem, daugh
ter of the deceased.
She conveyed the
" old dwelling house," as the house was
then called, to her brother-in-law
Joseph
Neal of Salem, cordwainer,
Oct. 10,
While Mr. Neal owned the es
1724.*
tate the house was burned down, in 1729,
with the Estes house, which stood only a
few feet distant.
Matthew Estes House.
This lot was
part of the lot conveyed by Thomas
Robbins to John Kitchen before 1664.
Mr. Kitchen conveyed
to George Dean
in or before that year. Mr. Dean who
was then of Salem, and
cordwainer,
transferred the lot with
house upon
for forty pounds, to Thomas Maule of
Salem, tailor, Oct. 14, 1674.1
The fol
lowing affidavits show that Mr. Maule
erected
new house upon the lot
"The testimony of Eleazer Linsey aged
about 36 yeares,
John Coates aged
about
yeares these two p'sons above
written
that when
testifieth,
Thomas
Male's new house was raised, that there
was sufficient rome left belweene
the
fence next Richard Croad's
house, to
clabord
the
whole side of Thomas
Male's new house, without removing any
abovesd fence, for we
part or p'cell of
sd new house on that
claborded part of
side next Richard Croad's, & had roome
new
enough to doe our work, betweene
house & the fence, from one end of
said house to the other end thereof, for
fence as neere as well could be ranged
from one end of Thomas Male's land to
to
the other end on
straite line
the truth hearof wee abovesd John Coates
Eleazer Linsey, witnes.
Sworne 28:
June: 1681, before Bartholraew Gedney
Assist."
"John Reeves aged about 72 yeares,
to his knowledge, the house
testifieth,
of Tho. Male bought of George Deane
doth stand wholy on the town's ground,
the fence
fenced the heads of the
1
Essex
Essex
Essex
Essex
Essex
6,
II § X
t
is
it,
a
a
it,
a
ye
it,
The rear section of the lot, north of
the dashes, was a part of that portion of
the lot of Richard Bishop that he devised
to his son Thomas Bishop for his life and
remainder to Thomas' son Richard Bish
Thomas Bishop, who lived in Man
op.
chester, conveyed it to Robert Kitchen
of Salem Dec. 22, 1691.*
His son
Richard Bishop released his interest in it
to Mr. Kitchen Feb. 7, 1692-3.*
Mr.
Kitchen conveyed it to Mr. Neal June
4, 1695-t
The house and the whole of this lot,
Mr. Neal conveyed to John Ropes, jr,
and Samuel Ropes, both of Salem, cordwainers, Nov. 7, 1709. J
John Ropes
conveyed his half interest in the house,
in which they both then lived, to his
brother Samuel Ropes Aug. 13, 1716;§
and, April 2, 1734,
John released to
"the old
Samuel the land around
cottage, So Called which formerly Stood
on
afores" Land," being gone.
Widow Frances Croade House.
This
lot was
part of the lot conveyed by
Thomas Robbins to John Kitchen before
The latter then owned
and
1664.
conveyed the part east of the dashes,
with the house thereon, to Richard
July 9,
Croade of Boston, merchant,
The remainder of the lot subse
1664.ll
quently came into the possession of Mr.
Croade, who died in 1689.
By his will
his widow Frances Croade became pos
sessed of the house and lot for her life.
In 1686 there was cellar in the western
end of the lot, but the writer has discov
ered no evidence of
house having been
either before or after that time,
upon
except that, in the division of the estate,
after the decease of the widow in 1716,
" part of an old house and an old cellar
with stones in it"
mentioned
as on
At the decease of
that part of the land.
Mrs. Croade the estate was divided, the
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 43, leaf 270.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 4, leaf 98.
�Registry
Registry
Registry
Registry
of
of
of
of
Deeds,
Deeds,
Deeds,
Deeds,
book
book
book
book
a
a
it
(a
§
a
1
* Essex Registry of Deeds, book 13, leaf 60.
69.
18.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 19, leaf
leaf 123.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 35, leaf 104.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book
144, leaf
1
it
leaf 72.
leaf 17.
leaf 53.
leaf 123.
to his grandson Edward Kitchen Turner,
In 1785
minor son of John Turner, esq.
or before, the father, John Turner, esq.,
came into the possession of the house,
bam and lot and October seventh of that
year, mortgaged the estate to Daniel Sar
Mr. Turner was
gent, esq., of Boston.
then living in the house.
789,
Jan. 13,
the mortgagee took possession of the pre
mises to foreclose the mortgage, the house
being vacant, and Mr. Turner being pres
For
ent and consenting to the entry.
and twenty pounds, Mr.
four hundred
Sargent conveyed the estate to Dr. Wil
7,
Essex
Essex
Essex
Essex
7, 6, 6, 4
§
t t
§
a
it,
or dwelling
my now pr'sent habition
place," July 30, 168i.f
For one hun
dred and one pounds, Mr. Prince con
veyed the house, shop and land to Mat
thew Estes of Pascattaqua, mariner, May
Mr. Estes died in 1723,
25, 16824
having devised the house and lot to his
grandsons
Richard and Ahijah Estes.
The house belonged to them when it was
burned down, with the Neal house, in r 7 2 9.
Joseph Dean House.
This was a part
of the lot sold by Thomas Robbins to
John Kitchen before 1664. Mr. Kitchen
sold it to George Dean, who was owning
it in that year.
But Mr. Kitchen died
without having received or given a deed
of
and yx. Robbins, gave
deed of
to Robert
itchen, son of the deceased,
Oct. n, 1679, but no deed to Mr. Dean
has been found.
Mr. Dean died possessed
of the house and lot in 1696, having de
vised the estate to his wife Elizabeth
Dean.
She survived him, and, for sixty
pounds, conveyed the same to her son
says that the house
on this lot was probably built about 1664.
merchant and
Robert Kitchen was
lived in Salem.
He died in 1712, having
devised the house, orchard, etc., to his
The son died under
son Robert Kitchen.
age, probably before the father, and Feb.
Edward
children,
27, 1718, the other
Kitchen, Mary, wife of John Turner, esq.,
and Bethiah, wife of Timothy Lindall, all
of Salem, for two hundred and six pounds,
the estate to their widowed
conveyed
Mrs.
mother, Madam Bethiah Kitchen.
Kitchen died in 1738, having devisedall
her estate to her son Edward Kitchen.
Edward Kitchen lived here, and died in
1766, having devised the house and lot
||
"
16794
William P. Upham
;
Gedney Assistant."*
Mr. Maule conveyed to Jonathan
Prince of Salem, cordwinder, the lot and
Mr.1! Dean, for sixty pounds,
1698.*
conveyed the lot, the house being gone,
to Robert Kiichen of Salem, merchant,
June 24, 17064
This lot was
Robert Kitchen House.
He
part of the Thomas Robbins lot.
sold
quarter of an acre) to John
Kitchen of Salem, who died without
deed of it.
Mr. Rob
having received
bins however, delivered
deed of this
and the Joseph Dean lot to Mr. Kitchen's
son and heir, Robert Kitchen, Sept. n,
a
comon, sworne 22: June: 1681, before
me Bartholmew Gedney Assist."
" Thomas Robbins testifieth, that
>e
fences that fenced in the lotts that were
Barber's & Bownes, which land was since
John Kitchens, ranged behind the house
that Thomas Mall bought
of George
Deane, leaving the sd house wholy out
the sd fences ranged to Richa1d Croads
house or where it stands, leaving some
vacant land betweene the house of Rich
ard Croade & Thomas Male, which he
bought of George Deane, & was at least
the whole bredth of ye sd house, sworne
23 : June : 1681, before me, Bartholomew
121
12.
NO.
Joseph Dean of Salem, mariner, Dec. 22,
J t
lotts left the said house without about
two foot, & the front of Thomas Male's
house standeth about 14 foot on the
town's ground, being sett upon a sellar
that Jno. Kitching had made in ye townes
IN 17OO.
II §
PART OF SALEM
�122
THE ESSEX
liam Steams of Salem
Jan. 27, 1789.*
Doctor Steams resided in this house
until about 1808, when he removed to
the northeastern corner of Flint and Es
sex streets.
He then let the house in
the summer of that year to
John Grant,
who opened a tavern, which he called
the " Sign of the Anchor."
The follow
ing is a copy of his advertisement,
pub
lished in the Salem Gazette on the day
of its date, Sept. 9, 1808 :
NEW TAVERN.
THE
Sign of the Anchor.
subscriber hereby informs the public, that
*
he has taken that large and convenient House
at the corner of Essex and Beckford Streets, be
longing to Dr. Steams, which he has opened as a
place of public entertainment, having obtained a
licence therefor.
He is now ready to receive and
entertain genteel companies or individuals, travel
lers, &c. and will exert himself for their accom
modation in every respect.
Good
viands and
liquors, clean and comfortable beds, and prompt
attendance, will always be furnished; and good sta
bling for horses.
He respectfully solicits the
favors his friends and the public, for which he
will be ever grateful. N. B. A number of gentle
men boarders can be well accommodated.
Salem, Sept. 9.
JOHN GRANT.
In the spring of 18 10, Mr. Grant was
succeeded by John Perley in the tavern
the name of the " Sign of the Anchor "
being continued.
Messrs. Morse & Fox
(Richard Morse
and Ebenezer Fox), who had a grocery
store on Essex street, in December, 1809,
hired the stable on Hamilton street that
had been conducted
by Galloway, and
became boarding and livery stablers. The
next August, the firm established a stage
route between Salem and Haverhill, going
to Haverhill one day and returning the
next, thus making three round trips each
week.
This tavern was its Salem termi
nus.
The partnership continued until
June 7, 181 1, after which Mr. Morse
carried on the stage business alone.
The writer has no evidence that this
house was open as an inn after 1810.
It became a tenement house, and con
tinued to be thus occupied as long as it
stood.
Before many years had elapsed,
it had become dilapidated in appearance.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 148, leaf 221.
ANTIQUARIAN.
Doctor Steams died in 1819, having
devised the whole of his estate to his wife
Sarah W. Steams.
She died, his widow,
in 1844, possessed of the house and lot.
Her heirs, Joseph E. Sprague, esq., Wil
liam Stearns, esq., widow Eliza Silver, all
of Salem, James W. Stearns, gentleman,
and Sarah White Stearns, singlewoman,
both of Somerville, and Harriet Steams
and Caroline Stearns, singlewoman, Hen
ry Barrett, gentleman, and his wife Lucy
T. G. Barrett, and William St. A. Stearns,
esq., all of Malden, conveyed the lot to
Joseph Andrews, esq., of Salem Oct. 27,
1849, "the old mansion house being ex
pressly reserved by the grantors with the
right of pulling the same down and ex
amining the ground under the same for
the term of sixty days."*
The old house
was accordingly demolished.
The writer has not succeeded in find
ing any picture of this house, and proba
Oliver Thayer, in his
bly none exists.
Recollections of Essex street from 1 804
to 1820, writes that the house was "a
large, square building, with an ell, ven
in appearance."
erable, but dilapidated
It was two stories in height, thejfront door
being in the middle of the house, with
two windows on either side in each story.
It stood a few feet from the sidewalk,
and its distinguishing feature was the two
large square brick pillars which supported
the small portico over the front
door
and steps.
The pillars were surmounted
with capitals of freestone.
These capi
tals were originally a part of the elegant
brick house of Deacon Marston which
formerly stood on the eastern comer of
Essex and Crombie streets.
The house
was removed about 1760, and these cap
itals, which had been carved in England,
were purchased by Edward Kitchen and
placed upon the brick pillars erected for
their support at the entrance to the house
which is the subject of this paragraph,
when the house was razed in 1849 the
capitals were given to James W. Steams,
at his request, and in 1851 they were
.Essex
Registryof
Deeds, book 420, leaf 153.
�PART OF SALEM
IN 1 70O.
owned by Lucius Manlius Sargent, a des
cendant of the Turners.
Katherine King House.
This lot was
a part of the Thomas Robbins lot.
He
was of Salem, husbandman, and conveyed
to William King of Salem, carpenter, that
part of the lot lying south of the dashes,
on which Mr. King "hath lately built a
That
house," June 2, 1676.*
dwelling
part of the lot lying north of the dashes
Mr. Robbins conveyed to Mr. King May
n, 167 7. t Mr. King died in 1684,
having devised the house and lot to his
wife for her life, and giving her the right
to devise one half of the same to whom
she pleased, and the other half he de
vised to his brother's sons who hath need
Mr. King's wife Katherine sur
of it.
vived him, and died in 1 7 1 8, having de
vised the half interest she was entitled to
convey by her will to her nephew Samuel
Stone of Salem and her niece Sarah, wife
of Jacob Manning of Salem, gunsmith.
Samuel King of Southold, N. Y., hus
bandman,
conveyed his interest in the
house and lot to Mr. Manning June 22,
Simuel King of Southold, N. Y.,
1 7 19. J
cooper, only surviving brother of William
of Salem,
husbandman,
King, late
deceased, Samuel King of Salem, husband
husband
man, William King of Sutton,
man, sons of John King of Salem, de
ceased, the other brother of said William
King, deceased, Henry Cook, guardian
of children of Jonathan King of Salem,
deceased, son of said John King, deceased
brother to William King, deceased, Samu
el King, jr., of Salem, guardian to the
children of John King, jr., of Salem, de
ceased, son of John King, sr., deceased,
brother to said William King, deceased,
and, als0, on his own account, and Mary
King of Salem, spinster, a daughter of
said John King, jr., deceased, conveyed
to Messrs. Stone and Manning the house
and lot June 23, 1 7 1 a.§ Messrs. Stone and
Essex Registry
t Essex Registry
X Essex Registry
§ Essex Registry
See also, book 36,
of Deeds,
of Deeds,
of Deeds,
of Deeds,
leaf 106.
book
book
book
book
4, leaf 138.
4, leaf 150.
36, leaf 109.
36, leaf no.
NO.
12.
"3
the house and lot to
Samuel Stone, jr., of Salem, mason, Dec.
For forty pounds, Mr. Stone
10, 1 7 19.*
conveyed the estate to Edward Kitchen
of Salem, merchant, Nov. 10, 1724.1
The house probably remained only a few
Manning conveyed
years longer.
This lot was a
Robert Kitchen Lot.
Robbins. His
the
lot
of
Thomas
of
part
heir was his niece Rebecca, wife of Wil
Mr.
liam Pinson of Salem, husbandman.
Pinson died, and she conveyed the lot to
Robert Kitchen of Salem, merchant, for
Mr.
Nov. 13, 16964
fifty pounds,
Kitchen owned the lot until his death in
1712.
John and Rebecca Beckford House. §
That part of this lot lying east of the
dashes was owned by Thomas Trusler,
His widow
who died March 5, 1654.
Elinor Trusler died in 1655, having
devised the house and lot to her son Ed
Mr. Phelps lived in New
ward Phelps.
for
pounds, he con
twenty.five
and,
bury,
veyed the estate to Thomas Robbins of
Salem July 2, 1657. || Upon Mr. Robbins'
decease, before 1694, the estate descend
ed to his niece and heir Rebecca Pinson.
Mr. Pinson died in July, 1695, having de
In
vised his estate to his wife Rebecca.
the inventory of his estate, the house,
at one
barn and land were appraised
Mrs. Rebecca Pinson
hundred pounds.
married
and
her
husband,
survived
secondly, Joseph Boobier of Marblehead ;
and, for thirty pounds, they conveyed to
Rebecca, daughter of William Pinson, and
of Marblehead,
wife of John Beckford
then being
n,
the
estate
1698.9,11
Jan.
in the possession of George Hacker, as
re
Mr. and Mrs. Beckford
tenant.
moved to Reading, where he was a yeo
man : and conveyed the house and land
HEssex Registry of Deeds, book 13, leaf 61.
Essex Registry of Deeds, book 37, leaf 56.
tEssex Registry of Deeds, book 42, leaf 276.
JEssex Registry of Deeds, book n, leaf 272.
§William P. Upham states that the middle por
tion of this lot was a part of the lot of William
Bownd, whose house was near the river, before
1653.
IIEssex Registry of Deeds, book 9, leaf 234.
�that laft Thurfday
fen'.
night, a large Whale, between fixty and
feventy foot long, came afhore at Plumb.
Ifland, near Newbury, out of which it's
laid, will be made near Eighty Barrels of
This
Oyl, and is worth 200I. fterl.
which was the
Whale had an Iron in
occasion, as
fuppoled, of it's death.
hear
is
SALEM, April
Laft Evening the large
Houfe of Mr. John Barton,
1,
p.
Molly Bartlett of Amesbury published
to Oliver Osgood Nov. 12, 1763.
Sarah Bartlett
married
Abner Ring
June
1769.
Elizabeth Bartlett of Amesbury pub
lished to Elijah Dow June 17, 1780.
John Bartlett married Sarah Goodwin
Sept. 14, 1794.
Salisbury town records.
Widow Elizabeth
Bartlet
married
David Burnam, both of Ipswich, Aug. 20,
1740.
31, 1769.
it,
We
1769.
4.
John Bartlet of Newbury married Sa
rah Souther of Ipswich Oct.
1782.
Ipswich town records.
Caleb
to
Bartlet published
Nelly
Haize, both of Manchester,
17,
Sept.
6,
NOTES.
PORTSMOUTH, March
common land in that township at auction
April 5th, Wednesday, at
m. at the
house of Mr. Goodhue, innholder, in Sa
lem.
Signed by Benjamin Pickman, jr.,
Salem, April
proprietors' clerk.
1769.
Francis Symonds, at the Bell, near
Salem, informs
and ladies
gentlemen
that he not only continues his endeavors
to give good satisfaction as to entertain
ment, but continues to sell West-India
and English goods, hay seed, and seedoats.
In an advertisement relative to the es
tate of Joseph Lakeman of Salem, mari
ner, deceased, David Masurey says that
he married
the administratrix
of the
estate.
Essex Gazette, March 28-April 4,
2
around it to their son John Beckford, jr.,
of Salem, shoreman, July
23,
1739.*
The house was probably gone soon after.
The exact site of the house, as it stood in
1700 is uncertain, it may have been on
the nar1ow way some two hundred feet
westerly of the place where it is marked
on the map.
That part of the lot lying west of the
dashes was a part of the Richard Bishop
lot, and was devised in the nuncupative
will of Mr. Bishop, who died in 1674.5,
to his son Thomas Bishop for his life and
the remainder in fee to the latter's son
Richard Bishop.
Thomas Bishop lived
in Manchester,
and was a wheelwright.
For forty pounds, he conveyed it to Rob
ert Kitchen of Salem Dec. 22, 1691.1
Thomas Bishop's son Richard released his
interest in the estate to Mr. Kitchen Feb.
7, 1 692-3. f Richard Bishop's house stood
upon the northern end of the lot, accord
ing to his will, but was probably gone
before the latter date. Mr. Kitchen appar
ently conveyed the lot to John and Re
becca Beckford about 1700, and it was
thenceforth
a portion of the Beckford
lot.
ANTIQUARIAN.
8,
THE ESSEX
124
1769.
John, son of Caleb and Eleanor Bart
born Oct. 16, 1770; died Feb. 3,
lett,
1772.
Manchester
town records.
Enoch Bartlet, jr., published to Sarah
Bricket May 14, 1768.
Mary Bartlet of Amesbury published
to Timothy Pilsbury of Newbury Feb. 19,
guished.
Daniel Bartlet married
rill May 31, 1770.
a
Dwelling.
fituate in
the main Street, was fet on Fire by
Rocket, which lodged on the Roof, but
Affiftance was foon extin
by timely
The proprietors
Hampshire county
of New Salem, in
advertise to sell the
Es.'ex Registry of Deeds, book 80, leaf 96.
tEssex Registry of Deeds, book 9, leaf 69.
1770.
Sarah
Bartlet
published
Priscilla Mer
to
Emery, jr., both of Newbury,
1780.
Stephen
May 22,
����
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Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
358-358 1/2 Essex Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Joseph Neal
Cordwainer
c. 1729
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built c. 1729
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1729
2021
358 1/2 Essex Street
358 Essex Street
Cordwainer
Massachusetts
Neal
Salem
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/5352b6069c04b80248f062a1e93d7c7d.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=f2q0MY2JR3nzgsAL7HAHSXtti9h9KIthnxyMesm42wYaKgV1kKciEnvIY5iXOmytgqNUNF7ejLHmtWMkeH3rvRiW2I-MOzqBmdV8MiCJ6ppNmJCFi8zgBed9WbZTeQpNQweXE%7EZmD4%7EKoQi1WF3W2TWokJ8j0QK1WvJUtLSfDuCRnNggM6gWs19OjZTzxXF1wbpTzPGilG77FjFadZKBqqXUnyxIR2-8EdcZb0VMULggxR24miO2rwjVM2khnl-swSqWpQZNuBYBfVR57oAg5eI9YbGzVrGSWgZxuFzIlsOaWZE4o6uEvUhMlOAC2yVVNAm3k5D1XgzmylTfANIEfQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e67638b8f61f9dce88a0b74955bff60d
PDF Text
Text
5 Gardner St.
Frank Charbonneau
Overseer of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.
Built c. 1917
Originally built for Charles H. Jelly c. 1895
Destroyed in the Great Salem Fire of 1914
Researched and written by Noelle Jones
November 2021
Historic Salem, Inc
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA, 01970
(978) 745-0799| HistoricSalem.org
© 2021
�Homeowner
Date
Purchased
Years of
Ownership
Number
of Years
Purchase Price Documents
Referenced
Notes
Charles H. Jelly
August 9,
1892
1892-1898
6 years
Consideration
paid $1
1351-56
“A certain
parcel of
land”
According
to the 1890
Salem City
Atlas, there
is no
building
present.
From 1895
on,
residents
are listed
as living at
5 Gardner
St in the
Salem City
Directory
so this is
the year
that the
original
pre-1914
fire house
must have
been built.
William F. M.
Collins
January 19,
1898
1898
> 1 year
Consideration
paid $1
1538-379
“A certain
parcel of
land”
Catherine Jelly
January 19,
1898
1898-1915
7 years
Consideration
paid $1
1538-380
“A certain
piece or
parcel of
land”
According
to the 1914
Salem Fire
Data,
Catherine
is listed as
losing 5
�Gardner St
to the fire
Paul N. Chaput
July 20,
1915
1915
> 1 year
Consideration
paid $1
2302-163
“a certain
parcel of
land”
Frank
Charbonneau
July 20,
1915
1915-1920
5 years
Consideration
paid $1
2303-84
According
to the 1917
Salem City
Directory,
residents
are listed
as living at
5 Gardner
St, so
around this
time the
post-fire
structure
must have
been
rebuilt.
May 6,
1919 parcel
of land
added,
purchased
from
Joseph
Poussard
2412-479
Elizabeth A.
Hickey
June 2,
1920
1920
>1 year
Mortgage of
2452-341
$3,500 held by
Frank
Charbonneau
Frank
Charbonneau
and Mary J
Charbonneau
June 2,
1920
1920-1925
5 years
Mortgage of
2452-341
$3,500 held by
Frank
Charbonneau
Elizabeth A.
Hickey
April 28,
1925
1925
> 1 year
Mortgage of
2637-370
$3,500 held by
Frank
Charbonneau
�Frank
Charbonneau
Mary Jeanne
Charbonneau
April 28,
1925
1925-1959
34 years
Mortgage of
2637-371
$3,500 held by
Frank
Charbonneau
Harry A. Simon
May 12,
1959
1959
>1 year
Consideration
paid
4614-190
Mary Jeanne
Charbonneau
Willy Roy
May 12,
1959
1959-1969
10 years
Consideration
paid
4614-191
Willy Roy and
Alma Roy
October 20, 1969-1978
1969
9 years
Consideration
paid
5644-714
Willy Roy and
Dora C. Roy
January 16,
1978
2 years
Consideration
paid
6437-219
Ronald L.
Wright
September, 1980
26, 1980
> 1 year
$75,000
6742-301
1978-1980
Ronald L.
September
Wright, Trustee 29, 1980
of B&R
Associates
Realty Trust
1980
>1 year
Consideration
paid $1
6747-432
Kathleen
Hagan
September
29, 1980
1980-1983
3 years
$80,000
7040-509
Kathleen J.
Broyer
(Spofford
Worth)
William J.
Broyer
November
7, 1983
1983-1989
6 years
$80,000
7263-262
Kathleen J.
Broyer
(Spofford
Worth)
August 9,
1989
1989-1991
2 years
Consideration
paid
10412-521
1991
>1 year
Consideration
paid
10822-566
Kathleen
June 7,
Spofford Worth 1991
and John E
Worth
Wright
transfers
the deed to
himself as
a trustee
William
grants
Kathleen
ownership
in their
divorce
�John W. Worth
June 7,
1991
1991-2002
11 years
$202,000
10822-567
John W. Worth
November
19, 2002
2002present
19+
years
n/a
19646-19
Master
Deed Creation of
Condomini
ums
James Maynard November
and James
22, 2002
Singletary
2002-2021
19 years
$215,900
19668-130
Purchase of
5 Gardner
St Unit 2
Kathleen
December
Spofford Worth 11, 2002
2002-2010
8 years
Consideration
paid $1
19786-456
Purchase of
5 Gardner
St Unit 1
Tracee M.
Sprong
February
14, 2003
2003-2016
13 years
$146,000
20175-107
Purchase of
5 Gardner
St Unit 3
Bonnie Jean
LeBlanc
November
26, 2010
2010-2015
5 years
Consideration
paid $1
30005-30
Purchase of
5 Gardner
St Unit 1
Kathleen
February
Spofford Worth 18, 2015
2015present
6+ years
Consideration
paid $1
33858-23
Purchase of
5 Gardner
St Unit 1
Thomas Shane
March 28,
2016
2016present
5+ years
$156,000
34802-057
Purchase of
5 Gardner
St Unit 3
Jennifer
Polansky
May 28,
2021
2021present
>1 year
$376,000
399228-377
Purchase of
5 Gardner
Unit 2
�Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts. Sanborn Map Company, Mar,
1890. Map. https://www.loc.gov/item/sanborn03836_001/.
�������F. W. Dodge Company, "Data on Burned District at Salem, Mass." (1914). Books, Pamphlets, and
Documents. 2. https://digitalcommons.salemstate.edu/fire_documents/2
This document lists those affected and what property they lost in the Salem 1914 fire
�������������������������������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Gardner Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
5 Gardner Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Frank Charbonneau
Overseer of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.
Built c. 1917
Originally built for Charles H. Jelly c. 1895
Destroyed in the Great Salem Fire of 1914
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built c. 1917
Originally built c. 1895
Destroyed 1914
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Noelle Jones
Language
A language of the resource
English
1895
1914
1917
5 Gardner Street
Charbonneau
Great Salem Fire
Jelly
Massachusetts
Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.
overseer
Salem
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/6a69dd27298d3c2b8af5e6f622b4dcfb.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=jRorVZ6k0q2YB4M48ELv5j5zawx1mk7MWXp4TqqY%7EObz2XpHbIFrEd%7EKchIQ5Wuhkyi7V3Zlg5dPkWR1Q5sV8xd8B0-NnPsJFy6ruciOZRrF8St4YjV%7Els0eYBfTwhy5RRiWZ3g56Ddjr7h8b1lvjbwJmdpWDxvVI4SMmuiUv5o3v-YTt%7EGKRiYxMNDATjkesPPICW1RafVOTXcEMxpfO81vA%7EV-5n4mH1zLmjBk4ZwqPBcaXFww5igsaTnpYkpXoxjBMzwqNL3WM8TbhwpEsziq7UQOUDnczh6t%7EvCeI7z%7EWqxw2AOl1sv9ro0S0MCz8ze9kttzkrKWj5JV9lVC6A__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
c32f37940b3a8554bbd8eac18f0c1f29
PDF Text
Text
4 Bentley Street
Built or moved here for
Ebenezer Slocum Jr.
Mason
Before 1846
Research by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
September 2021
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2021
�CHAIN OF TITLE, 4 BENTLEY STREET, SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
Date of
Transaction
December 2, 1833
Date Recorded
December 2, 1833
Grantor(s)
Richard Crowninshield of
Danvers, Manufacturer
Grantee(s)
Ebenezer Slocum of Salem,
Mason
May 16, 1868
May 16, 1868
Joseph H. Hanson,
Merchant, and Sarah A.
Hanson, his wife, of Salem
Jane Jackson of Salem
April 7, 1903
April 9, 1903
Chas. W. Richardson,
executor of the will of Jane
Jackson late of Salem
Lucy E. Roberts, Caroline
Augusta Pierce, and
Margaret C. Francis
September 3, 1903
September 5, 1903
Lucy E. Roberts, Caroline
Augusta Pierce, and
Margaret C. Francis, all of
Salem
John E. Barnett of Salem
June 7, 1947
June 13, 1947
Ellen T. Barnett of Salem
J. Donald & Marianne M.
Tahany of Salem
June 15, 1948
June 15, 1948
J. Donald & Marianne M.
Tahany of Salem
Wendell J. & Theresa D.
White of Salem
August 6, 1949
August 26, 1949
Wendell J. & Theresa D.
White of Salem
Arthur & Annette Genest of
Salem
March 18, 1955
March 18, 1955
Arthur & Annette Genest of
Salem
John J. Brennan Jr. & Terrie
A. Brennan of Salem
February 20, 1959
February 26, 1959
Beverly Savings Bank,
holder of a mortgage from
John J. Brennan Jr. & Terrie
A. Brennan of Salem
Beverly Savings Bank
May 1, 1959
May 19, 1959
Beverly Savings Bank
Sumner G. Whittier, as
Administrator of Veterans'
Affairs, Washington, D.C.
August 12, 1959
October 15, 1959
Sumner G. Whittier, as
Administrator of Veterans'
Affairs, Washington, D.C.
Consideration
$119.19
Conveyance of
Source
"a certain piece of Land situate in said Salem near the East
Meeting house (so called) bounded and described as follows,
Essex County
Easterly on a way leading from Derby Street to Essex Street, forty
Registry of Deeds
three feet ten inches, more or less, Southerly on land of Perkins,
(ECRD)
westerly on land of Standley and northerly on land conveyed by
me to Daniel Sage . . ."
Book / Page
272 / 307
$2,800.00
"the lot of land lying in said Salem which is bounded as follows,
East on Bentley Street about forty-three feet and ten inches,
North on land of Goodhue about seventy seven feet and six
inches, West on land of Standley about forty-two feet, and South
on land of Smalley about seventy seven feet and six inches."
ECRD
746 / 237
$1.00
"house and land number 4 Bentley Street in said Salem formerly
the property of said Jane Jackson . . ."
ECRD
1701 / 366
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon, being the
premises numbered four on Bentley Street in said Salem and
bounded and described as follows, to wit: Easterly on said
"One dollar and
Bentley Street about forty three feet and ten inches; Northerly on
other valuable
ECRD
land now or late of Goodhue about seventy seven feet and six
considerations"
inches; Westerly on land now or late of Standley about forty two
feet, and Southerly on land of Smalley about seventy seven feet
and six inches."
"the land in said SALEM, together with the buildings thereon,
bounded and described as follows: Easterly on Bentley Street,
forty-three (43) feet, ten (10) inches; Northerly on land now or late
"consideration paid" of Goodhue about seventy-seven (77) feet, six (6) inches;
ECRD
Westerly on land now or late of Standley about forty-two (42)
feet; and Southerly on land now or formerly of Smally about
seventy-seven (77) feet six (6) inches."
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings thereon, said to be
"consideration paid" situated at 4 Bentley Street, bounded and described as follows:
ECRD
EASTERLY on Bentley Street . . ."
"less than One
"the land in said Salem with the buildings thereon at 4 Bentley
Hundred ($100.00)
ECRD
Street Salem Bounded and described as follows . . ."
Dollars"
"the land in said Salem with the buildings thereon, said to be
"consideration paid" situated at 4 Bentley Street, bounded and described as follows . . ECRD
."
Notes
"Being the same
which was devised
to me by my late
mother Harriette
Slocum." See
attached probate
documents.
Bentley Street was
renumbered in 1888
(see attached
documentation) and
2 Bentley Street
became 4 Bentley
Street.
1715 / 399
3528 / 143
3608 / 311
3686 / 173
4148 / 409
$6,200.00
"The land with the buildings thereon situated on 4 Bentley Street,
ECRD
in said Salem . . ."
4540 / 389
"consideration paid"
"The land with the buildings thereon situated on 4 Bentley Street
ECRD
in Salem . . ."
4561 / 531
Carl M. & Gertrude Freeman
"The land with the buildings thereon situated on 4 Bentley Street
"consideration paid"
ECRD
of Salem
in Salem . . ."
4609 / 265
"For my title see
Estate of John E.
Barnett, #169449,
Essex County
Probate."
�CHAIN OF TITLE, 4 BENTLEY STREET, SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
Date of
Transaction
Date Recorded
October 3, 1963
October 4, 1963
July 26, 1972
July 26, 1972
December 5, 1974
December 6, 1974
January 11, 1978
January 11, 1978
May 28, 1980
May 30, 1980
December 9, 1983
December 9, 1983
December 9, 1983
December 9, 1983
June 20, 1989
June 21, 1989
November 30, 1995
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Carl M. & Gertrude Freeman Fred E. & Adeline E. Winter
"consideration paid"
of Salem
of Marblehead
Donald Koleman and
Fred E. & Adeline E. Winter Laurence C. Post Jr.,
unknown
of Marblehead
Trustees of Old Salem Realty
Trust
Donald Koleman and
Michael A. Levinson of
Laurence C. Post Jr.,
Salem and Rebecca Herman
$27,500.00
Trustees of Old Salem
of Marblehead
Realty Trust
Michael A. Levinson of
Micajah P. Clough IV of
Salem and Rebecca Herman
$55,000.00
Marblehead
of Marblehead
Micajah P. Clough IV of
Derek J. Cavanaugh & Ellen
$72,000.00
Marblehead
S. Dalton of Salem
Paul F. Stunzi, Anne C.
Derek J. Cavanaugh & Ellen
Stunzi, and Steven D. White
$87,000.00
S. Dalton of Salem
of Salem
Paul F. Stunzi and Steven D.
Paul F. Stunzi, Anne C.
"nominal
White, Trustees of the
Stunzi, and Steven D. White
consideration"
Bentley Realty Trust of
of Salem
Salem
Paul F. Stunzi, Trustee of
Anne Carey, Trustee of 4
Bentley Realty Trust of
Bentley Street Realty Trust
"Nominal"
Marblehead
of Marblehead
Anne Carey a/k/a Anne C.
November 30, 1995 Stunzi, Trustee of 4 Bentley
Street Realty Trust
Nicholas M. Osgood of
Salem
$137,250.00
Conveyance of
Source
Book / Page
"the land with the buildings thereon situated on 4 Bentley Street
in Salem . . ."
ECRD
5111 / 164
"the land with the buildings thereon sitauted on 4 Bentley Street
in Salem . . ."
ECRD
5889 / 195
"the land with the buildings thereon, situated on 4 Bentley Street,
ECRD
in Salem . . ."
6115 / 800
"the land in Salem . . . with . . . the buildings thereon, situated on
4 Bentley Street. . ."
ECRD
6436 / 1
"the land in Salem . . . with . . . the buildings thereon, situated on
4 Bentley Street. . ."
ECRD
6705 / 777
"The land in Salem . . . with . . . the buildings thereon, situated on
4 Bentley Street. . ."
ECRD
7290 / 1
"The land in Salem . . . with . . . the buildings thereon, situated on
4 Bentley Street. . ."
ECRD
7290 / 16
"the land in Salem . . . with the buildings thereon, situated on 4
Bentley Street . . ."
ECRD
10044 / 379
"the land in Salem . . . with buildings thereon, situated on 4
Bentley Street . . ."
ECRD
13304 / 572
Notes
Nicholas Osgood
converted the singlefamily home into
condos in 2005. See
ECRD B25094 P400
(attached).
���1846
48
SALEM DIRECTORY .
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Giddings, James , mason , h 22 Crombie
Gifford , James B. ( T. & J. B. ) 31 North , h 59 North
Gifford , Thomas S. carpenter , 31 North , h 59 North
Gifford , Thomas, jr . ( T. & J. B.) carpenter h 104 North
Gilbert , James, stone cutter, h 8 Creek
Gilbert, James, jr . mariner , h 10 Saunders
Gilman , Daniel , la borer , h 1 English
Gilman , Joseph , laborer, h 1 English
Gilman , Joseph , jr . laborer , h 1 English
Gilman , Phineas , victualling cellar, Market , h 18 Charter
Gilpatrick , Elizabeth , h 6 Briggs
Gladden , Henry , mariner , h 7 Orange
Glidden , Joseph P. cordwainer, h 29 Federal
Glidding , Mary W. h 7 Elm
Glover , Benjamin , painter , 348 Essex , h 13 Lynn
Glover , Benjamin A. painter , 348 Essex, h 13 Lynn
Glover, George W. tailor , 224 Essex , h 13 Lynn
Glover , John H. mariner , h 35 Lafayette
Glover, John P. painter, h 13 Lynn
Glover , Jonathan , cordwainer , h 2 Mill
Glover, Mahala , Mrs. h Salem
Glover , Nancy , Mrs. h 6 Chestnut
plate worker
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Glover, Nathaniel S.
Glover Sarah variety store
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Goldsmith John mariner
Goldsmith
Nathaniel mariner
Essex
Goldsmith
Nathaniel
clerk 186 Essex
Rust
Derby
Goldsmith
Thomas ship wright
Goldthwaite Aaron carpenter
Water
Broad
Goldthwaite Aaron
Broad
Goldthwaite Daniel 147 North
Goldthwaite Eben farmer
Goldthwaite Edward
Broad
Goldthwaite Ellen dress maker
Andrew
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Bridge
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Ward
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bentley Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
4 Bentley Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built or moved here for
Ebenezer Slocum Jr.
Mason
Before 1846
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built or moved here before 1846
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1846
2021
4 Bentley Street
mason
Massachusetts
Salem
Slocum
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/5ed97bb4ee67507509106f0c0b056154.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=oDPEwozdbt9X4pGF%7E-MITlRYhRJqIvIJ4Fyk2232NzEn5U3bwa3oz9fNwrKJn3%7EQCMLHxOxRbt7ajFw60g5NuSfnLMUC5WC7D-M%7EIq3tTO9DLjlB57aZnlNVAmJhUh8VCfoq-E4kF-lhH-P-UH5-fhUgvl%7E0FIb6b%7E%7E7M8ARcN8PSEajlFbrmH8w7Q6w%7ECqMOjoOxTSAmcKVQd6n0H2bgnI9%7E9snBVTFu4pJaiOmtX06ecb9PVwp8ocNWS9BZrau-yYDEfRt-dMkG7oGDFl51z6tTSMgEMuMd1KmbKJAIg7pWiWHwNM55AuEYTAjSAF1uqIF1TmmCZMtBaF6gC40KQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
2726a61796f781a63f27aa0e186ff471
PDF Text
Text
Built c. 1784
for John Berry, mariner
and Abigail Berry, spinster
Researched and written by Dan Graham
November 2021
�July 1985, source: MACRIS SAL.2584
August 2012, source: Google Maps
�October 2012, source: Google Maps
November 2020, source: Google Maps
�According to the Massachusetts Historical Commission, what is now Daniels Street was
in existence as early as 1661, and by the mid 1700s was known as Daniels Lane, later Daniels
Street. By the late 1700s, both Palfrey’s and Fogg’s Wharves were located at the foot of Daniels
Street, making the street busy with activities connected with the sea. According to MACRIS
property reports, 6 Daniels is among the oldest extant properties on the street.
As noted in the MACRIS report for this property (SAL.2584), the structure at 6 Daniels St
is somewhat larger than the average Federal period dwelling since it was built to house two
families. Placed gable end to the street, the structure was originally 7 bays long (2 narrow
windows have been added to the façade) and 3 bays deep. The Daniels St entrance has a simple
entablature while the north side doorway, while its blind sidelights, transom, and entablature,
appear to be a Greek Revival feature. The house also has the addition of a rear 2-story bay. Of
the architectural details and likely date(s) of construction, local architectural historian Vijay
Joyce contributed the following:
Along with other details (like the basic massing of the building), the massive bed
molding underneath the overhang is almost identical to the [house] at 10 ½ Herbert St.
which was built in the 1790s. [6 Daniels] was definitely added on to over the years. The
front door on the north side is very Greek Revival. And the south side of the building has
a Victorian bay added to it which came about in the 1840s/50s.
Perhaps the additional work/extension added in the 1840s/50s is why the Patriot Properties
listing for this property indicates 1850 as the construction date.
�According to historian Sidney Perley, a previous house built by 1672 once stood on this
site. John Berry acquired the property on December 7, 1722, and by 1746 had removed the old
house. See the excerpt below concerning the “Estate of Richard Rose House”:
Source: Sidney Perley, Essex Antiquarian, vol. 10, no. 24, pp. 122-123, Google Books
In 1784, Berry’s heirs - John Felt, Catharine Felt, and Elizabeth Stone - sold their interest
in this property to John Berry, a mariner, and Abigail Berry, a spinster. The language of the deed
is worth including at some length given its stipulations as to the intended partitions and future
building plans:
The said Abigail to have so much of the land under the house as may be covered by her
part of the house which she & said John the grantees may build & the said John to have
the land under his part of said house & the dividing line in said house to be an entry to
run from south to north through said house & the said Abigail to have the east end with
said entry & the said John the west end & the land round said house to remain in
�Common to the grantees with the well therein said Common land to extend as
farmost[sic] as to be six feet west from the west end of the house & to extend from
north to south parallel with said west end of said house & the rest of said land to be
divided in two equal halves […] (emphasis added)
As noted above, a house was intended to be built at the time of the deed’s signing in March of
1784, with Abigail taking the east end and John taking the west. According to city atlases and
directories, the house was partitioned as separate addresses - 6 Daniels and 8 Daniels (with 8 ½
Daniels also emerging in the early 1900s) - for most of its lifetime. The MACRIS report for 4
Daniels nextdoor (SAL.2585) notes that Abigail also acquired the eastern and western halves of
that property in 1797 and 1802, respectively. She died in 1824 after which point her executor,
Abigail B. Archer (nee Woodward; b. 1789; d. January 25/26, 1868), apparently rented out the
property.
John Archer (b. July 4, 1796; d. March 5 1884), a ship’s chandler, was the next owner of
6 Daniels. John Berry’s granddaughter, Mary Ann Stevens (nee Peele/Perle), and her husband
Hiram, a cordwainer, sold 6 Daniels to Archer in 1831. (Hiram and Mary Ann were married on
December 5, 1830 in Methuen.) The 1837 directory shows that Archer was sharing the house
with Eunice Russell, Aaron Meader, a laborer, and Ebenszer Morgan, a mariner. The 1850
Census lists John and Abigail living at the residence with Sophia Manning, who was 21 years of
age at the time; and a likely niece of John’s (see later note regarding 1880 Census).
��After Abigail’s death in early 1868, her sibling heirs - Benjamin Woodward and Nancy
Oneutt - granted John “two thirds of [the] house and one half the land” for $1,450 (see book
741, page 33 in “Deeds”). The 1870 Census shows that John continued to reside at the property
with Mary A. Francisco, identified as a housekeeper. The final Census showing John at the
property (before his death in 1884) is from 1880, and lists James Manning - a post office clerk and Robert Manning - a sea captain/master mariner - who are identified as Archer’s halfbrothers. Mary Francisco was living at 8 Daniels in 1880, and came to own the house after
John’s death, perhaps as a stipulation of Archer’s will. City directories show Francisco as the
sole occupant of 6 Daniels from at least 1890 until her death in 1895, at which point the
executor of her will, Nathaniel Simonds, sold the property to Roland Smalley. Book 1465 page
51 identifies Francisco as the owner of the property and stipulates that the property be sold off
via private sale as part of her will, but makes no mention of how she came to possess
ownership.
���Following Francisco’s death and more transfers of ownership, 6/8 Daniels provided
tenement housing for several decades (the 1906-1938 atlas labels the property as
“Tenements”). Throughout the early 1900s, 6/8 Daniels was home to various tenants, many of
them Polish immigrants. Attracted to job opportunities in the city’s mills and factories, Polish
immigrants began arriving in Salem en masse around 1890, accounting for about 8% of the
city’s overall population by 1911. Religion played a strong role in the Polish community and as
the number of Polish Catholics in Salem grew, the need for a permanent house of worship
became apparent. Nearby Herbert Street and Union Street became the heart of the Polish
Catholic presence in the city, after the opening of St. John the Baptist Church, a parochial
school, convent, and rectory.
The new church catalyzed the settlement of Polish immigrants in the neighborhood and
multiple single-family homes were converted or replaced with multi-family tenements to house
the growing population. The sizeable 6/8 Daniels was one such property, with 8 ½ being built in
the early 1900s (first appearing on the 1906 atlas and referred to as “Flats”). The Derby Street
neighborhood became a tight knit hub of all Polish activities with multiple shops, restaurants,
and social clubs in the area catering to Poles from all regions and religions. Even the House of
the Seven Gables (the namesake of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 1851 novel) played a crucial role in
this community. Caroline Emmerton opened the museum in 1910 to support her adjacent
settlement house, which provided classes and workshops to the local immigrant community, a
role the museum still upholds to this day.
Closer to 6/8 Daniels, the Polish American Citizens Club (PACC) moved its headquarters
across the street to 9 Daniels in 1928 (see MACRIS SAL.2619). Founded in 1916, the PACC grew
�out of efforts to promote citizenship and naturalization among Salem's Polish immigrants, a
project that was strongly supported by the St. Joseph Society and community leaders such as
Teofil Bartnicki, Felix Rybicki, and Wladyslaw Sobocinski (who lived on Daniels and likely had
relatives at 6/8 Daniels in the early 1900s). The building has remained part of the community,
later becoming (and remaining) the home of the local Polish Legion of American Veterans post,
which had originally used the old firehouse at 128 Derby Street as its meeting place.
1950 installation dinner of the Polish American Citizens Club, Falcons Hall.
Source: National Park Service, “9 Daniels Stret and the Polish American Citizens Club,”
https://nps.gov/articles/000/daniels-street. Accessed 21 Nov 2021.
Many Polish tenants of 6/8 Daniels and their relations are featured in In the Heart of
Polish Salem: An Ethnohistorical Study of St. Joseph Hall and Its Neighborhood (2009), a PDF
version of which is freely available online through the National Park Service.1 As a case in point,
the text features in-depth coverage of Joseph Kohn - who lived at 6 Daniels in 1911 - who had
come to the U.S. in part because he was seeking to avoid conscription into the Russian army.
1
http://npshistory.com/publications/sama/in-heart-polish-salem.pdf
�Following his older brother’s migration to Salem, Joseph followed the same route. As his wife
Hedwiga (Harriet) shared in 1978:
When they got to a certain age, the Russians were taking all the young Polish boys to
join their army. And when he knew that he was going to be picked, he got into a wagon,
one of those farmers’ wagons loaded with hay. And he hid under the hay. And every
border they come to, they’d stick pitchforks through to see if anybody was there. And
they just laid in that hay. Most of them traveled that way to get out of the boundary
lines.
Trained as a shoemaker, Joseph found work at a shoe shop in Salem before saving up enough
money to acquire a horse and wagon he used to transport fruit and vegetables from New
Hampshire to sell in Salem. He eventually established his own grocery business.2
Joseph and Hedwiga (Harriet) Kohn. Photo from Francis Kulik. Featured in In the Heart of Polish Salem, p. 109.
2
See Cathy Stanton and Jane Becker, In the Heart of Polish Salem: An Ethnohistorical Study of St. Joseph Hall and
Its Neighborhood, pp. 108-109.
�Another tenant of 6 Daniels - Frank (Franciszek) Sobocinski - attempted to start a local
mutual assistance society in 1897 with six other men, one of whom also lived at 6 Daniels in the
early 20th century - Walter Jastrzembski. As scholars Cathy Stanton and Jane Becker have noted,
the mutual assistance model had significant appeal in immigrant communities. Many ethnic
communities felt that it was shameful to accept aid from outside of their own groups; one early
study of Poles in the U.S. found that Polish immigrants saw the acceptance of American charity
as a disgrace to the entire community.3 Founded in 1899, the St. Joseph Society was among the
earliest of many local associations designed to provide civic, economic, educational, and social
benefits for Poles in the city. See Appendix C from In the Heart of Polish Salem which features
meeting minutes from the Society, naming several additional tenants and relations of 6/8
Daniels.
3
See David T. Beito, From Mutual Aid to the Welfare State: Fraternal Societies and Social Services, 1890-1967, p.
26.
�Owner
Years of
Ownership
Number
of Years
Purchase Price
Document
Referenced
(Book-Page)
146-181
260-164; 364151; 741-33
1465-51
1465-51
1708-255
John and Abigail Berry
John Archer
1784-1831
1831-1884
47
53
62 pounds, ten shillings
$275
Mary Ann Francisco
Roland Smalley
Robert and Nellie J.
McCartney
Joseph and Julianna
Kowalski
1884-1895
1895-1903
1903-1909
11
8
6
n/a
$2580
$1
1909-1955
46
$100 and other
considerations paid
Lionel and Wilfred
Pelletier
Theresa C. Pelletier
William H K
Donaldson
John A. Driscoll
1955-1958
3
$14,500
1958-1962
1962-1966
4
4
4487-369
4930-152
1966-1972
6
Peter A and Mary P
Lagos
John J Connelly III
Edmund L and
Marguerite H Phelan
Christopher B and
Celeste B Quinn
Claire S Quinn
1972
1
Less than $100
“for consideration
paid”
“for consideration
paid”
$24,000
1972-1974
1974-1985
2
11
$50,000
$31,477
5936-470
6059-306
1985-1991
6
$160,000
7642-286
1991-1992
1
11062-102
Christopher B Quinn
1992-1996
4
Alexander Stephens III
John and Deborah
Nestel
Michelle DuPont
Jerome and Frances
Wilson
Jennifer Mirra
Suzanne Inge
1996-2000
2000-2001
4
1
2001-present
2009-present
20
12
“for consideration
paid”
“for consideration
paid”
$157,000
“for consideration
paid”
$139,000
$117,500
2013-present
2019-present
8
2
$174,000
$340,000
1949-521;
1958-505;
2797-599
4187-289
5355-493
5686-715
11603-62
13412-78
16685-229
16959-461
28978-435;
31033-385
32670-142
38053-127
�Residents
John and Abigail Berry
John Archer, ship chandler
William B Jackson, cooper
Miss M. A. Francisco
Charles Boyer Jr., machinist
John Grant, car carpenter
Mrs Johann Grant
John A Grant, driver
Directory Year
N/A
1831-1884 (died Mar 5
1884)
1874-1884
1890-96
1890-96
1897-1910
John J Parsons, engineer
Mrs A J Parsons
Arthur P Parsons, shoemaker
1897-1910
Kasper Nikiel, machinist
Frank A Soboczinski, machinist
William P. Goldthwaite, jobber
Joseph Kohn, grocer
John Karbowniczak, furniture
Maciey Lipka, shoe worker
Frank Pszenny, leather worker
Alex H Chludzininski, mechanic
John Haluposki, shoe worker
Joe Vasoloski, machinist
Andrew W Wyzenski, molder
Frank Sentkowski, morocco
dresser
1911
1911
Directory Notes
6 Daniels; 1886 Directory
notes Archer’s death date
8 Daniels
6 Daniels
8 Daniels
6 Daniels; Mrs. J Grant first
named in 1910 directory
(John d. May 24, 1910); John
A named for first time in
1910
8 Daniels; John J Parsons died
sometime before the 190202 directory was published;
Arthur first mentioned in
1901-02
6 Daniels; would have lived
here until 1913 at the latest
1914
8 Daniels; would have lived
here until 1913 at the latest
6 Daniels
1914-15
1914-21
8 Daniel; men were noted
living at the rear
Pierre Gagne, mason
A Salowski
Wladyslaw Zuiski, leather worker
George Sansoucy, car conductor
Joseph Pelletier, operator
Walter A Jastrgembski, moulder
Alfred Morin, second hand
Theophile Dancosse/Dancausze
Georgiana Dancosse
1915-17
1915
1915-17
1915
1915-31
1915-31
1915
1917-21
1917-21
6 Daniels
Alexander Staniszenski, die sinker
Mary Staniszenski
Stanislaw Wilczenski, emp (U S M
Co Bev)
1917
1917
1921-31
8 Daniels; 1917 is the first
year in which 8 ½ features in
the directory; Jastrgembski
and Dancosse were still in
rear in 1921
6 Daniels
6 Daniels
�Helen Wilczenski
Z Tardiff
Thomas Goodrow, paper hanger
Margaret C Goodrow
1921-31
1921
1921
1921
Exena Dancause
Joseph Kowalski
Joseph Waleszkiewicz, leather worker
Nelly Waleszkiewicz
1931
1931
1931
1931
8 ½ Daniels
Eleopauldine Fournier
Clifford J Pooler, leather worker
Margaret C Pooler
Zygmunt Wodarski
6 Daniels
Joseph Skoniecki
1931
1931-36
1931-36
1933-34
1936
Edward M Haibon
Frances Grocka (widow of Bernard)
Jane Grocka, shoeworker
Lucien Grocka, leather worker
Edward M Haibon, machinist
Stella Haibon
1933-36
1933-36
1935-36
1935-36
1935-36
1935-36
8 Daniels
Andrew W Jastrzembski
Josephine Jastrzembski
Waclaw Jastrzembski, sign painter
William Radzymski
John Maciejewski
Jessie Maciejewski
Eug Maciejewski, shoeworker
Henry Radzymski, shoeworker
John Radzymski, shoeworker
Frances Radzymski
1933-35
1935
1933-35
1933-36
1933-36
1935-36
1935-36
1935
1935
1935
8 ½ Daniels
Anthony Gauthier
William Gadala
Mary Skoniecki
Paul Malawka
Chester Sawulski
Victoria Jaskiel
William Radzymski
John J Maciejewski
Joseph Bulkowski
Henry E Jendrazek
John J Konieczny
Jean D Sutherland
Joseph A Jablonski
1948
1948, 1951, 1954, 1959
1948, 1951, 1954
1948, 1951, 1954
1948, 1951, 1954
1948, 1951
1948, 1951, 1954, 1959
1948, 1951, 1954, 1959
1954
1959
1959
1959
1959
6 Daniels
6 Daniels
8 ½ Daniels
6 Daniels
Note: Available Salem City Directories span 1837-1964. All currently accessible City Directories were consulted.
Some years were not available at the time of research.
�Inventory No:
SAL.2585
Historic Name:
Common Name:
Address:
4 Daniels St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Derby Street
Local No:
35-355
Year Constructed:
c 1802
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Federal
Use(s):
Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
Wall: Wood Clapboard
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FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
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This file was accessed on: Sunday, September 26, 2021 at 3:30: PM
�FORM N O .
AREA
FORM
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MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
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Major a l t e r a t i o n s (with dates)_
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�ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE (Describe important _ architectural features and
evaluate in terms of other buildings within the cannunity.) • .
In i t s form, s i z e , and s h a l l o w p i t c h o f i t s g a b l e r o o f , 4 D a n i e l s .
St i s t y p i c a l o f numerous v e r n a c u l a r F e d e r a l p e r i o d b u i l d i n g s i n the
Derby"St. area.
O r i e n t e d s o u t h , the s t r u c t u r e has a 5-bay s y m m e t r i c a l l y
a r r a n g e d facade w i t h a modest c e n t e r e n t r y .
T r i m i s s i m p l e and c o n s i s t s
of s i l l arid c o r n e r b o a r d s , and p l a i n window s u r r o u n d s .
The r o o f eaves
are somewhat deeper than one might expect on a F e d e r a l house .
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE (rbGDlain the role owners played in local or state
history and how the building relates to the development of the community0
A c c o r d i n g to an account by h i s t o r i a n S i d n e y P e r l e y , R i c h a r d
I n g e r s o l l b u i l t a house on t h i s s i t e i n 1675. A b i g a i l B e r r y a c q u i r e d
the e a s t e r n and w e s t e r n h a l v e s o f the p r o p e r t y i n 1797 and 1802
r e s p e c t i v e l y and the I n g e r s o l l house, "was p r o b a b l y gone soon a f t e r w a r d . "
J u d g i n g from i t s appearance , B e r r y may have b u i l t 4 D a n i e l s S t .
s h o r t l y a f t e r demolishing the e a r l i e r b u i l d i n g .
She d i e d i n 1824 and
her e x e c u t o r , A b i g a i l B . A r c h e r , a p p a r e n t l y r e n t e d out the p r o p e r t y .
The 1837 Salem D i r e c t o r y shows m a r i n e r Thomas Seaver l i v i n g h e r e .
A r c h e r ' s h e i r s then s o l d t h e h o u s e . i n 1868 t o Susan Mundy who l i v e d here
w i t h h e r husband J o h n .
The F e d e r a l p e r i o d was one of g r e a t p r o s p e r i t y i n Salem due t o
numerous s u c c e s s f u l m a r i t i m e v e n t u r e s around t h e w o r l d . ' Many o f the
s t r u c t u r e s s u r v i v i n g i n the Derby S t . neighborhood date t o t h i s time
(179-1820).
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or P___F_NCES (name of publication, author, date and publisher)
Perley,
S i d n e y , Essex A n t i q u a r i a n , V o l , 1 0 , N o . 2 4 , P . 122
Essex Landry R e g i s t r y o f Deeds, Book 161/Le"af 1 7 8 , Book 1 7 1 / L e a f
743 / L e a f 137;
. '
7 0 , Book
10M - 7/3
����Inventory No:
SAL.2619
Historic Name:
Salem Polish American Citizens Club
Common Name:
Wiggin, Peirce L. - Goldsmith, William H. House
Address:
9 Daniels St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Derby Street
Local No:
35-383
Year Constructed:
c 1810
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Federal
Use(s):
Clubhouse; Multiple Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture; Ethnic Heritage; Recreation
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
Wall: Aluminum Siding; Brick; Brown Stone; Concrete
Unspecified; Granite; Wood; Stone, Cut
Foundation: Concrete Unspecified; Granite; Stone, Cut
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Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
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Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Sunday, September 26, 2021 at 3:32: PM
�FORM B - BUILDING
USGS Quad
Salem
Assessor's number
35-383
Town
Area(s)
Form Number
2619
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village) Derby Street
Address
9 Daniels Street
Historic Name
Uses: Present
Social Club
Original Residential
Date of Construction
Source
c. 1810
maps, directories
Style/Form
Architect/Builder
unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation
Stone
Wall/Trim
Brick
Roof
(not visible)
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
Major Alterations (with dates) (c. 1930) - south addition,
removal of facade cornice
Condition
good
Moved 13 no
Acreage
Recorded by
Lisa Mausolf
Organization
Salem Planning Department
Setting
.
•
yes
Date
6070 SF
densely built-up 19th century residential
neighborhood between Essex Street and the waterfront
Date (month/year) April 1998
SEP
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
A S S . HIST. C O M M
�c
BUILDING F O R M (9 Daniels Street)
A R C H I T E C T U R A L DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the
community.
This early 19th century brick dwelling was converted for use as a Polish social club in the late 1920s. The three-story, flatroofed brick building presents its narrow two-bay facade to the street and was apparently originally nearly identical to the
adjacent building at 7 Daniels Street which sits just a few feet to the north. The brick is laid in a Flemish bond and the
building rests on a stone foundation. With the exception of the first floor windows which have been bricked-in, most of the
windows contain a 1/1 replacement sash and display simple stone sills and splayed lintels. The windows on the third floor are
slightly smaller. On the facade, the height of the building has been raised slightly and the original cornice has been removed.
Extending to the south of the building is a 20th century three-story addition measuring l x l bay and obscuring the original
center entrance. Its detailing echoes that of the original building. The brick on this section is laid in a common brick above a
concrete foundation. The windows have splayed brownstone lintels and concrete sills. The first floor entrance is located on
the west wall of the addition and is fronted by new concrete steps. The original brownstone entablature over the entrance has
been partially obscured by a canopy and the doors have been replaced by modem bronze and glass double doors. At the rear
of the building is a two-story, wood-frame addition which is sheathed in aluminum siding above a concrete foundation. On
the south side, there is a recessed bay which accesses a set of covered stairs.
The building is set directly on the sidewalk just about two feet from the adjacent building at 7 Daniels Street. There is a large
paved parking area to the south of the building.
HISTORICAL N A R R A T I V E
Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building and
the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
What is now Daniels Street was in existence as early as 1661 and by the mid 1700s was known as Daniels Lane, later
Daniels Street. By the late 1700s Bentley states that both Palfrey's and Fogg's Wharves were located at the foot of Daniels
Street, making Daniels Street busy with activities connected with the sea. The houses at 7 and 9 Daniels Street both date to
the early 19th century.
The earliest available directory, that of 1836, indicates that Peirce L. Wiggin was living here at that time. Without deed
research it is not possible to find out whether he was the original owner. Mrs. Wiggin continued to live here as late as 1881.
By 1884 the property had been acquired by William H . Goldsmith, an inspector at the Custom House, who occupied part of
the house and rented out units to two tenants. William Goldsmith and William Hyde are shown as the owners on the 1911
map and in the 1905 and 1910 city valuation records. Goldsmith continued to live here until about 1915. The house was
rented out to a number of tenants over the next 10-15 years. By 1929 the building was being utilized by the Polish American
Citizens Club, which was organized in November 1916 and initially met at 160 Derby Street. By 1970 the present occupant,
the Polish Legion of American Veterans Post 55, was using the building.
B I B L I O G R A P H Y and/or R E F E R E N C E S
Hopkins, G M . Atlas of Salem. Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
Mclntyre, Henry C.E. Map of the Citv of Salem. Philadelphia: 1851.
Reardon, Elizabeth. Salem Historic District Study Committee Investigation. 1969.
Richards, L.J. Atlas of the City of Salem. Massachusetts. 1897.
Salem City Directories, 1836-1970.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company. Atlas of the City of Salem. Massachusetts. Boston: 1911.
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attached a completed
National Register Criteria Statement form.
�FORM
I L P I X 0:
M A S S A C H U S E T T S H I S T O R I C A L COMMISSIO N
Office of the S e c r e t a r y , State House, Boston
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Daniels Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
6 Daniels Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built c. 1784
for John Berry, mariner
and Abigail Berry, spinster
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built circa 1784
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Dan Graham
Language
A language of the resource
English
1784
2021
6 Daniels Street
Berry
Mariner
Massachusetts
Salem
Spinster
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f085760557739b0ac5d6989e25cb8c16.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=HmznTFrmp6tV1vcbYTMKMQd-iu-YssE6GGUG3mNHZelxsMrzjM%7EJ97EVi-ps2iZd0s5hh%7EV3UhNbYTOtdPbEAz85mq%7ECcKWybwt6QSXaX%7EndupIIeX7C9ikvw5ZakKq2uJ%7EMqiRk447RSK%7Eaz9N7Igi8va2pPo42jBbr8C-Hb62IhksoDh9r1%7E3o-KAjIa6H54lArqexNoH5R0i6XDNh5lR5qBN60BTVyW%7EAk0eZqGd1S8P-5qg3BGHFVTvzjodEi0qJXvvG9fOeA-4hBho0DglN8ljvACuZ4iwEUI16Kf7-GLosszpDb6sClDLCsJZnb9zdZ8JVVOga5gFReMAbfQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
ca8b17f804d9e41ce5cbfa628114fb49
PDF Text
Text
16 Summer Street
Harrison O. Flint
Shoe Dealer
and his wife
Mary A. Leighton
Built c. 1867
Researched and written by Eric Baumeister
December 2021
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2021
�OWNERSHIP TABLE
Family
Name
Years of
Ownership
Number Purchase
of Years Price
Deed
Referenced
Notes,
Additional
Documents
or Deeds
Flint
Harrison
Orlando
1865-1895
28
House: “Five
hundred
seventy
dollars and
83/100”
Lot: “Twentyeight hundred
fifty-four
dollars and
17/100”
690-151
725-124
“Dwelling
house and
a wood
shed”
Mary Augusta
(née Leighton)
1865-1921
54
see above
John Clarence
1896-1922
26
Grace L.
(née Bryant)
1922-1935
13
Mary Josephine 1935-1972
(née Nagle)
37
“Sixty Four
Hundred
Dollars Paid”
William Robert
1935-1936
1
see above
Janet
(née
Macdonald)
1969-2013
44
William Francis
1988-2001
13
William Francis
III
2001-2013
12
Renewal
Ventures LLC
2013+
8+
Cass
$425,000
3027-256
33049-316
Converted
home to
condos
�RESIDENTS TABLE
Directory Year
Residents
Occupation
1869 - 1895
1869 - 1921
1897 - 1922
1900 - 1926 (census)
1936 - 1964
1936 - 1937
1936 - 2001
1940
1949-2013
Harrison O. Flint
Mary A. Flint (née Leighton)
John Clarence Flint
Grace L. Flint (née Bryant)
Mary J. Cass (née Nagle)
William R. Cass
William F. Cass
Catherine F. Nagle
Janet Cass (née Macdonald)
Shoe Dealer
No Occupation Listed
Bookkeeper, Accountant
No Occupation Listed
Manager “The Roseway”
Boxmaker, Manager “Pick-Nook”
Restaurant Manager
unknown
Bridal Headpiece Designer
�16 Summer Street
Courtesy of Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System
16 Summer Street
Courtesy of Patriot Properties, Salem
The area of 16 Summer Street borders the Chestnut Street and McIntire Historic
Districts, two of Salem’s most popular areas. Both historic districts house hundreds of homes
that range from the late 17th century to mid-20th century. Much of the Chestnut Street area was
�owned by the notable John Pickering, who began to sell his plots of land in the mid to late 18th
century, a reason many Chestnut Street homes were built after this.
There are many styles of homes included in these neighborhoods, one being Italianate,
the style of 16 Summer Street. This style of home was derived from medieval Italian farmhouses
and villas and become popular after the Civil War. Many of these style homes were built
between 1865 and the late 1880s when their popularity began to fade. Italianate style homes
are usually relatively square homes with bracketed eaves (which are directly under the roofline).
16 Summer Street includes the Italianate feature of a 3 faceted bay window which is central on
the façade and draws attention to the home. As seen in the photos above, these features have
remained intact throughout the years, giving this home the historic character of its time.
FAMILY HISTORY
In 1865 Sarah Smith, a teacher, sold her family’s plot of land on Summer Street north of
Peirce land and south of the Danes family. Sarah was the latest in a long line of Smith women
to own and live in this property, going back to the beginning of the 19th century with the demise
of the last Smith patriarch, Father John Smith. In 1865, however, she sold her five-sixths of the
lot to a wealthy shoe dealer named Harrison Flint 1. Flint obtained the last one-sixth from Lemuel
B. Marden, a prosthetics manufacturer and carpenter 2 who lived nearby at 22 North Street, 3
though his ward lived on the lot that Flint was interested in obtaining. After gaining all the shares
of land, Flint likely rebuilt the house we know as 16 Summer Street around 1866 or 1867, where
there is a vacancy in the city directory and there are no known inhabitants of the property.
1
Essex County, Massachusetts, Deed Book 682: 100.
“United States Federal Census, Salem Ward 4, Essex, Massachusetts, 1870.” Digital images.
Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
3
“Salem, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1864;” Digital images. Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
2
�Flint Family
Harrison Orlando Flint was born in 1828 as a Salem native 4. By the time that he bought
the property and lands surrounding it he was a successful shoe dealer in a Salem economy
propelled by tanneries and textile factories. While the house was under construction, the Flints
were living at 2 Ash Street 5 (as of 1866), and then moved into the new house by 1869 6 with his
wife Mary Augusta Flint (born 1831), their teenager Annie Sarah (born 1853), and their child
John Clarence (born 1860). In addition, by 1870, they had hired on the services of an Irish
maid 7.
In 1878, when his widowed neighbor Hannah Peirce died, Flint had the means to buy
her estate at 10 and 12 Summer Street at auction 8, and quickly sold and leased the properties
to new tenants. Of note, 10 Summer Street came to be inhabited by his daughter Annie when
she married George Ropes, a retail druggist 9 -- the land was owned by the couple until Annie’s
death in 1917, after which it fell to the hands of an attorney named W. D. Chapple 10, who had
dealings with the Flint family in the past.
4
“U.S. Town and Vital Records, 1620 - 1988;” Digital images. Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
“1866 Salem City Directory - Name Listings;” Digital images. Salem Public Library Reference
Department. https://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/salem-city-directories
6
“1869 Salem City Directory - General Directory;” Digital images. Salem Public Library Reference
Department. https://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/salem-city-directories
7
Year: 1870; Census Place: Salem Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: M593_613; Page: 590A
5
8
Essex County, Massachusetts, Deed Book 1001: 55, 56.
“United States Federal Census, Salem Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts, 1910.” Digital images.
Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
10
“Salem, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1922;” Digital images. Ancestry.com. https://www.ancestry.com
9
�On August 21st 1895 Harrison died from angina pectoris 11. He was survived by his wife
Mary and their son John, who was at the time of death working as an assistant bank clerk 12.
John inherited his father’s estate and took over as legal head of the household. In 1897, he
married Grace L. Bryant (born 1868) of Medford, in Grace’s hometown. John moved back into
16 Summer Street, where he lived with his mother and wife into the start of the next century. He
would work later as a professional bookkeeper and accountant 13. Mary died in 1921, and John
swiftly followed the next year 14.
Upon their deaths, John’s wife Grace inherited 16 Summer Street. Grace had been living
with her husband and her in-laws since marriage, but after John’s death she only inhabited 16
Summer Street for a short amount of time, listing it as a primary residence in 1926 15, and then
leaving it vacant by 1929 16 -- she did not live in Salem at that time.
Cass Family
The house remained either vacant or unlisted in city directories until 1935 17, when the
land and property were granted to Mary Josephine Cass (née Nagle, born 1892) and her
husband William Robert Cass (born 1895), a box-maker who had just become manager of the
11
“Deaths 1891-1895; Vol 35, Collard-Frepanier;” Digital images. Massachusetts, U.S., Town and Vital
Records, 1620-1988. https://ancestry.com
12
“United States Federal Census, Salem Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts, 1900.” Digital images.
Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
13
“United States Federal Census, Salem Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts, 1920.” Digital images.
Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
14
“Massachusetts, U.S., Death Index, 1901-1980, Volumes 66-145;” Digital images. Department of Public
Health, Registry of Vital Records and Statistics. Accessed through Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
15
“1926 Salem City Directory - Name Listings;” Digital images. Salem Public Library Reference
Department. https://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/salem-city-directories
16
“1929 Salem City Directory - Name Listings;” Digital images. Salem Public Library Reference
Department. https://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/salem-city-directories
17
“1935 Salem City Directory - Name Listings;” Digital images. Salem Public Library Reference
Department. https://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/salem-city-directories
�Pick-nook Diner 18. Mary was also a Salem native, born to Irish coachman-turned-gardner
Bernard and his wife Catherine. Mary had two siblings: her twin Catherine Frances, and her
brother Henry.
William R. only lived in the house for a year before his death in 1936, at the age of 41.
The following year, Mary converted the house into a guest house, restaurant, and tea room
named the Roseway. She lived there with her son William Francis Cass (born 1918) and held
many short-term tenants throughout the guest house’s history, including those from Texas,
Austria, and New York 19. One of these tenants included Catherine Frances, Mary’s twin and a
clerical worker in Boston -- she lodged with the family from 1937 20 until her death in 1960 21.
In 1946 William Francis enlisted with the U.S. Navy. When he returned, he married Janet
M. Macdonald (born 1918) in 1949. Janet was born in Berlin, New Hampshire, but moved to
Salem and graduated from Salem High School in 1935. After her marriage she stayed with her
husband’s family. During this time William Francis worked at the Corinthian Yacht Club and
waited tables, eventually managing the Worcester Country Club, the Sippican Yacht Club, and
the Say-Hi Restaurant. Janet worked as a secretary in the law office of Charles Halladay, as a
server in her family’s Macdonald’s Tea Room, and managed the Boutique Bridal Salon making
headpieces 22. Together they had four children: William III, Janet, Robert, and Edward.
18
“United States Federal Census, Salem Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts, 1930.” Digital images.
Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
19
“United States Federal Census, Salem Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts, 1940.” Digital images.
Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
20
“1937 Salem City Directory - Name Listings;” Digital images. Salem Public Library Reference
Department. https://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/salem-city-directories
21
“Deaths 1901-1980;” Digital images. Department of Public Health, Registry of Vital Records and
Statistics. Accessed through Ancestry.com. https://ancestry.com
22
“Obituary: Cass, Janet M.” Salem News, 12 September 2013.
�In 1969, Mary made Janet the co-owner of 16 Summer Street, and Janet inherited the
estate upon Mary’s death in 1972 23. In 1988 William Francis signed on as co-owner of 16
Summer Street and remained as such until his death in 2001 24. Upon his death, his title was
granted to their son William F. Cass III, and William III was made a trustee of the property. After
Janet M.’s death in 2013, William III granted the property to Renewal Ventures LLC. Renewal
Ventures LLC then converted the home into four units of a condominium complex, occupied at
the time of writing by Abhijit Kamerkar, Halley Zummo, Gabriel Flavin, Alison Eagle, Nicholas
Rushman, Brett Dixon, and Abbey Newkirk.
23
24
Essex County, Massachusetts, Deed Book 5977: 367.
Essex County, Massachusetts, Deed Book 9569: 56.
�SUPPORTING MATERIALS
�������������������Atlas of Salem, 1874. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
�Atlas of Salem, 1897. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
Atlas of Salem, 1911. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
�Birth Records of Harrison O. Flint.
�Birth Records of Mary Leighton.
�Birth Records of John C. Flint.
�Birth Record of Mary Nagle.
�Birth Record of William Cass.
�Death Record of Harrison Flint.
�Death Record of Mary Flint (née Leighton).
�Death Record of John C. Flint.
�Death Record of Mary J. Cass (née Nagle).
�Death Record of Catherine F. Nagle.
Draft Card of William Francis Cass.
�Draft Card of William R. Cass.
Marriage Record of John C. Flint and Grace Flint (née Bryant).
�Excerpt from 1869 Salem Directory. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
Excerpt from 1899 Salem Directory. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
�Excerpt from 1926 Salem Directory. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
Excerpt from 1929 Salem Directory. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
�Excerpt from 1936 Salem Directory. Courtesy of Salem Public Library.
Excerpt from 1937 Salem Directory.
�Excerpt from 1870 Census, of Lemuel Marden.
Excerpt from 1870 Census, of the Flint family.
�Excerpt from 1910 Census, of Annie Ropes (née Flint).
Excerpt from 1920 Census, of the Flint family.
�Excerpt from 1940 Census, of the Roseway.
�“Permit to Build”, Building Jacket, 16 Summer Street, Salem Digital Archives
�Inventory No:
SAL.1492
Historic Name:
Common Name:
Address:
16 Summer St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Central Salem
Local No:
26-467
Year Constructed:
c 1865
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Italianate
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HJ: Chestnut Street Historic District
SAL.HU: McIntire Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (08/28/1973); Local Historic District
(03/03/1981)
Building Materials(s):
Wall: Wood; Wood Clapboard
Foundation: Brick; Granite; Stone, Cut
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
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DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Tuesday, January 4, 2022 at 4:26: PM
�NRDIS 8/28/1973; LHD 3/3/1981
FORM B - BUILDING
Assessor's
USGS Quad
Area(s)
Form Number
Number
26-467
Salem
M a s s a c h u s e t t s H i s t o r i c a l Commission
Massachusetts Archives B u i l d i n g
220 M o r r i s s e y B o u l e v a r d
B o s t o n , M a s s a c h u s e t t s 02125
HU
Town
tV\^yLV\ 1?) 1^1 C
p
l
a
c
1492
Salem
e
(neighborhood or v i l l a g e )
Central
Salem
16 Summer
Street
.c Name
Residential
'resent
riginal
Construction
See
orm
c . 1865-1868
Bibliography*
Italianate
ct/Builder
r
Material:
bion
Granite,
Wall/Trim
Brick
Clapboard/Wood
Roof
Not V i s i b l e
Outbuildings/Secondary
Structures
Major A l t e r a t i o n s (with dates) B a l u s t r a d e on
p o r c h ( l a t e 2 0 t h C.)
Condition
Moved
l
--'.Oft.
X
,ri;*v
Good
no
yes
7,527 S F
Acreage
Recorded by: Susan C e c c a c c i ,
Roger
Setting
S e t d i r e c t l y on s i d e w a l k on a
major s t r e e t i n a d e n s e l y - s e t t l e d ,
mixeduse n e i g h b o r h o o d o f p r i m a r i l y 1 9 t h - c e n t u r y
buildings.
Reed
and D i a n n e L . S i e r g i e j
Organization:
Commonweal
Date:
J u l y 1995
Date
yt,
Collaborative^
I lL i ^
r
SEP 2 9 199;
¥ MASS. HIST. COMM.
V
�(
BUILDING FORM
ARCHITECTURAL
16 Summer
DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural
features.
Street
See c o n t i n u a t i o n s h e e t .
E v a l u a t e t h e c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s o f t h i s b u i l d i n g i n terms o f o t h e r b u i l d i n g s
w i t h i n t h e community.
T h i s t h r e e s t o r y , h i p - r o o f e d house has t h r e e bays on t h e s t r e e t f a c a d e .
The m a i n e n t r a n c e i s on t h e s o u t h s i d e u n d e r a o n e - s t o r y p o r c h j u s t e a s t o f a
t h r e e - s t o r y wing.
A t w o - s t o r y e l l extends from t h e r e a r o f t h e b u i l d i n g .
I t a l i a n a t e f e a t u r e s i n c l u d e : t h e boxy shape o f t h e b u i l d i n g ; b r o a d , b r a c k e t e d
e a v e s w i t h a s h a p e d f r i e z e ; a b r a c k e t e d t h r e e - f a c e t e d b a y window; window
dimensions t h a t decrease a t each ascending f l o o r l e v e l ; v a r i e d , e l a b o r a t e
window c a p s i n c l u d i n g k e y s t o n e - a n d - b r a c k e t w i t h s h a p e d c o r n i c e ,
keystone-andc o r n i c e , a n d l a b e l l e d ; 2/2 s a s h ; b r a c k e t e d p o r c h w i t h c h a m f e r e d p o s t s ; a n d a
l a r g e , molded d o o r frame w i t h t r a n s o m and d o u b l e - l e a f d o o r s .
Of n o t e i s t h e
s u b s t a n t i a l s i z e , e l a b o r a t e n e s s , and w e i g h t o f t h e o r n a m e n t a l e l e m e n t s seen
h e r e , m o s t l y c o n c e n t r a t e d on t h e s t r e e t f a c a d e .
H I S T O R I C A L NARRATIVE
See c o n t i n u a t i o n s h e e t .
Discuss the h i s t o r y of the b u i l d i n g .
of
*
J
\
Explain i t s associations with local
(or state history.
Include uses
t h e b u i l d i n g and t h e r o l e ( s ) t h e owners/occupants p l a y e d w i t h i n t h e community.
T h e o r n a m e n t a t i o n o n t h i s h o u s e i s c h a r a c t e r i s t i c o f t h a t commonly e m p l o y e d i n
the
y e a r s a f t e r t h e C i v i l War when t h e I t a l i a n a t e s t y l e was p o p u l a r i z e d
t h r o u g h p a t t e r n books.
H a r r i s o n 0. F l i n t o c c u p i e d t h i s I t a l i a n t e s t y l e d o u b l e
h o u s e a s e a r l y a s 1869.
F l i n t s h a r e d t h i s b u i l d i n g w i t h G e o r g e F. R o p e s a t
l e a s t i n t o t h e 1880's.
F l i n t owned a b o o t & s h o e b u s i n e s s a t 210 E s s e x
S t r e e t . R o p e s o p e r a t e d a n a p o t h e c a r y s h o p a t 214 E s s e x S t r e e t .
Flint retained
o w n e r s h i p o f t h i s p r o p e r t y , a n d t h e d o u b l e h o u s e a t 12-14 Summer S t r e e t , a s
l a t e as 1911.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
and/or
REFERENCES
X
See c o n t i n u a t i o n s h e e t .
* S a l e m D i r e c t o r i e s , 1866, 1869, 1878, 1879, 1887, 1 8 8 8 - 8 9 , 1 8 9 7 .
B e e r s , D. G. & Company,
A t l a s o f Essex County, M a s s a c h u s e t t s ,
1872.
H o p k i n s , G. M. & Co.,
A t l a s o f S a l e m , M a s s a c h u s e t t s , 1874.
M c l n t y r e , H e n r y C. E . , Map o f t h e C i t y o f S a l e m , M a s s , 1 8 5 1 .
R i c h a r d s , L. J . , A t l a s o f t h e C i t y o f Salem, M a s s a c h u s e t t s . . . . ,
1897.
S a n b o r n Map Company, S a n b o r n F i r e I n s u r a n c e Maps o f S a l e m ,
M a s s a c h u s e t t s 1890 New Y o r k , S a n b o r h " M a p ~ C o . , 1 8 9 0 .
S a n b o r n Map Company, S a n b o r n F i r e I n s u r a n c e Map o f S a l e m , M a s s . ,
1906, New Y o r k , S a n b o r n Map Co., 1906.
S a n b o r n Map Company, S a n b o r n F i r e I n s u r a n c e Map o f S a l e m , M a s s . ,
1906 t o F e b . , 1950, New Y o r k , S a n b o r n Map Co., 1950.
W a l k e r L i t h o g r a p h and P u b l i s h i n g Company,
Atlas of the City of
Salem, M a s s a c h u s e t t s , 1911.
Recommended
for listing
i n the National
Register
of H i s t o r i c
I f c h e c k e d , s e e a t t a c h e d N a t i o n a l R e g i s t e r C r i t e r i a Statement form.
Places;
�Nit
ft
Ji^
c s
2. T o w n
ISSION
ostoa
lame
Original Use
i^ith. the
side)
Present
H"OM.€r
Use
J
•
7^
Present
Date
Owner
/
fl/f^Style
S o u r c e of D a t e
<^^.
0
^
^ _
S<ap
u2-n
^
Architect
Deteriorated
I M P O R T A N C E of s i t e t o a r e a :
Great
4.
Little
Moved
None
S I T E e n d a n g e r e d by_
DESCRIPTION
FOUNDATION/BASE M E NT: ^gigh^kegular
Low
Material:
W A L L C O V E R : W o o d _,
STORIES:
1 2 3
ATTACHMENTS:
PORCHES:
ROOF:
1 2
Wings
3
Brick
CHIMNEYS:
4
4
E l l Shed
Portico
1 2
3
4
Center
Balcony
Gable E n d : Front/Side
Entrance-. ^Front/Side
Windows:
Centered
End
Other
Cluster
Elaborate
lalO-EL
Double
Quoins
Irregular
Simple/Complex
pCTC-k.
Recessed
Grillwork
Symmetrical/Asymmetrical
Spacing^fegjila^'lri-egular
Corners:^PM^) Pilasters
Stone
Dependency
Ridge G a m b r e l F l a t ^ H i p ) M a n s a r d
T o w e r C u p o l a D o r m e r windows
Balustrade
FACADE:
Altered
Simple/Complex
Ornament
Features:
Identical/Varied
^Q,
Obscured
LANDSCAPING
OUTBUILDINGS
5. i n d i c a t e l o c a t i o n of s t r u c t u r e o n m a p b e l o w
|^
(
H
6. F o o t a g e of s t r u c t u r e f r o m s t r e e t
P r o p e r t y has
feet frontage on s t r e e t
Recorder
SUM.
KGtz__
NOV
For
1967
4
V/
NOTE:
Photo
a
-o<r
2.5-8 -/-3&$
R e c o r d e r should obtain written p e r m i s s i o n f r o m C o m m i s s i o n or sponsoring o r g a n i zation before using this f o r m .
(See R e v e r s e Side)
FORM - M H C B - 1 0M-6-66-94301 7
(
�F O R U S E W I T H I M P O R T A N T S T R U C T U R E S ( I n d i c a t e a n y i n t e r i o r f e a t u r e s of note)
Fireplace
Other
GIVE A B R I E F D E S C R I P T I O N O F HISTORIC I M P O R T A N C E O F SITE (Refer and elaborate
on theme c i r c l e d on front of form)
S.H.D.S.C., VOL. I l l ,
P. 112, R a t i n g . 2; P e r i o d : 3 r d Q t r .
^ ^ h i . ~fc]p i ' 6 9 s t o r y , e n d - t o - t h e - s t r e e t , wooien house w i t h a s i d e e n t r a n c e
p i a z z a up a f l i g h t o f s t a i r s i s i n t h e I t a l i a n a t e s t y l e . * *
Q
REFERENCE
(Where was this information obtained?
What book, r e c o r d s ,
etc.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Original Owner:
Deed Information:
Book Number
Page
,
R e g i s t r y of D e e d s
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Summer Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
16 Summer Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Harrison O. Flint
Shoe Dealer
and his wife
Mary A. Leighton
Built c. 1867
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built circa 1867
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Eric Baumeister
Language
A language of the resource
English
16 Summer Street
1867
2021
Flint
Leighton
Massachusetts
Salem
Shoe Dealer
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/dbbfe9b01aacedc83d0277c90315334d.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=g2GqmO-s7wkZMrO6Gb5H7PkDiDajhI3T27jguXUvLet1fh7S3RhzQSBNHO7r2P4OZqqpCElhAcpy%7EEyFaVZsXdCQTA%7EsOnKjSz5g4wEVSRcVlv4oZBo4e5J%7Etj45j%7E7piqENJNLaj9viXHvJ852FVrVOnZESrG1MOSClQEAZBr66UrIeGqysWNDyBWaBaWYlJHOkdl8x69l0VQItf5C8Qy2AxBtBmkfGhEnzw9NudIX0eTFLMk1aZEomMYslqGpSXyKaR6QwRguro8onseRFj2BrCtn-gy8UF%7EUgYDjqfaiULCpu4GD2blYdCsG0GFcexul4WReCH94TiwJvp6rt9g__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
04910bb74695ea2caf4cd5b5b1ad008c
PDF Text
Text
37 Clark Street
Mattie Simard
Harry Rodetes
Housewife and Shoeworker
Built in 1947
Researched and written by Amanda Eddy
November 2021
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2021
�37 Clark Street,
City of Salem Assessor’s Office
The land northwest of Highland Avenue in Salem, Massachusetts is a more recently
developed area of the city. It wasn’t until the early to mid-20th century that homes started being
built and in consequence, formed Ward 3. The area was originally pastureland owned by R.S.
Fay. In 1918, a plan was drawn up by Eastman & Bradford, surveyors, splitting the land into
mostly 1-acre plots. In 1921, Frederick H. Griswold and his wife Isabella J. Griswold purchased
most of these plots and immediately began selling them to individual buyers. In 1925, Mattie
Simard purchased lot 288 from the Griswold’s. Later on, she purchased lot 287. The land was
left untouched until 1947, when she and her husband built the home that now stands on lot
288.
The home is a fine example of mid-century modern architecture. This style of home is
associated with post-World War II due to the American trend of soldiers coming home from war
and beginning to build houses in this style during the mid to late 1940s. 37 Clark Street fits this
�stereotype with its ranch style and wooden structure that dotes peaked gables at the front of the
home and is geometrically pleasing to the eye. Its lack of decorative embellishments makes this
home a near perfect example for its time. It seems 37 Clark Street was interchangeable with
288 Clark Street, referring to the lot number. City directories list the home at number 288, while
the 1947 permit shows 37.
The Rodetes Family
The first of the only two families that have lived in the home is the Rodetes family. Harry
Stelianos Rodetes (1887-c.1962) was born on the island of Zakynthos, Greece on June
27,1887. Harry came to the United States in 1906. After having been in Salem for 11 years,
Harry registered for the draft in 1917. His registration card shows that he was a shoe worker for
Martin Silberman Company in Marblehead, Massachusetts at the time. Harry married Mattie
Simard (1885-c.1966) in 1925. Harry and Mattie were neighbors on Prescott Street prior to their
marriage. Between the two of them, they have lived at numbers 4,8, and 10. It seems that their
relationship as neighbors may have been the reason they were married some years later.
Mattie’s birth name was Josephine Delphine Madore. Nearly all of the records differ
when referring to her. She went by Delphine, Matilda, Josephine, and/or Mattie, the latter being
the most frequently used. She was born in Augusta, Maine on March 18, 1885, to Thomas
Madore and Delphine (Deveau) Madore. Mattie’s first marriage was to Joseph Cyr in 1900.
They had four children together: Odilon, Louis, Irene, and Gilbert. After Joseph passed away in
1912, Mattie married Narcisse Simard in 1914. Mattie and Narcisse continued to live in Mattie’s
childhood home on Prescott Street. Unfortunately, Narcisse passed away in 1921, leaving
Mattie a widow for a second time. Four years later, Mattie and Harry would marry and continue
to live on Prescott Street at number 8.
�Although Harry and Mattie had no children of their own, Mattie’s granddaughter, Patricia
Cyr, lived with the couple at 8 Prescott Street in Salem. Sometime before moving to Clark
Street, the Rodetes moved to 10 Prescott Street. Harry continued to work in the shoe industry,
working as a laster. A laster is the workman who shapes the boots and shoes in the shoe
making process. Mattie remained a housewife throughout all three of her marriages. Records
are unclear exactly when Harry and Mattie passed away, but it is estimated that Harry passed
around 1962 and Mattie around 1966.
The Rodetes family sold the home on August 8, 1952, to James F. and Joan B. Silveria.
The Silveria Family
James Francis Silveria (1920-1972) was born to Manuel and Laura (Baptista) Silveria of
Peabody, Massachusetts on March 21, 1920. His father, Manuel was born in the Azores
(Portugal) in 1873 and his mother, Laura was born in Massachusetts in 1885. James grew up at
87 Tremont Street in Peabody. He had one brother, Francis Silveria (1921-1982). James and
his brother worked as laborers at Wilson Square farm where their father was the operator. It is
recorded that in 1941, James married Doris Silveria, whose maiden name is seemingly
untraceable. They lived at 23 Beaver Street in Salem. Soon after they married, James was
deployed in World War II as a Private First-Class United States Marine. He sustained injuries
while on duty and was honorably discharged. When he returned, he worked as a chauffeur for
Beverly Mattress Company. Doris and James divorced sometime before his next marriage
which occurred on April 1, 1950. James then married Joan Marilyn Bishop (1933-1999). Joan
was born June 1, 1933, to Albert L. Bishop and Vivian N. (Collins) Bishop. At the time of
marriage, the couple was living at 138 President Street in Lynn, Massachusetts. James was
working as a truck driver and Joan was at home. James and Joan were married when they
�owned the home on Clark Street. In 1955, James’ brother, Francis Silveria, married Joan’s
sister, Beverly E. Bishop. Joan passed away November 18, 1999.
While James was living at 37 Clark Street, he is listed as working as a laborer. After
moving from Clark Street, James moved back to Peabody where he worked as an operator at N
N Flynn Contracting. James and Joan divorced not long after moving from Clark Street to
Peabody. James was then remarried to Anna T. Brisbois on June 30, 1956. Anna was born to
William Emmett and Stacia (Borowski) Emmett around 1916. They divorced sometime within six
years. On November 2, 1962, James married his fourth wife, Elaine E. (Tetreault) DeVarennes
in Seabrook, New Hampshire. Elaine was born in 1929 to Arthur W. Tetreault and Catherine
(Dubiel) Tetreault. The newlyweds lived at 23 Parsons Street in Peabody. James was a heavy
machine operator at the time and Elaine was at home. James and Elaine divorced and James
married a fifth time on March 3, 1972, in Florida; a woman whose name is illegible. Eight
months later, James passed away on November 12, 1973, in Levy, Florida.
James sold the home to Edward F. Colbert and Edith A. Colbert on June 11, 1954. The
Colbert family continues to live there to this day. The home has been owned by their son,
Dennis Colbert, since June 28, 1996, when Edward sold the home for $125,000.
�SOURCES
�Table of Deeds
Date
Purchased
Home
Owner
Years
of
Ownership
Number
of Years
November
30, 1921
Frederick
H.
Griswold
Isabella
H.
Griswold
1921
June 17,
1925
Mattie
Simard
April 23,
1947
Purchase
Price
Deed
Referenced
Notes
4
Certificate of Title
#3862
Griswold owned
a majority of the
plots on Clark
Street and sold
them at different
times over a
span of many
years.
19251952
27
New Cert: 5598
Document:13351
Lot 288 and Lot
289
Harry
Rodetes
Mattie
(Simard)
Rodetes
19471952
5
Permit No.192
The permit to
build the home
was approved by
the City of
Salem.
August 8,
1952
James F.
Silveria
Joan B.
Silveria
19521954
Document
66077-1&2
James F. Silveria
purchases lot
287
June 11,
1954
Edward F.
Colbert
Edith A.
Colbert
19541996
42
For
consideration
paid
16-3862:
Document 71997
Both parcels of
land (lot 287 and
288) are
combined.
June 28,
1996
Dennis W.
Colbert
1996present
25+
$125,000
66933-325:
Document
320652
n/a
�Residents Table
Resident Name
Directory Year
Occupation
Harry Rodetes
1947-1953
Shoeworker
Mattie (Simard) Rodetes
1947-1953
At home
James Silveria
1954-1955
Laborer
Joan B. Silveria
1954-1955
At home
Edward Colbert
1956-1996
Specialist at General Electric
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Clark Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
37 Clark Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Mattie Simard
Harry Rodetes
Housewife and Shoeworker
Built in 1947
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built in 1947
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amanda Eddy
Language
A language of the resource
English
1947
2021
37 Clark Street
Housewife
Massachusetts
Rodetes
Salem
Shoeworker
Simard
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/de5f817e4d95cfbea1cb8bf92f27a3cd.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=fUiaTV1pFK4wkuAzv4j6cJ1S%7E42Y4Pnp-UWMs8gMhdT71isrNLLH3Zqm3H%7EOaLdfFW3bpQfiYh6CNXwGgweCOlJ6vD9DCaxsQeeUZ3FWKCXTVCc7uwIb56C4VCtCldXtt9gNg8IJ9DaZ%7EXDyzPA18y-MCVEE2M6C8caFxLWFF8Ejc17QakI9QKhsKcnhH5t722oJUPYO0NWZpDk81x8Y0sSBGdpvMOHxm6xx%7EdHuTqTLbopXHTicSDSagNeMyTvSCwMFTeSxMCrf1-tMQVQaty0prz1pcQlMie6sBo8BfBx-tRxjcqFq3CV%7EYmIyqMiRgMFcysDveez8hKuY4oy8KA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
a90b146a1e4aebdc270804abb27edef9
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
68 Derby Street
Jay Levy
and Neal Levy
Developers
Built 2012
HSI Preservation Award Recipient, 2013
Researched and written by Jen Ratliff
September 2021
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2021
�Address listed as 34 Derby Street prior to 1880s.
A 19 century (or earlier) building previously occupied this space until the 1950s.
th
Homeowners
Date Purchased
Number
of Years
56
Purchase Price
October 29, 1886
Years of
Ownership
1886-1942
Notes
$2,500
Documents
Referenced
1494:72
2989:283
3289:188
Annie C. Trask
Yapoot Ahmed
Olive M. Ahmed
Pierre E. LeBlanc, Jr.
Laura L. LeBlanc
Demetrius “Demetri” Bik
March 21, 1942
1942-1946
4
June 21, 1946
1946-1955
9
$2,500
3494:10
Paid $1,500 remaining on $2,500 mortgage
April 14, 1955
1955-1961
6
$1.00
4156:317
May 2, 1961
1961-2010
49
$1.00
4766:393
Jay Levy
Neal Levy
Bedrock Construction
Thomas Czahor
Tracy Czahor
December 23, 2010
2010-2012
2
$97,500
30098:45
Demetri and Millie were siblings
Assumed remainder of mortgage
Operated Bik’s Variety store out of
66 Derby Street
Bequeathed to Family & Children’s Service in
Greater Lynn, Inc. upon Amelia’s death.
Redeveloped 66 Derby Street
and build 68 Derby Street
Amelia “Millie” Bik
August 14, 2012
2012-2020
8
$475,000
3168:523
Separated from 66 Derby Street
(66 Derby Street Trust)
Jonathan M. Frisch
Raquel L. Frisch
April 29, 2020
2020 +
1+
$100
34379:24
38464:404
$415,000 Mortgage
$1.00
�66 De rby Street
Jay Leuy and Neal Leuy, Bedrock Construction
If you are a builder/developer in historic neighborhoods of Salem watch and learn - Jay and Neal Levy
do it right. Originally, they approached the Historic Commission with their "Plan A", but after listening
to feedback from the Commission they returned with a "Plan B" that required resto1ing what was, at
one time, a variety store from the inside out. Leaving the envelope of the building intact they replaced
the structure and modernized the interior. Key to the economic success of restoring 6-6 derby street was
the construction of a new, highly contextual single family home on the vacant lot adjacent the site. This
new construction fit the scale and massing of nearby buildings and strengthens the streetscape on this
block. Jay and Neal, through their work ,vith the historic Commission and their architect, David
Jaquith, added two highly sought after single family homes in an area of town dense with condos.
2013 Preservation Award Winner – Historic Salem, Inc.
This house at 66 Derby Street was given a Preservation Award in 2013 by Historic Salem, Inc. Originally the development team planned to
demolish the house, and combined with the empty lot next door, build a single building with 6 condos. Thanks to the work by the Salem Historical
Commission, who opposed the demolition, they instead restored the house at 66 Derby Street (removing the store front) and paired it with a new
house on the empty lot at 68 Derby Street.
�--------
66 Derby Street, c. 2010
Courtesy of Amelia Kurpeski
�Place
66 Derby Street, 1995
MACRIS (SAL.3303)
�Ward 1
1911 Salem Atlas (Plate 5)
Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds
�43
1906-1938 Salem Atlas (Plate 11)
Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds
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Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds
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Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds
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1874 Salem Atlas (Plate B)
Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds
�Unofficial Property Record Card - Salem, MA
General Property Data
Parcel
ID 41-0337-0
Prior Parcel
ID -Property
Owner FRISCH JONATHAN M
FRISCH RAQUEL L
Mailing
Address 68 DERBY STREET
Account
Number
Property
Location 68 DERBY STREET
Property
Use One Family
Most
Recent
Sale Date 4/29/2020
Legal
Reference 38464-405
Grantor RAQUEL L. FRISCH TRUST,
City SALEM
Mailing
State MA
Zip 01970
Sale Price 0
ParcelZoning R2
Land Area 0.073 acres
Current Property Assessment
Card 1 Value
Building Value 465,800
Xtra Features
0
Value
Land Value 140,300
Total Value 606,100
Building Description
Building
Style Old Style
# of Living
Units 1
Year
Built 2011
Building
Grade Good (-)
Building
Condition Avg-Good
Finished
Area (SF) 2658.75
Number
Rooms 7
# of 3/4
Baths 0
Foundation
Type Brick/Stone
Frame
Type Wood
Roof
Structure Gambrel
Roof
Cover Asphalt Shgl
Siding Clapboard
Interior
Walls Plaster
# of
Bedrooms 3
# of 1/2
Baths 1
Flooring
Type Hardwood
Basement
Floor N/A
Heating
Type Forced H/Air
Heating
Fuel Gas
Air
Conditioning 0%
# of Bsmt
Garages 0
# of Full
Baths 2
# of Other
Fixtures 0
Legal Description
Narrative Description of Property
This property contains 0.073 acres of land mainly classified as
One Family
with a(n) Old Style style building, built about
2011 , having Clapboard
exterior and Asphalt Shgl
roof cover, with 1
unit(s), 7
room(s), 3
bedroom(s), 2
bath(s), 1 half bath(s).
Property Images
___.Disclaimer: This information is believed to be correct but is subject to change and is not warranteed.
�Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System
Scanned Record Cover Page
Inventory No:
SAL.3303
Historic Name:
Hill, Abner E. Grocery Store - Casey, John Building
Common Name:
Address:
66-68 Derby St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Derby Street
Local No:
41-98
Year Constructed:
c 1790
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
No style
Use(s):
Abandoned or Vacant; Bakery; Market or Grocery Store;
Multiple Family Dwelling House; Restaurant; Single Family
Dwelling House; Tavern; Paint Shop
Significance:
Architecture; Commerce
Area(s):
SAL.HN: Derby Waterfront Historic District
SAL.HO: Derby Street Local Historic District
Designation(s):
Local Historic District (12/17/1974); Nat'l Register District
(05/17/1976)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood; Wood Clapboard
Foundation: Concrete Unspecified
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
The MACRIS database and scanned files are highly dynamic; new information is added daily and both database
records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
note that there may be a considerable lag time between the receipt of new or updated records by MHC and the
appearance of related information in MACRIS. Users should also note that not all source materials for the MACRIS
database are made available as scanned images. Users may consult the records, files and maps available in MHC's
public research area at its offices at the State Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, open M-F, 9-5.
Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Sunday, June 13, 2021 at 4:54: PM
�Derby Waterfront NRHD, 1974; Derby Waterfront LHD, 1976
FORM B - BUILDING
Assessor's
Nll!lber
41/98
Massachusetts Historical Commission
80 Boylston Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02116
Ar ea(s)
USGS Quad
Form Nwber
HO
Salem
3303
H
Salem
Town
Place (neighborhood or vil Lage )
Derby Street
66-68 Derby Street
s
ic Name
Residential
Present
Original
f Construction
Possibly 18th C.
See Architectural Description,
Narrative and Bibliography* .
Georgian, Double-rear
Wall Chimney Form
tect/Builder
ior Material:
,, '
-'
Foundation
Concrete
Wall/Trim
Shingles
Roof
Asphalt Shingles
Outbuildings/Secondary Structure$
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Major Alterations (with dates)
See Architectural Description.
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Condition
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1 _~
Moved
J
Acreage
Dianne L. Siergiej
June 1995
no
__ yes
Date
--
Organization: Commonweal Collaborative
Date:
_1_
---
Fair
rEC EI \.lE
Setting Located in a densely-settled,
mixed-use neighborhood and oppos i te the
T-intersection of India Street and the
tank farm of the New England Power Co.
h,ic:o~!~~ks the view of Salem Harbor to
SEP 2 9 199b
(:.;1ASS. HIST. COMM.
r
5,818 SF
-
�(
66-68 Derby Street
BUILDING FORM
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
See continuation sheet.
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings
within the conmunity.
Clearly altered, this property appears to be an eighteenth-century,
rectangular, 2 1/2-story, 5 x 2-bay, gambrel-roofed dwelling that was modified
in the nineteenth century and thereafter to accommodate commercial space.
A 2-story, rectangular, gable-roofed ell with an additional, short, 2-story,
full-width extension has been attached and functioned as residential space.
As is common of its type to Salem, it is perpendicularly-oriented to
the street. Typically, (see 58 Derby Street, Form No. 3333 and
78 Derby Street, Form No. 3299), the main block would also have included
paired, rear-wall chimneys. Here they have been removed. A single,
rebuilt, stuccoed brick chimney now exists between the joined roofs of the
front and rear sections. Renovations have altered openings and stripped
detail. The Derby Street elevation houses the commercial storefront, now
obscured by boarding for security. The main doorway has been stripped of
trim.
The shallow, boxed, molded cornice has a small return. Windows have
molded trim, but boarding has also obscured sash.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
~
See continuation sheet.
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state history.
of the building and the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the conmunity.
Include uses
This property has been a commercial structure at least since the first third
of the nineteenth century. No title search has been conducted, but according
to local maps, ownership is tied in with the property next door at 62 Derby
Street. Abner E. Hill apparently owned both this house and 62 Derby Street
and is listed as a grocer at this site, 32 (now 66-68) Derby Street as early
as 1836. By 1866, Abner E. Hill moved to 30 (now 62) Derby Street.
It could
not be determined who had lived here during Hill's ownership prior to his
own residence.
The next owner of this property that can be identified without a title search
is John Casey (d. April 22, 1895) who both lived and operated a saloon here
in 1874. He continued to operate what was subsequently described as a liquor
store here and to own the property at 62 Derby Street, but by 1881, lived
elsewhere; at 37 English Street during the 1880's and at 27 Forrester Street
during the 1890's. After Casey's liquor store, the commercial space was
occupied by a lunch room run by Edward Donahue c. 1897, Beacon Express co-:":'
owned by John J. Mason c. 1905 and Silets and Drub Painters, c. 1910.
On the 1911 atlas, W. Karbisa is recorded at this property, but he
neither lived nor operated a business here and was is not recorded in
local directories as a resident of Salem. Tenancy for both the commercial
and residential space thereafter largely switched to occupants with
Polish surnames.
Joseph Skurski ran a grocery c. 1915. Anthony Bartkievicz
operated a variety store c. 1930. Around 1926, and again after the death of
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
~
See continuation sheet.
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places;
If checked, see attached National Register Criteria Statement form.
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
Salem
66-68 Derby Street
Area HO
Form No. 3303
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE (continued)
her husband, Alexander Palmer, a baker, c. 1933, Staislawa Palmer, took over
the grocery and remained a shopkeeper at least through 1945. She also lived
here with the rest of her family.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
*Salem Directories, *1836, 1842, 1846, 1850, 1851, 1855, 1857, 1859,
1861, 1864, 1866, 1869, 1876, 1878, 1881, 1884, 1886, 1886-87, 1888-89, 189091, 1893-94, 1895-96, 1899-1900, 1903-04, 1904, 1905, 1910, 1915, 1920, 1926,
1929, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1935, 1940 and 1945.
Beers, D. G. & Company, Atlas of Essex County, Massachusetts,
1872.
Hopkins, G. M. & Co., Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts, 1874.
*McIntyre, Henry c. E., Map of the City of Salem, Mass, 1851.
Richards, L. J., Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts .••• , 1897.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company, Atlas of the City of Salem,
Massachusetts, 1911.
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
SALEM
66-68 DERBY ST
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
SAL.3303
SAL.HN, SAL.HO
Supplemental photograph by Patti Kelleher, Salem Department of Planning & Community Development, November 2016
RECEIVED
JUN 20 2017
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Continuation sheet 1
�FORM B - BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
{)ffi~P. of thP. ~P.~rP.t.::lrv . ~t.::itP HonsP . Roston
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Present owner
Description:
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s~k1~-(U--,.,._-l:J-a;:m_l_Yl.t_t__- - 4. Map. Draw sketch of building location
in relation to nearest cross streets and
other buildings. Indicate north.
Architect
Exterior _w_a_ll_fa_b_r_i_c-,-~--1--.- - - - - - Outbuildings (describe) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Other features
-------------
Altered
- - - - - - - - Date-----
Moved
- - - - - - - - - Date- - - - - -
5. Lot size :
7
One acre or ®
Approximate frontage
Over one acre
c:2~- ~ ·
---P'-------
Approximate distance of building from street
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Organization
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Date
C. / z '3
IDO NOT WRITE IN THIS SPACE
USGS Quadrant
6. Recorded by
-------
IMHC Photo no.
-------
7
(over)
20M-5-73-075074
�I
7. Original owner (if known)
--------------- ---------------0 rig i nal use
---------------------------------------!.f.
ll
Subseque nt uses (if any) and dates _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
8 . The me s (check as many as applicable)
Aborigina l
Agricultural
Arc hitectural
The Ar ts
Commerce
Communication
Community development
-
-
---
Conservation
Education
Exploration/
settlement
Industry
Military
Political
--
Recreation
Religion
....
Science/
inventi-on
Social/
humanitarian
Transportation
9. Historical significance (include explanation of themes checked above)
10. Bibliography and/or references (such as local histories , deeds, assessor's records,
early maps, etc. )
3/ 73
�-
/
- - - - - ------
�CITY OF SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS
BOARD OF APPEAL
120 WASHINGTON STREET, 3RD FLOOR
SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 0 1 970
TELEPHONE, 978-7 45-9595
FAX, 978-740-9846
·20!! JUN 22 A fl:
June 22, 2011
Decision
Gty of Salem Zoning Board of Appeals
)'.,,LEVY AND NEAL LEVY, TRUSTEES OF 66 DERBY STREET
REAL TY 1!:,Ji.;r, requesting Variances from lot area, lot area per dwelling unit,
frontage, lot w;jg;li, front and rear yard setbacks, and off-street parking regulations,
and a Special P ·
. allow the reconstruction, extension, alteration and changing
of an existing none
ing two-family structure on a nonconforming lot to a
-single-family house, 1
er to subdivide the property located at 66 DERBY ST,
Salem, MA, into two lots
truct an addition on one lot, and construct a new
single-family home on the
-2 zoning district).
s opened on June 15, 2011, pursuant to Mass
A public hearing on the above Peti
General Law Ch. 40A, § 11. The hea
closed o1l that date with the following Zoning
n, Richard Dionne, Annie" Harris,
Board of Appeals members present: Re
Elizabeth Debski and Jamie Metsch.
·
•
Petitioner seeks Variances pursuant to Section 4.
psional Requirements) and 5.1
(Off-Street Parking Regulations), and a Special Pe
pursuant to Section 3.3
(Nonconforming Uses and Structures), of the Gtyof Sal
· g Ordinances.
Statements of fact:
•fiimously to
1. On March 25, 2011, the Salem Historical Commission vot
ition existing
approve a conceptual plan that allowed the demolition of the r
· · house,
on the house on 66 Derby Street, renovation of the remaining fro
ilding on the
construction of a new addition and construction of one new twoSite.
2. After the Historical Commission issued their conceptual approval, input fro
Director of Inspectional Services indicated that placing two principal structures
the same residential lot would be problematic. The petitioners revised the plans to
show the subdivided lot and a new single-family house, rather than two-family house,
proposed on the newly created lot. .
3. In a petition date-stamped June 1, 2011, petitioners requested dimensional Variances
and a Special Permit to subdivide the property located at 66 Derby Street into two
lots; alter the existing house on 66 Derby Street by removing a portion of it,
constructing a new addition and converting it to a single-family house; and construct
a new single-family home on the other, newly created lot. Petitioner also requested
rs
�2
relief from Off-Street Parking regulations in order to allow tandem parking spaces
and backing into a public way.
4. The petitioners were represented at the hearing on June 15, 2011 by Attorney Mark
Glovsky. Architect David Jaquith and the petitioners were also present.
5. At the meeting on June 15, 2011, resident Angela Omnery, 6 Connors Road, spoke
in support of the petition. The Board also received a letter of support from At-Large
Councillor Joan Lovely. A petition in favor of the project was also submitted. No
one at the hearing opposed the project.
Appeal, after careful consideration of the evidence presented at the public
thorough review of the plans and petition submitted, makes the following
f
1.
le relief may be granted without substantial detriment to the public
thout nullifying or substantially derogating from the intent or
zoning ordinance, since the proposed project's density is in
keeping wi
rrounding neighborhood, tandem parking is not
problematic
siJ:lt;le-family houses, and the proposed new house is
intelligently sited
ositive addition to the neighborhood.
t'.'#:1'·
2.
In permitting such chan
. ~, Board of Appeals requires certain appropriate
conditions and safeguards airl.oted below.
On the basis of the above findings of fact and
including, but not limited to, the Plans, Documen
Appeals concludes:
, ce presented at the public hearing
testimony, the Zoning Board of
1. Variances pursuant to Section 4 .0 (Dimensional
ts) and 5.1 (Off-Street
Parking Regulations), and a Special Permit pursuant to S,=
3.3 (Nonconfoffilillg
Uses and Structures), of the Gtyof Salem Zoning Ordin~,
re granted in order
2,t;,P
d
> ropose
to subdivide and redevelop the site as proposed on the plan
Subdivision, 66 Derby Street, Salem, Property of Jay Levy, Nea:
," dated May
10, 2011, and the plans and renderings titled "Proposed Restorat1
building of
66-68 Derby Street, Salem, MA," dated May 12, 2011.
In consideration of the above, the Salem Board of Appeals voted, five (5) in favor(.
Harris, Metsch, Debski and Dionne) and none (0) opposed, to grant petitioner's requ
a Special Permit and Variances subject to the following terms, conditions, and safegu
1. Petitioner shall comply with all city and state statutes, ordinances, codes and
regulations.
2. All construction shall be done as per the plans and dimensions submitted to and
approved by the Building Commissioner.
3. All requirements of the Salem Fire Department relative to smoke and fire safety shall
be strictly adhered to.
�3
4. Petitioner shall obtain a building permit prior to beginning any construction.
5. A Certificate of Occupancy is to be obtained.
6. Petitioner shall obtain street numbering from the Gty of Salem Assessor's Office
and shall display said number so as to be visible from the street.
Petitioner is to obtain approval from any Gty Board or Commission having
jurisdiction including, but not limited to the Planning Board.
.s this Decision expressly provides otherwise, any zoning relief granted does
:wer or authorize the Petitioner to demolish or reconstruct the structure(s)
the subject property to an extent of more than fifty percent (50%) of its
ore than fifty percent (50%) of its replacement cost at the time of
e ~tructure is demolished by any means to an extent of more than
destructio
"'of its replacement cost or more than fifty percent (50%) of its
fifty percent
of destruction, it shall not be reconstructed except in
floor area at th
ions of the Ordinance.
conformity with t
9. The renovated house on
rby Street and the proposed house on the proposed
· single-family homes.
e ecca Curran,
air
!em Board of Appeals
1-r
:;B· "">
wt~M PLANNING BOARD
A COPY OF TilIS DECISION HAS BEEN FILED
AND 1HE CITY CLERK v
("''
Appeal froni this decision, if any, shall be made pursuant to Section
General La:ws Chapter 40A, and shall be filed within 20 days of filing
· ·on in the
office of the Gty Clerk. Pursuant to the Massachusetts General La:ws Ch
Section
11, the Variance or Special Permit granted herein shall not take effect until a
of the
decision bearing the certificate of the Gty Clerk has been filed with the Essex ~Q>uth
of Deeds.
·
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12 MAY2011
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ZONING DISTRICT -
RESIDENCE 2
REQUIRED
EXISTING
PROPOSED
LOT 1
PROPOSED
LOT 2
15,000
6268
3180
3088
7500
3134
3180
FRONTAGE
100
87.25
45.48
LOT WIDTH
100
85.99
43.80
FRONT
15
5.8
6.0
SIDE
10
7.4
10.1
REAR
30
0.7
24.6
35%
17%
24%
LOT AREA
AREA PER UNIT
MAX.
LOT COVERAGE
parking setback
from st. line
5'
0
,
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'
MAP 41 LOT 136
3 1/2 BECKET AVENUE CONDOMINIUM
3 1/2 BECKET AVE.
MAP 41 LOT 100
THOMAS & GLENDA DORAN
48 ENGLISH ST.
31%
0
N55°UY4- 7 »E
36.94'
NSSW4-rE
0.7'-
44.17'
LOT 1
±
3180
AREA -
S.F.
3088
±
,
10
I
LOT 2
AREA -
'-._
existing building
to be removed
S.F.
proposed step
0
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proposed step H't--+-,
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MAP 41 LOT 97
NOREEN CASEY
PATRICK GRIFFIN
72 DERBY ST.
-
LOCUS IS SHOWN ON ASSESSOR'S MAP 41 LOT 98.
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MAP 41 LOT 99
PETER SHOLDS
MARY FRANCIS SHOLDS
GAJEWSKI REALTY TRUST
62 DERBY ST•
proposed
granite
steps
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EXISTING BUILDING
TO REMAIN
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parking
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STREET
DERBY
PROPOSED SUBDIVISION
66 DERBY STREET
SALEM
PROPERTY OF
,. t, ,
JAY LEVY
GRAPHIC SCALE
I CERTIFY THAT THE BUILDINGS
HEREON ARE LOCATED ON
THE GROUND AS SHOWN.
.
:;!fort(
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/REG. PROF.LAOSURVEYOR
10
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( IN FEET )
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SCALE 1h
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MAY 10, 2011
NORTH SHORE SURVEY CORPORA11ON
14 BROWN STREET - SALEM, MA
978- 7 44-4800
ft.
I
,
#3509
�------ - - - - - -
------------------------------------,
Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970
(978) 619-5685
FAX (978) 740-0404
of March 23, 2011, the Salem Historical Commission voted unanimously in favor of the
concept of the dem
of the rear addition, renovation of the remaining front main house, construction of a
new addition and the c
fuction of one additional. 2 unit building on the site as conceptualized in the
drawings submitted date
rch 7, 2011, in order for the applicant to proceed with seeking µeeded approvals
from the Zoning Board of
"'·• '
],
Dated: . March 25 2011
SALEM HISTORICAL COMMISSION
By: <~ /
., /
~
Note - This is not a Certificate indicating Commission
Demolition Permit can be issued until a Certificate of A
~1/t. (j' 1---,,k__..
': ,.
y( }
,,'?.,ii)
:?l for any work to commence. No Building or
teness has been issued.
�l!Citp of ~alem, ;iflla.s.sacbu.sett.s
~oNDITa.~
a
@ffice of tbe (l[itp (l[oumil
(l[itp ~all
~=w"'
COUNCILLORS-AT-LARGE
JERRY L RYAN
2011
THOMAS H. FUREY
JOAN 8. LOVELY
STEVEN A. PINTO
ARTHUR C. SARGENT Ill
Re
WARO COUNCILLORS
PRESIDENT
2011
ROBERT K. MCCARTHY
MICHAEL SOSNOWSKI
JEAN M. PELLETIER
JERRY L. RYAN
JOHN H. RONAN
PAUL C. PREVEY
JOSEPH A. O'KEEFE, SR.
CHERYL A. LAPOINTE
CITY CLERK
Curran, Chair
HAND DELIVERED 6/15/11
r.d of P,ppeals
,Jf
City of Sa
Ill
120 Washin
Salem, MA 019
Re:
'ND NEAL LEVY, TRUSTEES OF 66 DERBY STREET REALTY TRUST,
requesting Varianc
and rear yard setbacks,
m lot area, lot area per dwelling unit, frontage, lot width, front
off7street parking regulations, and a Special Permit to allow
\;Jf/i"l,
the reconstruction, extensi91'i',~jteration and changing of an existing nonconforming
two-family structure on a noh
rming lot to a single-family house, in order to
subdivide the property located at
. RBY ST, Salem, MA, into two lots, construct an
addition on one lot, and construct a
w ~iA,gJe-family home on the other (R-2 zoning
!,(
district) ·
Dear Chairwoman Curran and Members of the Boar
,/6
c-,
!}'
' ,:~{ ,, /;/\\,,
Please be advised that I am unable to attend tonigfl~{,l'oning Board of Appeals meeting
+P
as I have multiple conflicts in my schedule. Therefore, please
this letter of support for
the petition of Jay Levy and Neal Levy, Trustees of 66 Derby Stre
the above-referenced matter.
As you are aware, 66 Derby Street has sat fallow for a number of y
blight to that end of the Historic Derby Street neighborhood.
. d is an obvious
/;
This proposali~JII gr
tly assist
in the continued revitalization of Derby Street and will be in keeping with the arc
historic charm of.this area. Therefore, I wish to be recorded as in favor of this propo
you
have any questions or comments, please do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you.
Very truly y o u ~
~ : : ~ ) oYJff
Councillor at Large
SALEM CITY HALL• 93 WASHINGTON STREET• SALEM, MA 01970-3592 • WWW.SALEM.COM
�Bedrock Building Consultants
145 Cabot Street
Beverly, MA 01915
Tel
978-922-5479
Cell
617-803-7867
F
978-922-2590
·1 jaylevy@verizon.net
pport and endorse the petition of Jay Levy and Neal Levy
. . ;{ STREET REALTY TRUST requesting Variances from lot
area per dwelling
•!Y
ge, lot width, front and rear set backs, and off street parking
regulations, and a Speci
· to allow reconstruction, extension, alteration and
changing of a non confo
o.,,_;;,,,,;,
family structure on a non conforming lot to a single
family house, in order to subdivJ~Aie property located at 66 DERBY STREET, Salem,
MA into two lots, construct an ruldi,,'. • on one lot, and construct a new singe family
home on the other. (R-2 zoning distti.'1
NAME ·
~RESS
Janel Meni½
.3~'~':h Sf, 00,{efl{_,
:C6/i)i:/·;·'
~~{
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j6 [e, Q..{;;S, Jo 12. b D.-v
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.
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e ,~ e,
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I
��Bedrock Building Consultants
145 Cabot Street
Beverly, MA 01915
Tel
978-922-5479
Cell
617-803-7867
F~,
978-922-2590
: ·MJil jayleyy@verizon.net
pport and endorse the petition of Jay Levy and Neal Levy
from lot
kf
ge, lot width, front and rear set backs, and off street parking
regulations, and a Speci
it to allow reconstruction, extension, alteration and
changing of a non conform
o,:v:family structure on a non conforming lot to a single
family house, in order to sub ivj;~.te property located at 66 DERBY STREET, Salem,
MA into two lots, construct an a.ddltlo. on one lot, and construct a new singe family
home on the other. (R-2 zoning dis+.•
. , Y: STREET REALTY TRUST requesting Variances
NAME
~.QRESS
��.
~
{
66-68 Derby St
I
�Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970
(978) 619-5685
~
FAX (978) 740-0404
CERTlflCATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
ll is hereby cer ti~j~,at the Salem Historical Commission has determined that the proposcJ:
□
□
0
□
□
~o
Constructi~ .A
Reconstructio;
Demolition
S ignage
□
~
~
T
~
Moving
Alteration
Painting
Other work
as described below will be appro~
o the preservation of said Historic District. as per the requirements ser
forth in the Historic District's Act (fvl.~h. 40C) and the Salem Historic Districts Ordinance.
District:
Derby Street
Address of Property·
~~
66 &. 68 Derby Street
Name of Record Owner: Jay Levy & Neal Levy
Description
of Work Proposed:
~
q.
~
Installation of()(; slyle, 5 inches, 032 heavy gauge aluminum gull~
lnslallation ofc/0111nspo11ts.
(9'nled Wicker to 11wlc/1 1!,e lri111.
~
<9~
~
Dated:
May 7. 20 I2
SALEM HISTORIC~L CO:/I v ~
By
r:fri+"~c--jvfw- ~
The homeowner has the option not to commence the work (unless it relates to resolving an outstanding
violation). All work commenced must be completed within one year from this date unless otherwise indicated.
Tl ITS IS I OT A 13UILDING PERMIT. Please be sure to obtain the appropriate permits from the Inspector nf
13uildings (or any other necessary permits or approva ls) prior to commencing work.
�120 WASHINGTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970
978) 145•9595 EXT 311
FAX Q78) 740·0404
APPLICATlON FOR A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATE ESS
Pu
Ordinance. a
the I listori c District's Act (M.G.L. Chapter 40C) and the Salem Historical Co mmiss ion
· n is hereby made for issuance of a Certi ticatc of Appropriateness for:
ll
[]
Moving
Painting
[]
:J
Reconstruction
Sign
Alteration
Other
as descri bed below.
Original Building Construction Date, if known: / 790
f Z.o/ Z.
Description of ~or <Proposed
(Please include required scale drawin~s. paint chips, catulog rn r
or samples of material proposed. where applicahle.)
City: /36.;z;J.:t..Lz
l
Statc:f'..+"1' lip: O~//,C'
�PROCEDURES FOR FILING APPLICATIONS
A
Bil prepared to apply for approvals wel I in advance of co,nmencing any exterior work. Before making ill!Y changes 10 the exterior of 2 pro;:,erty
in an historic district, the owner should call or visit the Commission representative at the Department of Planning & Community Development to
discuss proposed alterations and to determine the ca1egory of the application (Appropriateness, Non-Applicability or I lardship).
B.
The Commission normally meets on the first and third Wednesdays of each month and noti::es arc posted at City I (all. The meetings are held at
120 Washington Street, 3rd floor, and begin at 7:30 p.m. All meetings are open to the public and any person is entitled to appear and be heard
on any matter before the Commission before it reaches a decision.
C.
An application for a Certificate of Appropriateness or Hardship must be received by 3:00 p.m. on the Monday 16 days before the 111::etir gin
order to make the agenda. An application for a Certificate of Non-Applicability may normally be added to the agenda up to the day of the
meeting. In some cases. a Certificate of Non-Applicability may be issued by the Clerk. without review by the full Commission. atler notifying
Commission members and allowing 24 hours for any objection. There is no fee for any applications.
D.
All'Opplications for Certificates of Appropriateness or Hardship require a public hearing. 'IJotice of the hearing must be posted with the City
Clerk 14 ays before the hearing and abutters must be notified in writing. Commission staff will handle these procedures. A public luaring is
not required for Certificate of Non-Applicability.
E.
Applications ml l bes bmitted by the owner ofthe property. A contractor for the owner, al the owner's request. may submit an application on
the owner's behalf. n case ofa tenant, a waiver of the owner's appearance may be granted at the discretion of the Commission ifit is reque.,ted
by the owner.
F.
All applications must include th ee to four 35mm photographs of existing conditions. No certificates can be issued prior to re::eip: of
photographs.
G.
An application will not be considere compJcte unless lill_work items are thoroughly described on scaled drawings and include specifications
regarding dimensions, materials. and any other information needed for the Commission to visualize the changes in order lo make a
determination. Applications for paint colors should in;;lude a paint chip or chart. The followi ng items should be included in your drav.ings as
applicable:
I.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Site plan showing location of improvements;
Elevation drawings of the specific improvements·
Details/profiles (i.e. moldings. fence caps, cornice Vents etc.);
Materials (i.e. wood, brick, etc.);
Dimensions (i.e. size of trim); and
Transformers. heat pump and condenser locations, electrical n ·es and meters. bmp posts. stove pipes.
H.
At the hearing. the Commission will discuss the application with the ap
t or his representative, hear the abutters and take a vote. Owners
having professional consultants such as architects or contractors arc urged to have,tli be present at the hearing. If the application is approved.
a Certificate will be mailed to the mailing address provided on the application ano copies ii be sent to the City Clerk and Building lnspect,Jr.
Please note that the application can be continued until the next meeting if the Commission deems necessary (i.e. for reasons or incomplete
drawings. to perform a site visit, etc.). In any case. the Commission must make a dctenninatio vithin 60 days from the date the application is
received, unless the applicant waives that requirement in writing.
I.
A property owner or a contractor cannot receive a buil:ling permit unless a Certificate has bee i ·s ed. Please be sure to obtain appropriate
permits from the Inspector of Buildings (or other nece~sary permits and approvals) prior to :ommencing vork.
J.
The homeowner may opt not to commence the work api::roved (unless it relates to resolving an outstand ing..-vig,I lion). Work commence:! must
be completed within one year from the Certificate date unless otherwise indicated.
,
K.
The City of Salem reserves the right to inspect the project to determine compliance with the conditions set fo rth~
ertilieate issued.
Violations
A person commencing or completing work to the exterior ofa buil:ling in an historic district without the necessary approval of the Commission is ~ubject
to lines ofup to $500 per day from the date of violation. The Commission is not responsible fo r an owner's neglect to inquire about necessary City permits
and approvals. All records are public and we will confidentially assist you if you are concerned that someone in your neighborhood is in violation.
Assistance
The Commission's guidelines are available for viewing at the Salem Planning Department and the Salem Public Library. The guidelines provide examples
or what is historically appropriate (or inappropriate) for Salem's 11eighborhoods including trim, siding, doors, li:nces. gullcrs, masonry. paint colors,
parking solutions. porches. roofing. satellite dishes. secondary egress, skylights, utilities. windows, etc. These guidelines help you understand what
changes are likely or unlikely to be approved. The Commission supports your efforts to improve :1our property and can guide you on historical
appropriateness. Further information. in the form of books. articles and pamphlets. City-wide architectural inventories. and photographs. arc avail:'.ble at
the Historical Commission's oflice at 120 Washington Street. For more information. contact the Clerk or the Commission. Jane Guy. at the Salem
Planning Department. 120 Washington Street, Salem. MA O1970. 978 745-9595. Ext. 3 11 .
RL'\ . mt 4
�Bedrock Building Consultants
145 Cabot Street
Beverly, MA 01915
Tel
978-922-54 79
Cell
617-803-7867
F
978-922-2590
ii jaylevy@verizon.net
APPLIC
AT66
· OR INSTALLATION OF GUTTERS
STREET
J£M1 J '' - ~ Y
~
Gutters to be color
STREET
P>e.~•
032 Heavy Gauge Aluminum:
R to match the color of the trim on both 66 & 68 DERBY
���..-!J
��Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970
(978) 619-5685
~
It is hereby cer
D
□
□
□
I
CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRlATENESS
i)j ~1at the Salem Hi storical Commission has determined that the proposed:
D
Construct~ ~
Reconstn1ction ~ o
Demolition
Signage
~
as described below will be appr~
forth in the Historic District's Act (
District:
FAX (978) 740-0404
□
"R
~
o the preservation of said Historic District, as per the requirements set
.~
h. 40C) and the Salem Historic Districts Ordinance.
Derby Street
~
Add ress of Property· 66 & 68 Derby Street
~
✓_...,.r,.,__~,z_, ______________
Name of Record Owner:_ _.: . Ja::. yL.. .: : :&: :. . :. .N:. : :e=a.,_l.=:L~ev.:...y.,____ _
Description of Work Proposed:
Point colors:
Body:
66 Derhy - Custom made red
68 Derhy - Custom made Khaki
~;:;::~!{::;:~n~~~;:,~reen
Moving
Alteration
Painting
Other work
-~o,
. ~~
. (S)~
.
/11sto!louon <d}enc111g os 111d1cated in yellow on site plan. Fence design /or.front.fence lJ> he ~;ced pickets to
reJ)licate design outlined in yellow in Walpole Woodworkers catalog, to he -12" high, posts
end Rear
fenc ing to he solid./lathoard to replicate design outlined in yellow in Wolpole Woodworks ca'!'ft/p~,'oocl
neighhorfence (w111e on hoth sides) ivith post and cap. Each back space will have gate.
o1fb~
Dntcd,
April 9. 20 12
SALEM HISTORICAL COMM ISSIO ~
(u□~ess
~~liJ
The homeowner has the option not to commence the work
i£ ~1
, iolat ion). Al l work commenced must be compl eted within one year from this date unless otherwi se indicated.
l"I IIS IS NOT A BU ILDING PERMIT. Please be sure to obtain the appropriate permits from the Inspector 01·
l3uildings (or any other necessary permits or approvals) prior to commencing work.
�MAR 1 2 ?012
D2FT. JF PL-• 1 1'
• )~..~jfl
I
1"•
Cc.
-•••/ff
r
I
Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970
(978) 745·9595 EXT 311
FAX (978) 740·0404
APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
Pursu
Ordinance. app 1c
ll
CJ
ti;
the Historic District's Act (M.G.L. Chapter 40C) and the Salem Histori cal Commission
n is hereby made fo r issuance of a Ccrti fi catc of Appropriateness fo r:
Const~
Demolitio
DEREJ'.
Moving
Painting
Reconstruction
Sign
fJ
O
Alteration
Other
~
as described below.
District:
11
~(
(S)()'Original Building Construction Date, if known: ttfod
5 7"
J\clclress of Property: __6_6 _-;-_l_B
___
D_>£
_~~f--:.::;=;.-·_r _ _ _ _ __
_p~ , /IJT
C::oLo~s
?.&:A/c.-,, /II b
5/Q,n;t),:..t;. S
j)/2--'fUJ /1) 0
d-/4..
+
2-0IZ...
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
·
/7 // cJTo
Tel. #:
/36"
_
_
sup,,o,t..ii-tC?
, ,;._£-
G c·
.$
o/,,17/. 11!;: ~
6 1 7- 803 - 786 7
City: B~V6.liLy
I
Statc:1'-1A 1,ip: 019/1
�PROCEDURES FOR FILING APPLICATIONS
A.
Be prepared to apply for approvals wel I in advance o: commencing any exterior work. Before making I!fil:'. changes to the exterior of a property
in an historic district, the owner should call or visit the Commission representative at the Department of Planning & Community Development to
discuss proposed alterations and to detennine the category of the application (Appropriateness, Non-Applicability or Hardship).
B.
·n1e Commission nonnally meets on the first and third Wednesdays of each month and notices arc posted at City Hall. The meetings r..re held at
120 Washington Street. 3rd tloor, and begin at 7:30 i;.m. All meetings are open to the public and any person is entitled 10 appear and be heard
on any matter before the Commission before it reaches a decision.
C.
An application for a Certificate of Appropriateness or Hardship must be received by 3:00 p.m. on the Monday 16 days before the meeting in
order to make the agenda. An application for a Certificate of Non-Applicability may normally be added to the agenda up to the d1y of the
meeting. In some cases. a Certificate ofNon-Applicability may be issued by the Clerk. without review by the full Commission. aIler notifying
Commi ion members and allowing 24 hours for any objection. There is no fee for any applications.
D.
All applications fo r Certificates of Appropriateness or Hardship require a public hearing. Notice of the hearing must be posted witl· the City
Clerk 14 ay before the hearing and abutters must be notified in writing. Commission staff wi ll handle these procedures. A public t earing is
not requ1
fu a Certificate of Non-Applicability.
E.
Applications must be submitted by the owner of the property. A contractor for the owner. at the owner's request. may submit an application on
the owner's behalf.
case of a tenant, a waiver of the owner's appearance may be granted at the discretion of the Commission ifit is requested
by the owner.
F.
All applications must include
photographs.
G.
An application will not be considere
mplete nless all work items are thoroughly described on scaled drawings and include speciticatiJns
regarding dimensions, materials, and y 0tlier information needed for the Commission to visualize the changes in order to make a
determination. Applications for paint colors should in::lude a paint chip or chart. The following items should be included in your drawings as
applicable:
I.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
ree to four 35mm photographs of existing conditions. No certificates can be issued prior to receipt of
Site plan showing location of improvements;
Elevation drawings of the specific improvements·
Details/profiles (i.e. moldings, fence caps, cornice vents. etc.);
Materials (i.e. wood, brick. etc.);
Dimensions (i.e. size of trim); and
Transformers. heat pump and condenser locations, electrical en es and meters. lamp posts. stove pipes.
11.
Al the hearing. the Commission will discuss the application with the app icantor his representative, hear the abutters and take a vote. Owners
having professional consultants such as architects or contractors are urged to hav.e-1hem be present at the hearing. Ifthe application is approved,
a Certificate will be mailed to the mailing address provi:lcd on the application and copies-will be sent to the City Clerk and Building lnDector.
Please note that the application can be continued until the next meeting if the Co1umissio1 eems necessary (i.e. for reasons of im;c,mplete
drawings, to perform a site visit. etc.). In any case. the Commission must make a determination within 60 days from the date the application is
received. unless the applicant waives that requirement in writing.
I.
A property owner or a contractor cannot receive a building permit unless a Certificate has been i · ucd. Please be sure to obtain appropriate
permits from the Inspector of Buildings (or other necessary permits and approvals) prior to commencing work.
J.
The homeowner may opt not to commence the work approved (unless it relates to resolving an outstandm
be completed within one year from the Certificate date unless otherwise indicated.
K.
The City of Salem reserves the right to inspect the project to determine compliance with the conditions set forth 111 he Certilicate issw:d.
Violations
A person commencing or completing work to the exterior ofa building in an historic district without the necessary approval of the Commission is su~je~t
to lines ofup to $500 per day from the date of violation. The Commission is not responsible for an owner's neglect to inquire about necessary City i:~m1its
and approvals. All records are public and we wi ll conlidentially assist you if you are concerned that someone in your neighborhood is in violat.:in.
/\ssistrnce
The Cc,mmission's guidelines are available for viewing at the Salem Planning Department and the Salem Public Library. The guidelines provide exa11plcs
of what is historically appropriate (or inappropriate) fo r Salem's neighborhoods including trim, siding, doors. knees. gutters. masonry. paint nlors.
parki ng solutions. porches. rooling. satellite dishes. secondary eg ress, skylights, utilities, windows. etc. These guidelines help you understand whr.t
dmnges are likely or unlikely to be approved. The Co111missio1 supports your efforts to improve your property and can guide you on historical
appropriateness. Further information. in the form of books. article~. and pamphlets. City-wide architectural inventories. :md photographs. are available at
the l listoricnl Commission's office at 120 Washington Street. fo r more information. contact the Clerk of the Commission. Jane Guy. at the ~alem
Planning Department. 120 Washington Street. Salem. MA O1970 978 745-9595, Ext. 3 11 .
Rt.'\" 1001
�STAINS
Benjamin
oore
~INT
Walpole is proud co
<$)~
partner with Benjamin
M oore~ a premium
coatings manufacturer
<90'
Sandsport Gray
Wh~
since 1883.
We offer their 100%
Navajo \Vhite
Acrylic Exterior latex
stains. These quality
solid color blends are
formulated to enhance
Old Parchment
the natural beauty of our
Buckskin
N orthern White Cedar.
In addition to being avail) ablc/1 fo~rtecn ~tand~-d
c 6 rs, this exterior stam
an be custom mixed to
f~ neds
Cape Cod Gray
~
Hamilton Blue
Evergreen
Verde G reen
N ote: Colors arc subject co the
effects or heat, ligl ,t, age and
other processes :11d may vary
slightly from the a::tual stain.
Black
Oxford Brown
W
A I
I' l1 l
E
W ll O 11 \\ () It K F It S
17
�HISTORICAL FENCE
Replicating exceptional fence of yesteryear.
Over the years, Walpole craftsmen
have worked closely with local groups,
government departments and discerning
private homeowners to replicate fence of
historical significance. Wo::-king from drawings, old photographs or sketches, we have
the experienoo and skill to build fence that
is true to tl:'ie ongi_nal and first quality in
construction.
e allowing are some
examples of our re .
A. The Handicraft Club, long-standing arts and crafts guild
the club's channing mortised picket.
RI. The president ofthis
ith Walpole to recreate
;
B. Governor Hopkins House, - Providence,
tth only very
old photographs as our guide, Walpole craftsmen r?f.!:.ated these historic gates for the home ofthe first governor ofRhode Island. Thanks
to "The Grand Dames ofProvidence, " the custom pair now stands in
front ofthis nationally registered building.
C. Historic Entrance Gates. For a private residence, Walpole replicated historic gates copiedfrom a site in Old Westbury NY. They
feature unique and meticulously crafted stepped pillar posts.
D. Arlington, .MA, - Chamber ofCommerce. Walpole teamed
with a Boston architect to recreate a stately fence that complements
an historic city center.
18
W ALPO L E
W o
c
o w o nK E R S
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=-- b@:te:b'-r' ~'.ftz!?E:?t·
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�D. While cleverly accommodating a mature tree, this standard Hamilton fence with additional
Westport post caps creates privacy for this home's courtyard.
E. Our skilled woodworkers and installers will negotiate fence to accommodate your environment.
F A convex scall.op adds some flair to the practical privacy afforded this garden. The posts and caps
are custom designed.
W
A I
P O I
E
W
O O D W O R K E It S
59
�1
II
I
�Bedrock Building Consultants
145 Cabot Street
Beverly, MA 0 1915
Tel
978-922-5479
Cell
617-803-7867
F
978-922-2590
ii jaylevy@verizon.net
Fro
Rear
to be painted VERDE see color chip
e painted VERDE see color chip
66DERBY
The dark red is
68DERBY
·- --..,,.,.,--- is trim
~
~
"'b
The dark green is body, the tan i~
Front door is VERDE
~
Q·~
o,
~
<$)~
~~<$)
�Bedrock Building Consultants
145 Cabot Street
Beverly, MA 01915
Tel
978-922-5479
Cell
617-803-7867
F
978-922-2590
il jaylevy@verizon.net
�Bedrock Building Consultants
145 Cabot Street
Beverly, MA 01915
Tel
978-922-5479
Ce! I
617-803-7867
F
978-922-2590
ii jaylevy@verizon.net
�Bedrock Building ConsuJtanls
145 Cabot Street
Beverly, MA 0 191 5
Tel
978-922-5479
Cell
617-803-7867
F
978-922-2590
ii jaylevy@verizon.net
FENC
UTUNED TN YELLOW IS REAR
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�Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET. SALEM. MASSACHUSETTS 01 970
(978) 619-5685
~
CERTIFI C/\TE Of APPROPRIATE ESS
It is hereby cc 1ti~
)1__
tr
D
FAX (978) 740-0404
iat the Salem I listorica l Commission has determined that the proposed :
Construction~
/\Iteration ., ~
Signage
Q
D
D
D
□
□
Moving
Demolition
Other work
Reconstruction
Painting
as described below will be a~ ~e to the preservation of said Historic District, as per the requirements set
forth in the Hi storic District's /\ct ( ~ .L. Ch. 40C) and the Salem Historic Districts Ordinance.
District:
'7::
Derby
(:)'
Address of Property· 68 Derby Street
a
N amc of Record Owner:_ _....:e..,:::...=..:::.c..:~.::::..c.:=.::._.:...:..=e..:..:...:,:.;a:::..v<--,z;ane::d=;l~N.:. e.: . : a:. :.l. .L::: . :e:. . :v_,_y_____________
♦
Description of Work Proposed:
~_)(
Construc.:tion <~fne111 /)l{i/ding per plan ·s (David F. Jaquith A~
ts & Planners elated I Oi l 9/ J I) lllilh ihe
ji,l!owi11g spec.:(/ics:
• Doors to he 6 panel, solid wood 1Fith solid wood surrounds
~
• Front and hack door to have I or 2 granite pla{form steps
•
l/'i11c/0111.1· to he Jeldwen Premium Site/ine EX ll'ith 11100d exterior, 5/ 8
~ . 1ri//, hronze m etal c.:asing on
Q
•
•
•
•
•
•
1
0~
~
Ror~f'to he 3-tah Moire Black 111ith so.ffit and ridge vents.
,~
C'/Ji11111ey to match 66 Derhy St reef chimney (Natural water or sand struck bri~ ~ ~1nple prevumsly
ll/JJJl'On!d. with light grey or while ceme/1L in mortar mix. Terra colla/lue. Leacl}Tct;Jfing.)
1·mts & air conclitioning equipment to be non-visible ji·om the public 111oy. /Vat er/ el ctr_j!j'1e1er.1· to he
inferior installed. Gas meters 10 be installed on interior ifpossihle or screened on exte, t<
irA
Lot line wolf to he retained and repaired using stone- washed color stuc:c.:o and c.:emen/ Cll/;""/ ' ~
C'eclur clophoorcls. -1 •· lo 11·eather: Install convenlionul wood 11·ater ta hie und comerlworcls V
011•11er to opply.fhr paint colors and fence al /a/er date.
1
1
~ J~i~n
1
(,~:i~ss
1
i'.~:ION
: l~~c:,,m:~:~~~ ~,: s ~l~c
not to commence the work
it cla~~t~ : ; , ~ ~ k ; d
violation). 1\II work commenced must be completc<l within one year from this <late unless otherwise indi cated.
Tl llS IS OT/\ BU ILDI 1G PERMIT. Please be sure to obtain the appropriate permits from the Inspector or
13uildings (or ~my other necessary permits or approvals) prior to commencing work.
�'
REL.
OCT 20 2011
DEPT OF PLANNING u
Salem Historical Commiss'flflf'TY
DEVELOPMENT
120 WASHINGTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 0 1970
(978) 745-9595 EXT. 31 1 FAX (978) 7.J0-0404
APPLICATION FO R A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
e Hi storic District's Act (M.G.L. C hapter 40C) and the Salem r li storical Commissio n
is hereby made for issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness fo r:
Pursu
O rdinance, a
~~
□
11-/
Constru.1
[J
DemolitioV ~
Movi ng
Painting
[I
rJ
rJ
Reconstruction
Sign
Il
Il
I\ Iteratio n
Otl·.er
~
as described below.
District: ,.,,,$ n,--~ O«"-'•i,:
5 ~ ( ) ' Original
~B
~;~
Building Construction Date. if known: _ _ _ __ __ _
~r
Address of Pro perty: - - ------v'~'-.:::ii~-- -- -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - 6_c._
N arne of Record Owner( s): __
+Y-
_;:
O;._:t:
_~r..
_--.._'7
5-
=--z:~3-..1_..,_ T
_ _ _;:J_A\
..:..,y,__-r
'---<1-tr
'-_:..--'-c..<\ "'--_t-c;
_ - _L~+f_
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
Description of M'or' Proposed
(Please ;nc/ude ,·equi,·ed scu/e drm,•;ngs. pu;nt ch;p.r. catalog er~
C:.,o,,,y:5- -r.-<vr~ ...,.-,,c/V '"'/;:
,,I/'.:_;•<./' /3V
sump/es ofmu ter·fo/ propo.,ed. where upphcuhle.)
""o
~&
~~
~~
~
S ignaturc of Owner:_ ==:::~~ ::-~_._--,· _ __ _ _ _ __ __
Ma ilin g address: _,, 4/c..-
G,-1.t:Jo-r
~..r
�PROCEDURES FOR FILING APPLICATIONS
'
'
A.
Be prepared to apply for approvals well in advance or commencing any exterior work. Uef::,re making illlY changes to the exterior of a property
in an historic district, the owner should call or visit t~e Commission representative at the Department of Planning & Community Development to
discuss proposed alterations and to determine the category of the application (Appropriateness, Non-Applicability or I lardship).
B.
The Commission normally meets on the first and third Wednesdays of each month and noti:es are posted at City I lall. The meetings lre hcld at
120 Washington Street, 3rd tloor, and begin at 7:30 p.m. All meetings are open to the pubIic and any person is entitled to appear and be heard
on any matter before the Commission before it reaches a decision.
C.
An application for a Certificate of Appropriateness c•r Hardship must be received by 3:00 p.m. on the Monday 16 days before the meeting in
order to make the agenda. An application fo r a Cer:ificate of Non-Applicability may normally be added to the agenda up to the oiy of the
mceting. In some cases, a Certificate of Non-Applicability may be issued by the Clerk, without review by the full Commission. afler notifying
Commi ion members and allowing 24 hours for any objection. There is no fee for any applications.
D.
Al '8 plicntions for Certificates of Appropriateness or Hardship require a public hearing. Notice of the hearing must be posted wit ti the City
Clerk 14&ays before the hearing and abutters must be notified in writing. Commission staff wi ll handle these procedures. A public tiearing is
not required fi
Certificate of Non-Applicability.
E.
Applications must
bm·tted by the owner of the property. A contractor for the owner. at the owner's request, may submit an appli1:ation on
the owner's behalf. ) n c e ofa tenant, a waiver of the owner's appearance may be granted at the discretion of the Commission ifit is requested
by the owner.
F.
All applications must incluae
photographs.
G.
An application will not be considered.FQmplete nless .!!.!!.work items are thoroughly described on scaled drawings and include specifications
regarding dimensions, materials. and any other information needed for the Commission to visualize the changes in order to make a
dctermination. Applications for paint colo should include a paint chip or chart. The following items should be included in your drawings as
applicable:
-0
\
(:fo
tr"
~
..0
-
I
-:::r--
I.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
ree to four 35mm photographs of existing conditions. No certificates can be issued prior to receipt of
Site plan showing location of improveme ··
Elevation drawings of the specific improvements·
Details/profiles (i.e. moldings. fence caps, cornices ents. etc.):
Materials (i.e. wood, brick, etc.);
Dimensions (i.e. size of trim): and
Transformers. heat pump and condenser locations, electrical ,.,fries and meters, l:imp posts. stove pipes.
H.
At the hearing. the Commission will discuss the application with the apJicant or his representative, hear the abutters and take a vote. Owners
having professional consultants such as architects or contractors are urged to have1ficm be present at the hearing. If the application is aproved,
a Certificate will be mailed to the mailing address provided on the application an c pics·will be sent to the City Clerk and Building ln~cctor.
Please note that the application can be continued unti l thc next meeting if the Commission deems neccssary (i.e. for reasons or inccmpl;:te
drawings. to perform a site visit. etc.). In any case. the :::ommission must make a dctermi ati n vithin 60 days from the date the applicltion is
received. unless the applicant waives that requirement in writing.
I.
A property owner or a contractor cannot receive a building permit unless a Certificate has been i · ued. Plcasc be sure to obtain appr:>priate
permits from the Inspector of Buildings (or other necessary permits and approvals) prior to commencing work.
J.
The homeowner may opt not to commencc the work approved (unless it relates to resolving an outstanding'vio Lion). Work commenced must
he completed within one year from the Certificate date unless otherwise indicated.
K.
The City of Salem reserves the right to inspect the project to determine compliance with the conditions set ll>rth in the Ce1titicatc issi.:ed.
Violations
A person commencing or completing work to the exterior ofa building in an historic district without the necessary approval of the Co nmission is ;u~jcct
to lines of up to $500 per day from the date of violation. The Commission is not responsible for an owner's neglect to inquire about necessary City r.crm1ts
and approvals. All records arc public and we will confidentially 1ssist you if you are concerned that someone in your neighborhood is in violat.on.
Assistance
The Commission's guidelines are available for viewing at the Salem Planning Department and the Salem Public Library. The guidelines provide examples
of what is historically appropriate (or inappropriate) for Salem's neighborhoods including trim. siding. doors, fences. gutters. masonry. paint colors.
parking solutions, porches. rooting. satellite dishes, secondary egress, skylights. utilities. windows, etc. These guidelines help you understand what
changes are likely or unlikely to be approved. The Commission supports your elTorts to improve your property and can guide you on his,orical
appropriateness. Further information. in thc form of books. article3 and pamphlets. City-wide architectural inventories. and photographs. arc avai lablc al
the Historical Commission's office at 120 Washington Street. for more information. contact the Clerk of the Commission. Janc Guy. at the Salem
Planning Department. 120 Washington Street, Salem. MA O1970, 978 745-9595, Ext. 3 11 .
Re-,. 10(14
�Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET. SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970
(978) 6 19-5685
FAX (978) 740-0404
CERTrFIC/\ TE OF AP PROPRI ATENESS
It is hereby ce ii ed that the Salem Historical Commission has determ ined that the proposed:
□
□
Moving
Demolition
Other work
Construct10
Alteration
Signage
Reconstrnction
Painting
as described below will be appr v ate to the preservation of said Historic District. as per the requirements set
forth in the Historic District's Ac
.L. Ch. 40C) and the Salem Historic Districts Ordinance.
District:
Derbv Street
Address of Propert:,...-·-U.l.L...L..U<.L..L.9-J..LU........,,.___~_..,....._ _ _ __ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Name of Record Owner:
66 Derby Street Re lty Trust (Jay & Neal Levy)
Description of Work Proposed:
Demolition ofrear addition.
Approval of Plan # I and Plan #2 dated 9/19/1 I with the/a
mg specifics:
• Replace existing skylight with Velux skylight ofsame size and location
• Doors to be 6 panel, solid ll'OOd with solid wood surrounYs'
• Frnnt and back door lo have 1 or 2 granite pla(form steps
• Cambre/ trim at transition between lower & upper roof to be painted .,. , hetween 6-8".for lenl{th c?fm<?l
• Windows to he Je!dwen Premium Siteline EX .vilh wood exterior, 5/8
aft '. with hron::e metal casing 011
panes {/a\'{/i/ahle. To he 6 over 6 sash per Plan 1 and 2 with the exceptio 'j over -I where noted on
Pion#/ . IVindow casings to have lentils.
• Roof to he 3-tab black or charcoal grey. No ridge vent.
• Chi/1/ney to have natural ll'aler or sand struck brick, with light grey or white cemen n mortar II/ix. Terrn
cotta.flue. Leadjloshing. Owner to provide sample of brick for approval before c011stmetw11,
• / 'ents, gas meters & air conditioning equipment to be non-vis ible.fro/I/ the puhlic way. Wa t /electric
meters to he interior installed. Plumbing ,·ems throuxh roof be located toward house rear, f i')h!ack
• Lot line ll'alf to he retained and repaired using stone-washed color stucco and cement cap
• ( 'ecfar claphoards. -I" to 11 eather: Install com•entional wood water table and corner/wards
• 01rner to apply/or paint colors am/fence m later date.
Dated: October 6. 1 0 I I
TORIC/\L COMM ISS ION
l
1
The homeowner has the option not to commence the work (::i~ss it r ates t ~ 2 ~ ~ i ,,~
violation). /\II work commenced must be comph.:ted within one year from this elate unl ess otherwise indic::itcd.
THIS IS OT/\ 13lJ ILO[NG PERM IT. Please be sure to obtain the appropriate permits 1·rom the Inspector 01·
Buildings (or any other necessary permits or approvals) prior to commencing work.
�--
.
-
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I
--+---r-----:--·---;
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--+------------t-
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-- -
��1
�120 WASHING ION STRI l T, SALEM. MA 01970
(978) 745-9595 EX I. 311 FAX (978) 740-0404
APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS
(2
Pursu:"""..0/t.Jie
Ordinance.
Historic District's Act (M.G.L. Chapter 40C) and the Salem Historical Commission
a;•;-:•;rfft · hereby made for issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness for:
Moving
Painting
.>-<:::::=:::ii~oiii::-1~
~
as described below.
District:
--~---'""-=-=e.e>=-'""-4Lf'--------'{__
ZcOr'
0
Address of Property: -----i~IFf_....]22~~
Alteration
Other
inal Building Construction Date, if known: II,~ ~Cii'N021Z'"j
~~~~~-~S'I:V~:J:..4.taAa-~-=r+--- -- - - - - - -
~, bi!"A.r3v'--------6"-----rl;,-:---+----''--$
r~v.$,-r"
VAY <r-1/S--'lt:- (.,,,,l:>,/v
Name of Record Owner(s): --=:;__;;_--=c..=._....:..:....::~,
- ---+-,- -- -- - - 1 7 ' - - - - -
Description of
or
(Please include required scale drawings. paint chips, catalog cutt/6J
roposed
'W.
r samples ofmC/lerial proposed. where applicable.)
1"2:> ~c,y/A,6 cf ~ --ro ~
A-t;:,0 A ,....,~ µ~1~Jc.F; ArT
r}( Ivt v ' , .1 \ C:---v,.._
cef2
re c ~
, ~~er',
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Mai ling address: /vs- C-,,tlf8o-r
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2
1
e.r.
p
--✓---◄-~=-r4---+-:.:.:.-:.s::.=----- Tel. #:
Signature ofOvmer: ___
,At-l'D
~,,.. 8()3 · 76't7
City: ~~y
,
State:M Zip: CJ/?/S-
�Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET. SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 0 1970
(978) 619-5685
FAX (978) 740-0404
CERTffICATE OF APPROPRJATENESS
rt is hereby ce
i
□
□
1 1
d that the Salem Historical Commission has determined that the proposed:
Reconstructio
Demolition
Signage
□
□
□
□
Moving
Alteration
Painting
Other work
as described below wi ll be approp i to the preservation of said Historic District, as per the requirements set
forth in the Historic District's Act (M G. . Ch. 40C) and the Salem Historic Districts Ordinance.
Description of Work Proposed:
Construction o/foundation as shown in Plan C dated October 5. 2
01Vner to apply_for remainder (?f'house details at later date.
Dale<l:
TORIC?'L ~~
October 6, 20 I l
13y:
!'he homeowner has the option not to commence the work (unless it relates to resolving an outstand ing
violation). /\II work commenced must be comp leted within one year from this date unless other\\'i se indicated.
l"l 11S IS NOT/\ 13 UILD rNG PERMIT. Please be sure to obtain the appropriate permits from the Inspector of
13ui ldings (or any other necessary permits or approva ls) prior to commenci ng wo rk.
�120 WA<;I IING ION\ I RI l' I . SAi Pvt, \,fl\ 01970
(978) 745-9595 EXT. J 11 FAX (978) 7,10-0404
APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRLA TENESS
Pursuan
e Historic District's Act (M.G.L. Chapter 40C) and the Salem Historical Commission
Ordinance, applic · A ·s hereby made for issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness for:
Moving
Painting
Al teration
Other
as described below.
·ginal Building Construction Date, if known: 1$~ t:=liiN'0-2tZ'j
J\ddress of Property: _..fiit:!i;-e,.~
/ / ,..,,, 13
Name of Record Owner(s): ---=c,;_~,:__--=v-'--s,"·'---'-'--'~1-.$
-
_11\Y .;-~,Jr'_,,, ,. ~i1v
--=-----------'--- ---v--~,
__-v_,____
•------/.-- -
(Please include required scale drawings, paint chips. catalog cut a ,
1
--
f rsamples ofmateriul proposed. where applicahle.)
~ - A ~ - 6 :t- AOt.r~
~ ~~Ji!JG,=A~
At= A r-./..e:k._.:, rze,;1~!=: kT ~ fJTTZISl5l---.
~~
~%
~
--✓-◄_·-',""--~--+-:_-:_:_-::_s;:_=-----
Signature 01·owner:_____
Mail ing adurcss: /ys- ~ <?Jor
s r
Tel. #:
~,-7. /J03 · 76't1
City: ~~y
1
Statc:M Zip: CIIWs'
�Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET. SALEM MASSACHUSETTS 01970
(978) 6 19-5685
FAX (978) 740-0404
CERTI FICATE OF NO -APPLIC/\BIUTY
It is here
□
□
□
□
ed that the Salem Hi storical Commi ssion has determined that the proposed:
Constrnc 1qi1
Reconstructi~
Demolition
Signage
□
□
r□
Moving
Alteration
Painting
Other Work
as described below does not invo
a exterior arch itectural feature or invo lves a feature covered by the
exemptions or limi tations set forth mt e ~ storic District's Act (M.G.L. Ch. 40C) and the Salem [ [istoric
Districts Ordinance.
District: _ ___..D'""e....r...,by.......,..S'""tr...,.e""'e""-t_ _ _ _ _ _~~Q=--Z":.=--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Address of Property: _.,,66..,,-::..,,6il,8L..,QL.L>.,,e.L..Lrb4yL;S...,,t...._r""'ee.....t_ _ _Q
--'::,:__.........;=--:;,
J
-.-----------------
Description of Work Proposed:
Erection <?fa tempormy 6 · high chain link fe nce 1t1ilh gate across the. ~
the property }<Jr nine months.
Dated: June 23.2011
fhe homeowner has the option not to commence the work (unless it relates to resolvi ng an outstand ing
violation). /\II work commenced must be completed withi n one year from this date unless otherwise indicated.
Tl IIS IS NOT A BUILD! G PERMIT. Please be sure to obtain the appropriate permits from the Inspector o l'
Buildings (or any other necessary permits or approvals) prior to commencing work.
�1 rr=o
REC f .,·,Jv~
.
JUN 22201'1
DEPT. OF PLA,'1,·lli\!G (?.
COMMUNITY CH
,:LGPMENT
Salem Historical Commission
120 \VA'-;lll'\CiTON STRH~T, SALl.:.M. l\l,\ 01970
(978) 745-9595 EXT. 311 f-/\:'<: (978) 740-0404
~
LICATlON FOR A CERTIFICATE OF
ON-APPLICABILITY
i toric District's Act (M.G.L. Chapter 40C) and the Salem Historical Commission
Ordinance, applicatio
e eby made for issuance of a Certificate of Non-Applicability for:
Demolition
~
Moving
ainting
Reconstructio n
Sign
Alteration
Other
O'
as descri bed below.
District: _D,;___£
_ _A...t3
__,,_y__
.5_1_ _ _ _ _~
I Boo
A 8du--r
- al Building Construction Date if known:
5 -~_R..
Address of Property: ---"6_6'_ --"b'-8___0_£._a:
_~
-----r-zr_c.
_-_£_T_ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
NameofRecordOwner(s):
J Av t
I
NIEAL-
E-
1
Description of Wo
c uc:..T; oA/ ,:Jr
6 , 111c.1-1
C, flA/
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oposed:
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/
Joe
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~ F c:- 111 ..., -
ro 13& l=./2..L.c.,,,50 _,,1C,/¼J!7.J
r /!-ON -r °F j}4-ojJE.. /IL';., A /30 cJ r e
Mr£
£
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w
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Gd/1/:5 r /2 UL; T/ o/V' + Q t:1ilOU 1/ () IV OF £
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S ignature of Owner: _ _ _~
- -=~- \ _.__ ______ Tel. # : G 1'7<ycJ l3£ 0 ,tZ..OGI~ /J 4-o/Je /2- r,,, Cs
Mailing address: /..,s..,~- ~ 8 0 1 .5 r
City: ,b'Lv.e:1-Ly
/
Bl03 - ?<c.96 /
State: ."1.1\ Zip:
019/
':>
�PROCEDURES FOR FILING APPLICATIONS
A.
Be prepared to apply for approvals well in advance of commencing any exterior work. Before malcing fillY changes to the exterior of a property
in an historic district, the owner should call or visit the Commission representative at the Department of Planning & Community Development
to discuss proposed alterations and to determine the category of the application (Appropriateness, Non-Applicability or Hardship).
B.
The Commission normally meets on the first and third Wednesdays ofeach month and notices are posted at City Hall. The meetings are held at
120 Washington Street, 3rd floor, and begin at 7:30 p.m. All meetings are open to the publ:c and any person is entitled to appear and ·,e heard
on any matter before the Commission before it reaches a decision.
C.
An application for a Certificate of Appropriateness or Hardship must be received by 3 :00 p.m. on the Monday 16 days before the meeting in
order to make the agenda. An application for a CertJicate of Non-Applicability may normally be added to the agenda up to the dzy of the
meeting. n some cases, a Certificate ofNon-Applicability may be issued by the Clerk, witt.out review by the full Commission, after notifying
Co
issi n members and allowing 24 hours for any objection. There is no fee for any applications.
D.
All applioatio ~for Certificates of Appropriateness or Hardship require a public hearing. Notice of the hearing must be posted with the City
Clerk 14 days before the hearing and abutters must be notified in writing. Commission staff will handle these procedures. A public hearing is
not required fop
ertificate ofNon-Applicability.
E.
Applications must be, li itted by the owner of the property. A contractor for the owner, a: the owner's request, may submit an application on
the owner's behalf. In case o a tenant, a waiver of the owner's appearance may be granted at the discretion ofthe Commission ifit is requested
by the owner.
F.
All applications must include t ree to..four 35mm photographs of existing conditions. No certificates can be issued prior to re:eipt of
photographs.
G.
An application will not be considered com?. e e un es~ fill.work items are thoroughly descri·,ed on scaled drawings and include specif:cati:>ns
regarding dimensions, materials, and any othe IAfonnation needed for the Commissic,n to visualize the changes in order to make a
determination. Applications for paint colors slfo
i Jude a paint chip or chart. The following items should be included in your drawings as
applicable:
a
1.
2.
1.
4.
5.
6.
H.
Site plan showing location of improvements~
Elevation drawings of the specific improve~e~ /
Details/profiles (i.e. moldings, fence caps, cornices, vents, etc.);
Materials (i.e. wood, brick, etc.);
•
Dimensions (i.e. size of trim); and
~
Transformers, heat pump and condenser locations, electrical?
d meters, .amp posts, stove pipes.
At the hearing, the Commission will discuss the application with the applicant o lii_veRresentative, hear the abutters and take a vote. Owners
having professional consultants such as architects or contractors are urged to have the ~ present at the bearing. If the application is ap"Jroved,
a Certificate will be mailed to the mailing address provided on the application and oopies · lpe sent to the City Clerk and Building lnEpector.
Please note that the application can be continued until the next meeting if the Commissio deems necessary (i.e. for reasons of incc-mplete
drawings, to perform a site visit, etc.). In any case, the Commission must make a determi ~
thin 60 days from the date the application is
received, unless the applicant waives that requirement in writing.
'-1'k
I.
A property owner or a contractor cannot receive a buiilding permit unless a Certificate has ,een issu . lease be sure to obtain appropriate
permits from the Inspector of Buildings (or other nece.ssary permits and approvals) prior to commenQ)ng ork.
J.
The homeowner may opt not to commence the work approved (unless it relates to resolving i:.n outstanding ~ lation)
be completed within one year from the Certificate dat,e unless otherwise indicated.
K.
The City of Salem reserves the right to inspect the project to determine compliance with the conditions set forth in #le € ertificate issued.
Violations
A person commencing or completing work to the exterior of a building in an historic district without th~ necessary approval of the Commission is subject
to fines of up to $500 per' day from the date of violation. The Commission is not responsible for an owner's neglect to inquire about necessa:y City
permits and approvals. All records are public and we will confidentially assist you ifyou are concerned that someone in yourneighborhood is in violation.
Assistance
The Commission's guidelines are available for viewing at the Salem Planning Department and the Salem Public Library. The guidelines provide ex3.11lples
of what is historically appropriate (or inappropriate) for Salem', neighborhoods including trim, siding, doors, fences, gutters, masonry, paint colors,
parking solutions, porches, roofing, satellite dishes, secondary egress, skylights, utilities, windows, ,~tc. These guidelines help you understand what
changes are likely or unlikely to be approved. The Commission supports your efforts to improve your property and can guide you on hi&torical
appropriateness. Further information, in the form of books, articles and pamphlets, City-wide architectural inventories, and photographs, are avai.able- at
the Historical Commission's office at 120 Washington Street. For more information, contact the Clerk of the Commission, Jane Guy, at the Salem
Planning Department, 120 Washington Street, Salem, MA OI 9'i0, 978 745-9595, Ext. 311.
Rev.10-04
�Salem Historical Commission
120 WASHINGTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970
(978) 619-5685
FAX (978) 740-0404
'trcet
At its
·ng of March 23. 2011. the Salem Historical Commission voted unanimously in favor of the
concept of the d
:tion of the rear addition, renovation of the remaining front main house, construction or a
new addition and t 1e co st ·uction of one additional. 2 unit building on the site as conceptualized in the
drawings submitted d
rch 7, 2011 , in order for the applicant to proceed with seeking needed approvals
from the Zoning Board o
I.
~_(9
_0'
Dated: ---'-'
M-=-=a:.:. .:rc=h=--=2=5..:. .;.2=0c..:.1--=-1_ _
~o~
SA LEM HIS TO RI CAL COM MI/SSI O
By
.
~dt 4J;r ~
ote - This is not a Certificate indicating Commission appr val for any work to commence. No Building or
Demolition Permit can be issued until a Certificate of ARBfO Lateness has been issued.
-.J,0
~&
~~
~~
~
�Salem Historical Commission
120 WA~I IINGTON STRl~l:T, SJ\Ll~M. MA 01970
<978) 745-9195 L\. 311
(978) 740-0404
r.
~i
Pursuan
Ordinance, applica
e Historic District's Act (M.G.L. Chapter 40C) and the Salem Historical Commiss ion
hereby made for issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness for:
Construe~
Demol ition ~
~<:)f
as described below.
D istrict:
r ,,x
0£1'Q. 1-;> '(
Moving
Painting
Reconstruction
Sign
Alteration
Other
'Figinal Bui lding Construction Date, if known: _ _u_ t<.._ _ ___
6t-6B 0 ~
Address of Property: - - - -- - - -----,;i---::::1--r- - - -- - -- - - - - -- - - - - - - - .)A
Name of Record Owner(s):
+ N.::A '-
t-t::-1.'
•
Description of
,r,R roposed
(Please include required scale drawings, paint chips, catalog cu¥ ,1Jf0J samples of material proposed. where applicable.)
A (Ja/J-1, Q. (
;,_,,,,
_
.
/.Z.c,pv &.S 'r
£>, cSr, ,v .-_
/='OA
,0~/?10~,1 ~/0...v:, /I ;f/ .0 /Z6:.Nc:J J/i ~ ~
:.r,,,_ v "-rUL C.
o# 12.c.AV.,,v, JV,;;
/J""- r,o,v
"-"-P JCs7' ro
cJf"
1--0 T
/2..e.670/2..A. r/O ..,V
~~
A
,.:~n,vo
r-
C/
8
v,~ouvr_
~~
~%
~
Signature of Owner: ___,,,,~~ .• ~
Mailing address:
/'75'
c.--<do 7'
sr.
~~
Tel. #: t, 7· 6b3 76'6 7
~~s
City: /3ev.:fl..1-I'I
State:MA Zip: oi9l5
�PROCEDURES FOR FILING APPLICATIONS
A.
Be prepared to apply for approvals well in advance ofcommencing any exterior work. Before making lillY changes to the exterior ofa property
in an historic district, the owner should call or visit the Commission representative at the Department of Planning & Community Deuelopment
to discuss proposed alterations and to determine the category of the application {Appropriateness, Non-Applicability or Hardship;.
B.
The Commission normally meets or\ the first and third Wednesdays of each month and notices are posted at City Hall. The meetings :U'e held at
120 Washington Street, 3rd floor, and begin at 7:30 p.m. All meetings are open to the public and any person is entitled to appear a~ be heard
on any matter before the Commission before it reaches a decision.
~
C.
An application for a Certificate of Appropriateness or Hardship must be received by 3:0( p.m. on the Monday 16 days before the r.,eeting in
order to make the agenda. An application for a Certificate of Non-Applicability may nc-rmally be added to the agenda up-to the jay efthe
meeting. In some cases, a Certificate ofNon-Applicability may be issued by the Clerk, wi:hout review by the full ComrnissiRj, after notifying
Com · ·on members and allowing 24 hours for any objection. There is no fee for any applications.
D.
All a pj_ications for Certificates of Appropriateness or Hardship require a public hearing. Notice of the hearing must be posted with the City
Clerk 14 ay b fore the hearing and abutters must be notified in writing. Commission staff will handle these procedures. A public hearing is
not requir fi ~ ~rtificate ofNon-Applicability.
E.
Applications m~
the owner's behalf.
by the owner.
sub ·tted by the owner of the property. A contractor for the owner, 3t the owner's request, may submit an appl:ication on
case of a tenant, a waiver ofthe owner's appear11.nce may be granted at the discretion ofthe Commission if it is requested
Q
.
F.
AU applications must inclu e
photographs.
G.
An application will not be considere
lete unless fillwork items are thoroughly described on scaled drawings and include spec:.fications
regarding dimensions, materials, and a
er information needed for the Commission to visualize the changes in order to make a
determination. Applications for paint colors shou include a paint chip or chart. The following items should be included in your drawings as
~~
I.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
H.
to four 35mm photographs of existing conditions. No certificates can be issued prior to r-eceipt of
~
-
Site plan showing location of improveme ~E levation drawings of the specific improvements
Details/profiles (i.e. moldings, fence caps, cornice ents etc.);
Materials (i.e. wood, brick, etc.);
Dimensions (i.e. size of trim); and
♦
Transformers, heat pump and condenser locations, elec ·c e 'es and meters, lamp posts, stove pipes.
C
At the hearing, the Commission will discuss the application with the ap Ji
or his representative, hear the abutters and take a vote. Owners
having professional consultants such as architects or contractors are urged to hav tli'f? n be p~esent at the hearing. If the application is approved,
a Certificate will be mailed to the mailing address provided on the application and COP, cs ill be sent to the City Clerk and Building Inspector.
Please note that the application can be continued until the next meeting if the ~ issio:1 deems necessary (i.e. for reasons of inc.Jmplete
drawings, to perform a site visit, etc.). ln any case, the Commission must make a detemvf~ o within 60 days from the date the appli;ation is
received, unless the applicant waives that requirement in writing.
V
I.
A property owner or a contractor cannot receive a building permit unless a Certificate has becm · s ed. Please be sure to obtain app:-opriate
permits from the Inspector of Buildings (or other necessary permits and approvals) prior to co
e mg work.
J.
The homeowner may opt not to commence the work approved (unless it relates to resolving an outstandifl8 violation). Work commenc::d must
be completed within one year from the Certificate date unless otherwise indicated.
K.
The City of Salem reserves the right to inspect the project to determine compliance with the conditions set fort
Violations
A person commencing or completing work to the exterior of a building in an historic district without th:: necessary approval ofthe Commission is s ubject
to fines ofup to $500 per day from the date of violation. The Commission is not responsible for an owner's neglect to inquire about necessary City
permits and approvals. All records are public and we will confidentially assist you if you are concerned that someone in your neighborhood is in violation.
Assistance
The Commission's guidelines are available for viewing at the Salem Planning Department and the Salem Public Library. The guidelines provide ex31llples
of what is historically appropriate (or inappropriate) for Salem's neighborhoods including trim, siding, doors, fences, gutters, masonry, paint colors,
parking solutions, porches, roofing, satellite dishes, secondary egress, skylights, utilities, windows, etc. These guidelines help you understand what
changes are like ly or unlikely to be approved. The Commission supports your efforts to improve your property and can guide you on hi, torical
appropriateness. Further information, in the form of books, articles and pamphlets, City-wide architectural inventories, and photographs, are avai:able at
the Historical Commission's office at 120 Washington Street For more infonnation, contact the Clerk of the Commission, Jane Guy, at the Salem
Planning Department, 120 Washington Street, Salem, MA 01970, 978 745-9595, Ext. 3 11 .
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OF MASSACHUSETTS
68 DERli Y STREET
CITY OF SALEM
BUILDING PERMIT
PERMISSION IS HEREBY GRANTED TO:
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Expires:
CONSTRUCTIO SUPERVISOR - 030030
Owner: Neal & Jay Levy
Applicant: NEAL LEVY
,AT: 68 DERBY STREET
JSS UED ON: 03-Apr-2012
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TO PERFORM THE FOLLdfY(Nl!i WORK:
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Signature:
Fee Type:
Receipt No: .
Date Paid:
Check No:
Amount:
BUILDING
REC-2012-002325
03-Apr-12
X
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IMRPRAONRGTANT: OWNER OR CO>_ •Too._c_TOR,., '"T
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City of Salem
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NEW SfNGLE FAMILY
Dwelling Type
in the
68 DERBY STREET
CITY OF SALEM
Address
Town/City Name
EREBY GRANTED A PERMANENT CERTIFICATE OF
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68 DERBY STREET
nted in conformity with the Statutes and ordinances relating thereto, and
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f----'----,f-------+----"-
formation:
de Flood Zone?
ec~~,•l~P
Provided
1.8 Sewage Disposal System:
Municipal □ On site disposal system □
·. SECTIOL'f 2:, PROP,El\IY ~W..:.l'i=ERS::,,::HlP.::'•
'':.:.f:..:_::..:_::..:_···:..:_:..:_,:..:__:..:_:..:__
New Construction
Demolition
□
□
Existing
Building □
Accessory
Bldg. □
Owner-Occupied
Number of Units
□
1~on(s)
_;_,:..:___:..:_:..:_'-'-1
□
Addition
□
"JY· .f' .,...
□ SpecifiY:#t'"'¾.
Other
SECTION 4: ESTii"L\IEDCONSTRUCTION COSTS
Item
· Oflici(li Use Only ..
.
.
··.. '.
..
1. Building
Do O
I. Buildin'g Permit Fee: :S' ·
Indicate haw fee is determined:
1-----='-----+--J.Q.~'...!:::...::.._:,_...j □ Stan_ d:ir_d,. Ciiytrown.Appljcation_
2. Electrical
.5
,f---------+---=-=-=-----J D total.Project Cost1 (Itein 6) x multiplier - - - x - - ], Plumbing
5
2. Other Fees:·$_ _
· __
F~.;
List: _ _ _ _ _ _~ - - - - - - - - - - - - l :,rechanical (HV.·\C)
5
1-,--..,-,--,----,--,-,=---l'--------j
5. t\·ki.:hanic:il (Firl!
5
Total All fees: $- - - - - S11~ rcssion)
.
�SECTION 5: CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
5.1 Construction Supervisor License (CSL)
~"b ?,e
&7 01.o 11 u vW tcf A«,
Lic~nse Number
Nami.! of CSL fk,ldt:r
Email address
List CSL Type (see bdow)
, C.O W\
SF
[
Solid Fuel Burning Appliancl!s
(nsu lation
D
Demolition
HIC Registration Number
Email address
ION INSURANCE AFFIDAVIT (M.G.L. c. 152. § 25C(6))
Workers Compensation Insurance affidavit m
,,,e•,;pmpleted and submitted with this application. Failure to provide
this affidavit will result in the denial of the Issua(~iii!J,~e building permit.
SECTION 7a: OWNER AUTHOR Z.A
OWNER'S AGENT OR CONTRACTO
, TO BE COl\ilPLETED WHEN
ilIES FOR BUILDING PERMIT
[, as Owner of the subject property, hereby authorize LI
¥,,,,,.::Je"""-..:.v_·..:.V_,/_,,(L=,1=---_,==s....----to act on my behalf, in all matters relative to work authorized by thi,ai,i'l\Tding permit application.
vJ l ll1°fWVl kac>L ~
0
--"--5+-1+---'--
Print Owner's Name (Eli;:ctronic Signature)
SECTION 7h: OWNER' OR AUTHORIZED AGENT O~lA,ijATION
c-c,,------------1
By entering my name below, [ hereby attest under the pains and penalties of perjury tha
contained in this application is true and accurate to the st ofmy knowledge and undersla
e information
2c kr-r A- P. e_ vt.e._
Print Owner's or Authorized Agent's Naml! (E{cctrontc Signature)
I.
An Ownt!r who obtains
::i.
NOTES:
building permit to do his/her own work, or an owner who hires an unregistefl!
actor
(nut registered in the Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) Program), will!.!.!!! have access to the arbitra
program or guaranty ftmd under 1'I.G. L. c. 142A. Other important information on the HIC Program can be ound at
\\·\VW.rna::;s.nov/1)1.'.t
Information on th~ Construction Supervisor License can be found at
www.111:1sS.'!\)\'_ . dQ.;i
2. When substantial work is planned, provide the information below:
Total floor area (sq. tr.) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (including garage, tinished ba.scmcnthttic.s. decks or porch)
Cirns-; livin~ an.\1 (sq. ft.)________
Habitabli: room t.:mmt _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Ntonbt!r of tir1..•plal'.cs___
Nt1111bl.!r l)f barhrno111s . _ _ _
_____
____
l\pi.: \)fh-::1ting systi..:m ____________________ _
I\ pt: l) f l.'.1J1J I lng _-;y-.km _
Number of bi.:dro1Jll1S
Numbt!r 11f halb'b;uhs
Number uf 1kcks/ ptm:hi.:s
Encln:;<.:d
___ ( lJ.H.:n
________ _
�The Commonw,alth of Massa,ht1setts
lloard of Building Regulations and Standards
Massachusetts State Building Code, 780 CMR
CITY OF
SALE~!
R~,1·i.1\•d .\far :ot I
Building Permit Application To Construct, Repair. Renovate Or Demolish a
()nt!- or TH·o-Fami~r Dwe/1/,rg
Uuilding Permit Number:
Jo/)J/0
Du1e
SECTION I: SITE INFORMATION
I .2 Asses_svrs Map & Parrel Numbers
9el
4'/
-Pa_r_co_•I~N_u_m_oc_•r_ _ __
no _ _
I.J Zoning lnfor
I .4 Property Dimension,:
Zoning District
Lot Area Js4 ll)
1' -z...
3200
Frontage t ll)
Side Yards
Fronl Yard
Rear Yard
Provided
ProviJetJ
10
1.6 Water Supply: (M.G.I. c. 40. § 5~)
1.8 Sewage Disposal System:
tside Flood Zuni:?
ck if '\!SC
Public)!t
Municipal lr( On site disposal sysh:m □
PEjcff+iPWNERSHIP 1
(1ty,Stat(Zt 4 ...
?.
.,i"'r
Name ( Print)
/"zS
o//802~sr
No. ,mJ Street
Emaf1 AJdn:ss
SECTION J: DESCRIPTION OF PROPOSED WORK
New Construction ui- Existing Building □
Demolition
,t(f;//Z.t.,q/'6@C,0Mc,,1s,.AJ
Owner-Occupied □
□ Accessory Bldg. □
Number of Units
tbt opply)
teration(s) □
Addition □
Other □ Sp(\!ti~)l #
SECTJO;,j ~: ESTIMATED CO,'iSTRllCTION COSTS
Estimated Costs:
Item
Official Use Only
t l.abor and .\laterials I
1. [luilding
I. Building Penn it Fee: S_ _ _ Indicate how fee is detern
s
i),
---'=------+--====::......---,
□ Standard City/Town Application Fee
" Eki.:trh:al
s 8000- □ Total Projeet C,is1' tltem 6) ., multiplier _____ .,
--------+---===:......--1
s 'fJo
., Plurnhirig
' Other Fees.· S_ _ __
---.....:.-----+----'of.'-""'-"",£__-~
•.
<>=-
-
fJ oco-
s
5. .\ kd1.1nkal t Fin:
I, Su, m:ssion)
s
---====----+--------.j
i
1, Total PrnjHI C"sl:
~
/
z~ ooo
List:
-··---------------
'flital .-\II Fc.:c.:s: S _______ _
Check "o.
Ch1.·i.:k .-\llhlllllt: - --~·-. _(.',1.:;h .-\llltllllll:
□ raid in Full
0 Ou1s1a11Jing IJ.il:uh:\! Du..::
�"'
SECTION~: C'ONSTRIICTION St:RVIC'FS
5.1 Cunstru,·tion Supcn-isur l.iccnse (CSL)
c2.3C2.~3.0 ..
I.ii.:l!nsi.: Nu111hi:r
_ZC/S
/;)Ol)~_>_2 _
N,, ..inJ Stn.:l!l
T} pt:
lkscription
lI
R
M
RC
t lnn.•stri~ti..:J ( 13ui1Jin •s u· to J5.000 ~ll. tt l
Ri:strkt..:J I&:! Famil · O,H.:llin,
Mason
M.nolin
WS
WinJo
CJOJ"'/~~,rf--s_·F_·_+~So_l~iJ_f~·u_c_ll_lt_ir_n_in~g_,l~p~p_lia_n_,_.,____-1
//BAt!.( 0-lt.([i} - /'./£ ,__!..I----1--"1'"'""""1::::"'::.:i'""'"'------------,
r
l-:111.111 aJJn.:ss
D
Di:molition
lmpro,·ement Contractor ( IIIC)
- ,P;
-c;,.Pe,
I!IC Ri.:gistr;lliun Numlii:r
E~pinlliun Dah:
I Ill' Compan) Nam..: 1
No. anJ SI.Ni:t
Ci /Town, State, ZIP
Email aJJrcs:1
.._:1.---_ _ _ __.!.Tc:.!'l:.!,e!h!!co:!!n•::...._ __J_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--<
SECTION 6: WORKERS 1'•@~treNSATION
INSURANCE AFFIDAVIT (M.G.L c. 152. I 25C(6))
;/;
FY
Workers Compensation Insurance affidlfit mJ!lfb• completed and submitted with this application. Failure to provide
this atlidavit will result in the denial of the lii.~JI!,~• of tho building permit.
Signed Affidavit Attached?
Yes ..........
No ........... □
SECTION 7a: OWNER AUTHO~~TION TO BE COMPLETED WHEN
OWNER'S AGENT OR CONTRKt ,:f>R APPLIES FOR BUILDING PERMIT
is:() "
I, as Owner of the subject property. hereby authorizo,_...-,;;2
to act on my behalf, in all matters relative to work authorized by f
Print Owm:r's Name (Electronic Signature)
Dute
.
)Jc
By entering my name below, I hereby attest under tho pains and penalties of perju~•
contain•d in this application is true and accurate to tho b<sl of my knowledge and unde
l'rint (h\n..:r' s 11r :\uthori1..:J ,\gcnt's Na1111; ( 1:1..:t.:lnmi..: Siijt1atur..:)
:"IOTES:
.-\n Ownt:r who obtains a building pt:rmit to do his. her own work, or an owner who hires an unn:gfSt1.•re,
I nut registored in th• Hume lmprov<m<nt Cuntrnctur I HIC) Program), will!!!!! have access to th• arbifi
program or guaranty fund undl!r \1.G.L. c. l,t1 ..\. Other important information on the HIC Program can
\\ ,\_,, n1.1~_, :.:,,.l\ _i'\·.1 lnfornrntion on the Construction Supervisor License can be found al 1\ 1\ ,~ .111.i:,;, g,'.1\ ,
"
\\'ht:n substantial \\Ork is planned, pro, iJe the information below:
fotal floor ar..:a t sq. tl. I_ /~, ? Q tY
·-- ! in,.:luJing garage, tinish~d bas1.•mc11L1ttks. dc1.:ks or pon.:h 1
(irnss Ji\'ing area tsq. tl.) ,L...) .. ? c)_~-- _____ _ _
Habitable room count
._7 _____ _
'\'un1li1.:r tif lir..:placc"s_. __..
(__ __
\:umb~r 1.1f bcdrol1111s . . ~--:3
\:umhl.!r 11f bali1rl10111s
_2,. -.3
,·umber of half haths
/
I
r~ pc nf h..:ating :>} Slt:111
\:u111bl.!r 1)f <lt.!cks, p11n.:h..:s
r_, pc 11l\;~111li11g S_\S!l.:111
F11~h1s..:J
___ Open
I
I.
'
�4J-9e
CITY OF SALEM
ROUTilNG SLIP
x·
New Construction
tilicate of Occupancy_ __
ar&
)6 ASSEl~t93 Washi
DATE _ _ __
- - - - - - - -DATE- - - - - -
~ PUBLIC SERVICES
--
YA_ _ DATE_ _ _ _ __
120 Washington St.
~WATER,-,--~--=------if120 Washington St.
CROSS CONNECTION _ _ __
5 Jefferson Ave
......___
y! PLANNING ))a,, rn.0 ~Q__
(v 120 Washington St.
ATION _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE _ _ _ _
7
. ELECT_JUe-AL_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE _ _ _ _ __
48 I:'!if:i"yette St.
VFIRE PREVENTION _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE_ _ _ _ __
fVi9 Fort Avenue
HEALlJl-::::::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE_ _ _ _ __
l~shington St.
BUILDING INSPECTOR _ _ _ _ _ DATE _ _ _ _ __
120 Washington St.
�72
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�withstanding any license or waiver of any prior breach of condition shall
make the whole of the balance of said principal sum immediately due and
payable at the option of the holder hereof. For any breach of the statuto y
condition or for any·breach of any condition of this mortgage the Mortgage
shall have the statutory power of sale. In the event the ownership of the
mortgaged premises, or any part thereof, becomes vested in a person other
than the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee may, without notice to the Mortgagor,
deal with such successor or successors in interest with reference to the
mortgage and the debt hereby secured, in the same manner as with the Mort
gagor, without in any way vitiating or discharging the Mortgagor's liability
hereunder or upon the debt hereby secured. No sale of the premises hereby
mortgaged and no.forbearance on the part of the Mortgagee and no extension
of the time for the payment of the debt hereby secured given by the Mortgagee shall operate to release, discharge, modify, change or affect the
original liability of the Mortgagor herein, either in whole or part. Wher
ever the words Mortgagor and Mortgagee are used herein they shall include
their several heirs, executors, administrators, successors, grantees and
assigns subject to the limitations of law and of this instrument, and if
the context requires, the words Mortgagor and Mortgagee and the pronouns
referring to them shall be construed as plural, neuter or feminine. In
case this loan is paid in full within one year from the date hereof, the
Bank reserves the right to charge one full year's interest thereon. WITNE S
our hands and seals this 20th day of March, 1942.
Joseph W. Taylor
THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS)
Louise C. Taylor
Essex, as. Uiarch 20th 1942. Then personally appeared the above-named Joseph
W. Taylor and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free act an~
deed, before me,
Joseph G. Bryer
Justice of the Peace
5, 1945.
Essex ss. Received Mar. 21, 1942. 30 m. past 8 A.M. Recorded and Examined
My commission expires Apr.
------------------------------------------------------------------------Salem F.C.S.
Bk.
to
Ahmed
One $2.,
One $1.,
One .2.5 &
One .05
R. Stamps
Documentary
Canceled
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS That the Salem Five Cents Savings Bank of
Salem, .Essex County, Massachusetts, for consideration paid, grant to Yapatt
Ahmed of said Salem with. QUITCLAIM COVENANTS the land in said SALEM, wi thl
the buildings thereon, bounded and described as follows: Easterly by St.
Peter Street twenty seven and five-tenths (27.5) feet, southerly by lend
formerly of Trask fifty one (51) feet, southwesterly by land formerly of
Trask eight (8) feet, southerly again by land formerly of Trask twenty s·
I ( 26) feet, westerly by land formerly of Calley twenty ( 20) feet and nort erly by land formerly of Fifield eighty one and sixty six one-hundredths
(81.66) feet. Excepting so much of the above described premises as was
�189
3289
I
conveyed to Annie C. Trask, October 29, 1896 recorded Book 1494 Page 72.
IFor title see Book 2982 Page 263. Also another parcel of land in said
:SALEM with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as follows: South!
Ieasterly by Allen Street twenty five (25) feet, southwesterly by land formi
erly of Cogswell now or late of Murphy one hundred one ( 101) feet eight
1(8) inches, northwesterly by land formerly of Ingersoll, now or late of
Welch twenty five (25) feet and northeasterly by land formerly of Rowell, 1
now or late of Dugan one hundred three (103) feet. For title see Book 3037
'
Page 209. Subject to taxes for 1942. IN WITNESS WHEREOF the said Salem Five
Cents Savings Bank, having no corporate seal, has caused its common seal
to be hereto affixed and these presents to be signed in its name and behalf by W. Warren Stocker, its Treasurer, hereunto duly authorized this
21st day of March 1942
'THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASS-)
Salem Five Cents Savings Bank
by W. Warren Stocker Treasurer
ACHUSETTS Essex ss. March 21, 1942 Then personally appeared the above
named W. Warren Stocker and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be
the free act and deed, of the Salem Five Cents Savings Bank, before me
ID.mer \11. Liebsch
Justice of the Peace
Essex ss, Received Mar, 21, 1942. 26 m•. past 9 A.M. Recorded and Examined
-------------------------------------------------------------------------1
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS THAT I, Yapatt Ahmed of Salem, Essex Count
Ahmed
Massachusetts, for consideration paid, grant to the Salem Five Cents Sav-
to
ings Bank, a corporation duly established by law and located in Salem in
the County of Essex, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, with MORTGAGE COVENAN'J'S,
i
to secure the payment of Two Thousand Five Hundred Dollars in one year with
five per cent interest, per annum, payable quarterly as provided in a note
of even date, the land in said SALEM, with the buildings thereon bounded
and described as follows: Easterly by St. Peter Street twenty seven and
five-tenths (27.5) feet, southerly by land formerly of Trask fifty one
(51) feet, southwesterly by land formerly of Trask eight (8) feet, southerly again by land formerly of Trask twenty six (26) feet, westerly by land.
formerly of Calley twenty (20) feet and northerly by land formerly of
Fifield eighty one and sixty six one-hundredths (81.66) feet. Excepting so
much of the above described premises as was conveyed to Annie E. Trask
October 29, 1896 recorded Book 1494 Page 72. Also another parcel of land
I
in said SALEM, with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as follows:
l
Southeasterly by Allen Street twenty five (25) feet, southwesterly by land
formerly of Cogswell now or late of Murphy one hundred one (101) feet eight
(8) inches, northwesterly by land formerly of Ingersoll, now or late of
Welch twenty five (25) feet and northeasterly by land formerly of Rowell,
Salem F.C.S.
Bk.
�190
now or late of Dugan one hundred three (103) feet. Being the same premises
conveyed to me by deed of said Bank recorded herewith. This mortgage is
upon the Statutory Condition, and upon the further condition that the gra:ntor or his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns shall pay all taxJs
and assessments on said premises, whether in the nature of taxes or asses1sments now in being or not, shall keep the buildings now or hereafter stadding thereon insured against fire in a sum satisfactory to said Bank or i t 1s
successors or assigns, all insurance to be made payable in ~ase of loss t~
said Bank or its successors or assigns, and shall pay to said Bank or i ts1
. successors or assigns all such.sums with interest as it or they may pay o~
1
incur for such taxes, assessments or insurance, or on account of any fore1I
closure proceedings hereunder, whether completed or not, for any breach
of which the mortgagee shall have the Statutory Power of Sale. And said
Bank and its successors and assigns shall have the further right to cancel'
I
and surrender any insurance policies and collect the proceeds therefrom
I
in case of any sale made hereunder, and to retain out of the proceeds of
j
any such sale one per cent of the purchase money for its or their service~
, in making such sale; any purchaser at such sale shall be held to claim
hereunder in case of any defect in said sale; and any entry made for the
purpose of foreclosing this mortgage shall enure to and for the benefit of
the purchaser at such sale. And I, Olive M. Ahmed wife of said mortgagor
release to the mortgagee all rights of dower and homestead and other interests in the mortgaged premises. WITNESS our hands and seals this twentyJ
Yapatt Ahmed
first day of March 1942
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS)
Olive M. Ahmed
Essex, ss. V.arch 21, 1942 Then personally appeared the above named Yapatt
Ahmed and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free act and de~d.
Before me,
Elmer W. Liebsch
Essex ss, Received Mar. 21, 1942.
2,8
Justice of the Peace
m, past 9 A.M. Recorded and Examined
I
-----------------------------------------------~-------------------------1
I, Fredericka D. Feldman, the holder of a mortgage from Clarence G. Beede
Discharge
1
and Dora M. Beede to me dated August 13, 1941 recorded with South Distric~
Feldman
1
Essex County Registry of Deeds Book 3266, Page 2.30, acknowledge satisfact ion
of the same. WITNESS my hand and seal this tenth day of March, 1942
THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHtJSE'l'I'S)
Fredericka D. Feldman
, Essex ss. March 10, 1942 Then personally appeared the above D.8llled Freder,
i icka TI. Feldman and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be her free
act and deed before me
David Feldman
Notary Public
commission expires Jan. 4, 1945.
Essex ss. Received Mar. 21, 1942. 32 m. past 10 A.M. Recorded and Examined
My
�3494
Wet.
L •... LeBlanc, husband ..and .. wire, .. both
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS THAT ..
I 0
of ......... Salem....................
. .. .t:
Pierre ..E.•....LeBlallOt .. J:r •., ...and..
. .
... ···-······· .. ,"'''"' ............. .,._,... , ............. ~.. ,. .. -... ,., ................ -..l' .-~. ·..................................... Esse;r. ... Countyi
~••ta:·
. ......... ,
l•i•d e:nmal'IPiMt for conaideration paid, 1rant to the SALEM FIVE CENTS SA VJNGS BANK.·• corporation
doly -bliabed by law and localed in Salem io the County
:i;. .
r;;:::·
rF ..
&:~.. ..
!if!-?···
~---}~ .
J,,.,-~
J!
..
ot Eaex, Common-lib of •vtili'ec'i'uilt..;
., . '
:
-~ .,r-.,,.._,
'f
••
. .
'\<
Thi• mort.pee is Ul)C)li the ST.t11.TT01\Y Cm-"t>tTION. ftlld upon the rurther condition that the grant.or so:r
theirhein•.. , t.
~';,,t.. e.xftbton. a.dmh:ii.Unt.on or u•Ien• ehall p.y aU tax.et tftd t..H~Hm11nt.1 on Hid premiaes. whetbu in the nature of ta.Ht or
'l."!
: .£,i \"°ff•~nte now in bting or not, 1hall keep the bt.uldingt now or hereafter 1tanding tht.!'tt0n in1ured again.at fire fn a 1um ~ ~
: ¥ , ;~~i.atitfi-Cto'ri to Did Bank or It.a aucce1aor11 or anigne. all in,utance to be made payable in cue of lot1 to uid Bank or It.a auc.. .
.
f~ ctt1orl 4?r u1lgna. and &hall pay to aaid Bank or ils suc~HOffl or u11lgn11 nU such 1um11 with intere1t u it or thoy may p&J or '
~ <!>~•;·, in'CUr for 1Ucb" tax.ea, &11~smcnta or lnrurance, or on account ot any foreclosure prceeedinp herounder1 whether completed or
'7.-,.;.J,::_.noi;;_for ans bTf'aeh of which tho mortgagff •hall have the STATUTORY POWER OF SAL&.
.
. ' / '.~
_'.-i{:~._Al'ld uid Bank and it.a 1uceetaort arid anigna- ehsll hav~ the fut'ther right to cancell and 1t1rrend11r any irumrahee polidH l.nd 1 ·:;-:, •
,.,;·coueet the proceeds the.re!r<1m in Catt of any sale made bereundot, Md to retain out ot the, procetds of any web A•le onfl ·pttr. \'-•
• _;:;:M~ ·ee·nt of the purehase money for it.a or their tervicee in making euch nl-e; any punhB.11er at 1uch tale aha1J be held to claim h•N:- .
. ,.. :•'t '=under In cue of any detect in 1aid 1ate; and any entry made for the purpose of forecl01ing thit mortpgo ahaU eoun to and fO't- ·
~;-."".~ti]• btnefit of the purchaser at 1uch ••I~~
-;1~: ~
f
j..-i:
,~,f;lf~-:,t~~•,::.,:~:~·::·
'
:::·'~: . . ~:: .. . . . . .... .
.
'
li.tf .:~
.
~
....· .
h11~1nd .~~' .. '..'..'.~ ..: • : : : : ·
roleru to t.h• mnrt£fB8SC all right• of domet.&!!rte'!Y11p:d.homwtad and 'Othm...:h:tc.cstulu tha:mwt:wa1Dd prMntae,
iii~
: ·' .:• Wm1ESS
.
.. •
.... our..
~ondS and seal Sthis ..
.
21 S t ......... day
46
of.. ... Jun~ ..................~~ ... 19-..
/~(lv'Lg t;..&p~C)-1._
.........................
.. 1:,,-1~cu
,,t, . M ~ .
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
ESSEX, SS.
Then pemonally appeared the above named ..
... Pierre .. E •...LeBlano,. Jr.•.....
and acknowledged tho foregoing instrument to be. . .....his
free act and deed.
Before m•: I - = , ~ ~
Jutic.e of tM Plitu:d.
lib' oomm~ espjr;,e -•····
......... ,..,,............. ti---_
Esaex ss. Received June 21, 1946. 5 m. past 11 A•.M, Recorded and Examined.
�3494
I I
r, Ya.Poot Abmed, otherwise known as Yapott Ahmed
·'
of ~ m . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ --~"~S_.\ill~-------County, Massachusetts,
Pierre E... I..eBJ eno~ .. iJr •. and Laura L--
lfffW:liffT for consideration paidt grant to..
1 eBJ anc, husband .aru:l~wife, as tenants by the entirety:, botb
I.D u\:dM. ad uacmat zctt; ·it MW
Southeasterly by Allen Street twenty-five (25) feet;
Southwesterly by land formerly of Cogswell now or lHte of
~t'urphy one hundred one (101), feet eiP,ht (8) inches;
Northwesterly by land formerly of Ingersoll, now or late of
·• :lelch twenty-t'i ve ( 25) feet; and
N9.rtheasterly by land formerly of Rowell, now or late of Dugan
one hundred three (10)) feet •
•t.,. ~, "''-
/
Being a·portion of the premises conveyed to rue by deed of the
,Salem .Five Cents Savings Bank, dated March 21, 1942, and recorded·.with the Essex South District Registry of Deeds, 'Book
J289 ;.. 'Page •188. ·
The 'a.'bove :premises are. sold subject to the taxes for the year
1946, which the grantees assume and agree to pay:
iii: '
'
I
'·,
wife
_;.
: ,"'·
of said ~;;;,:, :/:
11ilit QllllllllUtlll1n'lllfll .af ~ t t l l
~-
IJJ 1;;;rhr_ l!!t~ ;fl
11'.·J
;.i,:'
,h:c.,ul,~nhutu. '"'\, uf"ff'
.Tune ,,,,:<'/,
19
46
,
·,;n';Jly appeared the above named-.. __:Yc,a;i.p_.p._t,.t,.__..,t,"'bwro'"e"'d'----------,.-•:·
a: J'une'.21.,.1946.
·
·. fvtu, fu:11tvn·• •'\.t:.A'
U .\
; r
...
�3494
~~• Pi~eBlanc, Jr, and Laura L. LeBlanc, husband and
,, 2
~ . for ,'nsidcration J)aid, irant to
Essex
Yapott "1uned
Salem in said County of Essex
of
wilh
~ fPDfffllllU,
wife
County, Massachusetts,
lo sc<urc the payment of
--··-------------- Fifteen !'undred -----------------------Dollars
in
i'our
years with
five ( 5% l
per ccntum interest perannum payable
~ monthly
as provided in .
the land in
our
note
.
of even date,
said Salem with the buildings thereon, bounded and described
as follows:
to-:rrp,11on amt ~umbrantn. H 1n,1
Southeasterly by Allen Street twenty-i'ive (25) feet;
Southwesterly by land formerly 01' Cogswell now or late of
i~rphy one hundred one (101) feet eight (8) inches;
Northwesterly by land formerly of Ingersoll, now or late of
Welch twenty-five (25) feet; and
Northeasterly by land formerly of Rowell, now or late of Dugan
_one hundred three (103) feet.
Being the same premises conveyed to.us by Yapott A~ed by deed
dated June 21, 1946, and recorded herewith in the Essex South
District Registry of Deeds, For further title reference, see
Book.3289, Page 188,
I
!
I
------------"'"---'-·-....•·'lt
-
tr..i .(tUJ":'t,m'1':, ,,,. ,~±"T.t_,·:'S~:--------.::.-~",;i;
....
.... ,\
Vtbt «:ommonwraltfJ of J1a1111act,usrttli
'
Essex
.,,, • ·June
...!'/. • . :194
· , · · ', ,,,.;. ~-, -T 0,.,11
ss.
Then perwnally appeared the abovc•named
and aclcllowlcdged the foregoing instrumtnt to be
;:..s~ .. ~;
. . "\
-=;t,1
Pierre E. LeBlanc, Jr. !ind Laur~ ,
their·. free act and deed; · ,.. , ,,:,. • , LeBlan
.., l~l,"•!•i•;,;
before me~ ;
' .. ~ \~n ·-t•-~.
.,_,~La,z,c~J,,q,~~titt.i'f·Sj>t-.. >i;;
IN,'7
Januarri,23,ae:
Essex ss. Received J'une 21, 1946. 5
111.
past ll A.M. Recorded and
IC
_
.'.,
_i:. -i
•.
, ;·;
,!:".:5}~a'eir
Emiline~•.
�415fi
317
KNC ,; H7 L r-1i~i'i BY T~-lES~ PTIES~!·IT.:; T:-IAT ~·te, pier re E. 1e13lanc, Jr., and
Lc1u.ra L. LeBlanc, husband .. nd v1ife, both
Salem,
of
Essex
Ju;iu.g..ww.az.,:.kl,d, for co11si<lcration paicl, grant to
Demetrius Bik
of
with
said S2 lem
warrantg mur,n!lllts
1hclandin
as
County, Massachusetts,
said Sr,lem, "lith the buildings thereon, bounded ,rnd described
f O 110'',) s :
~~f'tptiert--ane ~rw:~eeitr tf-el¥/1 -
Southerly by D~rby Street, westerly by lnnd now or formerly of
Buckley, northerly by land no~ or formerly of Barry and Sheldon and
c~storly jy Jnnd no~ or formerly of Casey.
For title see Book 3494
PaBe 10, Subject to taxes for 195~.
Subject also to a mortgage to
Selem Five Cents Snvin~s Bank.
wtir C!1ommanwraltli of l&ssatltusrtts
..... Es.sex, ................ ss.
Then personally appeared the above-named _ _ _ _ __
..................................................................................Pier.r. -, . E.•..... LeB.lanc.
h;ls
arnl acknowkdg('d lhc foregoing instrnmc11t to be....
u. s.
$·-~L~-~'o~_affixed.
and eancelled on back of this instrument
Docum. Stamps
- ~-.::fffrffl11'!1.ffl>W- ~"''""' ...
-!.'i . .
frecaCtanddecd bd r
:Q ,·•
1c
· , ....-.. . . . . . . . . . . .....,_~.._....,.__.."/
Notary Public
-J-MIN e(-tbe, lleee• -
.... ··············'I'►.!:.~...
Essex ss, Recorded Apr, 18 19~~. 20 m. past 11 A.M. 1102
---------------------------------•-d---------------------------0
�K'\·'.::W ALL :"1.=:N BY T 11ESE Pm-:s:~N1'S Ti AT, I
of
Demetrlus Blk
Essex
bci,,g 1111111,,rried, for consideration paid, grant to
u>unty.
U,necbn■
Amel11< Blk
"'.:_.le:r. : nd sald County of Essex
of
the land in ."t:.le:n t.o~ethe.r wlth the bu1ldlngs thereon bounded and
dl!scr1 b~-1 , s !'ol l owe:
(Dnc:riptim a n d ~ if-,)
Suuthe,: sterly by Derby -jtreet about twenty-elght (26) feet;
:\:ort, eust.l!rly by 1/;.'.lnd formerly of Hlll, now or late of Swlniarakl,
~,bout s~venty-one (71) feet, slx (6) lnches;
~:l,rlh~·est8rly b)· l:.,nd now or forme.rly of BenJaml:n
twenty-n1ne (2S) feet, slx (6) lnches;
w.
Jetchell &bou
...iutr.,.;i:sterly b~ h,nd now or forir.e.rly of Joseph Perkins se\l•.:nty-tw,
six (,__,) lnches.
(?2} feet,
!:leln~ the s:;.me prernlses conveyed to me by deed of StanH1lawa Palme:
dated J,.11:>-· 2;, E.Li5, Md recorded wlth Essex South D'-strlct Deeds,
ia~k J418, Pa~~ 108.
Also o.rw ther p,:c.rcel of h .. nd bounded w:id described as follows:
:::.outi.e.rly by 0-..:-rby Streetj
·:est!rly by hllld now ur .formerly of 3ucKley;
:.:vrtherly b) L.nd now or formerly of Llb.rr,y; and Sheldon; and
East-rly by hnci. now or formerly of Casey.
!:'Cr
:r.y
tltle see i ook .)4~-4, h,,,_,-e 10, and E-,ook 4156, ?age Jl?.
!'fl·3 cunsi::ler~ tlon :'or thls c:onve~·cl-nce ls nominal.
S,lbject to all lncu:nbrJ;:1J1ces.
lmoloaud
X lllmX
■llnrJIJl .. ;nJ/.•..... hand
and ,..1
th;,........,S:,6-.~.0..~.!!............day of.. ......... M~.x .. _ _ _ _ 19..(
..'; ltn~,$ s .. t.o ...:narl<: ....................................
.. ............................l l , i . a . - - -
Dametrlu.s +
Blk
.................................
.,..rk ...........................
..
....~. J:.... ~ ........... .
Essex ss.
U ,r,i,l _ , i "
ss.
P!ay
Demetrius B11<
Then penonally appeared the above named
and uknowledpl the foregoing inlttumoat to be
(Adam F.
hl a
fi:oe ICt .... deod,.·beCoat .,..
Ster;;:;;·~kif~·J:::::i!f7~.1Cr----- .ru,...-1. 14,
1!8811
ss.
R!catDED l!ll
la,
1961.
2S N. PAST 3 P. N. 1136
s, 6
�Ill III Ill IIll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Ill
2010122300289 Bk:30098 Pg:45
State Tax Form 290
Certificate:
21862
Issuance Date: 12/20/2010
1212312010 01 : 12 MLC Pg 1/1
MUNICIPAL LIEN CERTIFICATE
CITY OF SALEM, MA
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Requested by GLOVSKY & GLOVSKY LLC
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
8 WASHINGTON STREET
BEVERLY, MA 01915
I certify from available information that all taxes, assessments and
charges now payable that constitute liens as of the date of this
ce rt ificate on the parcel of real estate specified in your app li cation
received on 12/15/2010 are listed below.
DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY
Parcel ID : 41-0098
66 DERBY STREET
Land area
Land Value
Impr Value
Land Use
Exemptions
:
Taxable Value:
BIK AMELIA
111 N. COMMON STREET
LYNN
MA 01902
0.16 AC
97,800
18,300
0
0
116,100
Deed date: 01/01/1900 Book/Page: 4766-/393.
Class: 1042011
2010
2009
DESCRIPTION
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE TAX
Charges/Fees
Abatements/Exemptions
Payments / Credits
Interest to 12/20/2010
$1,747.31
$.00
$.00
$.00
$31. 3 1
$.00
$.00
$ .00
$.00
$.00
$.00
$.00
$.00
$.00
$ . 00
TOTAL BALANCE DUE:
$1,778.62
$.00
$.00
FISCAL YEAR
TOTAL INTEREST PER DIEM:
OTHER UNPAID BALANCES:
Tax Tit le 2001 - 2010
$6.0200
$26,508.43
PLEASE CONTACT WATER DEPARTMENT
FOR FINAL WATER/SEWER CHARGES
LEGAL FEES: $557 . 00
BONNIE CELI
COLLECTOR
THIS FORM APPROVED BY THE COMMISSIONER OF REVENUE
�Ill III Ill IIll IIf111111111111111111111111111111
2010122300290 Bk:30098 Pg:46
12/23/2010 01 :12 TRUST Pg 115
66 DERBY STREET REALTY TRUST
DECLARATION OF TRUST
We, Jay Levy and Neal Levy, both of Beverly, Massachusetts (the "Trustee"), hereby
declare that Ten and 00/100 ($10.00) Dollars is held in trust hereunder and any and all additional
property and interest in property, real and personal, that may be acquired hereunder (the "Trust
Estate") shall be held in trust, solely as nominee, for the sole benefit of the individuals or entities
listed in the Schedule of Beneficiaries in the proportions stated in said Schedule, which Schedule has
this day been executed by the Beneficiaries and filed with the Trustee with receipt acknowledged by
at least one Trustee (hereafter, as it may be amended, "Schedule of Beneficiaries").
SECTION ONE
Name and Purpose
1.1 This Trust shall be known as the 66 Derby Street Realty Trust and is intended to be a
nominee trust, so-called, for federal and state income tax purposes and to hold the record legal
title to the Trust Estate and perform such functions as are necessarily incidental thereto.
SECTION TWO
Trustees
2.1 In the event that there are two Trustees, ANY ONE TRUSTEE may execute any and
all instruments and certificates necessary to carry out the provisions of the Trust. In the event
there are more than two Trustees, ANY TWO TRUSTEES, except as otherwise provided in
Paragraph 7 .2, may execute such instruments and certificates necessary to carry out the provisions
of the Trust.
2.2 No Trustee shall be required to furnish bond. No Trustee hereunder shall be liable for
any action taken at the direction of the Beneficiaries, nor for any error of judgment nor for any
loss arising out of any act or omission in the execution of the Trust so long as acting in good faith,
but shall be responsible only for his or her own willful breach of trust. No license of court shall be
requisite to the validity of any transaction entered into by the Trustees. No purchaser, pledgee,
mortgagee other lender shall be under any liability to see to the application of the purchase money
or of any money or property loaned or delivered to any Trustee or to see that the terms and
conditions of this Trust have been complied with. Every agreement, lease, deed, mortgage, note
or other instrument or document executed or action taken by the person or persons appearing from
the records of the Registry of Deeds to be Trustees, as required by paragraph 2 .1, shall be
conclusive evidence in favor of every person relying thereon or claiming thereunder that at the
time of the delivery thereof or of the taking of such action this Trust was in full force and effect,
that the execution and delivery thereof or taking of such action was duly authorized, empowered
and by the Beneficiaries.
�2.3 Any person dealing with the Trust Estate or the Trustees may always rely without
further inquiry on a certificate signed by the person or persons appearing from the records of the
Registry of Deeds to be Trustees, as required by Paragraph 2.1, as to who are the Trustees or the
Beneficiaries hereunder or as to the authority of the Trustees to act or as to the existence or
nonexistence of any fact or facts which constitute conditions precedent to action by the Trustees or
which are in any other manner germane to the affairs of the Trust. Execution, delivery or
recording of such certificate shalJ not be a condition precedent to the validity of any transaction of
the Trust.
SECTION THREE
Beneficiaries
3. 1 The term "Beneficiaries" shall mean the persons and entities listed as Beneficiaries in
the Schedule of Beneficiaries and in such revised Schedules of Beneficiaries, from time to time
hereafter executed and delivered as provided above and the respective interests of the Beneficiaries
shall be as therein stated.
3.2 Decisions made and actions taken hereunder (including without limitation, amendment
of this Trust; appointment and removal of Trustees; directions and notices to Trustees; and
execution of documents) shall be made or taken, as the case may be, by all of the Beneficiaries.
3.3 Any Trustee may without impropriety become a Beneficiary hereunder and exercise all
rights of a Beneficiary with the same effect as though he or she or it were not a Trustee. The
parties hereunder recognize that if a sole Trustee and a sole Beneficiary are one and the same
person, legal and equitable title hereunder shall merge as a matter of law.
SECTION FOUR
Powers of Trustees
4 .1 The Trustees shall hold the principal of this Trust and receive the income therefrom for
the benefit of the Beneficiaries, and shall pay over the principal and income pursuant to the
direction of all of the Beneficiaries and without such direction shall pay the income to the
Beneficiaries in proportion to their respective interests.
4. 2 Except as hereinafter provided in case of the termination of this Trust, the Trustees
shall have no power to deal in or with the Trust Estate except as directed by all of the
Beneficiaries. When, as, if and to the extent specifically directed by all of the Beneficiaries, the
Trustees shall have the following powers:
4.2.1 to buy, sell, convey, assign, mortgage or otherwise dispose of all or any part
of the Trust Estate and as landlord or tenant execute and deliver leases and subleases;
4.2.2 to execute and deliver notes for borrowing for the Beneficiaries;
2
�4.2.3 to grant easements or acquire rights or easements and enter into agreements
and arrangements with respect to the Trust Estate;
4.2.4 to endorse and deposit checks in an account for the benefit of the
Beneficiaries;
4.2.5 but the Trustees shall have NO AUTHORITY TO MAINTAIN BANK
ACCOUNTS IN THE NAME OF THE TRUST OR TRUSTEES but they may maintain bank
accounts in the name of the Beneficiaries. In the event of a violation of this subparagraph, the
Trustees shall indemnify and save harmless the Beneficiaries from any liability resulting
therefrom, including taxes and accounting expenses.
Any and all instruments executed pursuant to such direction may create obligations extending over
any periods of time, including periods extending beyond the date of any possible termination of the
Trust. A direction to the Trustees by the Beneficiaries may be by a Durable Power of Attorney.
4.3 Notwithstanding any provisions contained herein, no Trustee shall be required to take
any action which will, in the opinion of such Trustee, involve the Trustee in any personal liability
unless first satisfactorily indemnified.
4.4 Any persons extending credit to, contracting with or having any claim against the
Trustees shall look only to the funds and property of this Trust for payment of any contract, or
claim, or for the payment of any debt, damage, judgment, or decree, or for any money that may
otherwise become due or payable to them from the Trustees, so that neither the Trustees nor the
Beneficiaries shall be personally liable therefor. If any Trustee shall at any time for any reason
(other than for willful breach of trust) be held to be under any personal liability as such Trustee,
then such Trustee shall be held harmless and indemnified by the Beneficiaries, jointly and
severally, against all loss, costs, damage, or expense by reason of such liability.
SECTION FIVE
Termination
5.1 This Trust may be terminated at any time by notice in writing from any Beneficiary,
provided that such termination shall be effective only when a certificate thereof signed by the
Trustees, shall be recorded with the Registry of Deeds. Notwithstanding any other provision of
this Declaration of Trust, this Trust shall terminate in any event NINETY (90) years from the date
hereof, if not earlier terminated by action of a Beneficiary.
5 .2 In the case of any termination of the Trust, the Trustees shall transfer and convey the
specific assets constituting the Trust Estate, subject to any leases, mortgages, contracts or other
encumbrances on the Trust Estate, to the Beneficiaries as tenants in common in proportion to their
respective interests hereunder, or as otherwise directed by all of the Beneficiaries, provided,
however, the Trustees may retain such portion thereof as is in their opinion necessary to any
expense or liability, determined or contingent, of the Trust.
3
�SECTION SIX
Amendments
6.1 This Declaration of Trust may be amended from time to time by an instrument in
writing signed by all of the Beneficiaries and delivered to the Trustees, provided in each case that
the amendment shall not become effective until the instrument of amendment or a certificate
setting forth the terms of such amendment, signed by the Trustees, is recorded with the Registry
of Deeds.
SECTION SEVEN
Resignation and Successor Trustee
7 .1 Any Trustee hereunder may resign at any time by an instrument in writing signed and
acknowledged by such Trustee and delivered to all Trustees and to each Beneficiaries. Such
resignation shall take effect on the later of the date specified therein or the date of the recording of
such instrument with the Registry of Deeds.
7. 2 Succeeding or additional Trustees may be appointed or any Trustee may be removed by
an instrument or instruments in writing signed by all of the Beneficiaries, provided in each case
that a certificate signed by ANY TRUSTEE naming the Trustee or Trustees appointed or removed
and, in the case of an appointment, the acceptance in writing by the Trustee or Trustees appointed,
shall be recorded in the Registry of Deeds. Upon the recording of such instrument, the legal title
to the Trust Estate shall, without the necessity of any conveyance, be vested in said succeeding or
additional Trustee or Trustees, with all the rights, powers, authority and privileges as if named as
an original Trustee hereunder.
7 .3 In the event that there is no Trustee, either through tbe death or resignation of a sole
Trustee without prior appointment of a successor Trustee or for any other cause, a person
purporting to be a successor Trustee hereunder may record in the Registry of Deeds an affidavit,
under pains and penalties of perjury stating that he or she has been appointed by all of the
Beneficiaries a successor Trustee. Such affidavit when recorded together with an attorney's
certificate under M.G.L. c. 183 Section 5B, stating that such attorney has knowledge of the affairs
of the Trust and that the person signing the affidavit has been appointed a Trustee by all of the
Beneficiaries, shall have the same force and effect as if the certificate of a Trustee or Trustees
required or permitted hereunder had been recorded and persons dealing with the Trust or Trust
Estate may always rely without further inquiry upon such an affidavit as so executed and recorded
as to the matters stated herein.
SECTION EIGHT
Governing L<lw
8.1 This Declaration of Trust shall be construed in accordance with the laws of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
4
�SECTION NINE
Registry of Deeds
9 .1 The term "Registry of Deeds" shall mean the Registry of Deeds or Registry District of
the Land Court for the district in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in which the real estate
which is the subject of this Trust is located, and in which this Declaration of Trust is recorded or
registered.
No beneficiaiy is a minor, a corporation selling all or substantially all its Massachusetts
assets, or personal representative of an estate subject to estate tax liens, or is now deceased or under
any legal disability.
SECTION TEN
Other Provisions
None
_
Executed as a sealed instrument this 22nd day of December, 2010.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
dS
December 22-;-2010
Essex, ss.
On this 22 nd day of December, 20 l 0, before me, the undersigned notary public, personally
appeared Jay Levy and Neal Levy, proved to me through satisfactory evidence of identification, by
showing me a copy of their identification, which were Mass. driver's licenses, or personally known
to me, to be the persons whose names are signed on the preceding or attached document, and
acknowledged to me that they signed it voluntarily for · s stated purpose.
iranda P. Goodi , otar
My commission expires: 12/2/2016
5
�~-
~•v
1111111111111 I\IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\IIIIII IIII IIll
2010122300291 Bk:30098 Pg:51
'.W,4,_,.~"'"'
.,,~
12123/2010 01:12 CERT Pg 1/1
CHILDREN'S SERVICE
- - of Greater Lynn, Inc.
SECRETARY'S CERTIFICATE
I, Maroli Licardie, as Clerk of Family & Children's Service of Greater Lynn, Inc., hereby
certifies that on December 16, 2010, the Board of Directors of Family & Children's
Service of Greater Lynn, Inc., ("Corporation"), at a meeting duly called and held and at
which a quorum was present, authorized Maroli Licardie, Executive Director, Linda
Demerjian, Clinical Supervisor, Gail Paris, Manager of Elder Care and Guardianship
Services, or Charles Scott Heggie, Social Worker each acting singly, to execute as required
on behalf of any Ward of the Agency under the Guardianship program and/or when the
Corporation is from time to time appointed by any court as a guardian and/or conservator,
the following documents: Purchase and Sales Agreement.'>, Deeds of Conveyance,
Mortgage Discharges, State, Federal, and Estate Tax Returns, all documents related to the
transfer, withdrawal, closing, endorsement, sale, assignment of any and all shares of stocks
and bonds, and any bank accounts and safe deposit boxes.
I certify that the foregoing resolution conforms with the Articles of Organization and by
laws of the Corporation, and is presently in full force and effect without change.
Witness my hand and seal this ____./(,.___day of
Zµa~
;;J.IJ/o
FAMILY & CH DREN'S SERVICE OF GREATER LYNN, INC.
Confirmed:
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, ESSEX SS
On this /& day of ))ec.
20 I b before me, the undersigned notary public, personally
appeared
Mo.,-, Ii Lic.a,-J.•--L. + /J""'~ Sl·c.'t ~.,.....,proved to me through
satisfactory evidence of identification, whic were
K" ~ Wl"I t i ) r,,.(....
to be person
whose names are signed on the attached document in my presence, and acknowledged to me that
he/she signed it voluntarily for Its stated purpose.
r-
~i-~
~
Notary Public
Debra L Lozzi
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission expires:.____1q.,..rorn
.......ro.... ...,ei~resOec.16.2011
isstQO,...·
THlS AGENCY SUPPORTED HY
~!!!f~!!a.Way
(,I...
-~1'\ 111 NORTH COMMON STREET
\V'
LYNN, MASSACHUSETI'S
01902
(781) 598-55] 7
FAX
(781) 581-6614
�1111111111 \II Illlllll\11\\111111\l\lllllll\ Ill
2010122300292 Bk:30098 Pg:52
12/23/2010 01:12 PROBATE Ps 1/2
COMMON'X,.EAL TH OF MASSACHUSETTS
EssEX, ss.
Docket No..~.§.Q.~!:.?.fl.Q.1 PM
PRO BA TE COURT
At a Probate Court held at .......§.~Js!.m..........................................., in 1Znd for raid County of
Ess~~.-, on the ...... 13th ................._..................-... day of .·.December..............................................
in the y~ar of our Lord : D ~ ~ K l » 1 o b ~......t:w.o...t.ho.u!il.~.mt..Q..JlQ•.• t.~.U ...................
ON che pecicion of .Family .&...Children_'.s .. Service...of... Greater __ Lxnn, ___ Inc .
........................................: ............... ~~ .......- .........................·.......... conserv1tor of the property
of .... Ame 1 i a ...B i
k. ·.....................................- ...- ..................................................................................
.
...........--·. - • -- ••• - • --- ............. -
.
. . . . ... - · · · • • • • · · - - · . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . . ■ - - - - . . . . . . . . . . . - - . . . . . . . . . . . . · · - · · · . . . . . . . . . . - - . . . .. . . . . . . . . . - - . . . . . . . - - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
oi ........S.9.le.JJJ............................................... in s.ud County of Essex, ...P.f.<?.~.~.<;.~·~ti~·~}~~·~cted
ximox*lfflKcdiy<:i:lk,ft'~~mJ~µpr:iyi.ag for license to sdl ceruin rel! esme of kxX'IDdper son
described in said -pccicion-:xrxpub:xl:inaxJi~t pri.111/e sale, iii 11ccordana ii:ith tht offtr nam(d in
said petition or upon such t_erms as may be adjudged brst, or 11! public 1111c/ion,
if x.6ci tshall
think.
bf."st so to Jo. All... ........... persons inter,esttd h:.ving~»m<otl-becn duly notified- ....................... .
an<;! .. the ..guard i an .. ad ...l i tern.. ha vin.9.: ..ass.ented ........................................................ .
xiximo:,qx11CSmKX!xjir"dt1JJtKof~ :rnd ic :ippe:iring that s :id offer ir a,z ad111111./11geous <m~, p.nd that the
iilfrrrst of all parties concrrned will be best bromotd by tlu {lcccpiancr of said offer-and thn it is
protected person's
.
.nc:c:emry th2t s:id
xx.cdx:
ler mlintcnlnce ....................................... .
interest sh:ill be -sold for
.. .... ... .------ ..... ·- -..-- . -- ................ -- ................................. •, ...................... -·- ......................................... ···------······............. ----···
IT Is DECRF.:ED that the petitionr:r
be lice:ised co sell :ind con vey-2e public auccion-11/ pri11ait
sale in acrnrdana with said offer or for ll larger mm, or Ill public ouction; if :xlxi t shllll think
be~t so to do, the re:il esc:ire of uif~~a}s~~bif1~~~d petition, for the purposes ':l.forcs1id,~$
XJX.~lfa.N7.ik-i;hra_;'Utd(,p~1t-XX~~~XT/jjXff~Mfi~XX'Ye'j-Xs'lm£Xif.Jli~?(
.............. sEE ..AT.1:ACHED.. D.ESCR.I.P..TI ON.................................................................:.................:................
.. . .. - ............------- .... -........ .............. ---------- .............. ··········-· -.... ----. -- .......... --- -------·................................... .........................
-
Vu.
13,
u,10
............................................Jurlgl' of Probafr Court.
I, Pamela Casey O'Brien, Register of Probate Court for Essex County do hereby certify that
the, foregoing ·is a true copy of a document
on
file. '. iri,.,1 this co.urt.
,
•
.
.. . •
•
~
•
.'
•
:,,;
A"
~-
"T.•
-: ,
,
•-
·.1
.'• '.°'',
.
IN WITNESS, Whereof, I have-set my hand and·.affixed,·-the:seaf of.said Court this
DEC 13 2010
-------
ESSEX, SS
CERTIFIED
PROBATE CQ.URT
�•
the land in Sa!em together with the buildings thereon bounded and describe·d as
foliows:
Southeasterly
by Derby street about t\iventy-eight (28)-feet;
Northeasteily
by land formerly of Hill, now or late of Svviniarski, about seventy-one
(71) feet, sbc-(6) inches;
Northwester_ly
by land now or formerly of Benjamin W. Getchell about tvventy-nine
{29) feet, six (6) inches;
·
Southwesterly
by land now or formerly of Joseph Perkins seventy-two (72) feet,
six (6) inches.·
Also another parcel of land bounded and described as follows: .
Southerly
by Derby Street;
West~rly
by land now ot formerly of Buckley;
Northerly
by land now or formerly of Barry; and Sheldon; and
Easterly
by la'rid now or formerly of Casey.
�\\\ I\I \I\\\\\ I\1\1\11\\11\\\\1\\\1\\\\\I\I\ ~\\
2010122300293 Sk:30098 f,%· 54
12/23/2010 01:12 DEED Pg
MASSACHUSETTS EXCISE TAX
Southern Essex District ROD
Date: 1212312010 01:12 PM
ID: B267B5 Doc# 20101223002930
Fee: $444.60 Cons: $97,500.00
Fiduciary Deed
Family & Children's Service of Greater Lynn, Inc., conservator of Amelia Bik, of
Salem (Essex Probate Court Docket No. ES09P2001 PM) by power conferred by and
pursuant to decree of license to sell dated December 13, 2010 of said Essex Probate Court
and every other power, for consideration paid and in full consideration of ninety-seven
thousand five hundred and no/100 ($97,500.00) dollars grants to Jay Levy and Neal Levy,
trustees of the 66 Derby Street Realty Ttust. under declaration of trust dated December
22, 2010 and recorded herewith, both of 66 Derby Street, Salem, MA 01970, the land in
Salem together with the buildings thereon bounded and described as follows:
* 145 Cabot Street, Beverly MA 01915
Southeasterly by Derby street about twenty-eight (28) feet;
Northeasterly
by land formerly of Hill, now or late of Swiniarski, about seventy-one
(71) feet, six (6) inches;
Northwesterly
by land now or formerly of Benjamin W. Getchell about twenty-nine
(29) feet, six (6) inches;
Southwesterly by land now or formerly of Joseph Perkins seventy-two (72) feet,
six (6) inches.
Also another parcel of land bounded and described as follows:
Southerly
• Westerly
by Derby Street;
by land now or formerly of Buckley;
Northerly
by land now or formerly of Barry: and Sheldon; and
Easterly
by land now or formerly of Casey.
For title, see deed of Demetrius Bik to Amelia Bik, dated May 2, 1961 and recorded with
Essex South Registry of Deeds, Book 4766, Page 393.
�Property address:
66 Derby Street, Salem, MA
WITNESS my hand and seal this 22nd day of December, 2010
~~
GailParis, Designee of
Family & Children's Service of Greater Lynn,
Inc., Conservator of Amelia Bik
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Essex, ss
On this 22nd day of December, 2010, before me, the undersigned notary public,
personally appeared Gail Paris, designee of Family and Children's Service of Greater Lynn,
Inc., conservator of Amelia Bik, as afore-said , proved to me through satisfactory evidence
of identification, which was ~ v>so 'l'l~\\ y \t) ...,b ~ ~
, to be the person whose name
is signed on the preceding or attached document and acknowledged to me that she signed
it voluntarily for its stated purpose.
N~blic
My commission expires: ~
;;;'o/4;y
�ZONING DISTRICT -
RESIDENCE 2
REQUIRED
EXISTING
PROPOSED
LOT 1
15,000
6268
3180
3088
7500
3134
3180
3088
FRONTAGE
100
87.25
45.48
41.77
LOT WIDTH
100
85.99
43.80
42.19
3 1/2 BECKET AVENUE CONDOMINIUM
REC. BK. 8622 PG. 68
PL. BK. 217 PL. 94
PLAN 772/1959
LOT AREA
AREA PER UNIT
PROPOSED
LOT 2
FRONT
15
5.8
N/A
5.8
SIDE
10
7.4
N/A
7.4
REAR
30
0.7
N/A
0.7
35%
17%
N/A
34.5%
MAX.
LOT COVERAGE
I
L==
IRON
ROD
SET
PLANNING BOARD APPROVAL UNDER
THOMAS & GLENDA DORAN
REC. BK. 12603 PG. 365
HARBOR
N55"ct47"E
\'
LOCUS MAP
36.94'
THE SUBDIVISION CONTROL LAW NOT REQUIRED
LOT 1
AREA=
3180
±
SCALE 1"
o.r---
DRILL
HOLE
SET
.
SALEM
=
1000'±
LOT 2
AREA=
S.F.
3088
±
S.F.
bulkhead
V)
~
""!
O>
.I
•co ex,
vi·
;z
~
c.,
O'I 0
.,:;;;.
co• ex,
I co.
• 0
O>
•
r'1
0
~
1----1:.::.3·:.::.g•_ _.,.A.:l~
THE ABOVE ENDORSEMEN
NOT A DETERMINATION
OF CONFORMANCE WITH ZONING REGULATIONS
NOREEN CASEY
PATRICK GRIFFIN
REC. BK. 28447 PG. 99
PETER SHOLDS
MARY FRANCIS SHOLDS
GAJEWSKI REAL TY TRUST
REC. BK. 18966 PG. 436
NOTES:
2 story
dwelling
1. LOCUS IS SHOWN AS LOT 98 ON ASSESSOR'S MAP 41.
1/66
2. DEED REFERENCE -
RECORD
BOOK 30098 PAGE 54.
3. LOCUS WAS GRANTED VARIANCES FORM LOT AREA, LOT AREA
PER DWELLING UNIT, FRONTAGE, LOT WIDTH, FRONT AND REAR
YARD SETBACKS AND OFF STREET PARKING REGULATIONS AND
A SPECIAL PERMIT TO ALLOW FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF THE
EXISTING DWELLING BY THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS ON
JUNE 22, 2011.
7.4'
1IRON
ROD
SET
FOR REGISTRY USE ONLY
45.48'
S48"00' 49"W
-- 1-
-
41.77'
"'ti!.
-
S48"00' 49"W
IRON
ROD
SET
DERBY
(PUBLIC -
VARIABLE WIDTH)
IRON
ROD
SET
STREET
PLAN OOOK 4?t) RANI~
jig
PLAN OF LAND
~ - Au~.t,st. .,J:J, .. ikJL
66 DERBY STREET
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SALEM
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PROPERTY OF
_,,.,.,,.,,,--
JAY LEVY
NEAL LEVY
GRAPHIC SCALE
I CERTIFY THAT THIS PLAN CONFORMS TO THE
RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE REGISTERS OF DEEDS.
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DATE
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REGISTERED PROFESSIONAL LAND SURVEYOR
40
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( IN FEET }
1 Inch
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10
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= 10' JUNE 27, 2011
NORlH SHORE SURVEY CORPORA110N
SCALE 1•
14 BROWN STREET - SALEM, MA
978-744-4800
#3509
�\II I\I\\\\mI\111\1\\\11 \\1\1\\\\\\\ ~\ I\\
2012081400184 Bk:31618 Pg:523
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08 / 14/ 2012 10:38 DEED Pe 1/2
Return to:
MASSACHUSETTS EXCISE TAX
Sout her n Essex Di st ri ct ROD
Date :
08 / 14 / 2012 10 :38 AM
IO : 914608 Doc# 20120814001840
Fee : $2 , 166 . 00 Cons : $475 , 000 . 00
(SPACE ABOVE THIS LINE RESERVED FOR REG ISTRY OF DEEDS USE)
QUITCLAIM DEED
0
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0
vi
We, Jay Levy and Neal Levy, Trustees of 66 Derby Street Realty Trust, u/d/t dated
December 22, 2010, and recorded with the Essex South District Registry of Deeds in Book
30098, Page 46, for consideration of Four Hundred Seventy-Five Thousand Dollars and 00/ 100
($475,000.00) paid, grant to Thomas Czahor and Tracy Czahor, husband and wife, as tenants
by the entirety, both of 66 Derby Street, Salem, Massachusetts, with Quitclaim Covenants, a
certain parcel ofland, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, situated at and
known as 66 Derby Street, in said Salem, and shown as Lot 2 on a plan entitled "Plan of Land,
66 Derby Street, Salem, Property of Jay Levy/Neal Levy," dated June 27, 2011 , and recorded
with said Registry in Plan Book 430, Plan 19, more particularly described as follows:
SOUTHEASTERLY
by Derby Street, as shown on said Plan, 41.77 feet;
NORTHEASTERLY
by land of Peter Sholds et als, as shown on said Plan, 69.45 feet;
NORTHWESTERLY
by land of Thomas & Glenda Doran, as shown on said Plan, 44.17;
and
·soUTHWESTERL y
by Lot 1, as shown on said Plan, 74.98 feet.
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Said Lot 2 contains 3,088 square feet of land, more or less, according to said Plan, and is a
po).tion of the premises conveyed to the Grantors by Deed of Family & Children's Service of
Greater Lynn, Inc., Conservator of Amelia Bik, dated December 22, 20 I 0, and recorded with
said Registry in Book 30098, Page 54.
We, Jay Levy and Neal Levy, Trustees of the said 66 Derby Street Realty Trust, do hereby
certify that we are the sole and present Trustees of said Trust, that no beneficiary of the Trust is
below the age of majority, legally incapacitated or incompetent, a corporation or similar entity
subject to excise taxes, or an estate subject to estate tax~s, that said Trust is in full force and
effect as of the date hereof, that said Trust has not been amended or revoked since the date of its
original recording, and that we have been duly authorized and directed by the holders of One
Hundred Percent ( I 00%) of the beneficial interest in said Trust to execute and deliver this Deed
for th consideration stated hereinabove, all in accordance with the relevant provisions of said
T
Page 1 of 2
�Executed under seal on August
j_l_,2012.
Jay Levy, Tr
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Essex, ss.
Jl
On this
day of August, 2012, before me, the unders~gned notary public, personally
appeared Jay Levy and Neal Levy, Trustees as aforesaid, proved to me through satisfactory
evidence of identification, by showing me a copy of their identification, which were Mass.
driver's licenses, or personally known to me, to be the persons whose names are signed on the
preceding or attached document, and acknowledged to me that they signed it voluntarily for its
stated purpose.
Not
My
Page 2 of 2:
�Return to:
Brett A. Kaufman, Esq.
c/o Schlossberg, LLC
35 Braintree Hill Office Park, #204
Braintree, MA 02184
Ill Ill Ill Illl I~11111/IWI JIIIIIJlllllf /11111
SO.ESSEX #29 Bk:34379 Pg:24
09/17/2015 08:50 DEED Pg 1/2
QUITCLAIM DEED
We, Jonathan M. Frisch and Raquel Frisch, husband and wife, both of 68 Derby Street, Salem,
Essex County, Massachusetts
for consideration paid ofless than One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars,
grant to Raquel L. Frisch, Trustee of the Raquel L. Frisch Trust Agreement of2015 u/d/t dated
August 6, 2015, as amended, as evidenced by certificate of trust recorded herewith pursuant to
M.G.L. c. 184 § 35, of 68 Derby Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
with Quitclaim Covenants
A certain parcel ofland, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, situated at and
known as 68 Derby Street, in said Salem and shown as Lot 1 on a plan entitled "Plan of Land, 66
Derby Street, Salem, Property of Jay Levy/Neal Levy," dated June 27, 2011, and recorded with
said Registry in Plan Book 430, Plan 19, more particularly described as follows:
SOUTHEASTERLY:
by Derby Street, as shown on said Plan, 45.48 feet;
SOUTHWESTERLY:
by land of Noreen Casey and Patrick Griffin, as shown on said
Plan, 79.89 feet;
NORTHWESTERLY:
by land of 3 ½ Becket A venue Condominium and Thomas &
Glenda Doran, as shown on said Plan, 36.94 feet; and
NORTHEASTERLY:
by Lot 2, as shown on said Plan, 74.98, feet.
Said Lot 1 contains 3,180 square feet of land, more or less according to said Plan, and is a
portion of the premises conveyed by Deed of Family & Children's Service of Greater Lynn, Inc.,
Conservator of Amelia Bik, dated December 22, 2010, and recorded with said Registry in Book
30098, Page 54.
For title see deed of William F. Krol and Martha S. Krol to Jonathan M. Frisch and Raquel
Frisch dated June 24, 2015 and recorded with the Essex County Southern District Registry of
Deeds in Book 34159, Page 183.
�Witness our hands and seals this 6th day of August, 2015.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Norfolk, ss.
On this 6th day of August, 2015, before me, the undersigned notary public, personally appeared
JONiAN M. FRISCH, proved to me through satisfactory evidence of identification, which
was
photographic identification with signature issued by a federal or state governmental
agency,
personal knowledge of the undersigned,
oath or affirmation of a credible witness,
to be the person whose name is signed on the preceding or attached documents, and
acknowledged to me that he signed it voluntarily for its stated purpose.
D
*t
~
I
'lS~a.~c~
BRETT A. KAUFMAN
Brett A. Kaufinan, Not;/ublic
My commission expires: October 7, 2016
W
Notary Public
COMMONWEALTH _OF_ MASSACHUSETTS
My Comm1ss1on Expires
October 7, 2016
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Norfolk, ss.
th
On this 6 day of August, 2015, before me, the undersigned notary public, personally appeari
RAQUEL FRISCH, proved to me through satisfactory evidence of identification, which wa .
photographic identification with signature issued by a federal or state governmental agency,
personal knowledge of the undersigned,
oath or affirmation of a credible witness, to be the
person whose name is signed on the preceding or attached documents, and acknowledged to me
that she signed it voluntarily for its stated purpose.
D
Brett A. Kaufinan, Not Public
My commission expires: October 7, 2016
�II II II Ill I Ill Illllllllllll 11111111111111111111
SO.ESSEX #181 Bk:38464 Pg:405
04/29/202011:13AM DEED Pg 172
eRecorded
I, Raquel L. Frisch, Trustee of the Raquel L. Frisch Trust Agreement of 2015, under Declaration
of Trust dated August 6, 2015 for which a Trustee Certificate Pursuant to M.G.L. c. 184 § 35,
dated August 6, 2015 is recorded with the Essex Registry of Deeds in Book 34379, Page 22,
for consideration paid and in full consideration of ONE AND 00/100 ($1.00) DOLLAR,
grant to Jonathan M. Frisch and Raque] L. Frisch, husband and wife as tenants by the entirety.
of, 68 Derby Street, Essex County, Massachusetts,
with QUITCLAIM COVENANTS
A certain parcel of land, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, situated at and
known as 68 Derby Street, in said Salem and shown as Lot I on a plan entitled 11Plan of Land, 66
Derby Street, Salem, Property of Jay/Levy/Neal Levy," dated June 27, 2011, and recorded with
said Registry in Plan Book 430, Plan 19, more particularly described as follows:
i,i
VI
a;
...
"D
"C
SOUTHEASTERLY
by Derby Street, as shown on said Plan, 45.48 feet;
SOUTHWESTERLY
by land of Noreen Casey and Patrick Griffin, as shown on
said Plan, 79.89 feet;
NORTHWESTERLY
by land of3 1/2 Becket Avenue Condominium and Thomas
& Glenda Doran, as shown on said Plan, 36.94 feet; and
NORTHEASTERLY
by Lot 2, as shown on said Plan, 74.98 feet.
Said Lot 1 contains 3,180 square feet ofland, more or less, according to said Plan, and is a
portion of the premises conveyed by Deed of Family & Children's Service of Greater Lynn, Inc.,
Conservator of Amelia Bik, dated December 22, 2010, and recorded with said Registry in Book
30098,Page
<
Meaning and intending to convey the same Premises conveyed to the Grantor by deed dated
August 6, 2015, recorded with the Essex County Registry of Deeds at Book 34379, Page 24.
Grantor hereby releases and terminates any and all estates of homestead in and to the property
conveyed hereunder, whether created automatically pursuant to Massachusetts law or by
Declaration.
Signature Follows Next Page
�Executed as a sealed instrument this 24th day of April, 2020.
the Raquel L. Frisch Trust Agreement of 2015
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Essex, ss.
On this 24th day of April, 2020, before me, the undersigned Notary Public, personally
appeared the Raquel L. Frisch, trustee, proved to me by satisfactory evidence of identification,
being: rl,1 driver's license or other state or federal governmental document bearing a
photogtaphic image, [ J oath or affirmation of a credible witness known to me who knows the
above signatory, or [ ] my own personal knowledge of the identity of the signatory, to be the
person whose name is signed above, and acknowledged the foregoing to be signed by her, as her
free act and deed, voluntarily for its stated purposes as trustee of the Raquel L. Frisch Trust
Agreement of 2015.
G''
f..;«;,,iY,l('.J(,,_d,,,
--=£-;/
My Commission Expires: &"
Qualified in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Derby Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
68 Derby Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Jay Levy
and Neal Levy
Developers
Built 2012
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built in 2012
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Jen Ratliff
Language
A language of the resource
English
2012
2021
68 Derby Street
Developers
Levy
Massachusetts
Salem
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/bffbf0259ccb2d070f654093f2bd1389.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=IdgbNvSRkrgbQi5ZhiZt-TEZucqGAOlqrSZZooljdIJgTUAAb7QeB8VkGK8hbZAKSMxNTuuGbTHBzHkPvn8yPToPodLbHJRz5hwW6aBZ-9axMmsb-PZ0ArjKlCOor13FCJtSrZPGytXhZ2VP3bmGhgjWsXBDtxlOtpxod3inmI4SYTtsoN%7EWTfEVVGNhWLViRUbNKuF75eTMkpRbNRv%7EvqSkSH4sg6K%7EYBjL9H-ziUtYPjzbCxBeNBkVxLBwYwO4nQGh%7EelLh8h2CHNXZK-HG2qBu0Wx9Nb0vo%7ECYUWIzKdvgxWbW3JsNf%7Ew-cvz8pgx4EDhm82HWRCEsW2Ex53DrQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
adb075e2dd91e1bbabed0380b753b0f6
PDF Text
Text
80 Washington Square East
Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Built for Capt. Joseph and Hannah Hosmer, 1795
Researched and written by David Moffat – December 2020
�Date
Conveyed by
22 Apr Capt. Joseph Hosmer,
1794
mariner, and Hannah
Webb Hosmer, his wife
Conveyed to
Property
Samuel Webb,
Jr., goldsmith
Amount
Doc
Book
One
undivided
fifth part
£21 Deed
158
Page
75
30
Apr
1794
Samuel Webb, Jr.,
Capt. Joseph
goldsmith, and Jonathan Hosmer,
Webb, mariner
mariner, and
Hannah Hosmer
Four
undivided
fifth parts
£84 Deed
158
76
31
Mar
1800
Capt. Joseph Hosmer
and Hannah Hosmer
29 and
1/10 poles
with
“buildings
thereon”
$4,000 Deed
166
195
29 and
1/10 poles
with
“dwelling
house barn
and other
buildings
thereon”
$5,000 Deed
175
157
2 Oct. John Price Jr., Esq.,
John Fairfield,
1810 Samuel Ropes, Philip
Esq.
Chase, merchants acting
in trust on behalf of
Samuel Archer, III’s
creditors
29 and
1/10 poles
with
“dwelling
house barn
and other
buildings”
$7,400 Deed
190
284
24
Oct.
1810
29 and
1/10 poles
with
“dwelling
house barn
and other
buildings”
$5,500 Deed
190
285
16 Oct Walter Price Bartlett,
1804 merchant
John Fairfield, Esq.
Walter
Bartlett,
merchant
Price
Samuel Archer,
III, merchant
John White,
gentleman
�24
May
1813
Joseph White, Jr.,
merchant
Penn Townsend,
merchant
29 and
1/10 poles
with
“dwelling
house barn
and other
buildings”
$4,000 Deed
203
185
6 Mar Penn Townsend,
1826 merchant
The Merchant’s
Bank
29 and
1/10 poles
with
“dwelling
house barn
and other
buildings
$400 Mort
gage
240
111
26 Oct Penn Townsend,
1828 merchant
The Merchant’s
Bank
29 and
1/10 poles
with
“dwelling
house barn
and other
buildings
$300 Mort
gage
247
149
18
Aug
1845
Penn Townsend
William D.
Waters
26
Jan.
1891
J. Linton and Henry F.
Waters
Charles R.
Waters
“a certain
lot of land
with
buildings
thereon”
$1 and
other
considerati
ons
Deed
1301
447
31
Jan.
1891
Edward S. Waters
Charles R.
Waters
“a certain
lot of land
with
buildings
thereon”
$1 and
other
considerati
ons
Deed
1301
447
Sarah A. Weston
“a certain
lot of land
with
$1,000 Mort
gage
1692
543
5 Dec Charles R. Waters
1902
Will
�buildings
thereon”
6 May Charles R. Waters
1912
Catherine F.
Tracy, widow
“a certain
lot of land
with
buildings
thereon”
$1 and
other
valuable
considerati
ons
Deed
2140
588
14
Apr.
1923
Louis A.
Kotarski
“the land
with
buildings
thereon”
with
warranty
covenants
Considerat
ion Paid
Deed
2549
474
6 Jun Louis A. Kotarski,
1928 physician
Thomas B.
Ciesinki
“the land
with
buildings
thereon”
with
warranty
covenants
Considerat
ion Paid
Mort
gage
2767
156
6 Jun Thomas B. Ciesinki
1928
Louis A.
Kotarski
“the land
with
buildings
thereon”
with
warranty
covenants
Considerat
ion Paid
Mort
gage
2767
156
“the land
in said
Salem with
buildings
thereon”
$13,000 Deed
3525
263
“the land
in Salem
with
buildings
thereon”
$12,130 Repi
osses
sion
3761
83
21
Apr.
1947
Catherine F. Tracy,
widow of Henry J.
Helen A,. Kotarski,
Francis A. &
trustee of the Alexander Ruth M.J.
Trust
Walden
26 Jul. Waldens
1950
Roland A.
Stanley, acting
on behalf of
Salem Savings
Bank
�Considerat
ion Paid
Deed
3784
595
“the land
in Salem,
Essex
County,
Massachus
etts, with
buildings
thereon”
A Valuable
Considera
tion Paid
Deed
3839
97
Charles S.
Erskine and
Elvina M.
“the land
in said
Salem,
together
with the
buildings
thereon”
Considerat
ion Paid
Deed
4487
56
5 Mar. Charles S. Erskine
1959
Elvina M.
Erskine
“the land
in said
Salem,
together
with the
buildings
thereon”
Considerat
ion Paid
Deed
4542
159
30
Aug.
1974
Thomas A.
O’Donnell
“the land
in Salem,
together
with the
buildings
thereon”
$80,000
Deed
6095
353
16
Nov.
1950
Salem Savings Bank
20
Aug.
1951
Carl R. Gray, Jr., United John D. Jackson
States of America
Administration of
Veterans Affairs
20
Aug.
1958
John D. Jackson
Elvina M. Erskine
Carl R. Gray,
“the land
Jr., United States
in said
of America
Salem with
Administration
buildings
of Veterans
thereon”
Affairs
The Hosmer-Townsend-Waters House, built c. 1795
�-Initially described in spring 1794 as 29 and 1/10th poles, bounding 66 ft. westerly on the
Salem Common, 116 ft. southerly on land late of Francis Boardman, 66 ft. easterly on land of
Nathaniel Richards, and 79 ft. northerly on land of Samuel Webb, Jr.
-The date of 1795 is given based on a door knocker which once adorned the house, as
referenced in a footnote to William Bentley’s diary: “In the house in Pleasant Street which he
built in 1795 (Date on the knocker), afterwards the home of Capt. Penn Townsend and now of
his grandson Charles R. Waters.” The Diary of William Bentley, Vol. 3, January,
1803-December, 1810. Salem: The Essex Institute, 1911, p. 35.
-Capt. Samuel Webb was buried April 2, 1780. He married Hannah Ward, daughter of
John Ward, November 9, 1758. She died of fever at age 72 in April 1808. Priscilla seems to have
been his sister, born 1741. Samuel and Hannah had at least two sons, Samuel Webb, Jr., baptized
November 28, 1762, and Jonathan, baptized July 28, 1767. The younger Hannah was possibly
their daughter or perhaps a niece. In August of 1789 she married Joseph Hosmer. Jonathan died
of fever at age 27 while a mate of Captain Martin in Hispaniola, news of which reached Salem in
December of 1795.1
In May 1808, after the elder Hannah Webb’s death, Hannah Hosmer bought a dwelling
house on Pleasant Street from Samuel Webb, goldsmith, Priscilla Webb, singlewoman, for
$2,616.672 In October of that year Samuel Archer III sold an adjoining piece of land to Priscilla
Webb for $2,290.3
-For Samuel Archer’s trustation, see Registry of Deeds 188:241, April 3, 1810.
-Joseph White received the property “from Daniel Dutch Deputy Sherriff on the 16th of
April AD 1813, in part satisfaction of an execution which issued at sd. Salem on the sixteenth
day of April 1813, upon a judgement recovered to me against one John White, of said Salem,
merchant, in the circuit Court of Common Pleas for the middle circuit, which execution is
recorded in the Registry of deeds in said County Books of Executions No. 1, page 300.”
-Will of Penn Townsend
Be it remembered, that I, Penn Townsend,
of Salem in the county of Essex, state of Massts, being
weak in body but of sound and perfect mind and memory, do make and publish this my last will and testament, in manner and in form following; (that is to say) –
First,
I give to William D. Waters (merchant in Salem) in
trust, all my real and personal estate, for the benefit
of my wife Sarah Townsend and my daughter Mary
Townsend, the income or interest of the same to be equally divided between them during their life time, on the
1
Salem Vital Records: Births, pp. 403, 404; Marriages, pp. 445, 519; Deaths: pp. 314-315.
Salem Deeds, Deed 184:176, 13 May 1808.
3
Salem Deeds, Deed 184:176, 7 Oct. 1808.
2
�decease of my wife, then the whole income to go to my
daughter Mary, and on the decease of my wife and my
daughter Mary, then the whole property to go to my daughter Eliza G. Waters or her heirs or assigns, to be disposed
of as she or they may think proper; - and I hereby
appoint William D. Waters above named sole executor
of this my last will and testament; hereby revoking
all former wills by me made.
In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and
seal, the eighteenth day of August in the year of our
Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty five.
Signed, sealed, published, and declared
by the above named Penn Townsend to
} Penn Townsend Seal
be his las will and testament, in the
presence of us, who, at his request, and
in his presence, have hereunto subscribed our names as witnesses to
the same.
N. Weston
James B. Briggs
James B. Curwen
-Kotarski Trustation, Registry of Deeds 2767:157.
-Waldens/Wheldons in 1950:
Mortgage (3525:263) 21 Apr. 1947
Order of Notice (3724:89) 6 Mar. 1950
Order of Notice (3726:186) 17 Mar. 1950
Final Decree Authorizing Foreclosure (3761:81) 11 Aug. 1950
Salem Savings Bank, possession (3761:82)
D. un. Pow. (3761:83)
Affidavit of Sale (3761:84)
-Thomas A. O’Donnell forms Castine Realty Trust, Dec. 17, 1987
-Declaration of homestead, 26 Dec. 2014
Directories:
1837: Asa Brooks, hardware, 10 Pleasant, Penn Townsend to 10 Pleasant (in additions,
removals and corrections)
1842: Penn Townsend, William Edwards, mariner, Esther Waters, all at 10 Pleasant
1846: Benjamin Barker, Benjamin Hawkes, Penn Townsend
1850: Mrs. Penn Townsend at 10 Pleasant, Mr. Penn Townsend at 10 Andrew Street.
�1853: John Barlow, boots and shoes, Mrs. Sarah Stimson, Peter M. Cooper, groceries,
Mrs. Penn Townsend
1857: 10 Pleasant is home to John Barlow, boots and shoes, and Mrs. Sarah Stevens.
1861: Charles R. Waters, Joseph G. Waters, a judge at the Police Court, Henry F. Waters,
instructor and Miss Mary Townsend, who boards there. William C. and WIlliam D. Waters live
at 6 Pleasant.
1874: Charles R. Waters, bookkeeper, and J. Linton Waters, counsellor and notary public
1878: Charles R., J. Linton, and Henry F. Waters
1914: C.F. Tracey, C.F. Grush
1921: Catherine F. Tracy
1931: Louis A. Kotarski, physician, Helen A., his wife, Clara, William C., physician,
Eliz., his wife, William K., physician, Eliz., his wife.
1937: Louis A. Kotarski, Helen A., his wife.
Atlases:
1851-Townsend
1874-J.G. Waters
1897-C.R. Waters
1911-Charles P. Waters
Other Sources:
Massachusetts Historical Commission4
Bryant F. Tolles’ Architecture in Salem. 5
Fiske Kimball’s Mr. Samuel McIntire, Carver: The Architect of Salem.6
Plan, June 1961:
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2699, “Hosmer, Capt. Joseph - Townsend, Capt. Penn House”
Bryant F. and Carolyn K. Tolles, Architecture in Salem: An Illustrated Guide. Hanover and New London: UPNE,
1983, pp. 32-33.
6
Kimball, Fiske. Mr. Samuel Mclntire. Carver: The Architect of Salem. Salem: Essex Institute, 1940. Reprinted,
Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith, 1966.
4
5
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Washington Square East
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
80 Washington Square East, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for Capt. Joseph and Hannah Hosmer, 1795
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built in 1795
House history completed 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
David Moffat
Language
A language of the resource
English
1795
2020
80 Washington Square East
Capt. Joseph Hosner
Captain
Hosner
Massachusetts
Salem
-
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d1effc5eddda0abba0aa4a96b64ae0c5
PDF Text
Text
6 Southwick Street
Built for
John Riley
Laborer
c. 1847
Research by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
October 2021
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2021
�CHAIN OF TITLE, 6 SOUTHWICK STREET, SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
Date of
Transaction
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Conveyance of
Source
Book / Page
Notes
Essex County
Registry of Deeds
(ECRD)
379 / 161
No buildings mentioned.
April 15, 1844
March 24, 1847
William O. Andrews of
Salem
John Daland of Salem
$77.00
"A certain lot of land situate in said Salem described as follows . . .
Commencing at the northwest bound and running easterly forty feet by a
private way thirty five feet wide, thence southerly about eighty seven feet to
land of Flint; thence westerly forty feet by said Flint, thence northerly about
eighty eight and one half feet, to the point begun at.
April 23, 1847
April 23, 1847
John Daland of Salem
John Reiley of Salem
$125.00
"the following described lot of land situate in said Salem . . . commencing at the
ECRD
northwest bound . . . "
June 7, 1880
June 7, 1880
John Reiley of Salem
Thomas Reiley of Salem
January 3, 1920
June 10, 1942
February 1, 1946
May 18, 1972
August 31, 2009
January 5, 1920
Frank J. Brady, administrator
Delia F. Koen, wife of
of the estate of Thomas
George F. Koen, of Salem
Riley, late of Salem
Delia F. Koen of Salem,
widow
S. Gertrude Condon,
formerly S. Gertrude Koen,
August 3, 1946
of Salem
Thomas P. Condon,
executor under the will of
May 18, 1972
William J. Michael
James L. & Kathleen M.
September 2, 2009
Picone of Salem
June 11, 1942
Delia F. Koen and S.
Gertrude Koen
William J. & Mary A. Michael
of Salem
$1,000.00 "and
other good
considerations"
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in said Salem being
the same estate conveyed to me by deed of John Daland, dated April 23, 1847
- and recorded with Essex Deeds (Southern District) Book 381 leaf 38 . . . "
ECRD
1038 / 100
ECRD
2438 / 59
ECRD
3294 / 431
"the land in said SALEM, with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as
ECRD
follows: Beginning at a stake in the southeasterly line of Southwick Street . . . "
3470 / 82
"the land in said SALEM, with the buildings thereon bounded, beginning at a
stake in the southeasterly line of Southwick Street eigthy feet distant from
Walter Street, and running northeasterly on said southeasterly line of
Southwick Street thirty nine and six tenths feet to land now or late of Morgan,
thence turing and running southeasterly on said land of Morgan eighty eight
"consideration paid" and two one hundredths feet to land now or late of Hamilton, thence turning
and running southwesterly on said land now or late of Hamilton forty feet to
land now or late of William S. McIntire, thence turning and running
northwesterly by said land now or late of McIntire and land now or late of
Catherine Riley eighty nine and fifteen one hundredths feet to said Southwick
Street and point of beginning."
"the land in said SALEM, with the buildings thereon bounded and described as
"consideration paid"
follows: Beginning at a stake in the southeasterly line of Southwick Street . . . "
"consideration paid"
381 / 38
James L. & Kathleen M.
Picone of Salem
$15,000.00
"the land in Salem . . . with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as
follows: Beginning at a stake in the southeasterly line of Southwick Street . . . "
ECRD
5867 / 660
James T. & Stacey L. Picone
of Salem
$315,000.00
"The land in Salem . . . with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as
follows: Beginning at a stake in the southeasterly line of Southwick Street . . . "
ECRD
28904 / 333
No buildings mentioned.
House most likely built
shortly after Riley
purchased the land.
"This conveyance is
made on the conditions
that the said grantee
shall support and
maintain me in a suitable
and comfortable manner
during my life."
"For title see Essex,
South District, Deeds,
Book 1038, Page 100,
Book 381, Leaf 38."
Mary A. Michael died
January 29, 1956.
��������������1850
120
SALEM [ R ] DIRECTORY .
Rideout Nathaniel , carpenter , liouse 4 Bentley
Rideout Ruth Mrs. house Prospect
Rider Joseph ,captain , house 24 High
Rider Joseph
mariner , house 24 High
Riley James , laborer , house 21 Daniels
Riley John , laborer , house Dodge
Riley Matthew , laborer , house 21 Daniels
Ring Harriet , dress maker , house 3 Elm
Ring Mary , tailoress , house 3 Elm
Rinks John , ship keeper , house rear 7 Turner
Roach Richard , boarding house , 131Derby
Roach Richard , laborer ,house rear 40 St. Peter
Roaf Thomas O. boarding house , 114 Essex
Roake Catherine , boards 61 Harbor
Robbins Jane M. milliner , boards 60 Mason
Robbins Nancy O. Mrs. house 132 Boston
Robbins Nathaniel C. house 11 Washington
Robbins Thomas A. livery stable , 132 Boston , house do.
Robbins William S. mariner , house 13 Ash
Roberts A. D. tailoress , boards 55 Buffum
Roberts Adeline , teacher , house 13 Cedar
Roberts Caroline , teacher , house 21 Winter
Roberts Charles , butcher , 116 Boston , house Prospect
Roberts Clark , shoe maker , house 10 Prince
Roberts David , counsellor , over 174 Essex , house 21 Winter
Roberts Ezekiel, house Cedar
Roberts Hannah Mrs. house 24 Mechanic
Roberts Henry , shoe maker , house 10 Prince
Roberts Henry 0. house 18 Mechanic
Roberts Huldah , boards 70 Harbor
Roberts John , butcher , house Prospect
Roberts Matilda , teacher , house 13 Cedar
Roberts William , mason , house 19Federal
Roberts William S. mason , house 12 St. Peter
Robertson S. W. & Co. soap and candle manuf . h . 44 Boston
Robinson Abigail Mrs. house 95 North
Robinson Henry , mariner , house foot of Blaney
Robinson John Mrs. house 2 Chestnut
Robinson J. A. dentist , house 20 Washington
Robinson Lucy Ann , house 35 Lafayette
Robinson Peter A. mariner , house 9 High st. court
Robson Thomas , leather dresser , house 130Boston
Rodrick Eliza Mrs. house 16 Church
Rogers Abby , boards 64 Harbor
Rogers Albert , laborer , house 55 Broad
Rogers Augustus ,soap boiler , house 7 May
Rogers Augustus D. counsellor , 150 Essex , house 376 do.
J.
*
* Dodge Street was renamed Southwick Street by 1874.
�1851
�1874
�1897
�1911
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Southwick Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
6 Southwick Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
John Riley
Laborer
c. 1847
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built circa 1847
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1847
2021
6 Southwick Street
Laborer
Massachusetts
Riley
Salem
-
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ef84bde046e5edfe17c0e043dbf336c8
PDF Text
Text
22 Lathrop Street
Built for
Perry Collier
Real Estate Broker
1886
Research by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
December 2021
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2021
�CHAIN OF TITLE, 22 LATHROP STREET, SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
Date of
Transaction
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
September 3, 1870
March 27, 1871
George D. Phippen of
Salem
David B. Newcomb and
John Newcomb of Salem
September 30, 1886
October 1, 1886
David B. Newcomb and
John Newcomb of Salem
Perry Collier of Beverly
November 13, 1886
November 13, 1886
Perry Collier of Beverly
James Finegan of Salem
May 5, 1910
May 5, 1910
Margaret H. Finegan of
Salem
Catherine Madigan of Salem
July 11, 1910
July 11, 1910
August 7, 1922
July 28, 1941
Consideration
$350.00
"one dollar and
other valuable
consideration"
$700.00
Conveyance of
Source
"a certain lot of land and flats situate in said Salem, and bounded as
follows. Commencing at a point twenty five feet southeasterly from the
southeasterly corner on Lathrop street of land today conveyed to Walter
S Moses and David Hodgkins, and bounded northeasterly on said
Lathrop street eighty feet, southeasterly on other flats of grantor about Essex County
Registry of
one hundred and sixty eight feet on a straight line to Watson street,
southwesterly on said Watson street eighty feet, northwesterly on other Deeds (ECRD)
land and flats of grantor about one hundred and sixty eight feet in a
straight line to the point begun at on Lathrop street which line for
seventy nine feet of the way is parallel with the south eastern bound of
said moses and Hodgkins land and twenty five feet distant therefrom."
"a certain lot of land situate in said Salem, bounded northeasterly on Lathrop
street eighty feet, southeasterly on land now or late of George D. Phippen
ECRD
eighty six feet; northwesterly by land of Perry Collier and J. J. Perkins eighty six
feet, and southwesterly by land of said grantors eighty feet."
"a certain parcel of land situate in said Salem with the buildings thereon
standing bounded Northeasterly by Lathrop Street thirty feet Southeasterly on
land now or late of George D. Phippen eighty six feet, Southwesterly by land of ECRD
David B. Newcomb et al thirty feet, and Northwesterly by other land of said
Collier eighty six feet . . . "
Book /
Page
Notes
819 / 39
1182 / 237
This is a portion of the lot of land
conveyed above.
1186 / 32
This is a portion of the lot conveyed
above, but buildings are mentioned.
"one dollar and
other valuable
considerations"
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in said Salem
bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
2018 / 187
"Being the same premises conveyed to
my late husband James Finegan by
deed of Perry Collier dated November
13, 1886 . . . "
Catherine Madigan of Salem William D. Chapple of Salem
$300.00
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in said Salem,
bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
2028 / 231
Deed of Mortgage
August 23, 1922
William D. Chapple of Salem Mary J. Gillam of Salem
$500.00
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in said SALEM,
bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
2525 / 143
August 15, 1941
John T. Gillam of Salem
Blanche O'Keefe of Salem
"consideration
paid"
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in said SALEM,
bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
3266 / 265
Henry J. O'Donnell Jr. of
Salem, administrator of the
estate of Blanche (O'Keefe)
Redding, late of Salem
Joseph W. Morphew of
Ipswich
"the land in Salem, Massachusetts, being a certain parcel of land with buildings
ECRD
thereon more particularly bounded and described as follows . . . "
4908 / 307
Joseph W. Morphew of
Englewood, Florida
Dorothy R. Morphew and
Joseph W. Morphew,
Trustees of Morphew
Revocable Trust
"the land in Salem, Massachusetts being a certain parcel of land with buildings
thereon more particularly bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
11375 / 538
March 19, 1962
April 26, 1962
June 25, 1992
July 7, 1992
October 6, 1999
October 6, 1999
August 7, 2000
August 18, 2000
July 20, 2005
July 28, 2005
Dorothy R. Morphew and
Joseph W. Morphew,
Trustees of Morphew
Revocable Trust
Amy M. Meimeteas, Trustee
of Lathrop Street Realty
Trust
Brian F. & Kathryn R.
Levesque of Salem
$1,500.00
"nominal
consideration
paid"
Amy M. Meimeteas, Trustee
of Lathrop Street Realty
Trust
$25,000.00
"the land in Salem, Massachusetts being a certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon more particularly bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
15981 / 197
Kathryn R. & Brian F.
Levesque of Salem
$178,000.00
"The land in Salem, Massachusetts, being a certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon more particularly bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
16514 / 162
Rosa M. Ventura of Salem
$266,000.00
"The land in Salem, Massachusetts, being a certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon more particularly bounded and described as follows . . . "
ECRD
25929 / 544
William Chapple sold the property at
auction after Catherine Madigan
defaulted on the mortgage.
"For my title see Essex Probate No.
157890."
���������������������Salem Atlas 1874
�Salem Atlas 1897
�Salem Atlas 1911
�1886
462
SALEM
DIRECTORY .
STEPHEN
.
F
NICHOLS ,
Painter , Glazier ,
WHITENER ,
W
-
AND
PAPER HANGER ,
DEALER
PAINTS , OILS , AND GLASS ,
IN
24 Boston Street , - - - - Salem , Mass.
CHAS . C . REDMOND ,
J . . GLOVER ,
SIGN
N
AND
-
Painting .
Ornamental
PAPER HANGER , Etc .
Particular attention given to all kinds of
|2
PORTRAIT AND LANDSCAPE PAINTING
SCROLL WORK
On Wagons
243 )
, Coaches ,
Etc .
ESSEX STREET , SALEM
THOMAS
House ,
Sign
H
,
.
NORTON
PAINTING ,
,
PERRY COLLIER ,
| AUCTIONEER ,
,
,
,
Frescoing Papering
Graining
Hard Wood Finishing a Specialty
Dry and Mixed Paints and Glass
REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE BROKER
Central Street ,
.
- Salem
-
FIRT INSURANCE
.
243) ESSEX STREET , SALEM
OLD STAND ,
13
Norman Street, near Depot ,
SALEM , MASS .
Furniture of all kinds Cleaned
and Polished .
Decorative
and
AND
.
STREET
118 CABOT
,
SALEM LOAN
BEVERLY
.
,
Revolvers , Jewelry , Musical
Instruments ,
.
-
OR SECOND HAND
GUN AND LOCKSMITH
DOGS FOR SALE
.
Depot
SMITH Manager
Salem
Mass
.
Stone
,
opposite
.
.
.
H
,
Street
,
179 Washington
S
.
No
,
.
,
WATCH
NEW
,
.
and Eye -Glasses
,
Spectacles
Etc
Watches , Clocks , Guns , Rifles ,
�
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
22 Lathrop Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Perry Collier
Real Estate Broker
1886
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built in 1886
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1886
2021
27 Lathrop Street
Collier
Massachusetts
Real Estate Broker
Salem
-
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eeefeb18439a5a28321f49017eebf42a
PDF Text
Text
27 Liberty Hill Avenue
Abbie Stowers
and her husband,
John B. Wallace, Blacksmith
Built in 1897
Researched and written by Amanda Eddy
December 2021
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2021
�Table of Deeds
Date
Purchased
Home Owner
Years of
Ownership
Number of
Years
Purchase
Price
Deed
Referenced
Notes
October 31,
1896
Abbie Wallace
John B. Wallace
1896 1907
11
$500
1494-81
Lot 19
purchased
by Abbie
Wallace in
1896**; the
home was
built in 1897.
Abbie
Wallace
passed away
in 1907,
leaving her
husband,
John B.
Wallace, to
execute her
will and
potential sale
of the estate.
November
21, 1907
Catherine T.
Brennan
1907 1953
46
$1
1898-144
$2,400
mortgage.
December
29, 1953
Dorothy A.
Brennan
1953 1956
3
Nominal
consideration
paid, less than
$100
4038-302
Lot 19 (land
with the
house on it
that
Catherine
Brennan
owns) and
Lot B (just
land that
Dorothy
Brennan
owns) are
combined.
December
29, 1953
Thomas F.
Brennan
Catherine T.
Brennan
Dorothy A.
Brennan
1953 1956
3
“For
consideration
paid”
4038-302
Subject to
associated
mortgage
from
November
21, 1907,
Book 1898,
Page 145
August 27,
Joseph R.
1956 -
36
“For
4300-545
Mortgage at
�1956
Dylengoski
Barbara E.
Dylengoski
1992
consideration
paid”
Salem
Savings
Bank records
a mortgage
of $8,800.
(Document
4300-546)
October 21,
1992
William P.
Dylengoski
1992 2019
27
“Nominal
consideration”
11549-17
December
10, 2019
Jordan Ryan
2019 2020
1
$330,000
38100-289
June 26,
2020
Douglas Kuzniar
Joshua Keith
Childs
2020+
1+
$542,500
38654-200
*See note
below table.
*In 1992, Joseph R. and Barbara E. Dylengoski made their son, William P. Dylengoski, a trustee
of their estate, 27 Liberty Hill Avenue. Joseph passed away March 9, 2009, but Barbara E.
(Bowden) Dylengoski didn’t pass away until October 4, 2018. (See document 37362-577 for
2019 transfer of William P. Dylengoski as trustee to owner).
Barbara E. (Bowden) Dylengoski
Courtesy of O’Donnell Funeral Home
Joseph R. Dylengoski
Courtesy of U.S. School Yearbooks, 1900-1999
**Lot 19 is a part of the Plan entitled “Land of J.M. Parsons, J.C. Foster, Sur., June 1896.” This document
could not be located.
�SOURCES
�1874 Atlas Plate R
Southeastern Registry of Deeds
�1897 Atlas Plate 009
Southeastern Registry of Deeds
�1906-1938 Atlas Plate 0067
Southeastern Registry of Deeds
�1911 Atlas Plate 0010
Southeastern Registry of Deeds
�&ND O,t:' Do/cOTHY /9. 8R.eNNRN
_s-..-=:!Le:-M,
M/9S.S.
,qv,susr, i!JS<o.
;;£___, U.4i,!&� C,!ff/ 9 "'43Z/.
\
,
--,'
I
/
0
0
t,j
l,j
D}¥ELL.tlv'G
No.2.7
�o.oo
L1BeRTY
***Lot B is on the Plan of “Land of Dorothy A.
Brennan, Salem, Mass, August 1956. Thomas
A. Appleton C.E.” The upper left corner subtly
labeled “Lot B” is the parcel of land that was
combined with Lot 19 (27 Liberty Hill Avenue.)
11? 6'/
�DEEDS
��������������Inventory No:
SAL.1752
Historic Name:
Wallace, John B. House
Common Name:
Address:
27 Liberty Hill Ave
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
North Salem
Local No:
27-202
Year Constructed:
c 1897
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Queen Anne
Use(s):
Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood Clapboard; Wood Shingle
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�r4<
FORM B - BUILDING
AREA
FORM NO.
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
80 BOYLSTON STREET
BOSTON, MA 02116
S a 1 em
e
s
s
27 L i b e r t y
H i l ] Avenue
oric Name
Present
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Atlas,
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A n n o
Architect
Sketch Map: Draw nap showing property"o location
in relation to nearest cross streets and/or
geographical features. Indicate a l l buildings
between inventoried property and nearest
intersection(s).
Indicate north
Exterior Wall Fabric
n
apboard,—wood
shingles
Outbuildings
Major Alterations (with dates)
Condition
r
Good
Date
Moved
Acreage
Setting
None
Loc s — t h a n — o n o
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UTM REFERENCE
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NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA STATEMENT ( i f applicable)
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE Describe important architectural features and evaluate in terms of
other buildings within the community.
27 L i b e r t y H i l l Avenue i s an u n u s u a l l y w e l l - d e t a i l e d Queen
Anne house f o r t h e a r e a .
I t s t a n d s two s t o r i e s h i g h , w i t h a g a b l e
r o o f , end t o t h e s t r e e t .
The e n t r y i s l o c a t e d t o t h e s o u t h o f t h e
f a c a d e , u n d e r an o r n a t e p e d i m e n t e d p o r t i c o w i t h a t u r n e d b a l u s t r a d e
and t u r n e d s u p p o r t s , and a s p i n d l e f r i e z e s u p p o r t e d by open s t r u t s .
W i t h i n t h e p e d i m e n t i s diamond s h i n g l e w o r k .
A 2 1/2 s t o r y t o w e r
s i t s a t t h e n o r t h e a s t c o r n e r , w i t h a c o n i c a l r o o f and f l a r e a t t h e
base o f t h e s e c o n d s t o r y . The g a b l e end f e a t u r e s a r e c e s s e d
window.
The n o r t h e l e v a t i o n has a w a l l dormer and a o n e - s t o r y
screened porch.
The w a l l s a r e c l a d i n a v a r i e t y o f c l a p b o a r d and
shingle patterns.
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE Explain the role owners played in local or state history and how the
building relates to the development of the community.
L i k e most o f N o r t h S a l e m , t h i s a r e a was f a r m l a n d u n t i l t h e
mid-19th century.
L i b e r t y H i l l Avenue was n o t l a i d o u t u n t i l t h e
e a r l y 1890s; t h e s t r e e t f i r s t a p p e a r e d i n d i r e c t o r i e s i n 1895-6.
The house was d e p i c t e d on t h e 1897 a t l a s a s t h e p r o p e r t y o f A b b i e
W a l l a c e , and was f i r s t l i s t e d i n t h e s t r e e t d i r e c t o r y o f t h a t y e a r
as v a c a n t .
J o h n B. W a l l a c e , a r e t i r e d b l a c k s m i t h , was l i s t e d i n
t h e 1899 d i r e c t o r y a s t h e h o u s e ' s r e s i d e n t .
t
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Salem C i t y D i r e c t o r i e s
«— ~ *
Maps and A t l a s e s , 1 8 5 1 , 1874, 1897, and 1911
8/85
�
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
27 Liberty Hill Avenue, Salem, Ma, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Abbie Stowers
and her husband,
John B. Wallace, Blacksmith
Built in 1897
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built in 1897
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amanda Eddy
Language
A language of the resource
English
1897
2021
27 Liberty Hill Avenue
Blacksmith
Massachusetts
Salem
Stowers
Wallace
-
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7879909e9193a1c58e5d80214cecd3cc
PDF Text
Text
84 Washington Square
Dr. Hardy Phippen
Physician
Built circa 1900
Researched and written by Alisa Grishin
December 2021
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2021
�Homeowner
Date Purchased
Years of
Ownership
Number of Years
Purchase Price
Documents
Referenced
Notes
Thomas F. Hunt
October 16, 1854
1854-1869
15
unstated
501:296
Parcel III(a)
“...described land
situate in said
Salem”
Bought from C. A.
Ropes
James P. Cook
November 4,
1869
1869-1895
26 years
unstated
785:166
Parcel III(a)
“Certain parcel of
land and the
buildings thereon”
Thomas F. Hunt
May 14, 1890
1890-1890
<1 year
$10,000
1279:227
Parcel III(b)
“Certain parcel of
land and the
buildings thereon”
Bought from
Hannah A.
Kittredge
James P. Cook
December 6,
1890
1890-1895
5 years
“$1 and other
good and
sufficient
considerations”
1298:361
Parcel III(b)
“Certain parcel of
land with the
buildings thereon”
Parcel III
�complete
Charles A.
Sinclair
January 12, 1895
1895-1901
6 years
$175,550
1437:1
Parcel III
“Certain parcels
of land with the
buildings thereon”
Hardy Phippen
April 25,1899
1899-1953
54 years
“$1 and other
valuable
considerations”
1575:198
Purchase of
Parcel I(a)
“A certain parcel
of land with the
buildings thereon”
Hardy Phippen
April 25, 1899
1899-1953
54 years
“$1 and other
valuable
considerations”
1575:198
Purchase of
Parcel I(b)
“A certain parcel
of land with the
buildings thereon”
Frank Jones
Hardy Phippen
December 18,
1901
July 28, 1902
1901-1902
1902-1953
1 year
51 years
“$1 and other
valuable
considerations”
1644:155
$1
1683:322
Parcel III
“A certain parcel
of land with the
buildings thereon”
Purchase of
Parcel III
“A certain parcel
of land”
Hardy Phippen
August 10, 1903
1903-1953
50 years
“$1 and other
1716:296
Parcel II
�considerations”
“A certain parcel
of real estate”
Purchase to join
together the three
(3) parcels
George W. Full &
Sons, Inc.
June 29, 1953
1953-2017
64 years
$37,500
3991:114
Three (3) parcels
of land
O’Donnell
Funeral Home
October 2, 2017
2017-Present
4+
“For
consideration”
$1,462,500
36223:159
Three (3) parcels
of land
�1897 Atlas, Plate 4
������Photos
Dr. Hardy Phippen House, 1900
Unknown Creator
Courtesy of MIT Libraries
�The Philadelphia Inquirer. September 21, 1885
�The Philadelphia Inquirer. May 23, 1893
Duluth News Tribune. April 23, 1899
�DEEDS
����������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Washington Square East
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
84 Washington Square East, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Dr. Hardy Phippen
Physician
Built circa 1900
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built circa 1900
House history completed 2021
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alisa Grishin
Language
A language of the resource
English
1900
2021
84 Washington Square East
Dr. Hardy Phippen
Massachusetts
Phippen
Physician
Salem
-
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PDF Text
Text
�����������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Pleasant Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
20 Pleasant Street, Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
John W. Stocker
carriage + chaise maker
1844
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built 1844
House History completed 1994
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Larry Davis
Language
A language of the resource
English
1844
1994
20/Pleasant Street
carriage maker
chaise maker
Massachusetts
Salem
Stocker
-
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Text
��������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Washington Square North
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
35 Washington Square North, Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Hannah & Elizabeth Hodges
1840
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built 1840
House History Conducted in 2001
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1668
1769
1840
2001
35/Washington Square North
Cheever
Hodges
Massachusetts
Poindexter
Salem
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b25b7c035f27c7a3c9b37b92767f4af0
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HISTORIC
SALEM INC
7 Curtis Street
Horatio B. Perry
Gunsmith
and his wife
Sarah Ashton
Built c. 1856
Researched and written by Jen Ratliff
June 2020
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA. 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2020
�7 Curtis Street, 1985
(MACRIS SAL.2569)
The address of Seven Curtis Street is first listed in the city directory in 1857, when it was
owned by Horatio B. Perry, a gunsmith. The current home’s exterior contains Georgian
elements, a popular style between 1715-1780. However, the home faces North, which is
uncharacteristic for a Georgian home. This may be evidence that the home was moved to this
site. According to Vijay Joyce, a member of the Salem Historical Commission, the home does
contain timber framing, which was still in use in the 1850s. Maps from 1851 and 1872 show a
similarly shaped structure positioned flush with Curtis Street. It is possible the home was later
turned to face North to create space for additional homes to be built. Based on available
evidence, what is now Seven Curtis Street may have previously been referred to as Four Orange
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
1
�Street. Between 1850 and 1856 mariner, Joseph Karier lived at this adjacent address, which
disappears from city directories the same year that Seven Curtis Street is first listed. Deeds for
Seven Curtis Street cite an 1849 sale of land to Joseph Karier as the origin of ownership. 1 A
connection between Karier and the Perry family is unknown but by September 1856 the
ownership of this land was transferred between them and a home was present. By 1874, Seven
Curtis Street was in its present, north-facing orientation.
The Historic Derby Street Neighborhood is perhaps the best example of Salem’s diverse
and ever-changing history. The land began as part of the largest native village inhabited by the
Naumkeag people. Europeans began settling in the area after 1626 and many of Salem’s
remaining first period homes line lower Essex Street, including the 1667 Stephen Daniels House,
1675 Narbonne House, and c. 1688 William Murray House. As Salem’s maritime industry
bustled, seafarers built their stately homes in the neighborhood to be close to their wharves. In
the early-to-mid 19th century, Salem’s elite moved to newly built estates on picturesque streets
such as Washington Square and Chestnut Street. Their former waterfront neighborhood
became home to Irish immigrants looking for work in the city’s factories and homes.
In the early 20th century, the neighborhood transitioned again, this time from being an
Irish neighborhood to predominantly Polish. Like the Irish, Polish immigrants were attracted to
job opportunities in the city’s mills and factories. Polish immigrants began arriving in Salem
around 1890 and by 1911, Poles comprised about 8% of the city’s overall population. Religion
played a strong role in the Polish community and as the number of Polish Catholics in Salem
grew, the need for a permanent house of worship became apparent. Masses in Polish had long
1
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 407:139.
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
2
�taken place in the basement of the Church of Immaculate Conception, an Irish parish on the
corner of Hawthorne Boulevard.
Beginning in 1903, Herbert Street and Union Street became the heart of the Polish
Catholic presence in the city, with the construction of St. John the Baptist Church, a parochial
school, convent, and rectory. Polish clubs, businesses, and restaurants continued to line Derby
Street for the first half of the 20th century but the community began to wane as second and
third generation Poles spread out across the city and North Shore.
The settlement house at The House of the Seven Gables on Turner Street had attracted
neighborhood residents since opening in 1910. The organization used its museum proceeds to
fund classes, social gatherings, and medical care to benefit the city’s newly arrived immigrants.
In 1970, following a fire at a Hollywood studio, the television show “Bewitched” filmed several
episodes in Salem and surrounding towns. The House of the Seven Gables was featured in one
of these episodes and tourism to Salem spiked. That same year, Laurie Cabot opened America’s
first witch shop one block away at the corner of Derby and Carlton streets.
The Perry Family, 1856 - 1890
Augustus Horatio Perry (1836-1891) was born to Sarah Ashton (1813-1877) and Horatio
B. Perry (1808-1874) on October 10, 1836 in Salem, Massachusetts. The family lived at 21
Carlton Street before moving to 7 Curtis Street around 1856. Horatio and Sarah purchased the
Curtis Street home and their son Augustus followed. Like his father, Augustus worked as a
gunsmith on nearby Blaney Wharf. In 1867, he married Sarah E. Cogswell, (1842- unknown) also
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
3
�of Salem. Together, the couple had two daughters Margaretta and Mary. 2 Augustus’s brother,
William Ashton Perry (1846-1927) also lived in the family home. In September 1856, he
purchased “one undivided half part” of the Curtis Street home from his parents for $496. 3
William was in the clothing business and was part-owner of Perry and Hayward Clothing, which
was located downtown at 225 Essex Street. In 1861, William sold his portion of the home to his
brother Augustus for $800. Augustus assumed ownership of the remainder of the house
following the death of his parents in 1874 and 1877. 4
Based on available atlases, the Perry family constructed the back addition to the home,
that fronts Orange Street, between 1874 and 1890. At first, it appeared this space was added to
generate rental income, as renters begin appearing at 7 Curtis Street in 1884. 5 Upon further
investigation, it was found that this space houses the kitchens for the two-family home. It is
likely this addition was always intended to house a modern kitchen. It is possible that the home
was re-oriented on its plot at this time to allow for the kitchen space to be added.
By April 1890, the Perry Family relocated to Melrose, Massachusetts and Sarah E. Perry
sold the Curtis Street home on behalf of her and her husband Augustus for $2,020. 6 William F.
White and his wife Margaret White began their 27-year ownership of the home.
2
Records indicate that the couple bore two sons that did not survive infancy and possibly a daughter.
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 538:247
4
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 619:275
5
Probate 49990, Sarah Perry, September 3, 1877
6
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 1276:410.
3
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4
�The White Family, 1890 – 1924
William F. White (c. 1840-Unknown) was born in Ireland around 1840. He immigrated to
the United States in 1862, where he worked as a laborer. In 1865, he married his wife Margaret,
also from Ireland. Together, the couple had five children, three of which survived into
adulthood: Mary A. (b. 1866), Robert F. (b. 1872), and William J. (b. 1875). 7
In 1882, William purchased 27 Union Street, better known as the birthplace of
Nathaniel Hawthorne. Salem’s Irish population was anchored by the Church of Immaculate
Conception, which sits only one block away on present day Hawthorne Boulevard. In 1890,
William and Margaret also purchased 7 Curtis Street from the Perry family for $2,020. There is
no evidence that members of the White family lived in the home but instead used it as rental
property to generate income. The renters listed in Salem’s city directories changed almost
yearly and residents ranged in occupations. Early residents include John C. Smith, a clergyman
and Charles J. H. Burkinshaw a police officer.
In 1917, Mary A. White inherited the home at 7 Curtis Street before giving it to her
brother, William J. White in 1921. After 34 years in the White Family, William J. White sold the
Curtis Street home to Antoni Jendraszek in 1924 for $2,400. 8
The White Family continued to live nearby at 27 Union Street before relocating to
Maine. In 1957, the home was bequeathed to a Catholic charity by William J.’s wife, Catherine.
The charity ultimately decided to sell the home, which was then purchased by the trustees of
The House of the Seven Gables. In 1958, the museum relocated the home to their grounds
7
Year: 1900; Census Place: Salem Ward 1, Essex, Massachusetts; Page: 2; Enumeration District: 0441; FHL
microfilm: 1240647
8
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds 2602-41
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
5
�abutting Hardy Street and for the first time, opened it to the public.
The Jendraszek Family, 1924 – 2019
Polish immigrants began arriving in Salem around 1890 and by 1911, Poles comprised
about 8% of the city’s overall population. Many Poles settled in the Historic Derby Street
Neighborhood, which had previously been the city’s Irish neighborhood. This transition is seen
in the history of 7 Curtis Street with sale of the home from the White family to the Jendraszek
family.
Antoni “Anthony” Jendraszek (1884-1968) was born in Zieluń, Poland in 1884. In 1900,
he immigrated to the United States, where he found work in local leather factories. 9 Around
1903, he married his wife Katarzyna (Cathrine) “Katie” Majoika (1885-1919), who had
emigrated from Poland that same year. 10 Together, the couple had six children that survived to
adulthood: Jean (b. 1906), Felix (b. 1907), Bertha (b. 1909), William (b. 1910), Alexander (b.
1914), and Chester (b. 1916). 11
By 1908, Anthony had joined St. Joseph Society, a Polish fraternal organization that
began in 1897. The society “provided aid to its members in the form of assistance in times of
illness or financial hardship, as well as funeral benefits.” Anthony’s membership likely
contributed in some way to the construction of St. Joseph Hall at 160 Derby Street, which
9
Thirteenth Census of the United States, Year: 1910; Census Place: Salem Ward 1, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll:
T624_587; Page: 13B; Enumeration District: 0455; FHL microfilm: 1374600
10
Findagrave.com (Memorial ID: 182226058)
11
These are the children’s chosen anglicized names. Records may also appear with their Polish names or
nicknames. Findagrave.com (Memorial ID: 182226058)
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
6
�opened in 1909. 12
Katie Jendraszek passed away in 1919 at age 34. Shortly after her death, her widowed
sister, Mary Swisienska moved in, likely to help raise Katie’s young children. The Jendraszek
family rented homes on Union Street and Turner Street before purchasing the two-family home
at 7 Curtis Street in 1924. 13 The family rented out the other unit of their new home to a rotating
list of tenants, often consisting of factory workers and their families. In 1943, Anthony’s son
Felix and his wife Mary began occupying the home’s second unit.
As they aged, many of the Jendraszek children followed their father into the leather
industry, working in factories in Salem and Peabody. When Anthony passed away in 1974, his
children inherited the family home on Curtis Street. The siblings signed over their ownership to
Felix (1907-1990) and his wife, Mary (1911-1997). The home stayed in the family until 2019,
when it was sold L. H. Capital Development, LLC. In total, the home was in the Jendraszek family
for 95 years.
12
Stanton, C. (2009). In the heart of Polish Salem: An ethnohistorical study of St. Joseph Hall and its neighborhood.
Boston, MA: Northeast Region Ethnography Program, National Park Service.
13
Fourteenth Census of the United States Year: 1920; Census Place: Salem Ward 1, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll:
T625_696; Page: 16A; Enumeration District: 254
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
7
�Owner
Years of
Ownership
1849-1890
Number
of Years
41
Purchase Price
$700
Document
Referenced
407-139
538-247
619-275
1890-1917
27
$2,020
1276-410
1917-1921
4
2371-219
William J. White
1921-1924
3
2477-557
House and barn listed
Antoni Jendraszek
Felix Jendraszek
Mary Jendraszek
LH Capital Development,
LLC.
1924-1974
1974-2019
50
45
$1.00 and other
considerations
$1.00 and other
considerations
$2,400
$2,000
Assumed $600 mortgage
Both illiterate
Execution of Possession
2602-41
6070-138
2019-2020+
<1
$454,000
37854-564
Antoni “Anthony” Jendraszek
Estate of Antoni “Anthony” Jendraszek
Probate No. 299661
Estate of Mary Jendraszek
Probate No. ES97P154EP1
Joseph Karier
Augustus H. Perry
Sarah E. Perry
William A. Perry
William F. White
Margaret White
Mary A. White
Notes
Deed only references land, no buildings.
The connection between Perry and Karier is unknown.
Karier lived at adjacent 4 Orange Street.
This home has been owned by only three families: The Perry Family: 41 years, The White Family: 34 years, and The Jendraszek Family: 95 years
�Residents
Horatio B. Perry
Augustus H. Perry
William A. Perry
Mrs. Horatio B. Perry
Frank H. Jewett
George H. Kimball
Frank Parsons
William White
Bridget Gilleece
Mary A. Gilleece
Michael Coleman
David H. Jowders
Thomas H. Bailey
John C. Smith
Charles J. H. Burkinshaw
Charles Melancon
Patrick J. O’Keefe
Mrs. Hannah B. Deasy
Thomas E. Deasy
Mrs. Ellen Crean
Catherine Crean
Dennis Crean
Cornelius J. Crean
John J. Leary
J.B. Doucette
Michael Szczatnik
Cornelius J. Sullivan
S.L. Lapham
Isodore Gagnon
Delma Gagnon
Directory Year
1857-1872
1857-1890
Directory Notes
Gunsmith and Locksmith on Blaney Wharf (Later at West Place)
Gunsmith at West Place (Late 16 ½ Lafayette Street)
Clerk/Owner at Perry & Hayward Clothing 225 Essex Street
1884-1886
1886
1888
1890
1890
Launderer 215 Washington Street
Foundry Helper
Clerk at 7 Derby Wharf
Widow of Andrew D. Gilleece
Saleswoman at 240 Essex Street
No occupation listed
Shoemaker
Shoelaster
Clergyman/Pastor
Police Officer
Beater out
Shoe repairer at 123 ½ Essex Street
No occupation listed
Laborer
Widow of Dennis Crean
Labeler
Laborer
Morocco Dresser
Sawyer
Teamster
Laborer
Brass worker
No occupation listed
Painter
1893
1893-1897
1895
1897
1899
1899
1901
1901-1906
1903-1905
1907-1911
1907-19-17
1912
1913-1915
1916-1917
1917
�Honorah Sonigan
Bronislaw Napierski
Eva Napierski
Mary Holland
Andre Couillard
Agnes Couillard
Caroline LaPointe
Adelard LaPointe
Diana LaPointe
Anthony Jendraszek
Bertha Jendraszek
Felix Jendraszek
William Jendraszek
Charles Raphael
Jean M. Raphael
Thomas J. Zak
Wanda Zak
Michael Szumski
Anna Szumski
John P. Szumski
Sabina A. Szumski
1918-1924
1918
1919-1924
1921-1923
1924-1926
1929-1964
1943-1964
1929-1932
1935
1936-1943
Widow of Mathias Sonigan
Janitor
No occupation listed
Widow of Thomas Holland
Leather Worker
No occupation listed
Widow of Louis LaPointe
Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.
Lampworker
Leather Worker
Leather Worker
Leather Worker
Shoe Worker
Felix occupied unit #2 beginning in 1943, he previously lived with his
parents in unit #1
Leather Worker
No occupation listed
Restaurant at 171 Derby Street
Iron Worker
No occupation listed
Student
Student
Note: All available City Directories were consulted. Some years were not available at the time of research.
Available Salem City Directories span 1837-1964
�Sources
�1851 Salem Map
�--
,, ,. '
~-
r1, ..1
•
7\
•
-.
J11
•
•
C.
C.
.,.
1874 Salem Atlas (Plate A)
�I
SHEET
r. --.. . ---t------~ _..,....,..
p
-
-- ~...,. ~ - ..,,.------__,. - -
-
-
~
~---------------,.'!'!'~--=======-:'\
-v
w ------ _ , _
---
~
,
.,
~
1890-1903 Salem Atlas (Plate 9)
-
�Cl)
Ill
1897 Salem Atlas (Plate 3)
�enrJM
emmD
8r1JdY
\_ _:;;.__
~
""
~
c::.
~
(\)
1911 Salem Atlas (Plate 4)
�.P
!J
1906-1938 Salem Atlas (Plate 15)
�oa~em.
t'l ER.&1.-Tb• fnner 1 l f B ratio B. P rry. wbo died on
Sntur\la~ t' \"C'Di u • took plac: y ,terd3y from bL late resltlt ncP on
rtl-. •tr t, and WA! attend d by lar~ number
relative and frl 1ul... li r P f' rt'J • ·a a promtnent and
"P • lr>tl t·ltiz D aucl """" "' J DOWD '
~ lltul gunsmttb,
11 which t,,1~1u •,:, be "fl tor many ,ean ::ucct- s:fully
.1gt·• •
,n-
Boston Post
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Tuesday, May 26, 1874
pg. 3
L E CAL NOT IC E •.
TI C E I
ut,
trn.: or t
ton, lo t
l ken "'
ERERY G I VE
ber
duly
/lpo nt
I.
h
d
cata
tna
>
• 1
ronnt.y
ff'olk, d
ed,
lf'
t at h
"
)
la"' ,Urecta.
ll p
h ., n
n
th
of lri t.1 ... - _ ..,,~rt arc req1 red
..
th
, nnd all
Ind b id t-0
p ym nc. lo me.
E. Pt:l<K\·. ~dtnloiatratrix. ~Olton, J 111
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --Jo.2- -
are call•d upon to
The Boston Globe
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Wednesday, January 27, 1892
pg. 6
•
I
�Sch edule 0£ Roal Estate in D etuil.
~ OLI-~.
~1~
..
01'8,
c,-,c,
Sch edule o f P e1·sonal E!-<ta,te.
D05".
,; 3
L,
t, 11-
/-'9/
Probate 49990, Sarah Perry, September 3, 1877
r
CTt.
~
0-&
c,-,o
t:?-~
�Nathaniel Hawthorne Birthplace, c. 1890
27 Union Street - Salem, Massachusetts
Moved to The House of the Seven Gables complex in 1958.
(Salem State University Archives and Special Collections)
�~ ·,
,·.
' " ·Jt
HAWTHORNE
BIRTHPLACE LEFT TO
thornc's birthpli\cc at 2i Union st., Salem.
ARCHBISHOP-Nathaniel
Haw-
�--~---------------- I
·
,
HAWTHORNE
Conli111U"d /to11, tit~ fir.st Page
e,·cr havl' !IC'cn the ln!!lde or the 1Khoo1 In Conrord.
home as the White family had I Ar~hbbhc,, C hlnr last nl1llt
. l d.
t
11 . 1aid he wu ..u,,emelJ pleut"d
• J[rea , 1sln!! le or • ow1n1 '"•' "ach • hoase nf hbh'lflc-al
curious outsiders in. The late = sl,:nlDnMe ■h aid he left I& the
i ~tu. \Yhitl' 11dh,r•d to the fam• '. Charu,. F■11d."'
lly w1i1h first expr(.'$.:led rh ■ ny He said hr h:1, ,wt ~ <1t·trr•
-rt
years ago.
mlMd what . the futur holcl~ for
It is bl'lieved that then h:we llhe I ndmark but ~:11t1 h" :111t k1 •
ncvt'r ~cm any photo1rapha PIIINI that It would be- to ront inur
taken of the interior
•~ menmrlalize H:i"'·thornc 11nd
.
:
h1~ d•u~hler.
1
The fablc-d landm:irk, built
fn 1680, was b ..que:.lhf'd to lhe
Catholic rhar·ty by M s C th
1
r · 11 •
erlne M. White, who lived in
the hnuse 25 years, She died
F eb , 20 ·
The birthplace ot the man
h
w . o wrote such ma!ltcrpircts as
"The Scarlet Letter" and
.. Hou.se ot the Sevt'n Gablt's"
WIii b<1uiht by the Willi
Whit f ·1 b
rr. . nm
"
Offll Y I out ,o1 )'cars
ag~nly a handful of ~nons
The ad,cftnt au\bhodr \\ 35 born ln
A de~,:,tnd,mt of nlrl r11r it :-i n
a sccon • oor e . room.
stock Ha thnrnr w:1!1 horn in 1h,:,
The history or the home dur- home' on tnd<"f't'nd.:nrf' D:i y in
Ina the owner11hip of the \Vhtte
family Is In direct rontrast to
that of . ,nother S111,m Jnnd.•
mark whkh H11wthornc made
famous. the House or the Seven
Gables. Thota!londs visit th11it
home annually,
The woman who bequrathed
the hou e wru, 11 dnu,rhter-tn•
J,w of the White,, who bou,cht
Continued from the Fiut Poot the home from the ~~vinaa at
yenn. While wu • labol't'r tflr
Allhough his appointment
the pavinl d~partment in
wa, stron,tly protci1ted by Rn Salem.
alumni 1ro~p _ ecause he was
b
BUNKER
ff'rnr
If
,
•nip
it ta
. ,.,."
d111u1
t~!~
F.'
TR
o,
\804. He liwd thf'rf' c\unn h 1
.·
Hrlr bo1h..,.)d_ until thr . r:im1ly
511~vtd
em,
to M~•n•.
Uc- h\·r ,t_ 1n ·;
Qonrnrd
and Lc-no.,c,
amonr olH'tr pl er,.
·~ . ~ - - - - - - - - - - - -
Boston ,s oldest SllVlng!
.
Boston •s newest sa
Hawthorne house in Salem willed to prelate's fund. (1957, Apr 11).
Daily Boston Globe
�Anthony Jendraszek
Possibly taking in front of 7 Curtis Street
Photo courtesy of A. S. Mielniczuk
(Findagrave.com Memorial ID: 182226058)
�......~,
. .
I An111111 'h.t.T I Jug VllalnD .t.NY1I . . , _ _ u.
c---◄
....,
United States, Selective Service System. Selective Service Registration Cards,
World War II: Fourth Registration. Records of the Selective Service System, Record Group Number 147.
National Archives and Records Administration.
�Unofficial Property Record Card - Salem, MA
General Property Data
Parcel ID 35-0339-0
Prior Parcel ID 11 -Property Owner LH CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT, LLC
Mailing Address 581 BOYLSTON STREET STE 604
City BOSTON
Mailing State MA
Account Number
Property Location 7 CURTIS STREET
Property Use Two Family
Most Recent Sale Date 9/18/2019
Legal Reference 37854-564
Grantor JENDRASZEK CHESTER,
Zip 02116
Sale Price 454,000
ParcelZoning R2
Land Area 0.058 acres
Current Property Assessment
Card 1 Value
Building Value 293,100
Xtra Features 400
Value
Land Value 143,600
Total Value 437,100
Building Description
Building Style Muiti-Garden
# of Living Units 2
Year Built 1850
Building Grade Average
Building Condition Average
Finished Area (SF) 2748.89996
Number Rooms 10
# of 3/4 Baths 0
Foundation Type Brick/Stone
Frame Type Wood
Roof Structure Gambrel
Roof Cover Asphalt Shgl
Siding Wood Shingle
Interior Walls Plaster
# of Bedrooms 4
# of 1/2 Baths 0
Flooring Type Hardwood
Basement Floor Concrete
Heating Type Forced H/Air
Heating Fuel Gas
Air Conditioning 0%
# of Bsmt Garages 0
# of Full Baths 2
# of Other Fixtures 0
Legal Description
Narrative Description of Property
This property contains 0.058 acres of land mainly classified as Two Family with a(n) Muiti-Garden style building, built about 1850 , having Wood Shingle
exterior and Asphalt Shgl roof cover, with 2 unit(s), 10 room(s), 4 bedroom(s), 2 bath(s), 0 half bath(s).
Property Images
Disclaimer: This information is believed to be correct but is subject to change and is not warranteed.
�Inventory No:
SAL.2569
Historic Name:
Common Name:
Address:
7 Curtis St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Derby Street
Local No:
35-339
Year Constructed:
c 1855
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Victorian Eclectic
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House; Single Family Dwelling
House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood; Wood Shingle
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This file was accessed on: Monday, January 27, 2020 at 7:12: PM
�FORM NO.
AREA
FORM B - BUILDING
311
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
80 BOYLSTON STREET',
BOSTON, MA 02116
Salem
7 Curtis
Street
H Present r e s i d e n t i a l
c
res
maps
MA?P"
Show property's location in relation
m$
to nearest cross streets and/or
geographical features. Indicate
H
a l l buildings between inventoried
property and nearest intersection.
Indicate north.
,
Date
Moved
sr.
Organization
Outbuildings
e a s t end a d d i t i o n
X
Recorded by
Exterior wall fabric wood s h i n g l e s
Major a l t e r a t i o n s ( w i t h dates)_
1 1
*
Style_
Architect
FSSEX- sr.
IX !
x
Date
e
Approx. acreage l e s s than one a c r e
Setting
Debra H i l b e r t
residential
Salem P l a n n i n g Department
November, 1985
(Staple additional sheets here)
�ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE (Describe important architectural features and
evaluate in terms of other buildings within the community.)
B u i l t to accommodate a small l o t , 7 C u r t i s Street has a high narrow roof
o r i e n t e d gambrel end to the s t r e e t . The house has l i t t l e decoration to speak o f
except f o r . a bracketed doorhood which i s probably a l a t e V i c t o r i a n a d d i t i o n . I t s
asymmetrical 6-bay facade faces north and there i s a -two-stoxy e l l at the east end,
Many modest homes such as t h i s one are l o c a t e d i n the Derby Street area.
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE (Explain the role owners played in local or state
history and h w the building relates to the development of the ccmimunity.)
o
This house does not appear i n the 1837 Salem Directory nor on the 1851 Salem
Map.
I t i s p o s s i b l e that the s t r u c t u r e was moved here but i t could also have a mid19th century date since gambrel roofs p e r s i s t e d i n Salem w e l l a f t e r the Georgian
period.
In 1849, Hannah H. King s o l d the land on which t h i s house s i t s to Joseph K a r i e r ,
a mariner. No mention of a b u i l d i n g on the p a r c e l i s mentioned i n the deed. By'
1874'the house was the property of Augustus and Horatio P e r r y , gunsmiths at West
P l a c e . The Perry's had p r e v i o u s l y l i v e d at 25 Carlton S t r e e t .
The Derby S t r e e t area was p r i m a r i l y developed by those w i t h maritime i n t e r e s t s .
By the mid-19th century, however, shipping became l e s s p r o f i t a b l e . -Subsequently,
tradesmen and laborers then began to. populate the neighborhood.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES ( a e of publication, author, date and publisher)
nm
1
1837 Salem D i r e c t o r y
1851, 1874 Salem Maps
Essex County R e g i s t r y of Deeds, Book 407/Leaf 139, Book 1276/Eeaf 410
10M - 7/82
�Deeds
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�~---237-j _ _ _ _ _ __
cmn~ONWEALTH OF Y.ASSACHUSETTS.
Essex, ss.
219
TO the Sherlff of our said
EXecution for
Possesslon
County of Essex, or either of his Deputies, or the Constables of the City
of Salem, or Town of - within said County, duly qualified according to law
to serve civil process in said Salem, or to any or either of them,
ING:
WHEREAS,
GREETl
to
Wh1te
Mary A. White of Salem, in our county of Essex judgment
creditor, before our First District court of Essex, holden at Salem, in
1
Gagnon
Memo 1n margin as
in original.
said County, for clvil business on the thirteenth day of of August A. D.
7,--..u.~ <• • « ~~~ '
1917, by the consideration of our said court recovered judgment for his
title and possession of and 1n a certain tract or parcel of land with the
building thereon situate number seven on Curtis Street, in said SALEM
agalnst Isador Gagnon of Salem, in our county of Essex, who had unjustly
Costs
withheld, put out or amoved the said plaintiff from his possession thereof;
and also at the said Court recovered Judgment against said defendant for
·the
SUJn
of six dollars, six cents, damages and costs of suit, as to us ap-
pears of record:
WE COMMAND YOU, therefore, that without delay you cause
the said plaintiff to have possession of and in said premises
MANil
WE ALSO COMI
YOU, therefore, that of the money, goods or chattels, or lands of the
said judgment debtor wlthin your precinct, you cause to be paid and satisJ
fied unto the said creditor at the value thereof in money, the aforesaid
sum of six dollars and six cents which to the said plaintiff is adjudged,
I
I
1
I
for his costs with interest on the same from the said date; and thereof also to satisfy yourself for your own fees.
And for want of such money,
goods or chattels, or lands, of the said debtor to be by him shown unto you
'
or found ?Ti thin your precinct, to the acceptance of the said creditor, for
•
satisfying the aforesaid sums with interest thereon from said date, we com-
mand you to take the body of.the said debtor, and him commit unto our jail•
in Salem, in said county, and detain _in your custody. within our said jail,!I
until he pay the full sums aforementioned, with your fees, or that he be
discharged by the said plaintiff, or otherwise according to law.
Hereof
'
I
fail not, and make return of this writ, with your doings therein, unto our,
said Court, within sixty days next coming.
WITNESS, George B. sears, Es-
quire, Justice of our said District court, at Salem aforesaid, this flfteenth day of August in the year of our Lord one thousand n1ne hundred and
seventeen.
1
Essex, ss.
Morgan J .- Mcsweeney
Salem, August 18 A. D. 1917
Clerk. ( Court seal)
I
I
By virtue of the within execution
I have this day caused the within named uary A. White to have possession
of and in the within described premises.
Labor
5.oo
Recording Fee
1.00
Salem, August 18, A. D. 1917.
a.oo
Demand
il.oo
Delivery
1.00
Harry D. Wheeler Deputy Sheriff.
I have this day been put into possession
of the within described premises. ·
I
'
$6.06
�220
+-------------------------· I
Mary A. White
I Essex as.
by Wm. J. White
I
Agent
Received Aug. 27, 1917. 10 m. past 10 A.M. Recorded and Examined.
I
Rogers
' I, John Rogers of Newbury, Essex County, Massachusetts, for consideration
I
to
, paid, grant to Ida May Rogers, my daughter, of said Newbury; with warranty
Rogers
covenants the land in said NEWBURY with the buildings thereon known as the
Hector Rogers place bounded.and described as follows,
on the southerly
aide by Fruit street, on the westerly side by land of Cl1arles s. Rogers
1and on the Easterly and Northerly sides by land formerly of Daniel Johnson,
'
I containing one acre more or less. WITNESS rzy hand and seal this Seventeenth
.
:day of August 1917
John Rogers
IF. L. Ferguson
COl.!.MOlilWEALTH OF YLASSACHUSETTS
!Newbury Aug. 17th 1917
(seal)
Essex ss.
Then personally appeared the above named John Rog-1
I
era and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free act and deed,;
;before me
I
I
Frank L. Ferguson
Justice of the Peace_.
Essex ss. Received Aug. 27, 1917. 20 m. past 12 P.M. Recorded and Examined.
Discharge
Donaldson
to
, I, Alice B Donaldson of Hamilton holder of a mortgage from Cornelius J Mul~
, lins to me dated July 26, 1915 recorded with Essex South District Deeds,
Mullins
book 2302, page 567, acknowledge sat1sfact1on of the same
WITNESS rzy hand
and seal this twenty fourth day or August 1917
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Allee B. Donaldson
(seal)
I
Essex ss.
August 24th 1917
Then personally appeared the above named Allee
B. Donaldson and acknowledged the roregoing instrument to be her free act
and deed,
before me,
George c. Donaldson
Justice of the Peace.
Essex ss. Received Aug. 27, 1917. 40 m. past 12 P.M. Recorded and Examined.
Discharge
Merchants
Natl. Bk.of
Salem
to
, The Merchants National Bank or Salem holder of a mortgage from Odilion Pelletter
&
seraphine Pelletier to Alphonse
M
Joly dated May 26,1916 recorded •
i with Essex .South District Registry Deeds, Book 2330 Page 449 acknowledge
Pelletier
et al. satisfaction of the same WITNESS my hand and seal this 27 day of August 1917
COMMONWEALTH OF
j MASSACHUSETTS
Essex as.
1
I 27,
1917
August
)
)
)
)
)
Tte Merchants National Bank of
Salem., Mass.,
( corporate seal)
By Josiah H. Gifford
cashier
I
Then personally appeared the above named Josiah H. Gifford cash-
I ier and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be the free act and deed
1of The ~ercr.ants National Bank of Salem,
I
1
H. M. Batchelder
before me,
Justice of the Peace.
I
!Essex ss. Received Aug. 27, 1917. 13 m. past 10 A.M. Recorded and Examined.
-----------------------------~
+----- -
--· --. ------ - - -- - - - ---- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
�+------il---------i'Z7
________
557
--j
'
Registry or Deeds, book 1290, page l, and being the same estate conveyed
to ma by Mad E, Cahoon, by deed recorded in book 2337, page 148, in said
Registry.
is mortgage including all furnaces, heaters, ranges, mantels,
gas and ele tric light fixtures, screens, screen doors, awnings and all
other fixt
or whatever kind and nature at present contained in said
buildings,
nd hereinafter placed therein prior to the fUll paymant and
discharge o
this mortgage.
In case of a foreclosure sale or assignment
by this mor gagee, this grantee is hereby appointed the attorney irrevocably
of the gran or to make an assignn~nt of all the Insurance Policies on the
buildings,
n the land covered by this mortgage, or collect all money due
on such Ins ranee Policy or Policies if the same are cancelled.
This
mortgage is;upon the Statutory condition, for any breach or Which the mort
gagee shall have the statutory Power of Sale.
subject to
The property is conveyed
he following encumbrance!!_ a mor,tg. held by the Bank.
I, Mary
A. Coughlin wife of said mortgagor release to the mortgagee all rights of
dower and homestead and all other rights and interests in the mortgaged
premises.
D,
W,
I TNJ<iSS our hands and seals this seventh day of March 1921.
Q,uill
CO:MMONWEALT
)
( seal~
)
OF
John F, Coughlin
Mary A, Coughlin
( seal ~
MASSACHUSET S Essex ss. Beverly, March 7th, 1821. 'l'hen personally appearaJ
the above n med John F, Coughlin and acknowledged the foregoing instrumen
to be his f ee act and deed, before me
D, W, Q,uill
Essex ss.
Justice of the Peace
ceived Mar. 12, 1821, 36 m. past 9 A.M. Recorded and Examined
----------------------------------------------------------KNOW ALL
BY THESE PRESENTS that I, Mary A. White of Salem, county of
White
Essex, co
nwealth of Massachusetts, in consideration of one dollar and
to
other good
nd valuable consideration to me paid by my brother, William
White
J. White of said Salem, do give grant bargain sell and convey unto the
Tl'lree ~6., One $2 •
One #1 .& One .50
J. White all of the real estate situate in said SALEM howso- I R.Btamps Documentary. Canceled.
ever these eral parcels may be bounded and described Which were devised
said
to me by my father, William White, deceased, by his will heretofore allowed
by the Prob te Court
for said county of Essex; and all the real estate
situated in SALEM which was devised to me by my mother, Margaret White,
deceased, b
her will heretofore allowed by said Probate court; and also
all the rea
estate the title to Which I hold by deeds from any and all
granters, i~cluding especially the real estate conveyed to ma by Ellen
Grady by he
deed dated October twenty fourth 1800, recorded with Essex
South Deeds Book 1626 Page 276; meaning to convey hereby all the real
estate and
ll interests in real estate wherever situated which I now ovm.
�558
The granted premises include the following parcels, in said SALEM:house
and lot numbered 27 Union Street; house and lot numbered 23 Union street;
house and lot numbered 7 Curtis street; house, barn and lot null1bered 16
Daniels street; house and lot numbered 28 Essex Street; vacant lot on
Congress Street on which V1ere formerly two houses numbered 36 and 37,
burned in the great fire of 11314; vacant lot on Harbor street on which
was formerly house numbered 28, burned in said fire.
TO HAVE AND TO
HOLD the granted premises, to said William J. White and his heirs and
assigns to their own use and behoof forever, with all the privileges and
appurtenances thereto belonging.
And I do for myself and my heirs, execu-
tors and administrators, covenant with the grantee and his heirs and assi1 ns
that I am lawfully seized in ree simple of the granted premises, that· the:
are free from all incumorances, that I have good right to sell and convey
the same as aforesaid; and that I will, for myself, and my heirs executor
and administrators shall warrant and defend the same to the grantee, and
his heirs and assigns forever against the lawful claims and demands or
all persons.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I hereunto set my hand and seal this
eleventh day of March in the year one thousand nine hundred and twenty on, •
Signed sealed and de-
)
Mary A. Whi ta
( seal )
livered in presence of
)
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Essex as.
Alden p. White
)
March 11, 1021.
Then personally appeared
the said Mary A. White and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be
her tree act and deed, before me
Justice or the Peace
Alden p. Whi ta
My commission expires March 18, 1021.
Essex ss. Received Mar, 12, 1921, 40 m. past 9 A,M. Recorded and Examined
------------------------------------------------------------------------Discharge
KNOW ALL MH:N BY THESE PRESENTS that I, Lydia A. Farnham, as trustee tor
Farnham Tree.
the benefit or Francis M. Farnnam, the mortgagee in a certain mortgage
to
Bruley
given by Joseph
w.
Bru1:ly to me dated August 23, A,D, 1917, and recorded
with Essex so.Dist. Reg. of Deeds, book 2373, page 169 do hereby acknowle, ge
that I have received rrom the said Joseph
w. Bruley the mortgagee named
1:
said mortgage, full payment and satisfaction or the same; and in consideration thereof I do hereby cancel and discharge said mortgage, and release
and quitclaim unto the said Joseph
w.
Bruley and his heirs and assigns
forever, the premises thereby conveyed,
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I hereunto
set my hand and seal this sixteenth day of March, A, D, 1921,
Signed and sealed
)
Lydia A. Farnham
in the presence of -
)
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Essex as.
March 16, 1921.
( seal )
Then personally appeared the abo,re named Lydia A. Farnha.i
�~------------------------- -
--
•
50
tion therewith shall be erected- upon said lot.
Said dwellins house shall
be erected at least 50 feet back from Ocean Avenue and such garage shall
be set ce.ck at least twenty (20} feet from said Avenue; provided, however,
that steps, bay windows, verandas, cornices, and other usual :projections
may project into said reserved space.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the said Bonell -
Adams Co. has caused these. presents to-be signed and its corporate seal
to be hereto affixed in its. name and on. its behalf by Edward H. . Bonelli,
.its Treasurer, hereunto duly authorized,- this 6th day. of June A. D., 1924.
.
COMMONWEALTH OF
)
Bonelli-Adams Co.
(Cor_porate seal)
MASSACHUSETrS
)
By Edward H. Bonelli
•
Suffolk, ss: Boston, June 6, 1924.
Treasurer
-Then l)ersonally al)peared the above
named Edward H. Bonelli and. acknowledged the :foregoing instrument to be
the free act and deed of' the Bonelli-Adams Co., before me
c.
Gertrude Connell
Notary Public
. My co~ssion expires Oct. 21 1930.
I, C. Gertrude Connell, Clerk. of the. Bonelli-Adams Co., a corporation duil. ,
Vote
established by law in Massachusetts, hereby certify that'at a meeting of
j
the Directors of said Cor_poration, duly noti:ried and held at Boston,Ma.ssa
I
chusetts on February 5, 1924, at which a quorum was present, the following
I
vote was unanimously passed, pursuant -to provisions of' the by-laws of said!
•
Corporation.
VOTED:
That all deeds, mortgages, _assignments,. discharges,
bonds for deeds, releases, tra.'lsf'ers, aiµ-eements, and all other cont;,:acts
of the corporation,_ shall be signed by Edward H. Bonelli its president or
its treasurer.
-I also certify that it am;,ears by my records that the fore-
going vote is in full force- and effect, and that Edward H. Bonelli is the
•
president and the treasurer o:r the Corporation.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I
have hereunto set my hand and the seal of said Corporation,. this 3rd day
of June A. D. 1924.
C. Gertrude Connell
Clerk o:r the Bonelli-Adams Co.
(Corporate seal)
Essex ss. Received June 7, 1924 59 m. past 11 A. M. Recorded and Examined
------------------------------------------------------------------------~
White
to
KNOW ALL MEl:'1 :BY THESE PRESENTS THAT I, William J. White, of Salem, Essex
County, Massachusetts, being unmarried, for consideration paid, grant to
Jandraszek
Antoni Jandraszek, of said Salem with WARRANTY COVENANTS the land in said
Two $2.
SALEM with the buildings thereon bounded and described as follows: Begin-
R.Stamps
Documentary
Canceled
ning on CUrtis Street at the comer of the fence at land formerly o:r Ha:nna;h
I
H. King, more recently of Samuel Calley and running Southerly by said Cur•·
tis street a bout thirty nine :reet eleven inches ( 39' 11"-} to land formerlyj
of Brooks, now or late of Ames; thence running Easterly by said land six:t.
three feet seven inches. (63'7") or thereabouts. to Orange Street; thence
�7
_2602 __ _
'
t--
51
'
I
.
· running Northerly by said Orange Street about f or t y thr ee (43) feet ·, thencl.e
I
I running
Westerly by land fo~erly of King and more recently of Calley sixl
., ty one feet ten inches (61 '10") or thereabouts to CUrtis Street and point
'
'
.
i begun at,
.
?38~ng a portion of the premises conveyed tp me by deed of my
sister Mary A, White, dated March 11, 1921, and recorded with Essex South
· Dist. Registry of Deeds in Book 2477, :page 557.
this seventh day of June 1924,
I COMMONVTEl\IlrH OF MASSACHUSETI'S
'
I
WITNESS - hand .and seal
William J. White
Es~ex ss. June 7, 1924.
(seal)
Then personally
appeared the above named .William J. White and acknowledged the foregoing
instrument to be his free act and deed, before me,
Elmer W, Liebsch
Yy
Justice of. the Peace
commission expires Feb. 23, 1929.
Essex ss. Received June 7, 1924 7 m. :past 12 P. M. Recorded and Examined
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.- - - - ""'! - - - - - - - -
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, THAT I, Antoni Jandraszek of Salem in the
Jandraszek
!County of Essex, Commonwealth of .Massachusetts, being unmarried, for con-
to
sideration :paid,·grant to the Salem Five Cents Savings Bank, a con,oratio
Salem F.C.S.Bk.
I duly established by law and loca.ted in Salem in the County of Essex and
1Commonwealth of Massachusetts, with MORTGAGE, COVENANTS, to secure the pay-
~
Ii. ,f,ff;
: ment of Two Thousand Four .Huruired Dollars in one year with Five .per cent
interest per. annum, payable quarterly, as provided ina note of even date,
1
•
the land in said SAIEM with the buildings thereon bounded. and described
"
. as follows: Beginning on Curtis Street at the corner of the fence at land
I
•
formerly of Hannah H. King, more recently of Samuel Calley and running
11
::u::l;o:e:::d0: : : : ~ ~ : : : :;o:t:h::t:::~e t::::ee=~in:::e~:;
'll ")
;by said land sixty three feet seven inches (63'7") or thereabouts to Oran e
Street.; thence rurming Northerly by said Orange Street. about forty three
I
· (43) feet; then running Westerly by land formerly of King and more recent}'
ly of Calley sixty one. feet ten inches (61'10") or thereabouts to Curtis
Street and point begun at.
Being the same premises conveyed to me by dee
of William J, White to be recorded herewith.
This mortgage. is upon the
Statutory Condition, and upon the further condition that the grantor or
'his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns shall :pay all taxes and
assessments on said premises, whether in the nature of taxes or assessments
'
I
,now in being or not, shall keep the buildings now or hereafter standing
I
, thereon insured against fire in a sum satisfactory to said Bank or its suc-
I
its I
cessors or assigns, all insurance .to be made payable in case of loss to
said Bank or its successors or assigns, and shall pay to said Bank or
successors -or assigns all such sums with interest as it or they may pay or
~
'
/!SJo ,
�����
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Curtis Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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7 Curtis Street, Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Horatio B. Perry
Gunsmith
and his wife
Sarah Ashton
Built c. 1856
Creator
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Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
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Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
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Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
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Built c. 1856
House History written June 2020
Contributor
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Jen Ratliff
Language
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English
1856
2020
7/Curtis Street
Ashton
Massachusetts
Perry
Salem
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/c01c4865fc2ec6a2e45430292b077783.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=lbeNX1jJqTlmUUSZVnwomZDWq%7EY7he0vjAPozAm49RDcpoXUwroUm60dA-dwfOz6JURH%7EPr89lnZ4zcNQBkUOF-8iCs6VlqIr6qGHd9-xYfAEfA%7Ex8FrpnUtEdiqhaqZ7E7rKURiOxeNw6Cxx%7EP6CVuIzwyGHiqk2W0je0Q81VW-KI7aw4m47NLoMrFldEy7m9lGywUFIsrOt%7EPLMN1a6pIcT2HV0x7Hnpc4CN-Xe0Rwlmfofumw5sGpXP9EiBx0c4KDb%7EtwurslFc1EJRbYwFcHdn675AX6H8033WlW0Xrm1TAMyHBR8P7XjoRE9Del6XHiKRGseyuLNanah9FXsQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
a7ebf1ac5a2be65f06f43440930f21c2
PDF Text
Text
70 Webb Street
Built for
Edward O. Sinclair
Grocer
1921
Webb Street Neighborhood Grocery
1921-1976
Research Provided by
Amy Kellett
January 2020
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2020
�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
Prior to the late 19th century, the land under and adjoining 70 Webb Street was part of the
waterscape of Salem, Massachusetts known as 'the flats' of Collins Cove. In May of 1891 William
J. Conlin, a local milk dealer, purchased the house that still stands on the southern corner of
Webb and Briggs Streets (34 Briggs) from James P. Cook. At the time the Greek Revival home
was a waterfront property, to include the flats on Collins Cove:
[…]all my right, title and interest to a certain
parcel of land on the flats bounded […] North by
the extension of Briggs street; Easterly by land
of the Boston & Maine Railroad; Southerly by land
of Fanning and; Westerly by Webb street;
containing about 12000 square feet. The Northerly
and Southerly lines of said last names lot are
subject to any change which may be made by a
commission appointed by the Supreme Judicial
Court to determine the boundary lines of flats in
Collins Cove.1
1851 Salem City Map — Area of 70 Webb Street (indicated with arrow)
More than 70 years before the construction at 70 Webb Street, the land that it now stands on was
part of the Collins Cove flats, later filled in through the area of the railroad line.
1
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds — Book 1310; Page 388
A. Kellett — January 2020
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�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
For the next twenty-five years William J. Conlin and family enjoyed the home with an
unobstructed view of Collins Cove from the windows at 34 Briggs Street. In 1920 a business
arrangement was made between the Conlin Family and Edward O. Sinclair to build a grocery
facing the recently completed road running perpendicular to Briggs, named Webb Street.
Edward Oliver Sinclair was born in Salem on the 10th of November of 1876, America’s
centennial year, the youngest child of Edward Manning Sinclair and Mary Ellen Tuttle. Edward
Oliver’s father, Edward Manning Sinclair, born on December 2, 1846, in Liverpool, Nova Scotia,
Canada, was the youngest son of Ann Sawler, a Nova Scotia native, and John Gasper Sinclair,
originally from Germany. Shortly after Edward Manning was born, the family relocated from
Canada to Salem, and by 1850 the family are listed living in Ward One of Salem, Massachusetts
(according to the US National Census). As a young man, Edward M. Sinclair made his living
working as a clerk at various businesses, including Gayle & Co. at Phillips Wharf while boarding
at 15 Essex Street. Three years later, in 1869 Edward M. Sinclair is listed living at the entrance to
Phillips Wharf (29 Derby), when he met Salem native Mary Ellen Tuttle — the two were wed on
the 20th of October, 1870.
1866 Salem Directory
Commission Merchants
Historically, commission
merchants were brokers
responsible for all aspects of
exchange including
transportation and disposition
of goods themselves, as well as
providing credit to their
customers. Edward M. Sinclair
worked for Gayle & Co. as a
clerk on Phillips Wharf in 1866.
Over the next six years, the couple settled in the house at 16 Oliver Street (a home built by
Aaron Osborne in 1830) and welcomed three children: a daughter named Mary Ellen Sinclair on
the 27th of April, 1872, Arthur Henry Sinclair on the 1st of February, 1874, and finally Edward
Oliver Sinclair on November 10th, 1876. Sadly, just two years later on the 16th of November,
A. Kellett — January 2020
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�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
1878, Edward Manning Sinclair committed suicide at the age of 31, leaving his wife a widow, 28
year-old Mary E. Sinclair, and three fatherless young children, then six, four, and two years old.
The Widow Sinclair and her children continued to live at 16 Oliver Street, along with Mary E.
Sinclair’s mother and uncle, the Widow Mary E. Tuttle and her brother, John W. Willis, a clerk in
a local furnishing company.
1880 US Federal Census — Salem, Essex Co. Massachusetts — Oliver Street
The extended Sinclair & Tuttle family are listed at 16 Oliver Street, with Mary E. Tuttle keeping
house, John W. Willis, a clerk in furnishing, and Mary E. Sinclair, a clerk in a hat shop, also known
as a millinery. Mary E. Sinclair, aged 9, and 'Harry' (Arthur Henry) aged 6 attended school, while
three-year-old 'Oliver' (Edward Oliver) remained at home with his grandmother.
Mary E. Sinclair went to work in a local millinery after her husband’s untimely death, and raised
her three children in the home on Oliver Street. Her oldest daughter and namesake, Mary E.
Sinclair, would go on to marry a local salesman, James H. Jones. The Sinclair’s oldest boy, Arthur
H. Sinclair, received an education to become pharmacist, eventually opening his own
neighborhood apothecary on lower Bridge Street in Salem. Edward Oliver Sinclair grew to
follow in his family’s professional footsteps and became a clerk, first appearing in the Salem City
Directory in 1895 at the age of nineteen working at 132 Bridge, the grocery of William S. Harris.
According to the 1900 US Census, the ever-changing Sinclair family remained living at 16 Oliver
Street through the beginning of the 20th century. Mary E. Tuttle, the Widow Sinclair’s mother,
A. Kellett — January 2020
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�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
had passed away a decade earlier in 1890, leaving the home at 16 Oliver Street to her daughter
mortgage-free. Mary E. Sinclair shared the home with her daughter and son-in-law, Mary E.
Jones (née Sinclair) and James H. Jones, along with their first-born son, James H. Jones, Jr.
(aged 4 in 1900). Both of Mary E. Sinclair’s boys, Arthur Henry (aged 25), listed as a 'druggist’
and Edward Oliver (aged 22), listed as a 'grocer', also lived with their mother, sister, brother-inlaw, and nephew.
The first few years of the 20th century proved to be eventful for the youngest of the Sinclair
family, as Edward O. Sinclair established a business, was married, and fathered two daughters
within the first five years of the 1900s. To begin the century, Edward O. Sinclair went into
business with Salem local and former chauffeur, Leo F. Shapley, opening the 'Shapley & Sinclair'
grocery at 69 Bridge Street in 1900.
1917 Boston Globe Advertisement — Lord’s Nu-Blac Stove Polish
In the wake of disastrous fires across the state, Massachusetts legislature declared that flammable
liquids be illegal to make, keep, sell, or transport, thus Lord’s Nu-Blac became popular in stores
throughout the region, including Shapley & Sinclair in Salem, Mass. (indicated with arrow).
A. Kellett — January 2020
4 of 16
�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
During this same year in 1900, he was introduced to Carrie Shattuck Wyman, a Boxford native
who had recently relocated from Boston to Salem, when she met and was courted by Edward O.
Sinclair. Carrie was the oldest child of Walter W. Wyman (1847-1915), a carpenter, and Helen M.
Emerson (1857-1935) from Boxford, Massachusetts. The wedding of Edward Oliver Sinclair and
Carrie Shattuck Wyman took place in Walpole, Massachusetts on the 29th of November in 1901,
when both were aged 25. The newlyweds lived with Edward’s mother, Mary E. Sinclair, at 16
Oliver Street for the first few years of their marriage and through the birth of their two
daughters, Marjorie born on March 14th, 1903, and Ruth born on the 29th of June a year later in
1904. By 1908, Edward O. Sinclair had established himself and done well enough to purchase
the home at 27 Boardman Street, just around the corner from 'Shapley & Sinclair’ at 69 Bridge,
and even closer to the eventual location of Sinclair’s grocery at 70 Webb Street.
1911 City Atlas; Plate 7 — Salem, Massachusetts; Ward 2
Edward O. Sinclair noted at 27 Boardman Street, and William J. Conlin noted as
owner of the property at 34 Briggs Street, as well as the flats across the street that
in 10 years would become the site of Sinclair’s Grocery at 70 Webb.
A. Kellett — January 2020
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�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
1917-1918 WWI Draft Registration Card — Edward O. Sinclair
This document provides a snapshot of Edward O. Sinclair’s life in 1917-18, and further
provides physical details of Mr. Sinclair, which describes him as a tall man of medium
build, with blue eyes and brown hair.
Shapley & Sinclair grocers remained in business at 69 Bridge Street through 1920, at which
point Leo F. Shapley and Edward O. Sinclair professionally parted ways, and Edward O. Sinclair
invested in opening his own grocery on a portion of property belonging to a local milk dealer,
William J. Conlin.
A. Kellett — January 2020
6 of 16
�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
In 1920 Salem was a booming city, bordered with factories of every type; after the Great Salem
Fire of 1914, the state and locals had invested in modernizing the centuries-old streets, and a
steady flow of immigrants and in-migrants from other New England and neighboring states
populated the homes of Salem’s downtown. A large influx in manufacturing took place in Salem
beginning during the middle of the 19th century with the establishment of the Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Company along with a multitude of leather and shoe factories. In turn the City’s
population increased and demographics changed, which then created a need in the city for
more shops in the ever-expanding neighborhoods. Keen to business opportunities, Edward O.
Sinclair opened the doors of his grocery at 70 Webb Street in 1921 to provide the Webb Street
neighborhood with fresh produce and other necessities. Beyond providing locals with their
vegetables, meats, and dairy products, the local grocery was undoubtedly a place to exchange
information, current gossip, and business deals — neighborhood groceries such as Sinclair’s at
c.1920 Photo — Unidentified Grocery
Scenes such as this one would have been similar to that at 70 Webb St. in the early days of
business at Edward O. Sinclair’s grocery.
A. Kellett — January 2020
7 of 16
�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
70 Webb Street became a part of the fabric of a neighborhood; a central place of daily life for a
small corner of a world-famous city. Salem’s local Patch newspaper published an article by
Jerome Curley, a long-time Salem resident, recalls the significance of these local shops:
In researching various articles and seeing old photographs, I’ve
been reminded regularly of the transitory nature of neighborhood
stores. I recall how prevalent such stores were before shopping
centers and supermarkets. It seemed that every neighborhood
had at least one variety store where the neighbors would
congregate while they picked up a few things. In ethnic
neighborhoods, these stores were a vital link for immigrants. Here,
in addition to local and ethnic food products, there were native
speakers and native language newspapers. There was a strong
community bond that helped the newly arrived cope in a new
place. We still see this today in the many small stores that cater to
our Hispanic population. At various times in our history this has
been true for all the diverse peoples in Salem. Looking back in
history these stores were like little city halls for new groups,
whether they were the French, Irish, Polish, Eastern European,
Greek, Asian or Hispanic. If someone had a problem or question,
help could usually be found here. Since these stores were
centered in the neighborhood, there was limited interaction with
the greater community except for market days when various
sellers would offer products for all the City’s clientele. I recall in my
youth going to the weekly Salem market, where, in addition to the
usual vegetables, there was also a strong ethnic blend. Here, in
addition to what I’d expect coming from an Irish background,
were also such products as kielbasa, linguica, Italian vegetables
and pea soup. In those days, ethic foods were not readily available
in the meat and grocery stores my family frequented. The market,
in addition to selling, was also an opportunity to experience local
diversity and try something new.2
On several occasions the grocery at 70 Webb Street appeared in the Boston Globe and other
local newspapers under the 'Wanted' section as a place for young women to reply in order to
procure work in various local hospitals and homes for aged residents. Meanwhile, life in 1920s
Salem provided plenty of opportunities for neighborhood chatter within the walls of Sinclair’s
2
Curley, Jerome. "A Look Back — The Disappearing Neighborhood Store Blues" Salem, MA Patch, 14 Jul 2012.
(https://patch.com/massachusetts/salem/disappearing-neighborhood-store-blues)
A. Kellett — January 2020
8 of 16
�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
Boston Globe — 1922 & 1923 Wanted Advertisement Clippings
In addition to selling groceries and other provisions, Edward O. Sinclair (noted as E.O.S.) made
his store and phone available to young ladies in the neighborhood looking for employment.
grocery. Whether it be the secret marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Southworth’s son, C. Raymond
Southworth (from across the street at 71 Webb Street), to a girl named Ella Marshall Hoysradt
from Magnolia in March of 1927, or the Webb Street boys who were injured by a farmer with
birdshot when they intruded on his orchard in Peabody during the Summer of 1928, there was
never a shortage of rumors and stories to go around at Sinclair’s grocery.
27 October 1922
Boston Globe Article
Just a year after the little
grocery opened at 70 Webb,
Mrs. Margaret Phinney, who
undoubtedly visited Edward O.
Sinclair’s shop, passed away
from an accidental poisoning.
One can imagine how the
rumors might have flown about
this tragedy amongst those
chatting in Sinclair’s Grocery.
Meanwhile, around the corner at 27 Boardman Street, Edward O. & Carrie W. Sinclair raised
their two daughters, Marjorie and Ruth, to be intelligent and involved members of the
community. According to the 1920 National Census, the Sinclair family included 42 year-old
Edward O. Sinclair, listed as a 'retail dealer' of groceries, Carrie Sinclair, aged 43, their two
daughters, Marjorie and Ruth (aged fifteen and sixteen in 1920) who attended local schools, and
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70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
1922 Salem City Directory
Page 474 — Sinclair
Marjorie and Ruth Sinclair, aged 19 and
18, were both employed as clerks, and
are noted as boarding at 27 Boardman,
the Sinclair family home, along with
their paternal grandmother, Mary E.
Sinclair, widow of Edward Manning.
Edward’s mother, 71-year-old Mary E. Sinclair. Both of the Sinclair daughters took to the same
profession as their father and grandfather before them, and by 1922 both are listed in the Salem
Directory as Clerks. Marjorie found work for herself as a clerk at the Merchant’s National Bank,
while Ruth began working as a bookkeeper for the Naumkeag Trust Company, before either of
them turned twenty years old.
At the age of 22, Marjorie Sinclair met and married New York native and Salem in-migrant John
F. Williams at a ceremony in Manhattan, New York in the Fall of 1925 — the couple then moved
from Ward 2 of Downtown Salem to the developing neighborhood of Wisteria Street in South
Salem for a time, before returning to live in the family home at 27 Boardman in the 1930s. Mr.
and Mrs. Williams both had begun their careers in the banking industry, John as a clerk in an
investment bank, and Marjorie as a bookkeeper. The younger of the Sinclair sisters, Ruth, was
engaged to be married in June of 1932 to Marblehead native, Harry Reed Chapman, Jr.,
2 June 1932
Boston Globe Article
Marriage
announcement of Ruth
Sinclair, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
O. Sinclair of Salem to
Harry Reed Chapman,
Jr. of Marblehead,
Mass.
A. Kellett — January 2020
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70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
treasurer at the Marblehead Savings Bank. Certainly, the marriages of the Sinclair daughters
would have given fodder to the neighborhood about the couples and their wedding plans, and
one can imagine that Carrie and Edward O. Sinclair were enormously proud of their girls.
During the first decade of Edward O. Sinclair’s ownership of the grocery at 70 Webb Street, the
property deed changed hands several times. After the passing of William J. Conlin in 1924, the
heirs of Conlin divided the property in a deed recorded in December of 1926 from Frederick J.
Conlin (son of William J.), to Catherine F. Brennan, which separated the home at 34 Briggs
Street from the property at 70 Webb Street:
I, Frederick J. Conlin […] for consideration
paid, grant to Catherine F. Brennan of said Salem
with QUITCLAIM COVENANTS the land in said SALEM
together with the buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows: Westerly by Webb Street;
Southerly by land now or late of Fanning;
Easterly by the Boston & Maine Railroad;
Northerly by the extension of Briggs Street, or
however otherwise the same may be bounded and
described […] For a more particular description
of the above described premises reference is
hereby made to the Commissioners report and plan
on file in the Essex Superior Court, Case #293
for the year 1897, pertaining to the Division of
Flats in Collins Cove […] the above described
premises which were conveyed to my father,
William J. Conlin, now deceased, by James P. Cook
by deed dated May 20, 1891 recorded with Essex
South District Registry of Deeds, Book 1310, Page
388, which said premises were devised to me by my
said father by his last Will and Testament,
allowed by the Probate Court in Salem on January
19, 1925.3
3
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds — Book 2704; Page 598
A. Kellett — January 2020
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70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
The following year, Brennan sold the piece of property back to Frederick J. Conlin4 in January of
1927 — months later Conlin authorized the exchange of warranty covenants to the property at
70 Webb to Howard C. & Eunice A. Clark, along with a mortgage of $8,000 to the Salem
Cooperative Bank. 5 The Clarks managed the mortgage for three years, until the property was
once again sold in 1930, this time to Harry D. Clifford6, who only held onto the title for one year.
Then, in 1931, after being in business for ten years at 70 Webb Street, Edward O. & Carrie W.
Sinclair were able to purchase the property from Harry D. Clifford in the Summer of 1931.
Fortunately, for the sake of historic record, this time a plan was recorded with the deed from
Clifford to Sinclair.
I, Harry D. Clifford […] for consideration paid,
grant to Carrie W. Sinclair of said Salem with
QUITCLAIM COVENANTS the land in said SALEM with
the buildings thereon, bounded as follows:
Southwesterly by Webb Street thirty-five and
90/100 (35.90) feet; Southeasterly by land of
grantor seventy-two and 69/100 (72.69) feet;
Northeasterly by the location of the Boston and
Maine Railroad twenty-two and 74/100 (22.74)
feet; Northwesterly by the parcel next herein
described seventy-one and 42/100 (71.42) feet.
Also all my right, title and interest in and to
the following described parcel of land bounded as
follows: Southwesterly by Webb Street ten and
5/10 (10.5) feet, more or less; Southeasterly by
the above described parcel seventy-one and 42/100
(71.42) feet; Northeasterly by. The location of
the Boston and Maine Railroad twenty-nine (29)
feet, more or less; Northwesterly by land of
other unknown sixty-seven and 5/10 (67.5) feet,
more or less.7
4
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds — Book 2710; Page 493
5
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds — Book 2735 Page 542
6
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds — Book 2851 Page 559
7
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds — Book 2888; Page 168
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�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
Essex Registry of Deeds, So. Dist. Salem, Mass. Received July 17, 1931 With Deed:
Harry D. Clifford to Carrie W. Sinclair
Rec. B. 2888 P. 168 Filed as No. 112-1931 Attest: Moody Kimball Register
Land in Salem, Mass. Harry D. Clifford to Carrie W. Sinclair Scale 1in.=20ft. July, 1931.
Thomas A. Appleton, C.E.
Edward O. Sinclair’s only brother, Arthur Henry, had his own business just down the road from 70
Webb Street, where he owned and operated the neighborhood apothecary at 107½ Bridge.
Arthur and his wife, Sarah (née Rhodes), lived nearby at 112 Bridge Street as well, along with
their two daughters, Dorothy, born in 1902, and Barbara, born in 1910. Arthur H. Sinclair
continued to operate the pharmacy until his death at the age of 63 in 1937.
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70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
The occurrence of families in neighborhoods throughout the City and the centuries is commonly
found when researching historic records, but it should be noted that the familial connections
certainly contributed to the sense of community in Salem’s various neighborhoods; the world
was certainly a much smaller place to the residents of Salem less than a century ago.
After the purchase of the property in 1931, Edward O. Sinclair continued to manage the grocery
at 70 Webb Street through the beginning of the 1930s. The 1930 US Census gives a bit of
insight into the Sinclair home at 27 Boardman, and how well the business had fared in its first
decade of operation: Edward O. Sinclair, aged 53 in 1930 is noted as the outright owner of the
home (valued at $10,000), and the proprietor of a retail grocery store (and the family did, in fact,
own a radio). Later in the 1930s, Edward O. Sinclair allowed himself to take a step back from the
business, and hired a manager named C. Burton Huntress (1889-1957) from Peabody.
1942 WWII Draft Card
Charles Burton Huntress
Two years before his
purchase of the property at
70 Webb Street, C. Burton
Huntress is listed as an
employee at the same
address. Contemporaneous
directories note Mr.
Huntress as a manager of
the grocery.
Carrie W. Sinclair sadly passed away at the age of 68 in November of 1944 — a heartbreak for
Edward that apparently proved to be too much, and shortly thereafter on February 10th, 1945,
Edward Oliver Sinclair died and was buried beside his wife at Greenlawn Cemetery in Salem.
After the dust of mourning had settled, the family decided to sell the grocery at 70 Webb Street
to the long-time manager, C. Burton Huntress and his wife, Helen D. Huntress (née Widger)
(1891-1975). Carrie W. Sinclair’s son-in-law and husband of Ruth Sinclair, Harry R. Chapman,
handled the exchange of property in September of 1945:
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�Property History Report
70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
I, Harry R. Chapman, Jr. Administrator of the
Estate of Carrie M. Sinclair […] by power
conferred by license of the Probate Court within
and for the County of Essex, dated September 13,
1945 […] for Fifteen Hundred Dollars ($1500)
paid, grant to Helen D. Huntress of Peabody the
land in SALEM with the buildings thereon, bounded
as follows: Southwesterly by Webb Street, thirtyfive and 90/100 (35.90) feet; Southeasterly by
land now or formerly of Clifford, seventy-two and
69/100 (72.69) feet; Northeasterly by the
location of the Boston and Maine Railroad twentytwo and 74/100 (22.74) feet; Northwesterly by the
parcel next herein described, Seventy-one and
42/100 (71.42) feet. Also all right, title and
interest in and to the following described parcel
of land bounded as follows: Southwesterly by Webb
Street , ten and 5/10 (10.5) feet, more or less;
Southeasterly by the above-described parcel,
seventy-one and 42/100 (71.42) feet;
Northeasterly by the location of the Boston and
Maine Railroad, twenty-nine (29) feet, more or
less; Northwesterly by land of owner unknown,
sixty-seven and 5/10 (67.5) feet, more or less.8
The C. Burton Huntress continued to operate the property at 70 Webb Street as a
neighborhood grocery until 1953, at which point the property was sold to Arthur and Inez
Proctor. The Proctors updated the grocery to a 'variety store', but only owned the property for
three years, from 1953 until 1956, when the property was sold to Stephen and Jane Davidowicz.
Under new ownership, the building at 70 Webb Street was named 'Variety Terry’s' and catered
to the neighborhood for the next two decades, closing its doors by the end of 1975. In the latter
half of the 20th century, the need for neighborhood groceries and variety stores such as the one
founded by Sinclair had subsided, and were largely replaced by supermarkets, chain stores, and
the like. Upon the sale of the property from Jane J. Davidowicz to John Femino in January of
1976, the era of the little market on Webb Street ended, and the building was converted into a
single-family dwelling.
8
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds — Book 3423; Page 107
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70 Webb St. Salem, Mass.
SUGGESTED HISTORIC PLAQUE TEXT:
Edward O. Sinclair’s
Grocery
1921
OPTIONAL PLAQUE DETAILS:
Webb Street Neighborhood Grocery
1921-1976
CHAIN OF TITLE (DEEDS) — SOUTHERN ESSEX CO. REGISTRY OF DEEDS REFERENCES:
1. 1891 — Book 1310; Page 399 — James P. COOK to William J. CONLIN
2. 1926 — Book 2704; Page 598 — William J. CONLIN to Catherine F. BRENNAN
3. 1927 — Book 2710; Page 493 — Catherine F. BRENNAN to Frederick J. CONLIN
4. 1927 — Book 2735; Page 542 — Frederick J. CONLIN to Howard C. CLARK et ux.
5. 1930 — Book 2851; Page 559 — Howard C. CLARK et ux. to Harry D. CLIFFORD
6. 1931 — Book 2888; Page 168 — Harry D. CLIFFORD to Carrie W. SINCLAIR
7. 1945 — Book 3423; Page 107 — Estate of Carrie W. SINCLAIR to Helen D. HUNTRESS
8. 1953 — Book 3987; Page 464 — Helen D. HUNTRESS to Arthur A. & Inez M. PROCTOR
9. 1956 — Book 4354; Page 234 — Arthur A. & Inez M. PROCTOR to Jane J. DAVIDOWICZ
10. 1976 — Book 6213; Page 633 — Jane J. DAVIDOWICZ to John FEMINO
A. Kellett — January 2020
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�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Webb Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
70 Webb Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Edward O. Sinclair
Grocer
1921
Webb Street Neighborhood Grocery
1921-1976
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1921
House History Written: Jan. 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
1921
2020
70/Webb Street
grocer
Grocery
Massachusetts
Salem
Sinclair
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/489757d4a1ed97b30b7b567ea9817c32.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=vaMaFO88Lg797s06tF0iQr2pyACpgK4ZYhEnmrvYdpYCB5sDLWyfJPR7qYqsRPDWnUQgXaZAqGDtH30%7Eym0R3lqDHweJbRJcRJHCSok5iMjZDO5R-OR4CWm-c3baYdM1rcz28n006SiOpTGGWymFIrBLl-YyK2Cjf%7E3tKHRiSKliQg-0hux-SWKZmzwyjLYPzfI9U0hjRaRLozvF9%7E7uPcXzS73De%7E8s-wABvfJ3R0I84bSXvr7avyTm%7EhhtIGr8ej8AhOLZkAkU8vdWVmlVaoF0ujU7pknNrfyQxBda8lUumIlLwPWqZvPTbK%7EUqU3DLlBplIWzSK1p24dWdjDUEQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
25 Briggs Street
Salem, MA
Built for
Richard Savory
Cooper and wife
Betsy Lewis
1805
Researched and written by Robert Booth, assisted by Amy Kellett, Public History Services Inc.
March 2020
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 I historicsalem.org
©2020
�Owners & Occupants
25 Briggs Street, Salem
By Robert Booth, assisted by Amy Kellett, Public History Services
Inc. March, 2020
According to available evidence, this house was built as the residence of
Richard Savory, cooper, and wife Betsy Lewis, in 1805.
On June 4, 1805, Mrs. Anna Briggs, widow, sold to a pair of Salem coopers,
Richard Savory & Joshua Raymond, a piece of land, in area 20 poles and 107',
fronting 70' on Briggs Court (now Briggs Street) and running back 79' between her
land and land partly of Lewis (ED 175:291).
On this land, the coopers hired a contractor to build a double house with a
partition wall; its long ends were laid up in brick. We know this because the Salem
"Gazette" for Feb. 4, 1806, reported on Salem's brick buildings, and this one
"Richard Savary's, Briggs Court," appears under the heading "buildings partly of
brick" (EIHC vol. 1, 1859).
Richard Savory Jr. (1781-1869} was born in Portsmouth, NH, the son of Richard
Savory. Richard had six siblings, and their mother died before 1799, when his
father remarried and moved to Farmington, NH. Richard and his brother Robert
had already been apprenticed to a Portsmouth or Salem cooper at that time, and
evidently did not make the move. He was in Salem by 1803, when, on Sept. 11,
he married Betsy Lewis. He and brother Robert did well as coopers, or
barrel-makers, at a time that Salem was the most successful seaport in
America-and almost everything was shipped in barrels.
Betsy Lewis was the daughter of shipwright Ebed Lewis {died 1816) and Amy
Safford of Salem. As of 1804, the Ebed Lewises resided on Briggs Street {ED
175:25), just to the east, on a lot purchased from Richard Savory. Betsy's mother
would die in April, 1812, aged 45; her father would die in 1816.
From the start, the Savorys occupied this westernmost of the two houses, which
had a partition down the middle. On Nov. 2, 1807, the two men made a division of
the property, in which Richard Savory, cooper, acquired the westerly house and
other buildings on the western half of the lot (fronting 35' on the street), the whole
of which lot was bounded running north 79' 8" by lands of Lewis and of Briggs,
west 70' by land of Brown & sons, south 79' by land of Briggs, and east 70' by
Briggs Court; and the eastern bound of said
1
�western half of a lot is the partition wall between the two houses (ED
202:86).
Richard Savory (1781-1841), died 12 Feb. 1841. Hem. 11 Sept. 1803 Betsy
Lewis (1786-1861), dtr. of Ebed Lewis & Amy/Emma Safford of Salem, died 2
Sept. 1861. Known issue, surname Savory:
1. Emily Lewis, 1804-1874, m. 1830 Phineas Weston.
2. Mary, 1806, m. 1828 Joseph Hardy Millett.
3. Augustus, 1808-1838, m. 1829 Eliza Varney.
4. George, 1810, shipmaster
5. Elizabeth, 1813-1860, m. 1843 Benjamin Webb
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Caroline, 1816-1849, m. 1846 John J. Scobie.
Sarah Ann, 1818-1864, m. 1839 Charles A. Smith
Harriet E., 1820-1877, m. Henry P. Upton
Richard F., 1823-1851, m. Elizabeth M. Lopez
Theresa M. 1825, m. 1847 Daniel R. Bowker
William T., 1827, m. Laura Deland
Salem had grown wealthy in foreign trade since the 1780s, led forward by the
merchant families. In 1806 the Derbys extended their wharf far out into the harbor,
tripling its previous length. This they did to create more space for warehouses and
ship-berths in the deeper water, at just about the time that the Crowninshields had
built their great India Wharf at the foot of now-Webb Street. Perhaps Mr. Savory
had his cooper shop on one of these wharves. The other important wharves were
Forrester's (now Central, just west of Derby Wharf), and Union Wharf at the foot of
Union Street; and then, father to the west, a number of smaller wharves extended
into the South River (filled in during the late 1800s), all the way to the foot of
Washington Street. Each had a warehouse or two, and shops for artisans (coopers,
blockmakers, joiners, etc.). The waterfront between Union Street and Washington
Street also had lumber yards and several ship chandleries and distilleries, with a
Market House at the foot of Central Street, below the Custom House. The wharves
and streets were crowded with shoppers, gawkers, hawkers, sailors, artisans
("mechanics"), storekeepers, and teamsters; and just across the way, on Stage
Point along the south bank of the South River, wooden barks and brigs and ships
were being built.
Salem's boom came to an end with a crash in January, 1808, when Jefferson and
the Congress imposed an embargo on all shipping in hopes of forestalling war with
Britain. The Embargo, which was widely opposed in New England, proved futile
and nearly ruinous in Salem, where commerce ceased. As a hotbed of
Democratic-Republicanism, Salem's East Parish and its seafarers, led by the
Crowninshields, loyally supported the Embargo until it was lifted in
2
�spring, 1809. Shunned by the other Salem merchants for his support of the
Embargo, the eminent Billy Gray took his large fleet of ships-fully one-third of
Salem's tonnage-and moved to Boston, whose commerce was thereby much
augmented. He removed a large amount of Salem wealth, shipping, import-export
cargos, and local employment. Gray soon switched from the Federalist party, and
was elected Lt. Governor under Gov. Elbridge Gerry, a native of Marblehead.
Salem resumed its seafaring commerce for three years, but still the British preyed
on American shipping; and in June, 1812, war was declared against Britain.
War was not favorable to a cooper. In November, 1813, Richard Savory (wife
Betsy), Salem cooper, for $1700 sold the premises to Thomas Kast, a cooper or
yeoman of Hopkinton, NH (ED 204:173). The house was evidently rented out to
tenants.
Although the merchants had tried to prevent the war, when it came, Salem swiftly
fitted out 40 privateers manned by Marblehead and Salem crews, who also
served on U.S. Navy vessels, including the frigate Constitution. Many more local
vessels could have been sent against the British, but some ofthe Federalist
merchants held them back. In addition, Salem fielded companies of infantry and
artillery. Salem and Marblehead privateers were largely successful in making
prizes of British supply vessels. While many of the town's men were wounded in
engagements, and some were killed, the possible riches of privateering kept the
men returning to sea as often as possible. The first prizes were captured by a
30-ton converted fishing schooner, the Fame, and by a 14-ton luxury yacht fitted
with one gun, the Jefferson. Of all Salem privateers, the Crowninshields' 350-ton
ship America was most successful: she captured 30-plus prizes worth more than
$1,100,000.
Salem erected forts and batteries on its Neck, to discourage the British warships
that cruised these waters. On land, the war went poorly for the United States, as
the British captured Washington, DC, and burned the Capitol and the White
House. Along the western frontier, U.S. forces were successful against their
weaker opponents; and, as predicted by many, the western expansionists had
their day. At sea, over time, Salem vessels were captured, and its men
imprisoned or killed. After almost three years, the war was bleeding the town dry.
Hundreds of Salem men and boys were in British prison-ships and at Dartmoor
Prison in England.
At the Hartford Convention in 1814, New England Federalist delegates met to
consider what they could do to bring the war to a close and to restore the region's
commerce. Sen. Timothy Pickering of Salem led the extreme Federalists in
proposing a series of demands which, if not met by the federal
3
�government, could lead to New England's seceding from the United States; but the
Pickering faction was countered by Harrison G. Otis of Boston and the Federalist
moderates, who prevailed in sending a mild message to Congress,
At last, in February, 1815, peace was restored.
Mr. Kast, the owner as of 1813, never left Hopkinton evidently, and in May, 1822, for
$750 he sold the premises to Miss Sarah B. Russell of Salem (ED 229:276). Note
the low price, which perhaps reflects the fall of prices in Salem as its foreign
commerce faded.
Sarah B. Russell, 26, the new owner, was engaged to marry Joshua Safford,
ropemaker, which she did on Oct. 6, 1822; and the house remained in their
possession for many years. Perhaps Joshua Safford was a nephew of Amy
(Safford) Lewis, mother of Mrs. Richard Savory.
Joshua Safford (1785-1869), b. 8 Feb. 1785, son of William Safford & Thankful
Goodale of Salem, died 13 May 1869. He m. April 1815 Ann V. Prince of Beverly
(d. 23 Oct. 1816). He m/2 6 Oct. 1822 Sarah B. Russell (1796-1880), dtr. of
Edward Russell & Sarah McClure, died Boston 9 July 1880, aged 84.5. 0. Known
issue, surname Safford:
1. Anna Prince, c.1825, m. 1847 I. Sexton James, M.D.; missionary lost at
sea off Hong Kong.
2. Sarah Baxter Russell, 26 Oct. 1828, m. Charles Endicott.
3. Elizabeth G., 1831, d. 7 Aug. 1832, aged 9 months.
4. Charlotte Elizabeth, 28 Jan. 1834, m. Hiram Washburn; died 18 Sept.
1896.
5. Caroline Baldwin, 27 April 1837, m. 1864 Hiram F. Russell, Boston
dentist; d. 20 Nov. 1888 in Newton.
Sarah Baxter Russell was the daughter of Edward Russell, an English immigrant, and
Sarah McClure, originally of Boston, who married in Salem in 1792. Her father, a
coaster (captain of coast-wise trading vessels), owned a house on Central Street. He
died on Jan. 14, 1815 and was survived by his wife Sarah and two children; and in
April, 1816, a guardian was appointed for Sarah B., then nineteen, and younger brother
Edward Barker Russell (#24427). Her brother would become a mariner and move to
Maine; he was in Bath, Maine, with wife Mary Jane and children in 1850; and he was in
Salem in 1853 (per Directory) employed as a gum copal worker and residing at 26
Essex Street. He died in that year, and Joshua Safford, his brother-inlaw, was
appointed administrator of his estate and guardian of his four children, who evidently
resided in Bath.
4
�Joshua Safford (1785-1869) was born in Salem, of a Salem mother (Thankful Goodale)
and a father who had come from Ipswich, William Safford. Joshua was a graduate of
Phillips Exeter Academy, class of 1799. At thirty, in 1815, he married Anna Prince of
Beverly, who died the next year. In 1817, a rope maker, he was a founding member of
the Salem Mechanic Charitable Society.
Post-war, the Salem merchants rebuilt their fleet and resumed their worldwide trade,
slowly at first, and then to great effect. Many new partnerships were formed. The
pre-war partisan politics of the town were not resumed, as the newly powerful
middle-class "mechanics" (artisans) brought about civic harmony, largely through the
Salem Charitable Mechanic Association (founded 1817). Rev. William Bentley, keen
observer and active citizen during Salem's time of greatest prosperity and fiercest
political divisions, died at the end of 1819, the year in which a new U. S. Custom
House was built on the site of the George Crowninshield mansion, at the
head of Derby Wharf. Into the 1820s foreign trade continued prosperous;
and new markets were opened with Madagascar (1820), which supplied tallow and
ivory, and Zanzibar (1825), whence came coffee, ivory, hides, and gum copal, used to
make varnish. This opened a huge and lucrative trade
with East Africa in which Salem dominated.
Salem's general maritime foreign commerce fell off sharply in the late 1820s. Imports
in Salem ships were supplanted by the goods now being produced in great quantities
in America. The interior of the country was being opened for settlement, and some
Salemites moved away. To the north, the falls of the Merrimack River powered large
new textile mills (LoweU was founded in 1823), whose cotton cloth, sold at home and
overseas, created great wealth for their investors; and it seemed that the tide of
opportunity was ebbing away from Salem. Salem's merchants and capitalists were
already prospering from ownership of an iron-products factory in Amesbury and from a
textile factory they had built in Newmarket, NH, so they saw the potential of
manufacturing in Salem. In 1826, in an ingenious attempt to stem the flow of talent
from the town and to harness its potential water power, they formed
a corporation to dam the North River for industrial power; but the attempt was
abandoned in 1827, which further demoralized the town, and caused several leading
citizens to move to Boston, the hub of investment in the new economy.
In 1831 (per valuation book, p. 41) this house was owned and occupied by Joshua
Safford Jr. & family, and also occupied by Nicholas White and Jonathan R.
Southward. Presumably Mr. Southward was the one born in 1792, a tailor, married
(1819) to Margaret Brown.
5
�In 1837 (per Salem Directory} Joshua Safford Jr. had his cordage manufactory at
44 Bridge, with house at 13 Briggs. In the middle of a blizzard in February, Mr.
Safford's cordage factory (ropewalk} on Bridge Street burned down, as did William
Stickney's.
Joshua Safford, out of business due to the fire, got the job as ticketmaster of the
Eastern Railroad and in 1842 (per Directory} the Saffords resided on Central
Street, with Mrs. Safford's mother, Mrs. Sarah Russell. At this time this house
(now-#25} was rented out to cordwainer {shoemaker) Joseph Varnum (per Salem
Directory, 1842}. It was then numbered #13 on Briggs Street.
By 1844 (per Street Book) this house was identified as occupied by Nathaniel
Holden, 35, and William Doyle ("Doil"}, a young currier who would marry Elizabeth
Monies in 1846. This was the beginning of a long-standing and very interesting
connection ofthe Holden family with this house, which the Saffords would never
again occupy.
Nathaniel Holden (1809-1858}, a native of Marblehead, was a sailmaker, married
(as of 1826 when just seventeen} to Mary Ann Brown (1805-1894} of Salem. They
had children Nathaniel J., Ann E., Thomas B., and John C., born from 1827 to 1839.
Mary Ann Brown was the daughter of Thomas Brown and Elizabeth Howard
(1782-1857}. She was third-eldest oftheir eventual thirteen children. Her father
was the son of a couple who resided in Hamilton; her mother was the daughter of
John Howard & Jemima Ashby of Salem. John Howard had been the foremost
sailmaker in the seaport.
Nathaniel Holden had left Marblehead as a boy and had been accepted as a
sailmaker apprentice by John Howard of Salem, in whose family he would live for
five years in the 1820s. Having mastered that trade, he decided instead to follow
the sea from time to time. In 1826 he was a deckhand on board the Salem brig
"Java," on a voyage to Antwerp. In September, 1830, he ( described as 5' 8" with
light hair) was first mate of the brig "Stork" of Salem. She departed on Sept. 30,
1830 on a voyage to Montevideo, during which he performed the heroic task (in
shark-infested waters) of re-mounting the vessel's rudder after the vessel had
struck a reef. His actions nearly killed him, and he never fully recovered from the
strain.
Next he sailed as a seaman (5' 9", light complected) on board the brig
"Neptune," departing on May 4, 1835, for the East Indies (Asia). Year-long
voyages proved too hard on the family. In 1836 the Holdens moved to
Marblehead, where he made one trip as a fisherman to the Grand Bank and
6
�then opened a Marblehead sail-loft with S. A. Porter. In 1843 John Howard Jr.,
son of his old master, set him up in a sail-loft on Derby Wharf, where Nathaniel
and his former fellow-apprentice, Thomas Oakes, carried on the business with
success for the next 15 years. The Holdens evidently occupied now-#25 as their
residence starting in 1843.
The Hold ens were Baptists in religion, and active members of the local antislavery society.
Nathaniel Holden (1809-1858), son of John Holden & Mary Raymond of
Marblehead, died 2 Sept. 1858. He m. 10 Aug. 1826 Mary Ann Brown (18051894, dtr. of Thomas Brown & Elizabeth Howard, died 9 April 1894. Known
issue, surname Holden:
1. Nathaniel Jay, 1827-1910, m. 1882 Hattie E. Richards.
2. Ann£., 1835, died 1855.
3. Thomas Brown, 1837-1901, m. 1859 Sarah £. Stone.
4.
John Charles, 1839-1924, m. 1872 Harriet F. Fogg, m/2 1874 Lily L.
Fogg.
In 1838 the Eastern Rail Road, headquartered in Salem, began operating between
Boston and Salem, which gave the local people a direct route to the region's
largest market. The new railroad tracks ran right over the middle of the Mill Pond;
the tunnel under Washington Street was built in 1839; and the line was extended
to Newburyport in 1840.
The 1840s proved to be a decade of explosive growth in Salem's leather industry,
still conducted largely as a mass-production handicraft, and its new textile
manufacturing, applying leading edge machine technology.
The tanning of animal hides and curing of leather, a filthy and smelly enterprise,
took place on and near Boston Street, along the upper North River. In 1844, there
were 41 tanneries; a few years later, that number had doubled and in 1850 they
employed 550 workers. Salem had become one of the largest leather-producers
in America; and it would continue to grow in importance throughout the 1800s.
In 1847, along the inner-harbor shoreline of the large peninsula known as Stage
Point, the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company completed the construction of the
largest steam cotton factory building in the world, four stories high, 60' wide, 400'
long, running 1700 looms and 31,000 spindles to produce millions of yards of
first-quality cotton sheeting and shirting. It was immediately profitable, and 600
people found employment there, many of them living in new houses on The
Point. The cotton sheeting of The Point found a ready market in East Africa, and
brought about a revival of shipping,
7
�led by the merchants David Pingree (president of the Naumkeag company) and
John Bertram.
In Lynn, the factory system was perfected, and that city became the nation's
leading shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe workers
from outlying towns and the countryside. Even the population changed, as
hundreds of Irish families, fleeing the famine in Ireland, settled in Salem and gave
the industrialists a big pool of cheap labor.
The Gothic symbol of Salem's new industrial economy was the outsized twintowered granite-and-brick train station-the "stone depot" -smoking and growling
with idling locomotives, standing on filled-in land at the foot of Washington Street,
on the site of shipyards and the merchants' wharves.
In general, foreign commerce waned: in the late 1840s, giant clipper ships sailing
from Boston and New York replaced the smaller vessels that Salem men had
sailed around the world. The town's shipping consisted of vessels carrying coal
and importing hides from Africa and Brazil, and Down East coasters with cargoes
of fuel wood and lumber. A picture of Salem's waterfront is given by Hawthorne in
his mean-spirited "Introduction" to The Scarlet Letter, which he began while
working in the Custom House.
In the meantime, the owner, Joshua Safford, had carried on as a cordage
manufacturer. By 1850 he had also become a representative to the
legislature, with the family residing at 7 Andrew Street.
In 1850 (per census, house 188), this house was occupied by Nathaniel Holden,
44, sailmaker, wife Mary A., 48, children Nathaniel J., 24, carpenter, Anne E., 14,
Thomas B., 12, and John C., ten.
Nathaniel J. Holden (1827-1910) was a graduate of Marblehead schools. He
worked as a carpenter but had other ambitions, and began to prepare himself for a
career in the law. He moved out, perhaps to Lynn, where he studied law in the
office of William Howland. In 1855 (per census, house 401) this house was
occupied by Nathaniel Holden, 48, sailmaker, Mary A., 50, her mother Elizabeth
Brown, 72, Thomas B. Holden, 19, sailmaker, Charles Holden, 14; sadler Edward
Read, 19, bookbinder Albert Chalk, 16, and Martha Raymond, 56. Mrs. Elizabeth
(Howard) Brown died in 1857.
Nathaniel J. Holden had moved to Lynn, and in 1856 became librarian of the
public library there, remaining three years in that position. He then returned to
Salem and began studying the law in the office of Sidney Bancroft Esq. in Salem,
and would be admitted to the bar of Essex County in 1863.
8
�In August, 1857, the Saffords sold the property for $1000 to their son-in-law
Charles Endicott, 34, merchant of Salem (ED 557:97). Mr. Endicott (and wife
Sarah 8.) sold it in June, 1858, for $1100 to the tenant Nathaniel Holden, Salem
sailmaker {ED 572:74). The Holdens had resided mere since 1843.
Joshua Safford would die on May 13, 1869, in his 84th year. He was survived by
his wife Sarah and three married daughters; a fourth, Annie, who had gone out to
China as a missionary with her husband Dr. James, had drowned, with him, in the
sinking of a vessel off Hong Kong.
Nathaniel Holden died of heart disease on Sept. 2, 1858, aged 48, soon after
purchasing this house. It was subject to a mortgage for $800.
In 1860 (per census, house 1996}, this house was occupied by Mary Ann Holden,
54, Nathaniel J., 34, student, Thomas B., 22, musician, his wife Sarah, 21 (b. NH),
John C., 21, sailmaker, all attended by domestic servant Eliza Watson, 21, a native
of Nova Scotia.
The Civil War began in April, 1861, and went on for four years, during which
hundreds of Salem men served in the army and navy, and many were killed or
died of disease or abusive treatment while imprisoned. Hundreds more suffered
wounds, or broken health. The people of Salem contributed greatly to efforts to
alleviate the suffering of the soldiers, sailors, and their families; and there was
great celebration when the war ended in the spring of 1865.
Through the 1860s, Salem pursued manufacturing, especially of leather and
shoes and textiles. The managers and capitalists tended to build their new, grand
houses along Lafayette Street (these houses may still be seen, south of Holly
Street; many are in the French Second Empire style, with mansard roofs). Factory
workers, living in smaller houses and tenements, wanted something better for
themselves: in 1864 they went on strike for higher wages and fewer hours of work.
N. J. Holden was elected a state representative in 1864 and again in 1865. In
1865 (per census, house 302) this house was occupied by Mary Ann Holden, 57,
Nathaniel J. Holden, 37, lawyer, and J. Charles Holden, 26, conductor on the
horse railway; also by two other families: William Perkins, 43, pattern-maker,
wife Hannah and two children, and William Chase, 60, laborer, wife Elizabeth,
49, and daughter Almira, 18.
9
�Nathaniel J. Holden was a director of the Salem Lyceum starting 1868 and for the rest
of his life (President starting in 1891). In 1869 and 1870 he was elected to the State
Senate as a Republican. Among other duties, he chaired the Judiciary Committee, and
he was primarily responsible for winning citizenship status for the Gay Head Indian
tribe.
In 1870 (per census, house 247), this house was occupied by Nathaniel J. Holden,
42, lawyer ($5000 in r.e., $1000 in p.e.), and mother Mrs. Mary Ann Holden, 63,
keeping house.
In March, 1872, the widow of Nathaniel, Mrs. Mary Ann Holden, for $1100 sold the
premises to her son, Nathaniel J. Holden of Salem (ED 851:153). He had already (in
1868) bought the other house attached to this one.
N. J. Holden continued with his government and legal career. He was thrice elected
Master in Chancery for the County; and in 1874 was appointed a Trial Justice of
Juvenile and District Courts. Often he was selected as a special commissioner for
insolvency.
In 1870 Salem received its last cargo from Zanzibar. By then, a new Salem & New
York freight steamboat line was in operation. Seven years later, with the arrival of a
vessel from Cayenne, Salem's foreign trade came to an end. After that, "the
merchandise warehouses on the wharves no longer contained silks from India, tea
from China, pepper from Sumatra, coffee from Arabia, spices from Batavia, gum-copal
from Zanzibar, hides from Africa, and the various other products of far-away countries.
The boys have ceased to watch on the Neck for the incoming vessels, hoping to earn a
reward by being the first to announce to the expectant merchant the safe return of his
looked-for vessel. The foreign commerce of Salem, once her pride and glory, has
spread its white wings and sailed away forever" (Rev. George Bachelder in History of
Essex County, II: 65).
Salem continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leathermaking
business. In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor earthquake.
In the following year, the large Pennsylvania Pier (site of the present coal-fired
harborside electrical generating plant) was completed to begin receiving large
shipments of coal, most of it shipped by rail to the factories on the Merrimack. In the
neck of land beyond the Pier, a new owner began subdividing the old Allen farmlands
into a development called Salem Willows and Juniper Point. In the U. S. centennial
year, 1876, A. G. Bell of Salem announced that he had discovered a way to transmit
voices over telegraph wires.
10
�In this decade, large numbers of French-Canadian families came to work in
Salem's mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The
better-off workers bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their
families in the outlying sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam
Cotton mills would employ 1500 people (including hundreds of children) and
produce annually nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Shoemanufacturing businesses
expanded in the 1870s, and 40 shoe factories were employing 600-plus
operatives. Tanning, in both Salem and Peabody, remained a very important
industry, and employed hundreds of breadwinners. On Boston Street in 1879, the
Arnold tannery caught fire and burned down.
In 1880 (per census, house 293) this house was occupied by Nathaniel J.
Holden, 51, lawyer, and mother Mrs. Mary Ann Holden, 74, keeping house.
In June, 1882, Nathaniel J. Holden, Esq., 55, married Hattie Estelle Richards, 25, a
native of Baltimore (of Mass. parents) in South Walpole. They resided here in
Salem, and would have three children. Estelle died of cholera in 1883. Florence E.
(b. 1884) and Sidney Howard (b. 1887) lived well into adulthood. Judge Holden
presided over several municipal and county conventions. He was a long-time
member of the Starr King Lodge of the Masons.
In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the
manufacturers for a ten-hour day and other concessloas: but the manufacturers
imported labor from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out, and
there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners prevailed, and
many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their families,
through a bitter winter.
By the mid-1880s, Salem's cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed 1400 people
who produced about 19 million yards annually, worth about $1.5 million. The city's
large shoe factories stood downtown behind the stone depot and on Dodge and
Lafayette Streets. A jute bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry Street
and English Street; its products were sent south to be used in cotton-baling.
Salem factories also produced lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern Railroad yard on
Bridge Street, cars were repaired and even built new. In 1887 the streets were first
lit with electricity, replacing gas-light. The gas works, which had stood on Northey
Street since 1850, was moved to a larger site on Bridge Street in 1888, opposite
the Beverly Shore.
On the evening of April 9, 1894, Mrs. Mary Ann (Brown) Holden died at home
here, in her goth year. She had been a member of the Central Baptist Church since
her youth; and she was remembered as "a woman of many excellent
1
1
�traits (who) endeared herself to many." She "retained her faculties until the last."
(per Salem Evening News obituary, 10 April 1894).
In 1900 (per census, h. 256) Judge N. J. Holden resided here, aged 73, with wife
Hattie, 42, and children Florence, 15, and Sidney H., 12. The house was
numbered 25 Briggs Street, having had other numbers in the preceding
decades.
Judge Nathaniel J. Holden spent his last years, outside of his legal duties, with his
family and in literary pursuits. He was "a thorough scholar and student, and had a
fine collection of rare and curious books, and especially of illustrated books of all
kinds, which he was gathering for many years. He devoted much time to the study
of local history, more particularly as relates the old houses of Salem, upon which
he wrote very interestingly." He died on Jan. 2, 1910, in his g3rd year (see obituary
from Monday, Jan. 3, 1910, Salem Evening News, from which other information
him was taken). The next day, Mayor Arthur P. Howard took office.
In 1910, the house became associated with one of the most remarkable political
events in Salem's history: the election of Arthur P. Howard as Mayor. In one year,
Mr. Howard had gone from an indigent stranger in the city, jailed for alleged libels in
the scrappy newspaper he published (The Salem Despatch) to a reform candidate
for Mayor, and overwhelming election to the city's highest office. He was of the
same Howard family that had once employed Nathaniel Holden as a sailmaker,
and to wrnich Nathaniel's wife was related. Mayor Howard, 40, resided here at #25,
and his private secretary was none other than Sidney Howard Holden, then 22 (see
appended materials). Mr. Howard, who ran a fudge parlor on Church Street and on
Essex Street. He declined to run again, but served as alderman; then he tried to
recapture the Mayor's chair in 1911, but failed. He remained in Salem through
1915, then went to Burlington, Vermont, and started another newspaper.
Eventually he moved to New York City; and he died in New Haven, Conn., on Jan.
10, 1920, as a consequence of an operation in the hospital (see appended article).
In 1910 the census-taker found this house (#246, ward two) occupied by Hattie
E. Holden, 52, widow, her daughter Florence, 25, stenographer, her son Sidney
H., 22, private secretary to the Mayor, and Arthur P. Howard, 40, Mayor of
Salem.
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th century by
large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who settled primarily in the
Derby Street neighborhood, and by Sicilians, in the High Street neighborhood.
By the eve of World War One, the bustling, polyglot city
1
2
�supported large department stores and factories of every description. People from
the surrounding towns, and Marblehead in particular, came to Salem to do their
shopping; and its handsome government buildings, as befit the county seat, were
busy with conveyances of land, lawsuits, and probate
. proceedings. The city's politics were lively, and its economy was strong.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street at Proctor), a
fire started in small wooden shoe factory. This fire soon raced out of control, for the
west wind was high and the season had been dry. Out of Blubber Hollow the fire
roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out the houses of
Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping through
Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men and machines
could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed
the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of
Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the tenement district of The Point.
Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and cities, the
fire overwhelmed everything in its path: the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company
factory complex exploded in an inferno. At Derby Street, just beyond Union, after a
13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses,
and 41 factories, and leaving three dead and thousands homeless. Some people
had insurance, some did not; all received much support and generous donations
from all over the country and the world. It was one of the greatest urban disasters in
the history of the United States, and the people of Salem would take years to
recover from it. Eventually, they did, and many of the former houses and
businesses were rebuilt; and several urban-renewal projects (including Hawthorne
Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and widening old streets) were put
into effect.
In April, 1918, Mrs. Hattie E. Holden and her offspring Florence and Sidney sold
the premises to Thomas F. Cronan of Salem (ED 2388:162). The land was
bounded as before, 35' on Briggs Street, running back 79' deep.
Mr. Cronan (1860-1923), a contractor, resided with his family at 6 Lemon Street.
He purchased #27 Briggs as well. He died on Nov. 12, 1923. The executors of his
will sold the premises for $8400 (subject to $3800 mortgage) to Laura M Larivee of
Salem (ED 2592:526).
Salem's tercentenary in 1926 was a time-of great celebration. The Depression hit
in 1929, and continued through the 1930s. Salem, the county seat and regional
retail center, gradually rebounded.
Salem prospered after World War II through the 1950s and into the 1960s.
General Electric, Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills (formerly Naumkeag
13
�Steam Cotton Co.), Almy's and Newmark's and Webber's department stores,
various other retailers, and Beverly's United Shoe Machinery Company were all
major local employers.
1
4
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f"1ied · at his home, 25 Brlgg;s st reel,
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to Saturday, "ft<>l' a brl_ef illnes~. In
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uf luw, h(~lng- ad11dllt->d t<) .t he bu r In UiHi3. ··· -Maycir-elect Arthur \;r. Howard ne!t
·i:1:@.~ two ven rs fnllowlng .Mr. Holden wn s ee nt
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�H11NoR.\H1.~; Atn"·, "•WARn
�MAYOR ARTHUR HOWARD OF SALEM
A Tale of Romance in Modern Politics
By GRACE AGNES TI-1O:\IPSON A:o.o FRED HARRIS THOMPSON'
I
N generations to come, along with the
played so tantalizingly and so long, heaped
historic tales of gallant seacaptains quaint
fame, honor, and riches, upon him all in one
mansions, old-fash
brief day. For the very day after election,
ioned g;rdens, and witches, there will be
Howard's father, president of the jewelry
handed down in the annals of the famous old
New England town of Salem the story of how house of Bowan! & Company, Fifth Avenue,
New York, died and left his son some money.
one Arthur Howard came here in 1908,
Though Howard was a stranger in Salem till
friendless, penniless, unknown, started a
newspaper that was regarded as a joke, and in 1908, his paternal ancestors were among its
less than a twelve month rode off on a broom- earliest settlers. They took a prominent part in
the development of the community. Many
stick with the mayoralty election to the
amazement of everyone. It will be told how he streets, churches, a library, and a graveyard are
named after them. His grandfather, fourth
set up in an old paint-shop a ramshackle
removed, was John Howard, who was born in
foot-power printing press that sometimes
wouldn't print, struggled day after day to get Marblehead in IiSS, and died in Salem in his
ninety-fourth year. This John Howard served in
out an edition of twenty-five copies that
both the army and navy during the
people didn't buy, pawned his coat to raise
money for·paper, often went hungry, and then Revolutionary War, and afterwards became a
became famous when Salem politicians had sailmaker in Salem. He founded the Salem Insurance Company and was the original
him arrested for criminal libel because he
subscriber to the levelling of the Common. He
attacked them with a caustic pen.
served as a representative to the General Court
Sitting in Cell 45 in the Essex County jail, he in 1817, and was selectman from 1819 to 1822.
announced his candidacy for mayor and
He organized the Salem Charitable Mechanic
continued to write humorously sarcastic
Association and became its first president. His
editorials which were set up and published by picture now hangs in the rooms of that society.
the faithful printer, his only assistant, whose
John Howard was a warden of St. Peter's
onerous duties included every department
Church, and one of the bells there was given in
from managing editor to printer's devil. Then his memory. Howard Street is namer! after
released on bail put up by a wealthy friend
him, and he was buried in the Howard Street
won by his fearless attacks on the conduct of Cemetery. When he died he was the last man in
the city affairs, Howard launched a
Salem to wear a queue. knee breeches, and the
spectacular, unprecedented campaign.
silver shoe buckles on the old-fashioned
Without spendingacenthimselfhe forced .his
costumes.
four opponents to the mayoralty to spend
John Howard's father was Joseph Howard,
money like water, and at the election received
who is described in the archives of Salem as
such an avalanche of votes that the other
being "a man of character and judgment, of
candidates were completely buried. While
wealth and learning,
Fickle Fortune, smiling at last upon the man
with whom she had
737
�738
NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE
and a linguist familiar with seven languages,
the merchants of Salem being accustomed to Europe.
Howard came back to the States, algo to him for the translation of their foreign
most penniless; and unable to secure
letters."
Joseph Howard's father was Abraham assistance started to make his own way.
Howard, a merchant oi London, England, and Lacking three years of 40, Dr. Osier's age
descended from the Duke of Norfolk, the limit of human usefulness, Arthur Howard
resolved to begin life over again at the foot of
Premier Duke of England.
Mayor Arthur Howard's father, Joseph the ladder.
Platt Howard, was born in Amherst, Mass., 77 He had been all over Europe, and spoke
years ago, and going to New York City when French so well that in France he passed for a
young built up a great jewelry business. His Frenchman unchallenged. So when he heard
mother came from Nantucket Island, her that his cousin "Joe" Howard, the journalist,
maiden name being Andrews. She was author of the famous "Howard Letters" was
descended from one of the original settlers of dead, Arthur Howard came to Boston and
applied for a position with one of the
the island.
newspapers for which "Joe" Howard had
Mr. Howard's paternal grandfather was Dr. written.
Joseph Howard, who was born in Salem in
Without any newspaper experience
18o7, and who was a schoolmate of Nathaniel
Howard was promptly turned down. He ran
Hawthorne. His greatgreat-grandfather was
up to Salem, the home of his ancestors which
Joseph Howard, an old shipping merchant,
he had never before visited, to take advantage
born in Salem in 178o.
Howard's own story runs like a romance. of the opportunity to call upon Judge Holden,
He was born in Brevoort place, Washington a distant relative, the oldest court justice in
Square, New York City, December 16, 186g. Essex county.
Upon the impulse of a chance'remark
As the son of a wealthy man he received his
early education in a private school. He had as during that conversation, Howard resolved to
his schoolmates the sons of many wealthy start a newspaper of his own in Salem. "If
they don't think I know enough about the
New York merchants.
newspaper business to get a job, I'll start a
He left school when he was but 15 years of paper of my own and show them," he told his
age and entered his father's employ at the new-found relative.
latter's Fifth Avenue establishment. At the age
of twentythree he was married and has one Without a penny of backing, and with only
the prospect of an income of a few dollars a
daughter now about sixteen years old.
week from the wreck of his fortune, Howard
Leaving his father's firm he founcled the leased an old, twostory shed on Central street,
firm of Arthur Howard Company, Shipping which had been built for a paint-shop. He
Agents, which business was conducted by him bought on credit a second-hand, foot-power
for two years. He then engaged in the printing press that was about to be consigned
manufacture of silverware and novelties, in to the junk dealer. He picked up some job lots
which business he remained two years. He then of type, some odd sizes of print paper, a
returned to Howard & Company, remaining broken deal table, a dictionary and a rickety
ten years with his father's firm.
chair, and founded the "Salem Morning
In the course of his varied enterprises Howard Dispatch."
constantly visited Europe. He had a wide
Howard found a clever young printer without
acquaintance both in England and on the
a job, but with plenty of sporting blood, and
Continent. In 1906 he established the Arthur
together they managed to issue on the
Howard Company of London, Shipping
morning of October 24, a year and a half ago,
Agents, a clearing house for American jewelry an edition of twenty-five copies. Nobody
firms. The panic of 1907 broke him. Mrs.
in~icated any desire to purchase a copy of the
Howard and their daughter began travelling in "Salem Morning Dispatch," at the market
price of one cent, so Howard went out
�MAYOR ARTHUR HOWARD OF SALEM
739
on the street and gave them away like
He took a room at the Bullard House and
handbills.
when his board bill became due he pubHe went among the merchants of Salem lished a handsome advertisement of the
soliciting
advertisements
for
his hostelry in lieu of cash. Matters went along
newspaper, and they laughed at him. He finely at first, but presently he found it took
put his advertising rates at such a tempting a lot of space to pay for breakfast. A full
figure that the little business he did manage dinner required the better part of a column,
to pick up filled most of his single sheet and to settle up for the week's board
newspaper without bringing him any more crowded out most of the editorials.
than enough to pay for the print paper
Although far from being a religious
itself.
crank Howard found a great deal of
Sometimes the foot-power printing enjoyment-"Inspiration" he calls itreading
press refused to print, and Howard and his the Bible. About this time he had
printer struggled for hours to get out a few succeeded in getting some of his supplies
dozen copies. They would have to take on credit.
each copy afterwards and go over it with
The Salem citizens were getting interink to fill in missing spaces where letters ested and advertisements picking up.
had failed to print.
One of the merchants came in several
Frequently after Howard had sat up most of times to collect a bill which Howard
the night, in the little stall he had partitioned couldn't raise money enough to pay, aloff with rough, unplaned boards in one
though it was but a small amount. "My
comer of the paint-shop loft, writing the
friend," he told the merchant, "if you will
copies for the next day's "Despatch," his
go home and read verse 26 of the 18th
assistant, grimed with the labor of sorting
chapter of the gospel of St. Matthew, you
pied type, would rush in and announce they will find my answer." The merchant went
would fix up something else because there home and found this : "and his fellow
were not n's, or e's, or a's enough to set up servant besought him saying, 'have pawhat the perspiring editor had so
tience and I will pay thee all.' "
laboriously composed.
This merchant thought it over, studied
The day before Christmas, 1()08, How- his Bible, and the next day called at the
ard had just seventy cents. His assistant had paint-shop again. He asked Howard to read
thirty cents. They had to spend eighty cents the 8th verse of the 13th chapter of the
of their combined wealth to get enough Epistle to the Hebrews. Howard looked it
paper to issue the next edition of the up and read : "The same yesterday, today,
"Despatch," and they went to bed and forever."
supperless Christmas Eve.
The struggling editor hustled around to
When they arose Christmas morning, secure another advertisement and promptly
hungry, with only a dime apiece, Howard settled.
felt his first serious doubts about the
It was last spring that the tide really
financial prospects of the newspaper
business. They had a long, careful dis- began to turn. It was then Howard met
cussion, and finally decided beans would Herman F. Curtis, a young Salem man of
be the most filling and lasting food that good family, who also had had a disasterous business experience and was
could be obtained for ten cents.
One dime went for beans for breakfast. looking for a new sphere of activity.
They had no dinner. The other dime went Together they decided politics was what the
for more beans for supper. They got up the columns of the "Salem Morning Despatch"
next morning "dead broke," but managed needed to make the paper a paying
to sell enough newspapers to change their proposition.
Until then Howard had modelled his
diet of beans for something more
publication somewhat upon the literary
substantial.
Howard then evolved a scheme which, lines of Addison's "Spectator," not deemhe admits, still sends a glow of pride ing it necessary that a local newspaper
should publish any "news," and so comthrough his veins when he thinks of it.
posing " highbrow literature," as he
�i40
NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE
called it, for his columns.
they had to sit up all night working over the
Always feeling a penchant for literature,
Howard had during his business career written big type like a picture puzzle, trying to
compose an appropriate headline with the
a number of books, several of which sold
successfully. Among them were "Shakespeare few letters available in their type cases.
for the Unsophisticated," "Grandmother's
It is related in this connection that when
Cookbook," "The X Y Z of Wall Street,"
Howard had written a particularly vicious
"Animals That I Have Met," "The Girl From attack upon a certain politician, whose
Boston," "Raising the Dickens," "The Cure for connection with a city deal looked
Insomnia," and others of a humorous nature.
rather shady, the printer rushed in to tell him
Curtis went to City Hall, made friends with the he couldn't set it up because there were too
many N's in the politician's name. Howard
politicians and renewed his friendship with
thought it over, remembered there was
some of them. Not real-. izing his intentions,
another politician concerned in the same
they talked rather fredy. Curtis reported to
Howard, who also had been doing some quiet
affair whose name
sleuthing, and together they composed the
•was spelled with less N's, and the substitution was made.
"Despatch's" first "graft expose," the articles
which have now boosted the circulation from This man, an office holder for 18 years and
67 to 5000, the size of the electionday edition. rather illiterate, was despised by many
This in a city of 38,000 inhabitants. already citizens, but none had sufficient courage or
with one newspaper, the "Salem Evening energy to attack him. The misfortune of not
News," a one-cent, twelve-page, eight-column having N's enough to set up the first name
paper with a news franchise and universally turned out to be a real fortune-for Howard-as
his final selection of the other victim was so
popular.
popular he at once became a sort of hero with
The "Despatch" had no news franchise some citizens.
because its proprietor coul<ln't afford to pay
In the course of his City Hall disclosures,
the price. It was a single sheet paper with only
four pages, and about the size of the ordinary Howard had occasion to find fault with a
number of deals in which Alderman Michael
weekly.
Doyle was implicated. He
When the first "expose" was ready for
alleged the Salem Theatre people had been
publication Howard found he had no large size
type for the "scare head" he considered called unable to connect with the city sewer because
for. and so he scraped together a dollar, car fare their basement was so low, that an order had
to Boston and back, and hustled to the Huh to been put through the city council requiring
buy big type enough to set up the headline he the lowering of the city sewer in an entire
street fronting the theatre at an expense of
had composed.
thousands of dollars, following which Doyle
· That edition of the "Despatch" sold like the
received a job taking tickets at the door at $18
proverbial hot cakes. The newsdealers who
per week, although a boy usually does such
had refused before to have it on their counters, work for about $4 per week. Doyle's nephew
rushed up to the paintshop and begged for
was engaged to play the piano in the theatre.
copies. The old foot-power press contracted a
Alderman Doyle had Howard arrested for
bad attack of asthma and dry heaves under the
criminal libel on Saturday afternoon, at such
muscular assaults of the staff of the
a time that it was very probable the editor
"Despatch," which now comprised three
would have to spend Sunday like common
members, in their strenuous endeavor to run
drunks in a cell. But Judge Sears, who was
off extras.
presiding that day, allowed Howard to go
Howard and Curtis had another "expose" until Monday on his own recognizance.
ready for the next edition, hut when it came to
He produced a plea, written by himself,
setting up the headline
and asked to be allowed to go without bail
when he was finally arraigned. That
�MAYOR ARTHL"R HO\\'ARD OF SALEM
741
MAYOR HOWARD ,\T THE DOOR OF HIS PRl:s'TING OFFICE
document was considered such a model of
legal excellence and rhetoric that it was consented to be bailed out. Four weeks after,
copied by seventy-four newspapers in the his rival, Robin Damon, had him arrested for
libel and he was bailed out again. The man
United States.
The plea was denied, and not desiring to that went on the bond, a liquor dealer named
Hagerty, was so notorious that Howard's
obligate himself to anyone, Howard enemies, includmg the Salem Evening News,
<lecJined a number of offers of bail and went viciously
to jail. For three days he edited his paper attacked mm.
.
from Cell 45. Then contracting a severe
Hagerty promptly issued a statement
attack of rheumatism, he
declaring that anyone who was an enemy
�742
NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE
of Robin Damon, owner of the News, was a
incident alone won Howard many votes.
friend of bis, and although he expected
Howard might some day want to attack him, A few days before election Howard and
he had signed the bail bond because Damon Curtis together composed one of the most
was responsible for the editor's arrest.
remarkable campaign-songs ever sung in
Howard said he consented to Hagerty's America,-a real classic in that form of
assistance because he felt sure the man "literature." It was published in the
could have no axe to grind. Curtis was also "Despatch" and sung about the streets by
enthusiastic citizens as the battle hymn of
arrested and bailed out by his brother.
the Reform Candidate. If it were not so
This occured eight months ago. Howard at
long, it might with interest be quoted here.
once became famous. He announced his
During those last few days there was more
candidacy for mayor and as soon as he got
out of jail he registered as a voter in Salem so demonstration and excitement, a more
as to be eligible. He is still under indictment, general arousing of the citizens than has
however, and is expected to go on trial at the occurred in that staid old Puritan city since
the Revolution, or, perhaps, as some insist,
next sitting of the Superior Court. Salem
since the time of Cotton Mather and the
faces the possibility of having her affairs
dreaded witches. Finally came the election,
conducted from the county jail, in case the
with an overwhelming majority in favor of
jury decides against her interesting
Arthur Howard.
editor-mayor.
Early in the evening when the returns
"An honest mayor in jail is better than a
crooked politician at liberty any day," began to indicate the landslide in the Reannounced Howard, and kept busily at work form Candidate's favor, the younger voters
went wild with enthusiasm. They hired a
on his campaign.
brass band, impressed automobiles, and
About this time he published an article
abducting Howard from the paint-shop
concerning three Mcsweeney brothers. He
where he was preparing to get out an
said Morgan McSweeney, a republican and
"extra," they paraded him through the
member of the liquor commission under
streets before the admiring multitude.
Mayor John Hurley, William McSweeney,
There was a sad note, however, in all
democrat, alderman and a candidate for
mayor, and P. A . .McSweeney, independent the cheering and enthusiasm with which
and insurance and bond agent, were "shaking the populace hailed the election returns,
for Howard had received a telegram from
down" the applicants for liquor licenses to
New York that day, summoning him to the
their own considerable profit. He charged that
death-bed of his father. He was followed to
when an applicant went to Morgan Mcthe railroad station by the most enthusiastic
Sweeney for a license, he was required to
crowd ever seen in the city, thousands who
retain Brother Bill as counsel and go to
Brother P. A. to obtain his bond. This article, were all fighting for a chance to shake hands
entitled "Both Ends and the Middle," resulted with the man from whom a few weeks
in so severe a beating from the enfuriated P. before they would not as much as purchase
a penny paper. It was with difficulty that he
A. McSweenev,
got away from them and into his train. He
a powerful man six feet tall. that tl-ie editor
was obliged to go away for a week in order to reached New York just too late to receive his
father's blessing and ten him of his having
recuperate sufficiently to appear in public
succeeded at last; his father had died.
again on the stump. Nevertheless, though
McSweeney was very friendly with the men Howard got back to Salem two days later to
who were prosecuting Howard for libel, the find money showering into his little
paint-shop newspaper office from
latter refused to prosecute him saying that
merchants eager to get a few lines, at least,
the man had merely allowed his temper to
of advertising into his now famous paper.
gain the better of his self-control. This
He rushed an order off for modern linotype
machines, printing presses, and is making
plans to renovate the old
�MAYOR ARTHUR HOWARD OF SALElI
74
building where he began so humbly a year
3
dates. They couldn't speak French. I can. I
ago, into a modern newspaper office.
Howard does not look like a mayor, nor yet addressed the French citizens in their own
language and it made a hit with them. So
like an editor. He looks more like ·a
they voted for me.
travelling salesman. He is tall and slight, not
"One of my first official acts will be to
at all strong physically, but his face makes remove City Marshal. Joseph W. Dane.
up for any deficiency in that respect. It is
The mayor has the authority both of
that of a fighter.· The clear gray eyes are
nominating and removing the city marshal.
level and seem to see through the man with I think that one of the things that defeated
whom he may be talking. In the corners of
Mayor Hurley was his retention of Dane in
the eyes are the footprints of Howard's ever office.
ready smile, for he does not make the
"I shall ask each of the aldermen to
mistake of taking life too seriously. He even name a candidate for city marshal, and I
jokes about his fight for the mayoralty,
shall select one of them. If at any time any
"Running for mayor," says he, "is like being two aldermen bring me a complaint
seasick. When a man's seasick, he is afraid against the man I select I shall at once pref
at first he's going to die, and at the last of it er charges against him.
he's afraid he won't die. When I announced
"I intend to combine efficiency with
myself a candidate I was afraid I wouldn't economy, honesty with politics, and give
win, and the last of it I was afraid I would." Salem the best administration next year
A platform as unique as his career was that the city ever had. If I don't make good
announced by the editor~mayor when he it won't be my fault. In my inaugural
was met by an interviewer, as he was address I shall call attention to twenty-five
returning from his father's funeral.
improvements that can be made under the
"There are several things which it won't existing city ordinances in the conduct of
do to talk about until I am ready to put in city affairs."
practice," said he, "but for one thing I am Howard also announced that he would
going to publish in full every bill against the devote all his salary as mayor to the fund for
city which is presented to me for approval. playgrounds for children in Salem. But his
They will be published in my paper, where enemies were still abroad and very busy. A
every citizen can see what Salem is asked to disinterested spectator may well suggest that
pay for, by whom, and how much.
he should not have made public his
"And I am going to see what can be done charitable design, for this was the first of his
about removing the present excise cherished plans that enemies undertook to
commissioners,'' continued the mayorelect. thwart. Among the bitter exigencies of the
"I have found the mayor has power to preceding twelve months, several bills had
remove them if they dabble in politics. I am accrued -for printing and for board. At the
going to see the three commissioners right instigation of hostile politicians, an ataway. If they refuse to resign, I think I will tachment was forthwith placed upon his
have no trouble in removing them.
salary, so that for the first time in the history
"My idea of a License Commission is a of New England it is said, perhaps in the
board· composed of one representative history of our whole country, a mayor could
business man, one laboring man, and one not touch a penny of the money his city owed
Frenchman. Out of the thirty-seven him until his creditors had been appeased.
licenses granted by the present commission Having accomplished this bit of strategy,
only one was given to a Frenchman,
they next proceeded to win over the man who
. which I consider very unfair to the large
had so eagerly offered surety for the
French population of Salem.
harrassed editor last fall, Daniel P. Hagerty
"It was our French citizens that helped a taking advantage of the present critical
lot in my election. This is where I had the period while his father's estate is being
bulge on the four other candisettled. At the close of March, Mayor
Howard's secretary was astonished at receiving notice to the effect that Hagerty
�74
4
NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE
would surrender the mayor to custody unless new
not being treated fairly. I think he is in the right
bondsmen were secured before the following
Saturday night. This fact quickly became known in and means to do the fair thing by his city. Why
the city, and there ensued another of the thrilling de- should he be so criticised and found fault with
velopments of this remarkable story. The women of and abused? Wouldn't you, if you Jived in
Salem did not propose that their mayor should go to Salem, want to see a man given chance when
he is doing his best?"
jail again. Without intimating their plan to the
mayor, or indeed to anyone, they hastily canvassed
Mrs. Little, whose husband is the present
the city for one-dollar subscriptions to the necessary Collector of the Port, remarked:
fund. Miss Charlotte Fairfield, the coal dealer who "Yes, Mayor Howard is giving us a dignified
recently made a plucky and famous fight against the administration; but of course there is always
antagonism toward a true reformer on the part
Salem coal trust, was in charge, and the club
of those who are sure to be hit in the event of a
members, society women, and leaders in the best
reform wave."
feminine influences of Salem,-among them Kate
Tannat Woods, the author; Mrs. David M. Little, Mayor Howard appears always in good spirits,
wife of a former mayor; Mrs. George L. Adams; and declares that he is not troubled by what his
and Mrs. W. H. Gove, - were active subscribers. Soenemies may say about him, that possibly some
strong was the feeling, that when the scheme was who are now talking may themselves be later
welJ under way, it could scarcely be stopped.
committed to jail. He has already accomplished
Dollars kept pouring into :Miss Fairfield's office many of the reforms he intended, and states that
long after they were no longer needed. The amount more surprises may be expected. He is indeed
of the bond, $800, was raised within a few the hero of one of the most curious and romantic
hours. and represented eight hundred individual politic situations that has occurred in our
suhscril,ers, all women. ::\Iayor Howard was country since those exciting days just
prior to the Civil War, and not only New
deeply touched by this proof
of sympathy and inspired to renewed effort. nor England but all the States await with interest
could he refuse a new bond so heartilv what further events wiJJ follow while he is in
office.
furnished. Therefore he is still
at liberty,
His latest announcement is that he intends to
But his enemies now had a new subject for
become Congressman from the Salem district,
l'on1111ent. "Hiding behind the skirts of
and he has been making some intensely
women!" Mrs, George L. Adams exdaime<I
interesting and characteristic speeches at dubs
indignantly on hearing this gossip. "\\'hy, if such and dinners in and about the towns and cities
a thing as that is ever said, the women of Salem outlying Salem, no doubt with this purpose in
will raise up in a body and dcnnunce the author! view, though speaking always by invitation.
lfavor Howard was in utter iRTiorance o( our
Recently some of his busy political enemies
plans. He did not know what we had done until spread a rumor that the Mayor had decided to
we offered the cash itself in court. I consider it
give up and leave Salem for good. On being
rather shamcinl that the men clid not take the
asked about this, Mr. Howard's serious eyes
initiative in this matter and not leave it to the
lighted for an instant. "Quit !" he exclaimed,
women. Xe) rloubt this affair will interest Salem then added quietly: "Xo, not till the end of the
women more in politics in future."
last day of next December, and then only be:Miss Fairfield stated why the women were cause I'm going to Congress."
so ready to co-operate in the matter. "Our reason
His editorial ways are as unusual as his
for this? w-n, we think ;\Tayor Howard is a Political views. His little office partitioned off
gentl<•man and is
in a comer of the paint-shop loft is a most
interesting place. It is furnished with a rickety
table patched up with a rough board and
covered with brown paper fastened on with
nails. This
a
�MAYOR ARTHUR HOWARD OF SALEM
745
is his desk. There is a battered' kitchen chair
with a split seat for a desk chair. A dilapidated sold . . • . What I the Boston marketmen want
Morris chair which has seen better days is 500 papers? Sorry, but we haven't got them ..•.
placed beside the table for callers. In the corner No, can't do it. Our printer's gone home to
is a rusty stove. On a rough board shelf is a supper and we can't print any more papers until
much thumbed dictionary and a few city pam- he gets back .... No, can't promise any in the
morning. You'll have to wait until our new
phlets.
A row of spikes driven into the wall is Mr. machinery is set up . . . . No, can't let you have
Howard's letter file. The method of filing is to any back copies, either. The newsdealers came
stab the head of a spike through the letter being in today and bought them all up. Goodbye."
Just then the printer-who was typecareful to perform the stabbing in alphabetical
setter and all the rest of the mechanical
order.
A Bible and a telephone-a very recent department, too-got back from supper.
innovation-are placed handily upon the table. Presently he rushed into the editorial sanctum,
The bookmark in the Bible to mark the editor's type stick in one hand and copy in the other.
favorite text is a handsome, unmounted "Here, I don't like this. It ought to go this way,"
photograph of his wife. Opposite, against the he announced, rattling off a sentence.
"Oh, that's all right," assented Curtis with
bare boards of the wall, where his eyes may rest
upon it when he glances up from his editorial ready good nature. "Go as far as you like. Fix it
up to suit yourself."
duties, is a large photograph of his daughter.
The Despatch office is a model democracy.
"Now that you are rich and famous,"
ventured the interviewer, just after the election,
Since this article was written. one of the
"and your paper is booming, will yon publish
political storms that had for months been
any news in it?" •
.. J hadn't thought of that yet," said Howard, ' gathering over Mayor Howard's devoted head
I ··t T don't see why I should. If people 111.e broke ; he was brought to trial late in June on
them the charge of criminal libel for which last year
politics and literature, why should I
with murders and scandals? It's not necessarv to he was imprisoned. But the result of this trial
publish news in a newspaper unless people de- was a mighty shock to the "ring" which the
mand it. Besides, you have to hire reporters, pay Mayor fought so strenuously both before and
for telegrams and go to a lot of expense and since election. After an exciting and
nerve-racking trial, and an all-night deliberation
trouble.
"Now, right at the head of the editorial of the jury, during which all
column I invite anybody who hears any news to •the Mayor's friends fought the heaviest odds for
bring it in and I'll consider it. The only kind of him, a verdict of acquittal on each and all of the
news worth publishing is the news for which eight counts against him was rendered. Then the
there is a popular demand. If there is a popular city went -vild with delight; visions of jail and r
demand for a piece of news, any reader will he olitical martyrdom were dispelled by various
sure to bring it in and if there is any room for it, happy demonstrations such as, perhap e, no
and it's not scandalous or libelous, I'll publish other mayor has ever experienceu, Impromptu
receptions and flag-flying showed the whole
it."
While the interviewer sat in the paintshop district to be in the gayest of holiday moods.
private office chatting with H. F. Curtis, Also the 8oo women who had furnished $1 each
Publisher Howard's editorial and reportorial to make up the bail bond a few months previous,
staff rolled into one, the 'phone was continually declined to take back their monev.
During the harrowing hours while the jury
ringing and Mr. Curtis' voice would be heard in
deliberated, and hope sank so low. Mayor
a onesided conversation something like. this:
"Hello • . . . Yes, this is the Salem Despatch Howard wrote in place of his
office . . . No, every copy is
arn,ct
�746
NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE
customary editorial in the Despatch, the
following poem, which is the only public
expression of his many months of suffering he
has ever made :
Dark is this world; my sun gone down, No
star of hope for me to rise,
The face of all things wears a frown, Or on
the earth or on the skies.
Without an anchor_,:_where to ride,
And chased around in every storm.
No home, no haven, where to steer; No
chart, a sea without a shore; No buoy, or
light or beacon near; No one to weep
when I'm no more.
Next day, when the shadows were all so
suddenly dispelled, he said in an interview: ''I
Go on, unpitying world, go onPour all
want to thank all my staunch friends who have
thy vengeance on my head,
stuck by me through all this. There is nothing
And when the cup's last dregs are gone I,
of bitterness in my heart for those who sought
then, shall have no more to dread.
to bring about my imprisonment. I have only
forgiveness for my enemies and any elation I
Long have I toiled to live-in vain.
may feel is, I think, pardonable. .My greatest
joy is in the happiness of my friends. I acted
For life is naught, devoid of rest; Long
honestly and the people believed me when they
struggled with the strife for fame, Long kept
made me Mayor; the jury believed me when
my sorrows in my breast.
they found me not guilty. I'm a happy man
tonight." His victory at the polls, his
Why was I made; or why thus born, The
Uvictory in the courts and his personal
sport of every wayward gale? Launched on
fpopularity, evidenced so generally today, lead
an ocean dark, forlorn; A leaky, shattered
his friends to predict confidentially that he wiJJ
crazy sail,
he a winner in his fight for Congress against A.
Without a compass or a guide,
P. Gardner.
n
Without a rudder in a storm,
AUTUMN FOLIAGE FROM LAWRENCE OBSERVATORY B>'
FREDERICK MERRILL PYKE
Pray, tell me not that Homer's Times are dead
,vhen from this slender steel-reared height
Earth drops away beneath the sight
Like an unwelcome mist, and there, instead Breathe
round ethereal seas of Autumn red, And changeful
green, and silver-white, Thro' whose soft tides of
lucent light Anon some boulder Ii fts a shaggy head;
Glarlly on such a wonder-sea as this
Would I launch out, Ulysses-like of old, Make sail
within the vessel of my dreams, And westward fare,
until bright Atlantis
Rose heavenward thro' the spray of blue and gold, Her marble domes aglow
with rosy gleams.
�8.
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12.
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Briggs Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
25 Briggs Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Richard Savory
Cooper and wife
Betsy Lewis
1805
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1805
House History Written: March 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth & Amy Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
1805
2020
25/Briggs Street
Cooper
Lewis
Massachusetts
Salem
Savory
-
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e2cedf833d03cb6725cc373b52f3148b
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
14 Conant Street
Salem, MA
Built for
Richard Stickney
Housewright
1833
Researched and written by Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc.
February 2020
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 I historicsalem.org
©2020
�Owners & Occupants
14 Conant Street, Salem
by Robert Booth, Public History Services, Inc., February 2020.
According to available evidence, this house was built for Richard Stickney,
housewright, in 1833. For many years it was occupied by tenants.
In May, 1825, Richard Stickney, housewright, for $216 bought from the Youngs a
"piece of land in the easterly part of Salem," fronting 72' on the way "leading from
Bridge Street to Samuel Skerry's" and running back 83' (ED 239:76).
In the 1831 valuation, we find Richard owning and living in a Hardy Street house
worth $800 and also owning this lot worth $200.
In 1832, Mr. Stickney (1789-1858) divided the lot on now-Conant Street and sold the
southeast half. He kept the northwest half and began building a house there in
1833-valuations for that year show him with "unfinished house $200" in addition to his
Hardy Street homestead. In January, 1834, he mortgaged the remaining lot
(now-Conant Street) for $400 to John Swasey (ED 271:164). The lot fronted 36' on
"the way" and was bounded n.w. on land of Fitz, n.e. on land of Wells, and s.e. on land
of Conant. He finished the house that year. It was first noted in the 1834 valuation,
valued at $600.
It was built in a throwback form that had first appeared in Salem in the early 18th
century, including the gambrel type of roof. In finish-work it exemplifies the Federal
style in which Mr. Stickney had been trained and had been doing his carpentry. Within
a few years, houses were being built in the new Greek Revival style. This late-Federal
house retains some of its original woodwork, its chimneys, and its 1833 underpinning.
Richard Stickney was born in 1789 in Newbury, the son of Moses & Hannah (Ingalls)
Stickney. Circa 1802 he was evidently apprenticed to learn the trade of a housewright.
He was in Salem by 1812, when he was given a seaman's protective certificate on
Feb. 5, prior to sailing as a deckhand on a merchant vessel.
In February, 1814, he married Rebecca Jeffery (1791-1855), the daughter of Walter
Jeffery of Salem. They would have six children who grew to adulthood. The couple
resided on Hardy Street, in a house that Mr. Stickney evidently built in the 1820s.
They would live there for the rest of their lives.
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Salem's general maritime foreign commerce fell off sharply in the late 1820s.
Imports in Salem ships were supplanted by the goods now /being producecf (n
great quantities in America. The interior of the country was being opened for
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settlement, and some Salemites moved.away. To the north, the falls'ofthe,
Merrimack River powered large new te~tile mills (Lowell wrs founded in 18~3), whose
cotton, cloth, sold at home and overseas, created great wealth for their investors; and
it seemed that the tide of opportunity was e1bbing away from Salem. Salem's
merchants and capitalists were already pro$pering from ownership of an
iron-products factory in Amesbury and fro:m a textile factory they had built in
Newmarket, NH, so they saw the potential of manufacturi~g in Salem. In 1826, in an
ingenious attempt to stem the flow of talent from the town and to harness its potential
water power, they formed a corporation to dani the North River for industrial power;
but the attempt was abanJdoned in 1827, which further demoralized the town, and
caused several leading ditizens to move to
Boston, the hub of investment in the new economy.
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In January, 1828, Mr. Stickney contracted with the Free Wilil Baptists to bui'ld
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their meeting house on Herbert Street (EIHC, 1911). He wa~ to be paid $.7$ per day
for his apprentices' work, and $1.50 per day for himself, he not to charig:e
more than szoo and to take half his pay: in the value of the pews.
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Richard Stickney continued as an industr.ious building contractor and'carpenter
for many years. He would survive his ·wife and die on Dec: 11, 1858, q~ the : :
consequence of an accident. He had taken a visitor to the end of Hardy Street and
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was showing him the sights along the waterfront. Richard leaned on a fence,
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which collapsed, and he fell backwards to the beach below. /He died as a result.
His son Char/e's sued the City of Salem and won a jury verdidt, but the case was
appealed and 'the City won its counter-suit.
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In 1830 occurred a horrifying crime that brought disgrace tq Salem. Old Capt. : :
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Joseph White,·a wealthy merchant, resided in the house now called the GardnarI
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Pingree house; on Essex Street, One night, someone broke i~to his mansion ~nd
killed him in h~s bed. All ~f Salem buzzed with the news of 1urderou~ trug~;jbut the
killer was a Crowninshield (a fallen son of one of the five brothers; he killed
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himself in jail).' He had been hired by Capt. White's own rela;tives, Capt. Joseph
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Knapp and his brother Frank (they would be executed). Tile 1results of the 1 1
investigation and trial having uncovered much that was lurid, and several I i
respectable families quit the now-notorio, us town. . I : ; !
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In 1836-7 (per:1837 Salem'Directory);,this house (#14) is l,isted as ocoupled by
tenants Darling Low, brickmaker, and'by'John Hann, perhaps a misspelhng 6f. Ham.
There was a John Ham, 55, a native of Maine working ~s a maso», livihg in Salem
unmarried in 1855 (per census, h. '48). Darling Low·w~s recently arriv~~
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�from Danvers with his wife Phebe and their two children; and they would soon
return to Danvers.
Darling low (1813-1874, born 1813 in Shapleigh, Maine, son of Jeremiah & Abigail
Low, died 4 Oct. 1874, Lynn. Hem. October, 1833, at Waterboro, Maine, Phebe Rhoads
(1810-1890), born 9 Apr 1810, d. 5 May 1890, Lynn. Both buried Walnut Grove
Cemetery, Danvers. Known issue (recorded at Danvers):
1. Betsey E., 1834
2. Sylvester, 1835, died 1837.
3. Alonzo S., 1837-1899
4. Phebe A., 1839, died of measles 6 Feb. 1846.
5. James W., 1842-1906, m. Adrianna Canney
6. Augusta E., 1846, died 1851.
As the decade wore on, Salem's remaining merchants took their equity out of
wharves and warehouses and ships and put it into manufacturing and transportation,
as the advent of railroads and canals diverted both capital and trade away from the
coast. Some merchants did not make the transition, and were ruined. Old-line areas
of work, like rope-making, sail-making, and ship chandleries, gradually declined and
disappeared. Salem slumped badly, but in 1836 the voters decided to charter their
town as the third city to be formed in the state, behind Boston and Lowell. City Hall
was built 1837-8 and the city seal was adopted with an already-anachronistic Latin
motto of "to the farthest port of the rich East" -a far cry from "Go West, young man!"
The Panic of 1837, a brief, sharp, nationwide economic depression, brought
economic disaster to many younger businessmen, and caused even more Salem
families to depart in search of fortune and a better future.
Salem had not prepared for the industrial age, and had few natural advantages. The
North River served not to power factories but mainly to flush the waste from the 25
tanneries that had set up along its banks. Throughout the 1830s, the leaders of Salem
scrambled to re-invent an economy for their fellow citizens, many of whom were
mariners without much sea-faring to do. Ingenuity, ambition, and hard work would
have to carry the day.
One inspiration was the Salem Laboratory, Salem's first science-based
manufacturing.enterprise, founded in 1813 to produce chemicals. At the plant built
in 1818 in North Salem, the production of alum and blue vitriol.was a specialty; and
it proved a very successful business.
Some Salem merchants turned to whaling in the 1830s, which led to the building of
two small steam-powered factories producing high-quality candles and machine oils
at Stage Point. The manufacturing of white lead began in the 1820s,
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and grew large after 1830, when Wyma·n's gristmills on the Forest River wete
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retooled for maklng high-quality white lead and sheet leadj(the approach tq
Marblehead is still called Lead Mills Hill, although the empty mill buildings ,
burned downIn 1960s).
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These enterprises started Salem in a new direction. In 183~ the Eastern Rail' Road,
headquartered in Salem, began operating between Boston and Salem, which gave
the local people a directrouts to the region's largest market. The new railroad tracks
ran righ~ over the middle of the Mill Pord; the tunnel under Washington Street was
built in 1839; and the line was extended to Newburyport
in 1840.
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In 1842 (per Directory) "14 Conant Street" was occupied by E. Barron, a farmer,
and Fairfield Barron.
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In 1844 (per Street Book), 14 Conant was occupied by heads of household 1
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William Fairfield, 32, and John "Briges," 27.
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"William Fairfield (1814~18'77), the son Moses & ElizabetH Fairfield, led an I
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followina vovaaes: , , . i : :
• William, 16, with light hair arid light complexion, 5' tall, on board br.ig
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"Washington" departing for Maranham, 31 May 18~0
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~ William, 16, as above, ship "Delphos," departing tor.Sumatra on 1s;r:,ec.
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ο William. 18. as above. brlz "Numa." deoartine: for PJramaraibo & a' ·
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market, 13 Jan. 1832
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•William, 18, as above, brig "Numa," departing 4 Maf 1832 ·
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• William, 22, as above, 5' 4" tall, bark "Eliza" to Sout~ America and 1ppia,
departing 24 May 1833 under Capt. Thomas M. Saunders.
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On this last voyage, William Fairfield, having reconsidered making the trip out to
India, deserted at Montevideo. He made no further voyage$, per Salem Crew
Lists.
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William came ashore and took up the trade of a shoemaker' In August, 1834, in
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Reading, he married Eliza W. Russell (18~9-1904) of Salem. ,n 1837 they ha:d; a
son George A.; and in 1838 a son John H'. In 1840 (per census) they resldedon
Northey Street; and that year Eliza gave birth to a daughter] Anna. Daughter:
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Abba would be born in 1847: and Elizabeth would be born in 13.5n
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The 1840s prayed to be a decade of explosive growth in SalFm's leat):i¢r in~ystry, still
conducted largely as a mass-production handicraft, and1 its new textile i
manufacturing, applying leading edge machine technology. :
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�The tanning of animal hides and curing of leather, a filthy and smelly enterprise, took
place on and near Boston Street, along the upper North River. In 1844, there were 41
tanneries; a few years later, that number had doubled and in 1850 they employed 550
workers. Salem had become one of the largest leatherproducers in America; and it
would continue to grow in importance throughout the 1800s.
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In 1847, along the inner-harbor shoreline of the large peninsula known as Stage
Point, the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company completed the construction of the
largest steam cotton factory building in the world, four stories high, 60' wide, 400' long,
running 1700 looms and 31,000 spindles to produce millions of yards of first-quality
cotton sheeting and shirting. It was immediately profitable, and 600 people found
employment there, many of them living in new houses on The Point. The cotton
sheeting of The Point found a ready market in East Africa, and brought about a revival
of shipping, led by the merchants David Pingree (president of the Naumkeag
company) and John Bertram.
In Lynn, the factory system was perfected, and that city became the nation's leading
shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe workers from
outlying towns and the countryside. Even the population changed, as hundreds of Irish
families, fleeing the famine in Ireland, settled in Salem and
gave the industrialists a big pool of cheap labor.
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The Gothic symbol of Salem's new industrial economy was the outsized twintowered granite-and-brick train station-the "stone depot"-smoking and growling
with idling locomotives, standing on filled-in land at the foot of Washington Street,
on the site of shipyards and the merchants' wharves.
In general, foreign commerce waned: in the late 1840s, giant clipper ships sailing from
Boston and New York replaced the smaller vessels that Salem men had sailed around
the world. The town's shipping consisted of vessels carrying coal and importing hides
from Africa and Brazil, and Down East coasters with cargoes of fuel wood and lumber.
A picture of Salem's waterfront is given by Hawthorne in his mean-spirited
"Introduction" to The Scarlet letter, which he began while working in the Custom
House.
In the 1846 Directory William Fairfield (head of household) is listed as occupying #14,
whereas the Street Book identifies #14 as occupied by heads-of-household John
Stone Jr., 35, and Jeremiah Choate, 28 (who, in 1848, would be residing at #18). Mr.
Choate was a stone mason; he lived here with wife Sarah and daughter Caroline, two
(per census, 1850, h. 104).
William Fairfield, in the future, would, at 44, enlist in July, 1863, in Company D of the
Mass. Third Heavy Artillery Regiment. He saw hard duty and participated in
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several battles before being mustered out in November, 1864. The family ,
eventually moved to Beverly, where Mr .. Fairfield would dielon May 7, 1877 .. His
gravestone epitaph mentions his service in the army. He wqs survived by his:
children and wife Eliza, who would die on Aug. 31, 1904, aged 85.
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In 1847 (per Street Book), 14 Conant was occupied by hea~ of household Luther Scribner,
27. He worked as a stone mason. In 1848 (per Street Book), #14 was occupied by heads
of household Luther Scribner and Fentor Symonds, 28, who worked as a painter. Mr.
Scribner would die of lung fever ln May, 1850.
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On Dec. 1, 1848, for $835 Richard Stickney, housewright, sold to Salem mariner
John Bradshaw, the "two story dwelling house" and its land, fronting 36' on
Conant Street (ED 404:245). ' 1
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Like Mr. Stickney, Captain Bradshaw rented it out. In 1850 he resided in Beverly at age
63 with wife Hannah, 50, and four offspring (h. 337, i1850 census for :
Beverly). Capt. John Bradshaw would die at 93 in May of 1880 in Beverly. His
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talents included map-making. Circa 1830 he made a chart of the Bay of San :
Francisco, now in the coHection of the Bancroft Library at UC-Berkeley.
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:"tn 1850 the tenants at'.:tt:1:4 were Luther Scribner, stone mason, and Benjamin A.
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:Gray, tailor (per 1850 Sal·em Directory); Per the 1850 Census (ward two, h.177)
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the house was occupied by Benjamin A .. Gray, 38, clerk, wif~ Martha, 37, and
children John 10, Martha 8, George C., 14, Benjamin A. Jr., 5, Mary A. 3, and Caroline C.,
infant; also, Jonathan S. Temple, cabinet maker, wife Frances
(nee Elder), 33, a native
of Maine, son Howard E., 10, and Elizabeth Scully, 17, a· native
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of Nova Scotta, The Temples soon moved out; and they were living in Glou~,ster
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by 1860.
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Benjamin A. G.ray (1811-1891) had married Martha Ann Agtpe in 1835 and ~~ey
had son John and daughter Augusta. Hebecame an insurance agent1by 1853 (still
.residing here per Directory); then th~y rnoved to then-1~ "1all Street.; fy'lr. $tay, a native of
Salem, would die of bronchitis on Feb. 27, 1891, in his 80th ,year. i 1
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Salem's industrial growth continued through the 1850s, as business expanded,
the population swelled, new churches w,ere built, new wor*ing-class; : : : neighborhoods
were developed (especially at The Point, South Salem .along i Lafayette Street, in North
Salem, off Boston Street, and a:lo~g the Mf,11, Pond : behind the Broad Street graveyard);
and new schools, factories, and stores were erected. A second, even-larger factory
building for the Naumkeag St~~m C?~ton Company was.added in 1859, down at Stage
Point, where a1new Methodist 'Church went up in 1852; and many neatnew homes,
boardlng-houses, an~ ; stores lined the streets between Lafayette and Congress., The
tanning,business continued to boom, as better and larger'tannsrtss were built along ~oston
tS~reet
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�and Mason Street; and subsidiary industries sprang up as well, most notably the J.M.
Anderson glue-works on the Turnpike (Highland Avenue).
As it re-established itself as an economic powerhouse, Salem took a strong interest in
national politics. It was primarily Republican, and strongly anti-slavery, with its share of
outspoken abolitionists, led by Charles Remond, a passionate speaker who came from
one of the city's leading black families. At its Lyceum (on Church Street) and in other
venues, plays and shows were put on, but cultural lectures and political speeches were
given too.
In 1855 (per Street Book) here lived William Ellsworth (a shoemaker), Benjamin
Butman, and Luther C. Butman, 27 (suffering from "inability"). Recently Moses
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Stearns and John S. Howard had lived there (names crossed out in 1855 Street
Book).
The Butmans soon moved on; the Ellsworths remained.
Benjamin Butman (1791-1871) was a shoemaker and proprietor of a variety store. He
had married Mary Standley in 1816 in Beverly. Luther (1824-1868) was one of their
children. He married a woman named Mary, and was 37, working as a janitor, when,
in July, 1863, he began serving as a private in the 22nd Mass. Infantry regiment, then
he joined the 32nd Infantry for the balance of the war. He would die in Beverly, of
consumption, on June 4, 1868, leaving his family.
William E. Ellsworth (1825-1899), born Dec. 1825, Salem, son of Jacob Ellsworth (b.
Bath, Me.) & Lydia A. Nichols (b. Salem), died 14 Jan. 1899 of lumbar abscess, 75th
year, in Lynn. Hem. c.1852 Mary E. (1833-1893), b. Mass., parents born England,
died Lynn 1893. Known issue:
1. Mary E., 1853, m. 1893 John D. Faulkner, Lynn.
2. Lydia A., 1856, m. 1872 John Ward, Beverly.
3. Charlotte H., b. Jan. 1860, died of septicemia, Lynn.
In 1857 the Ellsworths were still here. In the 1855 census (ward two, family 60) they
were identified as living here with young daughters and with George R. Emerson, 19,
a shoemaker. They soon moved on, to Manchester and eventually to Lynn, where
William would die, in his 75th year, in 1899.
In 1859 (per Directory), the Williams family resided here: William Henry, 34,
varnisher, wife Rebecca nee Hiter, 32 (probably a native of Marblehead}, and
children Charles H., 5, and Frederick A., one (per 1860 census 1889, ward 2).
Remarkably, Mrs. Rebecca Williams, as a widow, would return to reside here with
family members by the year 1900.
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In 1860 (per census, h. 1863, ward 2,), here lived the Pattens and Huddells, ;
• Samual R. Patten, 38,
a nati\ie of Marblehead, alnd a shoemaker) with
wi,fe Sarah, 27, a native of Malne, and children William A., two,: and
George, an infant
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William Huddell, 54, laborer; children Sarah (nee Petty), 27, Mar,y, 24,
Abby, 20, Benjamin, 18, shoemaker's apprenticf, and John, 12. ,
With the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, it was clear that the S0outhern states
would secede from the union; and Salem, which had done so. much to win
•the independence of the nation, was ready to go to war to 1force others to
remain a part of it.
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The Civil War began in April, 1861, and went on for four ye~rs, during which hundreds
of Salem men served in the atmy and navy, and many were killed'or died of disease or
abusive treatment while imprisoned. HJndreds more sMfered wounds, or broken
health. The people of Salem contributed greatly to efforts to alleviate the suffering of
the soldiers, sailors, and their families; and thera'was
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great celebration when the war finally ended in the spring of 1865 ..
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From this house, Benjamin Huddell (1844-1878) was a brave soldier in the.Civil
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. War. He enlisted on Ju.ly JO, 1861,. a .shcemakar, 18, in Company G of 17th 1 1
regiment of Mass. lnfantrv, serving thrdughout the war. '147 men diea' of : I
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disease; 21 died on wounds during their years' -long deployment in North 1 1
Carolina. Benjamin liked military service. After the war, he slgned up for tijrlee years
in the Sixth Infantry, serving in Georgia and South Carolina, mainly ar fort Gibson.
He was described as standing 5~ 5" tall, blue eyed, brown halted, with a
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fair complexion. He came home and worked as a lather un~il his death, at
consumption, on July 19, 1878. His remains were interred ~t Greenlawn 1 ,
Cemetery. : 1
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. In August, 1863, Capt. John Bradshaw of Beverly for $650 sold to Capt. Joseph W.
Luscomb of Salem, the house here and its land (ED 654:22:(). He too would rent it to
tenants. He was a retired shipmaster wo lived nearby with a large faniily.
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In 1865 (per census) the house was occupied by the Carr fa:mily: Michael, ~~' a
machinist, and Catherine ~9, both treland-born, and children George; Theresa,
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Through the 1860s, Salem pursued manufacturing, especially of leather and
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shoes and textiles. The managers and capitalists tended to 1build their new; grand
houses along Lafayette Street {these ho~ses may still be se~n, sout~ ~f Holly Street;
many are in the French Second Empire style, with mansard roofs). fi=cJctory workers,
living in smaller houses and tenements, wanted somethlng better for
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�themselves: in 1864 they went on strtks for higher wages and fewer hours of
work.
In 1870 Salem received its last cargo from Zanzibar. By then, a new Salem & New
York freight steamboat line was in operation. Seven years later, with the arrival of a
vessel from Cayenne, Salem's foreign trade came to an end. After that, "the
merchandise warehouses on the wharves no longer contained silks from India, tea
from China, pepper from Sumatra, coffee from Arabia, spices from Batavia, gum-copal
from Zanzibar, hides from Africa, and the various other products of far-away countries.
The boys have ceased to watch on the Neck for the incoming vessels, hoping to earn a
reward by being the first to announce to the expectant merchant the safe return of.his
looked-for vessel. The foreign commerce of Salem, once her pride and glory, has
spread its white wings and sailed away forever" {Rev. George Bachelder in History of
Essex County, II: 65).
Salem continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leather-making
business. In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor earthquake.
In the following year, the large Pennsylvania Pier (site of the present coal-fired
harborside electrical generating plant) was completed to begin receiving large
shipments of coal, most of it shipped by rail to the factories on the Merrimack. In the
neck of land beyond the Pier, a new owner began subdividing the old Allen farmlands
into a development called Salem Willows and Juniper Point. In the U.S. centennial
year, 1876, A. G. Bell of Salem announced that he had discovered a way to transmit
voices over telegraph wires.
In this decade, large numbers of French-Canadian families came to work in Salem's
mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The better-off workers
bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their families in the outlying
sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam Cotton mills would employ
~500 people (including hundreds of children) and produce annually nearly 15 million
yards of cloth. Shoe-manufacturing businesses expanded in the 1870s, and 40 shoe
factories were employing 600- plus operatives. Tanning, in both Salem and Peabody,
remained a very important industry, and employed hundreds of breadwinners. On
Boston Street in 1879, the Arnold tannery caught fire and burned down.
In the 1880s and 1890s, Salem kept building infrastructure; and new businesses
arose, and established businesses expanded. Retail stores prospered; horsedrawn
trolleys ran every which-way; and machinists, carpenters, millwrights, and other
specialists all thrived. In 1880, Salem's manufactured goods were valued at about
$8.4 million, of which leather accounted for nearly half.
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�In 1880 (per census, h. 139, ward 2) here lived Samuel Pulsifer, 36, painter, wife
Jennie L., 18, and her sister Katie F. Richardson, 16; also dentist Alvah T. Newhall, a
Vermont native, 29, wife Mary A., 26 (b. NH), and infant son Ernest. During the Civil
War, Mr. Pulsifer had served as a seaman in the Navy on board the USS "Sabine."
Both families soon moved on. Samuel would die in April, 1884.
In 1886 (per Directory) the house was home to families headed by George
Cunning and Frank H. Quinlin, a carpenter at the Boston & Main Railroad car
shop.
In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the
manufacturers for a ten-hour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers
imported labor from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out, and
there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners prevailed, and
many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their families, through
a bitter winter.
By the mid-1880s, Salem's cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed· 1400 people who
produced about 19 million yards annually, worth about $1.5 million. The city's large
shoe factories stood downtown behind the stone depot and on Dodge and Lafayette
Streets. A jute bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry Street and English
Street; its products were sent south to be used in cotton-baling. Salem factories also
produced lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern Railroad yard on Bridge Street, cars were
repaired and even built new. In 1887 the streets were first lit with electricity, replacing
gas-light. The gas works, which had stood on Northey Street since 1850, was moved
to a larger site on Bridge Street in 1888, opposite the Beverly Shore.
More factories and more people required more space for buildings, more roads, and
more storage areas. This space was created by filling in rivers, harbors, and ponds.
The once-broad North River was filled from both shores, and became a canal along
Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill Pond, which
occupied the whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue, Canal Street, and
Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage areas, junk-yards, rail-yards,
and parking lots. The South River, too, with its epicenter at Central Street (the Custom
House had opened there in 1805) disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza and
New Derby Street, and some of its old wharves were joined together with much in-fill
and turned into coal-yards and lumberyards. Only a canal was left, running in from
Derby and Central Wharves to Lafayette Street.
In 1891 the owner of #14, Capt. Joseph W. Luscomb, died on February 14 in his
eightieth year.
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�In 1895 (per Directory), here lived the families of Charles H. Grimes, a helper at the
B&M Railroad car shop, and Mrs. Helen M. Stanley, nurse, the widow of Abram J.
Stanley. They soon moved on.
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In September, 1897, the heirs of Captain Luscomb sold the house and land to
James Welch (ED 1525:462-465). The new owner rented it out for income.
In 1900 (per census, ward 2, h. 127) this was the home (in one apartment) of Mrs.
Rebecca (Hiter) Williams, 71, with boarders 9-year-old Irving Brown and John
Griffin, 63, a car shop laborer; and (in the other apartment) Rebecca's grandson
Edward Williams, 23, day laborer, wife Giralda, 23, a native of Nova Scotia (their
first child had died young), and John E. Carlin, 31, a Canada-born shop laborer.
Mrs. Williams had resided here with her family back in 1860; she resided here in 1901
and perhaps for a few more years.
The owner, James Welch, died in 1903. In July, 1905, the administratrix of his
estate sold the premises for $650 to Patrick A. Mcsweeney (ED 2213:271).
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th century by large
numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who settled primarily in the Derby Street
neighborhood, and by Sicilians, in the High Street neighborhood. By the eve of World
War One, the bustling, polyglot city supported large department stores and factories of
every description. People from the surrounding towns, and Marblehead in particular,
came to Salem to do their shopping; and its handsome government buildings, as befit
the county seat, were busy with conveyances of land, lawsuits, and probate
proceedings. The city's politics were lively, and its economy was strong.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street at Proctor), a fire
started in small wooden shoe factory. This fire soon raced out of control, for the west
wind was high and the season had been dry. Out of Blubber Hollow the fire roared
easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out the houses of Boston
Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping through Hathorne,
Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men and machines could not stop it:
the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed the neighborhoods
west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of Lafayette Street itself, and
raged onward into the tenement district of The Point. Despite the combined efforts of
heroic fire crews from
many towns and cities, the fire overwhelmed everything in its path: the Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Company factory complex exploded in an inferno. At Derby Street,
just beyond Union, after a 13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed
250 acres, 1600 houses, and 41 factories, and leaving three
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�dead and thousands homeless. Some people had insurance, some did not; all
received much support and generous donations from all over the country and the
world. It was one of the greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States,
and the people of Salem would take years to recover from it. Eventually, they did, and
many of the former houses and businesses were rebuilt; and several urban-renewal
projects (including Hawthorne Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and
w~dening old streets) were put into effect.
In May 1915 Patrick Mcsweeney sold the same to Edward J. Kenneally (ED
2296:268). He sold it in May, 1916, to C. Annie Finnan (ED 2329:82).
In 1920 (per census) the house was occupied by tenants Ellen Cassell, 52, a widow,
and sister Maritchie, 46, as well as by James Jones, a shoe finisher, born in Nova
Scotia, and family.
Salem was once again a thriving city; and its tercentenary in 1926 was a time of great
celebration. The Depression hit in 1929, and continued through the 1930s. Salem,
the county seat and regional retail center, gradually rebounded.
Salem prospered after World War II through the 1950s and into the 1960s. General
Electric, Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills (formerly Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Co.), Almy's and Newmark's and Webber's department stores, various other
retailers, and Beverly's United Shoe Machinery Company were all major local
employers.
In more recent years, ownership of the property (the dimensions of the lot
remain 36' by 83') has been transferred as follows:
1943 Kapustka to Grabowski, 3327:90
1947 to McGrane, 3577:372
1969 to Thibault to Cann, 5587:660, 5597:532
2005 to Doran, 25024:506
2008 to Steven D. Winship, 28059:326
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Chart of the Bay of St. Francisco/ Drawn by Capt. John Hradjshaw of! Beverly, Mass
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Title:
Chart of the Bay of St. Francisco/
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Title
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Conant Street
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Title
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14 Conant Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
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House Histories
Description
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Built for
Richard Stickney
Housewright
1833
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Historic Salem, Inc.
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Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
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Historic Salem, Inc.
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Built: 1833
House History Written: Feb. 2020
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Robert Booth
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14/Conant Street
1833
2020
Housewright
Massachusetts
Salem
Stickney
tenants
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Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
29 Broad Street
Salem, MA
Built for
Ezekiel Savage,
Esquire And his children
1808
Home of
Captain Oliver Thayer And
wife Rachel Bancroft
And remains in possession of their descendants
1839 to 2020
Researched and written by Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc.
February 2020
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 I historicsalem.org
©2020
�Owners & Occupants
29 Broad Street, Salem
By Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc. ~, ?.R;'ltZ)
l
According to available evidence, this house was built in 1808 for Ezekiel
Savage, Esq., and his children. Later it was the home of Capt. Oliver Thayer and
wife Rachel Bancroft; and it remains in possession of their descendants.
On 1 July 1807 Ezekiel Savage, guardian of his three offspring by wife Ann
Hathorne (who had died in 1806), was awarded several pieces of property in the
division of the William Hathorne estate. This included Lot 3, so called, bounded
north on Broad Street 85', east 162' 6" on Lot 4, south 84' on Lot 16, west 173' on
Hathorne Street (ED 184:88). On this lot, Squire Savage had this elegant house
built in the following year. It was the finest residence on Broad Street at the time.
Earlier, Ezekiel Savage and family had occupied a house (and he a law-office
building) on upper Essex Street, per Oliver Thayer: "We pass on to the office of
Ezekiel Savage Esq., and then to an old two-story gambrel-roof house with two
tenements, in one of which Mr. Savage lived, and from which he removed to his new
house on Broad, corner of Hathorne Street, in 1808" (per O.T.'s "Early Recollections
of the Upper Part of Essex Street"). Some years later, the Savages' former
(pre-1808) residence would be torn down to make way for the present building and
grounds of the First Church.
Ezekiel Savage Esq. 1760-1837) was an important figure in Salem, where he
served for years as a judge of the court of common pleas. His father, Thomas
(1710-1760), a merchant of Boston, died when Ezekiel was a new-born, leaving
three other children; in 1765 Ezekiel's mother, Sarah (Cheever) Savage (17271812), married again (William Taylor) and moved the family to Milton. Ezekiel
entered Harvard in 1774. The college moved to Concord when the British occupied
its buildings in Cambridge. Ezekiel's stepfather Taylor was a Loyalist and fled (he
later returned). While a collegian, on a day that found Ezekiel visiting the troops at
Winter Hill during the siege of Boston, a British cannonball landed so near that he
was sprayed with dirt.
After graduation Ezekiel went to Weymouth to study under Mr. Smith, the clergyman
(father of Abigail Adams, wife of the future president). In 1783 he gave up the
ministry, entered into a partnership in Boston with his half-brother Habijah, and, at
23, married Margaret Vose of Milton. In 1784 they moved to
�Salem, where their daughters Sarah (1784) and Margaret (1787) were born. In
1788 they moved to Boston, where Ezekiel worked as a shopkeeper and
tobacconist. Margaret (Vose) Savage died in 1793 (after the birth of son Thomas);
and in 1794 Ezekiel, with children, returned to Salem, where he worked as a
magistrate and would be known as Squire Savage. In December, 1797, he married
Ann Hathorne (1766-1806), daughter of William Hathorne & Mary Touzell. She
became a stepmother to Sarah, Margaret, and Thomas; and Ezekiel and Ann
would proceed to have three children, Mary, John, and Ann.
Ezekiel Savage (1760-1837), son of Thomas Savage & Sarah Cheever, died 22
June 1837. Hem. 1783 Margaret Vose (1763-1793), dtr. of Joseph Vose & Sarah
How, died 1 Oct. 1793. He m/2 1797 Ann (Nancy) Hathorne (1766-1806), dtr. of
William Hathorne & Mary Touze/1, died Oct. 1806. He m/3 1813 Parnell Cadman (b.
1760), dtr. of John Cadman & Abigail Asbury; of Dorchester in
1846. Known issue:
1. Sarah, 24 Aug. 1784, died 25 Feb. 1837; author & teacher.
2. Margaret, 1787, d. 29 April 1862
3. Thomas, 1793, Harvard 1813, Harvard Divinity School, minister in NH,
married twice and had issue; died 8 May 1866.
4. Mary Hathorne, 1798, d. 14 Jan. 1871.
5. John Touze/1 Hathorne, 1801-1843, m. Elizabeth Griffin, went to
Mississippi; physician.
6. Ann Hathorne, 1802, d. 10 Nov. 1886.
In February, 1806, Rev. William Bentley noted in his diary that he had received a
latter from "Esquire Savage recommending the introduction of Hannah Adams'
book" which was titled "Truth & Excellence of the Christian Religion." Bentley
suspected some political maneuvering in this, but told himself that Hannah Adams
"is a woman of personal merit who deserves·encouragement for her industry and
perhaps literary attainments." This shows that the Savages were readers. Hannah
Adams would write other books, some of them empowering to women. Daughter
Sarah was then twenty, presumably reading avidly.
Mrs. Ann (Hathorne) Savage never lived in this house, having died before its
construction. As mentioned, Squire Savage had the house built in 1808. He
resided here with his two sons and four daughters. In 1813 he married Parnell
Cadman (1760-1846), who would survive him and die in Dorchester in 1846.
Ezekiel's eldest, Sarah Savage (1784-1837), was the most interesting member of
this accomplished family. She conducted a private school, presumably in this house.
She wrote fiction, including a slim novella, "The Factory Girl," about a young woman
working in a textile factory and discovering her own identity
2
�(1814). Other books she wrote were titled "Trial and Discipline," "James Talbot,"
"Alfred," "The Backslider," as well as stories that appeared in "Scenes and
Persons, Illustrating Christian Character" (1833): Sarah Savage was among the
first women writers of fiction in America, and certainly unique in Salem. She would
remain single.
Of the many cases at law over which judge Savage presided, perhaps none was
more controversial than that heard in 1825, in which John Mumford brought suit
against the Crowninshield brothers, Dick and George, for mayhem at the Mumford
road house, situated on Essex Street near the gate of the BostonSalem turnpike
(now Highland Avenue). That trial is described in the book "Death of an Empire."
Judge Savage warned of the tragic effects of this sort of crime and the crowd
attracted by its lurid aspects. Later, in 1830, Dick Crowninshield, was hired as an
assassin and murdered Capt. Joseph White of 128 Essex Street-an event that,
combined with other factors, would bring disgrace upon Salem.
In the 1837 Salem Directory, compiled in 1836, we find Ezekiel Savage listed as a
"notary," residing at 29 Broad Street.
Sarah Savage died on Feb. 25, 1837, aged fifty-two. Her father, Ezekiel Savage,
died the following June 22, aged 76 years. He was survived by his wife Parnell (she
moved away) and by his offspring.
In May, 1839, for $250 Oliver Thayer, gentleman, purchased from Mary H.,
Margaret, and Ann Savage a piece of land on Broad Street, bounded 49' 7" on the
street and running back about 200' between land of the Savages and land of
Goldthwait (on the west) (ED 313:40). The term "gentleman" meant one who was
sufficiently living on investments or the work of others. Perhaps Oliver and Rachel
thought to build on that parcel; but they decided to sell (for a $175 profit) and did so
on Nov. 25, 1839 (ED 316:16).
Having connected with the Savages, Captain Thayer purchased their elegant house
on Broad Street. On Nov. 18, 1839, he, identified now as a Salem merchant, paid
$2700 to the Misses Savage-Mary H., Margaret, and Ann-for the homestead
formerly of their father, Ezekiel Savage Esq. (ED 315:299). The land, at the corner
of Broad and Circus (now Hathorne) Streets, fronted about 80' on Broad and ran
back about 180' in depth. The Savages gave him back a full-price mortgage, which
would be repaid in 1847 (.ED 315:299).
The Thayer family moved in (per the 1840 census): Oliver and Rachel, three
boys, two girls, and a probable maidservant in her twenties; remarkably, the three
Savages-Margaret, Mary H., and Ann-continued to live here too,
3
�through 1846 at least (per directories). In 1847 (evidently) the Savage sisters
moved out and in 1849 were residing at then-35 Broad (per directories).
The Thayers would plant a beautiful garden on their property.
Oliver Thayer (1798-1893) was the son of Stephen Thayer (d. 1813) and Rebecca
Oliver (1774-1866), the first of six children. Stephen, a native of Danvers, worked as
a shoemaker; Rebecca, a native of Salem, was the daughter of Hubbard Oliver and
Rebecca Wallis (1743-1836). Mr. Oliver, a brazier (coppersmith), would, in his last
years, serve as the town bell-man; and at 74, in February, 1819, he would die of
injuries after being hit by a cart (in his diary Rev. William Bentley reflects on aspects
of Mr._Oliver's life).
The Stephen Thayers had moved to Salem by 1800 (per census) and resided,
evidently, on upper Essex Street, where Stephen's father Benjamin had a house at
the corner of May Street. In 1804 Stephen Thayer purchased a house and land on
the north side of Broad Street (ED 173:251), near the home of his wife's brother
William W. Oliver, an influential Custom House official.
Stephen & Rebecca sent Oliver to the Hacker School, from which he was graduated
in a class of one hundred in 1806. Stephen died in March 1813, aged 38 years,
leaving Rebecca with the care of five children, of whom the eldest, Oliver, was
fifteen. Perhaps he had already been apprenticed as a mariner and was sailing on
privateers (the War of 1812 was being fought). Rebecca (Wallis) Thayer would live
out a very long life, unmarried, in Salem.
Evidently Oliver made a voyage on board the ship "Augustus" in 1815 to Smyrna in
the Mediterranean, Smyrna being the source of opium for shipment to Asia; and he
spent several months in Smyrna (see obituary).
Oliver grew tall (5' 9½") and by 1817 was working asa seaman on merchant vessels
sailing out of Salem. This career would take him all over the world, and he would
rise to the rank of shipmaster by 1826.
In 1817, Oliver (described as dark in complexion and 5' 9" tall) sailed on board the
246-ton ship "Augustus," owned by Joseph Peabody and bound for Havana,
departing on April 25 (SCL, Mystic Seaport, which is the source for the maritime info
below). One year later, he sailed on board the ship "China" for ports in Europe &
India. A year after that, in 1819, he, at 21, sailed on the same vessel for Leghorn
(Italy) and India. In 1820 he sailed on board the "Augustus" for St. Petersburgh,
Russia, departing May 24. In 1821 he sailed in the same vessel to the South of
Europe, departing Salem Harbor on Jan. 3. And in 1822
4
�he sailed as a deckhand on board the brig "Niagara," departing on April 24 for the
North of Europe.
Oliver's persistence was rewarded with an appointment to First Mate of the ship
"Augustus," sailing on December 9, 1822, for India. He was back home by April 24,
1824, when he and Rachel Bancroft, twenty, married. Rachel was one ofthe five children
of Daniel Bancroft, a Lynn Street carpenter and builder, and his wife Sally Cloutman,
who had wed in 1794. Eventually, Daniel would become a lumber dealer, a business in
which he would be joined by his son-inlaw Oliver Thayer. Daniel's father had been an
architect and builder who worked closely with Samuel McIntire. The Thayers resided
with the Bancrofts at 3 Lynn Street.
On May 7, 1824, Oliver sailed as First Mate of the "Augustus" for South America.
He sailed as First Mate of the same vessel in 1825, departing for Europe on June
1.
Early in 1826 he was hired as master of the brig "Stork," bound for Brazil, departing on
March 3. This was his first known command. It was a short trip; and on his return he
was given command of the brig "Jason," bound for St. Thomas and departing on Sept.
23. In command of the same, he sailed for Leghorn (Livorno, Italy), on June 7, 1827. He
had returned by December, and took command ofthe brig "Niagara," sailing for St.
Thomas on Dec. 27. Joseph Peabody was the owner.
Captain Thayer and wife Rachel at that time had a one-year-old, Edward, born Dec. 3,
1826. In 1828 Oliver may have sailed out of another port. Edward died in July, 1828, at
two.
In 1829 Oliver sailed in command of the brig "Niagara," departing for Antwerp on March
31. His next known Salem command was the brig "Amazon," owned by Joseph
Peabody, departing for Matanzas, Cuba, on Aug. 5, 1831, returning in March, 1832, by
way of New Orleans and Marseilles (see obituary). This appears to have been his final
voyage in command of a Salem vessel. By then, the couple had two little daughters,
Rachel and Rebecca.
Oliver Thayer "swallowed the anchor" and came ashore. He set up as a merchant with
his father-in-law, Daniel Bancroft, lumber dealer, who had bought a wharf for a lumber
yard in 1832 (ED 263:123). The wharf fronted 52' on then-Water Street, which was
later incorporated into Derby Street (site #289 Derby Street, Waterfront Park,
evidently). The Bancroft-Thayer lumber wharf on the South River (Inner Harbor) lay
between the wharves of Joseph Peabody Esq. and Jonathan Ashby.
5
�In 1836 (per 1837 Directory) Oliver Thayer resided with his family at 3 Lynn Street,
and operated the lumber yard at 45 Water Street as a partner in Bancroft & Thayer.
At that time, too, Oliver's mother, Mrs. Rebecca (Wallis) Thayer, resided at then-33
Federal Street with her daughters-two working as teachers at a charity school, and
one working as a milliner. Oliver dealt in lumber for construction and may also have
sold wood for fuel. The source of the wood was Maine, from which lumber
schooners came to Salem and discharged their cargoes along the waterfront at the
merchants' wharves.
Evidently the lumber business was good. In June, 1839, Oliver Thayer, lumber
dealer, purchased a waterfront parcel off Harbor Street, on the South River (Inner
Harbor) from the bankrupt J. K. Haynes & Co. (ED 313 290). This would become a
Thayer lumberyard with a Harbor Street address.
Salem had not prepared for the industrial age, and had few natural advantages.
The North River served not to power factories but mainly to flush the waste from
the 25 tanneries that had set up along its banks. Throughout the 1830s, the
leaders of Salem scrambled to re-invent an economy for their fellow citizens, many
of whom were mariners without much sea-faring to do. Ingenuity, ambition, and
hard work would have to carry the day.
One inspiration was the Salem Laboratory, Salem's first science-based
manufacturing enterprise, founded in 1813 to produce chemicals. At the plant built
in 1818 in North Salem, the production of alum and blue vitriol was a specialty; and
it proved a very successful business.
Some Salem merchants turned to whaling in the 1830s, which led to the building of
two small steam-powered factories producing high-quality candles and machine oils
at Stage Point. The manufacturing of white lead began in the 1820s, and grew large
after 1830, when Wyman's gristmills on the Forest River were retooled for making
high-quality white lead and sheet lead (the approach to Marblehead is still called
Lead Mills Hill, although the empty mill buildings
burned down in 1960s).
·
These enterprises started Salem in a new direction. In 1838 the Eastern Rail
Road, headquartered in Salem, began operating between Boston and Salem,
which gave the local people a direct route to the region's largest market. The new
railroad tracks ran right over the middle of the Mill Pond; the tunnel under
Washington Street was built in 1839; and the line was extended to Newburyport in
1840.
6
�Oliver Thayer {1798-1893), born 12 March 1798, son of Stephen Thayer &
Rebecca Wallis, died 1 June 1893. Hem. 24 April 1824 Rachel B. Bancroft
(1804-1887), dtr. of Daniel Bancroft {1772-1844) & Sarah Cloutman {17741853), died 15 Feb. 1887, aged 83 years, of anemia. Known issue, surname
Thayer:
1. Edward Smith, 1826, died 1828.
2. Rachel Maria, 1829, m. 15 Nov. 1849 John Sfr!ith Jones {1825-1889),
died April 3, 1913.
3. Sarah Rebecca, 1831, died 1835.
4. William Oliver, 1833-1873, m. 1865 Mary E. Wells; two daughters.
5. Daniel Bancroft, 1835-1840.
6. Edward Smith 2nd, 1837, m. 1862 Kate Felt
7. Rebecca Oliver, 1840, m. 1862 William Gavett
8. Sarah Bancroft, 1842, m. 1863 Jose Margotte
9. Marianna, 1844, d. 2 Dec. 1868.
On Sept. 9, 1844, Daniel Bancroft died of consumption (tuberculosis) at age 72,
probably at his house at 3 Lynn Street, leaving Mrs. Rachel Thayer as one of his five
heirs.
The 1840s proved to be a decade of explosive growth in Salem's leather industry,
still conducted largely as a mass-production handicraft, and its new textile
manufacturing, applying leading edge machine technology.
The tanning of animal hides and curing of leather, a filthy and smelly enterprise,
took place on and near Boston Street, along the upper North River. In 1844, there
were 41 tanneries; a few years later, that number had doubled and in 1850 they
employed 550 workers. Salem had become one of the largest leather-producers in
America; and it would continue to grow in importance throughout the 1800s.
If he had not done so already, Oliver Thayer likely assumed full control of the
lumber wharf. We see Captain Thayer at work as he agreed to furnish lumber for
houses being built on Phelps Court (July, 1844) and (June, 1845) on Dearborn
Street (ED 348:99, 353:8).
In 1845 Oliver Thayer (per 1846 Directory) resided at 29 Broad with his family and
ran the lumber wharf at then-45 Water Street. Stephen Thayer, Oliver's brother,
worked at the lumber wharf as a clerk, and lived at 10 Carpenter Street. Oliver's
mother, Mrs. Rebecca (Wallis) Thayer, widow, resided at then- 34 Broad Street
with family members.
7
�Per 1847 Street Book (ward 3), 29 Broad Street was occupied by Oliver Thayer
and Stephen Thayer and their families. At 36 Broad Street lived William W. Oliver,
Mrs. Rachel Thayer's brother, and family members.
Stephen Thayer (Jr.) (1802-1886), b. 26 Oct. 1802, son of Stephen Thayer & Rebecca
Oliver, died of paralysis, 27 May 1886. Hem. 29 Oct. 1829 Jane Holbrook
{1805-1892), dtr. of Thomas Holbrook Esq. of Canton and widow of Mr. Ke/loch
evidently; died 4 Oct. 1892. They resided in Canton, then in Salem. Known issue:
1.
Stephen Oliver, 1831
2.
Edward Cornelius, b. & d. 1833.
3.
Mary Jane, 1834-1838.
4.
5.
Edward Francis, 1837-1916, m. 1862 Nancy J. Sherman.
MaryJane,1841
In 1847, along the inner-harbor shoreline of the large peninsula known as Stage
Point, the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company completed construction of the largest
steam cotton factory building in the world, four stories high, 60' wide, 400' long,
running 1700 looms and 31,000 spindles to produce millions of yards of first-quality
cotton sheeting and shirting. It was immediately profitable, and 600 people found
employment there, many of them living in new houses on The Point. The cotton
sheeting of The Point found a ready market in East Africa, and brought about a
revival of shipping, led by the merchants David Pingree (president of the Naumkeag
company) and John Bertram.
In Lynn, the factory system was perfected, and that city became the nation's
leading shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe workers
from outlying towns and the countryside. Even the population changed, as
hundreds of Irish families, fleeing the famine in Ireland, settled in Salem and gave
the industrialists a big pool of cheap labor.
The Gothic symbol of Salem's new industrial economy was the outsized twintowered granite-and-brick train station-the "stone depot" -smoking and growling
with idling locomotives, standing on filled-in land at the foot of Washington Street,
on the site of shipyards and the merchants' wharves.
In general, foreign commerce waned: in the late 1840s, giant clipper ships sailing
from Boston and New York replaced the smaller vessels that Salem men had sailed
around the world. The town's shipping consisted of vessels carrying coal and
importing hides from Africa and Brazil, and Down East coasters with cargoes of fuel
wood and lumber. A picture of Salem's waterfront is given by
8
�Hawthorne in his mean-spirited "Introduction" to The Scarlet Letter, which he began
while working in the Custom House.
John Smith Jones married Rachel Maria Thayer in 1849. He was the son of
Salemites William Jones (born Ipswich in 1790) and Elizabeth Giles, daughter of
Samuel Giles and Elizabeth Reith of Marblehead. Like his father-in-law Giles,
William Jones was a joiner, or finish carpenter; the family resided on Lafayette Street
in 1837 (he was listed as a cabinet maker) and on Walnut Street (now Hawthorne
Boulevard) in 1842, William working as both a house-joiner and ship-joiner (per
directories).
It is possible that John S. Jones clerked for Oliver Thayer at the lumber wharf. In
1850 (per census, ward 3, house 682) here (at #29) lived Oliver Thayer, 52,
proprietor of a lumber wharf, $3500 in r.e., Rachel, 46, Wm. 0., 16, clerk, Ed, 13,
Rebecca, 10, Sarah, 8, and Mary A., 6, attended by domestic servant Bridget
"Lothrum" (probably Loughlin), 18, born Ireland, and Sarah Bancroft, 73; also, John
S. Jones, 26, clerk, and Maria R., 21, attended by Irish-born Mary Howes, 25. Sarah
Bancroft was surely Mrs. "Sally" (Sarah Cloutman) Bancroft, Rachel Thayer's
widowed mother.
Sally Cloutman (1774-1853) was born in Salem, the daughter of Henry Cloutman,
a fisherman, and Sarah Lang, who had wed in 1767. The Cloutmans had seven
children, some of whom probably died young. Sally married Daniel Bancroft Jr.,
carpenter, and the couple resided at the Bancroft house (3 Lynn Street), purchased
in 1785 by builder and architect Daniel Bancroft Sr. (died 1818) from a Lang
(perhaps a brother of Sally's mother). Sally (Cloutman) Bancroft died on Sept. 6,
1853, of paralysis, likely at this house (#29).
Salem's industrial growth continued through the 1850s, as business expanded, the
population swelled, new churches were built, new working-class neighborhoods
were developed (especially at The Point, South Salem along Lafayette Street, in
North Salem, off Boston Street, and along the Mill Pond behind the Broad Street
graveyard); and new schools, factories, and stores were erected. A second,
even-larger factory building for the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company was added
in 1859, down at Stage Point, where a new Methodist Church went up in 1852; and
many neat new homes, boardinghouses, and stores lined the streets between
Lafayette and Congress. The tanning business continued to boom, as better and
larger tanneries were built along Boston Street and Mason Street; and subsidiary
industries sprang up as well, most notably the J.M. Anderson glue-works on the
Turnpike (Highland Avenue).
9
�As it re-established itself as an economic powerhouse, Salem took a strong
interest in national politics. It was primarily Republican, and strongly antislavery,
with its share of outspoken abolitionists, led by Charles Remand, a passionate
speaker who came from one of the city's leading black families. At its Lyceum (on
Church Street) and in other venues, plays and shows were put on, but cultural
lectures and political speeches were given too.
In 1855 (per census, house 20), this house (#29) was occupied as a two-family.
Here lived Oliver Thayer, 56, lumber dealer, wife Rachel, 52, and offspring William,
22, and Edward, 18, both working as clerks, Rebecca, 16, Sarah, 13, and Mary A.,
11, all attended by domestic servant Bridget Laughlin, 21, a native of Ireland. In the
other unit resided John S. Jones, 31, clerk, Mary, 26, Edward, 5, infant Oliver, and
domestic servant Nancy Laughlin, 18, perhaps Bridget's sister.
Per 1857 Directory, Oliver Thayer was listed at 29 Broad, operating lumber wharves
at 199 Derby and 15 Peabody Streets. William 0., a clerk at 199 Derby, also lived at
29 Broad. Stephen Thayer, Oliver's brother, of 44 Broad, worked
as a clerk at the 15 Peabody St. lumber wharf. Margaret Savage, once a
resident here, still lived nearby; she would die in 1862.
In 1860 (per census, house 2032) here lived Capt. Oliver Thayer, 62, lumber
dealer, wife Rachel, 57, and offspring William 0., 26, and Edward S., 23, clerks,
Rebecca 0., 20, Sarah, 18, and Mary A., 16, also Phoebe E., 23, teacher, born
Nova Scotia. Also: John S. Jones, 36, flour dealer, Rachel M., 30, Edward W., 9,
Oliver T., 6, and domestic servant Margaret O'Donnell, 20.
With the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, it was clear that some Southern
states would secede from the union; and Salem, which had done so much to win
the independence of the nation, steeled itself to force the seceders to remain a part
of it.
The Civil War began in April, 1861, and went on for four years, during which
hundreds of Salem men served in the army and navy, and many were killed or died
of disease or abusive treatment while imprisoned. Hundreds more suffered wounds,
or broken health. The people of Salem contributed greatly to efforts to alleviate the
suffering of the soldiers, sailors, and their families; and there was great celebration
when the war finally ended in the spring of 1865.
Through the 1860s, Salem pursued manufacturing, especially of leather and shoes
and textiles. The managers and capitalists tended to build their new, grand houses
along Lafayette Street (these houses may still be seen, south of Holly Street; many
are in the French Second Empire style, with mansard roofs). Factory workers, living
in smaller houses and tenements, wanted something
I
O
�better for themselves: in 1864 they went on strike for higher wages and fewer hours
of work.
On Broad Street in 1865 (per census, house 17) here lived Capt. Oliver Thayer, 67,
lumber dealer, wife Rachel, 61, son William 0., 31, bookkeeper, and daughter
Mariana, 21. Also: John S. Jones, 40, flour merchant, Rachel Maria, 36, Edward
W., 14, George W., 3, and infant Egbert, all attended by servant Anastasia Quinlan,
19, a native of Ireland. Egbert would die of scarlet fever on Nov. 28, 1871, aged
seven.
William 0. Thayer, a graduate of Comer's Commercial College in Boston
(bookkeeping and navigation, specialties), married Mary E. Wells in 1865, and they
went to live at then-22 Liberty Street, from which he commuted to Boston to work as
a clerk. They would have daughters Grace (b. 1867) and Mary (b. 1870). William
would die on June 2, 1873, aged 39. He was remembered as an avid horticulturist in
youth who had exhibited fruit and flowers from his parents' garden (see EIHC, 1873).
In the later 1860s Oliver and Rachel Thayer moved to South Salem to reside with
daughter Sarah and her family. In 1870 (per census) they, 72 and 66, lived at
then-116 Lafayette Street with Jose Margatti, 29, bookkeeper originally from Manila
($10,000 in r.e., $10,000 in p.e.), wife Sarah (nee Thayer), 28, and children Dolores,
5, and Marianna, 3, attended by Mary Brown, 35.
In 1870 Salem received its last cargo from Zanzibar. By then, a new Salem & New
York freight steamboat line was in operation. Seven years later, with the arrival of a
vessel from Cayenne, Salem's foreign trade came to an end. After that, "the
merchandise warehouses on the wharves no longer contained silks from India, tea
from China, pepper from Sumatra, coffee from Arabia, spices from Batavia,
gum-copal from Zanzibar, hides from Africa, and the various other products of
far-away countries. The boys have ceased to watch on the Neck for the incoming
vessels, hoping to earn a reward by being the first to announce to the expectant
merchant the safe return of his looked-for vessel. The foreign commerce of Salem,
once her pride and glory, has spread its white wings and sailed away forever" (Rev.
George Bachelder in History of Essex County, II: 65).
In 1870 (per census, house 165) here (#29) lived the Thayer sisters, Rebecca and
Maria, and their husbands and families: Rebecca 0. Gavett, 30, husband William
F., 32, bookkeeper, and daughter Rachel F., 5; also, Frances C., 50, and Frances
C., 29, with servant Mary Graham, 21 (born PEI); also, John S. Jones, 45,
commission merchant ($8,000 in r.e., $8,000 in p.e.), Maria R., 39, Edward, 19,
store clerk, George W., 8, and Egbert, 5. Nearby lived their uncle Stephen
1
1
�Thayer, 67, bill collector ($4500 in p.e.), Jane H., 65, Mary J., 29, teacher, and
Betsy Shepherd, 89.
Salem continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leathermaking
business. In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor
earthquake. In the following year, the large Pennsylvania Pier (site of the present
coal-fired harborside electrical generating plant) was completed to begin receiving
large shipments of coal, most of it shipped by rail to the factories on the Merrimack.
In the neck of land beyond the Pier, a new owner began subdividing the old Allen
farmlands into a development called Salem Willows and Juniper Point. In the U. S.
centennial year, 1876, A. G. Bell of
Salem announced that he had discovered a way to transmit voices over
telegraph wires.
In this decade, large numbers of French-Canadian families came to work in Salem's
mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The better-off
workers bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their families in the
outlying sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam Cotton mills would
employ 1500 people (including hundreds of children) and produce annually nearly
15 million yards of cloth. Shoe-manufacturing businesses expanded in the 1870s,
and 40 shoe factories were employing 600- plus operatives. Tanning, in both Salem
and Peabody, remained a very important industry, and employed hundreds of
breadwinners. On Boston Street in 1879, the Arnold tannery caught fire and burned
down.
On Broad Street in 1880, #29 was occupied (per census] as a two-family: here lived
John S. Jones, 59, flour & grain, Rachel, 50, Edward W. 29, and George W. 18,
clerks; also, the widow of William O Thayer, Mary. E, 42, and daughters Grace, 13,
and Mary W., ten.
In 1880 (per census), Capt. Oliver Thayer, 81, retired (and presumably, Rachel, 74,
who is not listed), resided at then-116 Lafayette Street with the Margatti family:
Jose, 38, bookkeeper at a Boston firm, Sarah, 37, and children Dolores and
Marianna, 15 and 12; also, Edward Rowell, 29, hostler, and two servants, May
Jane Green, 47, and Matilda Okersteren, 36, a native of Sweden.
In the 1880s and 1890s, Salem kept building infrastructure; and new
businesses arose, and established businesses expanded. Retail stores
prospered; horse-drawn trolleys ran every which-way; and machinists,
carpenters, millwrights, and other specialists all thrived. In 1880, Salem's
manufactured goods were valued at about $8.4 million, of which leather
accounted for nearly half.
1
2
�In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the
manufacturers for a ten-hour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers
imported labor from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out,
and there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners prevailed,
and many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their families,
through a bitter winter.
By the mid-1880s, Salem's cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed 1400 people
who produced about 19 million yards annually, worth about $1.5 million. The city's
large shoe factories stood downtown behind the stone depot and on Dodge and
Lafayette Streets. A jute bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry Street
and English Street; its products were sent south to be used in cotton-baling. Salem
factories also produced· lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern Railroad yard on Bridge
Street, cars were repaired and even built new. In 1887 the streets were first lit with
electricity, replacing gas-light. The gas works, which had stood on Northey Street
since 1850, was moved to a larger site on Bridge Street in 1888, opposite the
Beverly Shore.
On Dec. 2, 1889, John S. Jones died of paralysis, aged 65 years. He left his wife
Rachel and their sons George and Edward.
More factories and more people required more space for buildings, more roads,
and more storage areas. This space was created by filling in rivers, harbors, and
ponds. The once-broad North River was filled from both shores, and became a
canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill Pond,
which occupied the whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue, Canal
Street, and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage areas,
junk-yards, rail-yards, and parking lots. The South River, too, with its epicenter at
Central Street (the Custom House had opened there in 1805) disappeared under
the pavement of Riley Plaza and New Derby Street, and some of its old wharves
were joined together with much in-fill and turned into coal-yards and lumber-yards.
Only a canal was left, running in from Derby and Central Wharves to Lafayette
Street.
In June, 1900 (per census), this house (#29) was occupied by Rachel Jones, 60,
widow and son George W., 38, a chemical company clerk (one unit), and by (other
unit) Edward W. Jones, 49, clerk in a carpet manufacturing firm, and wife
Charlotte, 45.
In December of that year, 1900, George W. Jones, 39, listed as a bookkeeper,
married his cousin Mary W. Thayer, 31, the daughter of William 0. Thayer,
deceased, and Mary E. Wells. They would have three children: Helen, Malcolm, and
Quinton. By 1910 they were (per census) residing at 13 Crombie Street
1
3
�with Helen, 16, Malcolm, 8, and Quinton, 6, and with Mary's sister Grace, 43, who
worked as a Court House clerk.
At #29 in 1910 were (per census) Rachel M. Jones, 89, and boarder Mary
Perley, 60; also, Edward W. Jones, 59, clerk, wife Charlotte, 56, and servant
Marie Scahill, 22, born in Ireland.
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th century by large
numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who settled primarily in the Derby Street
neighborhood, and by Sicilians, in the High Street neighborhood. By the eve of
World War One, the bustling, polyglot city supported large department stores and
factories of every description. People from the surrounding towns, and Marblehead
in particular, came to Salem to do their shopping; and its handsome government
buildings, as befit the county seat, were busy with conveyances of land, lawsuits,
and probate proceedings. The city's politics were lively, and its economy was
strong.
Mrs. Rachel Maria (Thayer) Jones died on April 3, 1913. In that year, this house
(#29) was occupied (per directory) by her sons Edward and George and their
families.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, at Blubber Hollow (Boston Street at Proctor), a fire
started in small wooden shoe factory. This fire soon raced out of control, for the west
wind was high and the season had been dry. Out of Blubber Hollow the fire roared
easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out houses on Boston Street,
Essex Street, and upper Broad Street (this house was spared but only barely), and
then sweeping through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets.
Men and machines could not stop it:
the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed the
neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of
Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the houses of The Point.
Despite the combined efforts of crews from many towns and cities, the fire
overwhelmed everything in its path, including the large buildings of the Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Company factory complex. At Derby Street, just beyond Union,
after a 13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed three lives, 250
acres, 1600 houses, and 41 factories. Thousands were made homeless. Some
people had insurance, some did not; all received much
support and generous donations from all over the country and the world. It
was one of the greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States, and the
people of Salem would take years to recover from it. Eventually, they did, and many
of the former houses and businesses were rebuilt; and several urban-renewal
projects (including Hawthorne Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and
widening old streets) were put into effect.
1
4
�By 1920 Salem was once again a thriving city. In that year (per census, h. 116),
#29 was occupied by Edward Jones, 69, and wife Charlotte, 66, with servant
Frances Roye, 24, born in Canada (one unit) and by George W. Jones, 58, a
bookkeeper, wife Mary W., 50, and offspring Helen T., 25, a college teacher,
Malcolm B., 17, and Quinton 0., 16.
Salem's tercentenary in 1926 was a time of great celebration. The Depression hit
in 1929, and continued through the 1930s. Salem, the county seat and regional
retail center, gradually rebounded.
Salem prospered after World War II through the 1950s and into the 1960s. General
Electric, Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills (formerly Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Co.), Almy's and Newmark's and Webber's department stores, various other
retailers, and Beverly's United Shoe Machinery Company were all
major local employers.
·
The ownership of this house descended in the family. By the end of the 20th
century, and well before, it was occupied by the artist Quinton Oliver Jones, who
died in 1999.
1
5
�Glossary & Sources
A figure like (ED 123:45} refers to book 123, page 45, Essex South Registry
of Deeds.
·
A figure like (#12345) refers to Essex Probate case 12345, on file at the Essex
Probate Court, or on microfilm at Mass. Archives, Boston, or at the Peabody
Essex Museum's Phillips Library, Rowley.
MSSRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers & Sailors in the
Revolutionary War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
MSSCRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers, Sailors, &
Marines in the Civil War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
EIHC refers to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (discontinued), a
multi-volume set (first volume published in 1859) of data and articles about Essex
County. The indices of the EIHC have been consulted regarding many of the
people associated with this house.
The six-volume published Salem Vital Records (marriages, births, and deaths
through 1849} have been consulted, and the Salem Directory and later
Naumkeag Directory, with data about residents and their addresses, etc.
Sidney Perley's three-volume History of Salem, 1626-1716, has been
consulted, as has the four-volume William Bentley's Diary, J. Duncan
Phillips' books, some newspapers, and other sources.
Salem real estate valuations, and, where applicable, Salem Street Books,
have also been consulted, as have genealogies.
There is much more material available about Salem and its history; and the
reader is encouraged to make his or her own discoveries.
--Robert Booth
1
6
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�Savage's Biography I Digitizing Early American Literature
7/15/19, 4:05 PM
Dog Owners #1 Mistake
What Your Dog ts T0ting To Wam Al)out If They Uc~ Their Paws
Savage's Biography
Sarah Savage was born in Salem, Massachusetts on August 24, 1784 to Ezekiel Savage and Margaret Vose Savage. She
had a sister, Margaret, and a brother, Thomas. There is little known of Savage's formal education, but she was far more
literate than many girls of her day. During her childhood, Savage's family bounced between religious denominations often
before she herself developed increasingly Unitarian views. Savage lived with her father for all of her life; they shared a
house in which she wrote her books, when she was not teaching, until she died, unmarried, on February 25, 1837.
Before writing her first novel The Factory Girl in 1814, Savage was the head of a private school in Salem. In 1813, she began
a "Sabbath school" much like the one in The Factory Girl. These schools, unlike the private schools of the time, were for
children of poor families who could not afford to go to school, and therefore could not read or write. Savage's fascination with
factory girls came from the factories near where she lived.[ihe same year The Factory Girl was published, Savage saw an ad
in the Salem Gazette calling for "six to eight girls between the ages
'
of fourteen and twenty of industrious steady habits and fair reputation" to work as weavers in the Danvers Cotton Factory, one of the earliest in the United State~Though The Factory Girl had already been started, this was the
inspiration for many of her other works, where she would again focus on morality in Industrial America. ~ a e ublished at
least twelve books anon mousl between The Facto Girl in 1814 and her death in 1837: Filial
,..
----
Affection;, 0r, Tbe Clergyman's Granddaughter (1820), James Talbot (1821), Advice to a Young Woman at Service
{1823), The Suspected Boy {1824), The Badge {1824), The Two Birth-Days {1826), Life of Phillip, the Indian Chief
(1827), &nday School Conversations (1829, following a trend in writing narrative conversations), Blind Mariam Restored
to Sight {1833), and her last, Trial and Self-Discipline {1835). Her works were all primarily focused on morat issues and
religion, and aimed at children and young adults because of her history as a teacher.
https://digitizingearlyaml.wordpres~.e;om/factory~gi_rl-by-sarah,:savage/savages~biography/
Page 1 of 2
�FAMILY MEMORIAL.
r. Gideon l". W.,
2.:'Ilia! Thayer,
born
1822
" 22 Oct. 1824
3. :'\loses B.,
:'.\fr. Gideon Thayer died 21 December, 1829.
:'.\Irs. Betsey Thayer died I November, 1830.
xe. 1096. l G.
15
5 born 22 F eh, 1828
•
GIDEON U. W. THAYER.
First child of Gideon and Betsey Thayer, married Elizabeth Kimball, z8 •
April, 1857, by Rev. J. Smith, Uxbridge, Mas~.
:So. 1097. III G.
MOSES "THAYER.
Third child of Gideon- and Betsey Thayer, married Hannah -'.
~o. 1098. VD.
BENJAMIN THAYER.
Fifth child of Elikiam and Abigail Thayer, married Jane Clark, 1770.
Residence, Salem, llass. Children are : ·
.
r. Benjamin I..,
z. Stephen,
3.Susan,
born 1772
" 30 Sep. 1774
" 1776
4. 1\fory Jane,
5. John C.,
6. Nancy,
born 1778
" 24 Sep. 1783
" 17S9
:'.\Ir. Benjamin Thayer died in Salem, Mass., 1815.
:'.\Irs. Jane Thayer died 4 June, 1833.
~o. 1099. IE.
.BENJAMIN THAYER.
First child of Benjamin and Jane Thayer, married Lydia Doke, daughter of
James Doke, Esq., of l\Iarblehead, Mass., 27 December, r 795, and settled in
Salem, Mass. Children are :
1.
Lois,
2.
Eliza,
J- Lydia,
born 2 Feb. li99Died in 186o.
born 12 Sep. 1802
"
S Aug. 1804
4. Harriet,
born 20 Oct. 1So6
Died 6 )fay, 18b4.
5. Benjamin,
· born 13 Oct. 181,;
Died 6 l\!ay, 1851!,
:'.\fr. Benjamin Thayer died 6 l\Iay, 1833, aged 61.
:'.\Irs. Lydia Thayer died, 1856. Both died at Salem, Mass.
Xo. uoo. III F.
LYDIA THAYER.•
Third child of Benjamin and Lydia Thayer, married to James Odell, 8
~o\·ember, 1825. Residence, Salem, ::\lass. Children are:
1. Sarah,
z. Tames Augustus,
3.·Eliza,
4.Henry W.,
No. 1101. II E.
born 4 Jan. 1827
" 4Jan. 1829
" 8 Jan. 1831
" ro Mar. 1833
5. Lucy,
6. <,:harles,
7. Edward D.,
8. Abby,
horn 14 Sep. 1835
" 26 Oct. 1837
5 Aug. 1839
"
I Xov. 18.p
STEPHEN THAYER.
Second child of Benjamin and Jane Thayer, married Rebecca, daughter of
Hubbard and Rebecca Oliver, of Salem, Mass., 18 December, 1797, by Rev.
Daniel Hopkins. She was born 27 March, 1774. Residence, Salem, Mass.
Children are : .
r. Oliver,
2. Stephen,
born 12 liar, 1798
" 19 July, r8o1
Died July, 1804.
3.Stephen 2d,
born 26 Oct. 18o2
4, Rebecca,
born 3 Sep, 1804Died 21 Dec., 1865.
5. Nancy,
born 16 Sep. r8o6
6. Sarah,
" 3 Xov, 1808
llr. Stephen Thayer died 16 :March, 1813.
Mrs. Rebecca Thayer died 26 August, 1866.
No. 1102. IF.
OLIVER THAYER.
First child of Stephen and Rebecca Thayer, married Rachel, daughter
�156
FAMILY MEMORIAL,
-of Daniel and Sarah Bancroft, 24 April, 1824. Residence, Salem, Mass.
Lumber merchant. Mrs. Rachel Thayer was born 12 July, 1804- Children are:
1. Edward Smith,
born 3 Dec. 1826
• Died 12 July, 1828.
2.Rachel Maria,
born 14 Aug. 1829
3.Sarah Rebecca,
" .24 l\Iay, 1S31
Died 7 Feb., 1835,
• 4. William Oliver, born 25 Sep. 1833
11
5. Daniel Bancroft,
24 Dec. 18,35
Died 26 l'iov., 1840.
6. Edward Smith 2d, b'n 25 Dec. 1837
7.Rebecca Oliver,
"· 24 Jan. 1840
8.Sarah Bancroft,
" 4 Mar. 1!42
11
9.~fo.rianna,
29 May, 1844
Died 2 Dec., 186S.
No. 1103. II G.
RACHEL 1\-I. THAYER.
Second child of Oliver and Rachel Thayer, married to John S. Jones, 15
Nov. 1849. · Residence, Salem, Mass. Mr. Jones was born 9 Aug., 18.14.
Children are :
I.
.2.
3. George William, born 7 Dec, 1861
4. Egbert N. Thayer, " 17 Oct. 1864
Edward Warren, born 9 Aug. 1850
Oliver Thayer, " i Sep. 1854
Died 3 Jan., 1862,
No. r 104. IVG.
WILLIAM 0. THAYER.
Fourth child of Oliver and Rachel Thayer, married Mary Lizzie 'Russell, 3 r
May, 1863, and settled in Salem, Mass. Mrs, Mary L. Thayer; was born 3 r
March, 1838. Children are :
I.
Grace Oliver,
xe, 1105. YI G.
born 2 Oct. 1866
2•
.Mary Wells,
born 7 Sep. 186g
EDWARD S. THAYER.
Sixth child of Oliver and Rachel Thayer, married Kate Felt, 23 Jan., 1862 ..
Residence, Boston, Mass. Mrs. Kate Thayer was born 22 Sept., r 838. Children
arc:
1.
Alice,
born 19 May, 1864
2.
Oliver,
horn 4 Aug. 1868
No. 1106. VII G.
REBECCA 0. THAYER.
Seventh child of Oliver and Rachel Thayer, married to William Gavett, 24
September, 1862. Residence, Salem, Mass. One child :
I.
Rachel Thayer, horn r2 Sep. 1864
No. 1107. VIII G.
SARAH B. THAYER.
Eighth child of Oliver and Rachel Thayer, married to Jose Margotte, 16
June, 1863. lie was born in Manilla, 28 September, 1841. Children
.are
:
1.
Dolorus Raco,
born 26 Jan. 1865
2.
Marianna Thayer, b'n 15 Dec. 1867
No. 1108. III F.
STEPHEN THAYER.
Third child of Stephen and Rebecca Thayer, married Jane, daughter of
Thomas Holbrook, Esq., of Canton, Mass., 29 October, 1829, and settled in
Canton. Afterwards removed to Salem, 'Mass, where they now reside. Children
are :
1. Stephen Oliver, born 16 Aug. 1831
2.
Edward Cornelius, " 3 Mar.
1833 Died 7 o«; 1833,
3. Mary Jane,
born 20 Oct. 1834
Died II Nov., 1838.
4 .. Edward Francis, born 30 Dec. 1S36 5.
Mary Jane, 2d, 11 rz May, 1841
No. no9. I G.
STEPHEN 0. THAYER:
First child of Stephen and Jane Thayer, married Lydia Ann Gordon, J
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apes hilt mt tim . ether, of oldeu ti1r101 called the pillars of 1
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coasts, the J{ock of Oihi-nltnr
t
!tio~tlfo~:;0~'!S~~l'i~idi!i~{:;)~!~!1
li'
fled in his nppear1rnce1 but gouial iu m~\O 111~r an,1
co11"versatiou., His family co11Hi.tttcd of hi~ wife1 three
8ons :rn1 foul' 1.l1111g-httird, ,.,·ith whom .I had the
ploas11rH of 8\rnmliug mn.uy an !11grel1ablt! ovenin1.r1
1rnd who a wwed mo every attention, vi!':!itiui;;- with me
tiw curio:-.itieH
r.:he t.:ity. J.';,trirs10 the (d<lust liOll,
Jmviog in• \'ited we t1J visit tho ulrl nud famona ,;it,Y ot
l'1l!m1 procmred a carri11g'e, aufl WfJ had a
: b,i,mtiful l'ido through the country to t;l1at plat!e, th,~
di~timce being nb(>nt 12 miles; the city it will blJ
reeollocl<d, i8 H~tullt<:.d on the hank of tho rive1· Arno,
m1d WM in earlio1: Hge.s\
& 1~Ja.oe commeroi11Hy of ~rO!lt irup,.>rtRnce; it w:lH in
those ~Hu·lie.r ng:,~s o"f: ll<i.! histol',Y hnt 2 mile~ L from
tho city to the :,ea1 it is uow seven, r owin~ t-o tho dolJl'is
from th(~ river n1HI perhaps! from other c:~t1seH,
'l'he city is it montu.nent of great aut iquity dating back
ago.'! bufoi:e tile C11risti:u1 J!:rc\1 it has heim for ages tlrn
coutre of ilomosth; ~rnd fureign wnrfar.1~, h:t~ nt t.illl(!.,.
1J~itm JtlHtially de· pooulnted bv war, i-:mbjoct.cd and
thon ng:lin attaining its" i11<fopen<l1~1vJe, '.]~he
po1rnlntion is :~bout 30,r,oo,-tho paln.r.ms mul cluu·<ilws
am numerous, of marblt:i, :tml has n 11oble appuar- 1mce. It
ha.d 1J1:mn the lJinll pince of many ,eminent 1111m, and has
always bijen cow;ilfercd tho sent or hJiu·uiu;; fut· Jtaly. Ju
<:orr,1>nu.v witb tlw young man who ,vas II i.t.u<font at the
coll~igi~, and his lnothor, we visited almoitt 011e,·y pll\ce
of notti, 1>::i.rtil. uht.rly the Campo Sant<>, or
huryiugronud, with, its ¥'reiH;o 1miutiu~1:1-, the le,wing
'fowcr, built o{ wlnte marble, rnaiohing l80fcet in bnight,
nml hHrnhig 14.{t. from t-ho l)~rpcndicul:u·, the as1:ent
hciug; hy a circnfar statn:\·:~y \mtwcmn the h,·o walJ~ wl1eu
onco <Jtl the smnmit and peering ovm· the pr<>jectiug pa.rt It
8EHH10 of 'iu~e<:11.rity prc,yi~.(]N; the mind mHl we hecom~
iu some degme fen.rfol that nlthoug,h. the i-:lructnrn bas
wtmtl:wred some:-. tight hundred years, tht\t·e may nome a
moo1ent wheu it wm nttaio a horizontal instead of i1.
11enrly perpendicular posiUon.
.
Tlrn Campo Sa.ntJJ, or old 1n1:rymg ground, dateiJ
back e:twcu c:euturios, imd it is i:-aid thnti 01.10 of the
diguil.r1.rlt1M oJ the church t:uui-ed to be 'hrom::ht
fifty-three shiplon<l~ of ~mired enrth fl'Om :Mount
Onh-1uy, tn lu\llow tile coo~ocrated gl'onncl. A.ri)lrnd
tlu~ wn,lt o·f U,o onclosnl'e aro 'id•.sir:us f1·om ~cri1)tUh\
·fr~iCO 1):1.iutiugs, whic 1 :m~ many of them of quaint
cha,raoter, one of: whi<:11. J perfol.!tly 1·1;_1,me.mbe1·.
'rhe dmtt:h bud of Svfomnu; 11 ~uod and tm twH angel \lll
either 1:1i(ie, o;toh l'mld of Mm and ,foubtf:uJ whicli of them
i;lu,11ld rnke J~illl iu clu.ri::o.
~ r~t!!sili'!11l~o~!'
izon. j l!:! it not strnuge that tlto pr:mple of olden da-yij 1 from
obiservatious o( the like kmd1 did uoti •earlier learn the
splrnrica.f form (Jf tlu3 mHth? aud this mrniud.s · me of
nuotlmr voy:.1gl~ to Leglwru, when, \)~ling uot fat· from
tho t1outh~ ero til~rt of (forsic:~, the birtl11)h.HJC of
Nttp11l(iou, Jlom~llllrte, tlrn uti'110:mhc1'e being
unu8na1h' clear, we warn 1mr\.1rised to se~ o.t tlrn l'Wrth
o·r of Uii aud nhso at tie 011st of us, whitt n11pe:\l'ed to he
tu\k!~d rocktt 1·i~ing n.hovo the wnter.
'J.'hiuking we knew onr 1wsit-iun wo wcr(J 111- doot\
surprh:ied ut tho Hight, hnt 1L"I tho day 1\fl· vanood
they fmhHI fn!m our view, u.ntl the ad ..
\v!1~::f i~i:11i{:l:~11~~·;:~~ut t ~r
J;~ \,o~i·~~ \~~;~tl~>1:~; 1
Hntnmit» of the mount1tim1 that llue tho (m1tnt ot lt1tly
at t-hi~ uurtll, auil Urn enst, som~ uo or 70 miloij
di,tan\,
U11t l w1.1ndut• from i,ur pl\tltinu;(~ np U1u Stmn i tho.
we•thor pmn:d fail' 1uul f:M'omblu, ttml
lo h1huuh1 of
•om,1
Visltn hy tho Custom J:fou~o bortL, 1u11J to our' aorrow1
WUl'{' 01·1fot·fd to 1..tuJ. .L1tut·ntto or Q111u'-1 ,11.nUJH,
uro1.uu1i. to ditmJuu'14u our (ltU'go wlmN we r,mm1rn.H.I.
1wm•ly n .foitnlgh; hufom wo wore 11ermitwd tQ luml iot1)
t·he iruuu, hiu'l. JOI\ Tho! rmrgo woi:t cmiBi;,::.nod tn
MettnrR, P ... ~ A, :11u .. lh.1bl{ nu old oiu,1,hJfshud
<Jomu1lK1ihm hm1~u fort•• t>»fft 4Q or ~fl ye,11·•· 'l'hn
0111110,· 111n·tunr PhlllJ!, had h11111 olnc<1 1111••1><1
11wuy; Im h1ui
: ~n uufWd $tia.~1t1 Omuml fur mnny vuina, ju Ille Mtor
f'llll ol tho <1lgllLom1th 1111<1 /Ji., oi1rly )iarlol tho
11h101co111h utmtory, nud wu• 1111· )111111:U<l ~y l're•l<lent
Wa11hl11gtuu, A.t hi• 11t,111h
\m•h•WI• d•vulved on hi• tirull1or, Anthony, 1 bo hwl
t
oondm.1iot1 .It to thH Lhuu prn,umt ttu1u.;
u watt ouu of t 10 oh.t.,,!fuhoo chU1N1 v1.11•y tHKni:•
tt~t;~ ;t~~~l~i;~
~~;~~:\1iu~\~;;~~:,.,~:r18~wf~!tYl
~
hoi1,t)tt, 1md ijO .foot i.n dh~m~iter, mid tho ou.lhf!ihnl
eight e<mtnri~t!! old. of ,•ai;t,dhHt.HJ-.' tJions and oxqntsit.e
w<1rknrn11~l1i1), l.t t,Yntnhi;; numot1)1H!4 lipwin1e~1~
1,)f iu't uml I$ nthn-1H:d with J.mhHiugs by oht ltnliu.11
mm,tet~, ~tul la~t \wt uot lonst tho htUlj:fiug 1nm11 h'on.1
whii..:h Gf\lOtw r,u~ived lits ilr1:1t: lde1\ of flu.: om•th'.s
n\v,'<ll'n~nt,
t:\~!:!;1~~1~1~~~~11'H,~11
I~~~i~\~t~:;~ '~;r
~.;~:~~!\)~::~;~:
-~nd ll('t:uaurt of htm.1s\1j imd unl~r l'l\\'(I(\ hl!\ Hf~ by ll
l'Ot'AU~tUun h1 woi-chi, whllo meutnUy h\} h1.;J(\ ()U to
1\h1 theory, $,ime w1·iiN~ hu\'(} ,f\(l:CUt1Q:d hll\l t)f
IJ.OWl\r<ht.111 to,· )tO dvh1~1 \..l\lt l r,uwy mo!\~ of us wo11l1l
h1wo ,,u,,t,; tlh~ KllU\O tr, . pl,rnud 111 U~1~ st1..me
t1it:nnt,io1l,
ln a f~w dt,ys w11 l\ih Vi1'111 ~,ml 1·oturncd \mok to
I~u~hu1·n1 gn,Ut1ud h,1 tho \'ilicit wu l1t~d mrulf.t.
'l'ho1uu:1,.:rniatlo\1H t\t>t\lu,ote1l with my ~1wwnt vht\tH
to ltnly1 hnvu u,ter lmuu phmt<m1t .to 0101 wl\h t110
lriumlilhl11• I then, 11111do, """ l\nly ltMolf wlth ltn hmi:r
m·t1:\)' \If tnnhumt, muu ~,£ th\t
)f\fl' CUll\Olf. Yi\'hlly II) mhlli, nuil ,~hhVt\gh uow n
doo:ud&nm11 wo enn lrnt. ho1·m it mny ng~\in
l
tlt1lt\\mu 1t.n Ml ieut r,u,,,wn.
.
�8.
=r, Oliver
The \>r1g is now laden, we have set, our nils, cast off
our fasts, and are on our va~sage .homeward, with a
fair wind, and In seven or· :eight days, arrive down the
Medlterranean, as
fnr as Gibraltar. There eneountering it strong . westerly
wi 11d we were unable to pass the Strait .for a.ix or seven
days on account of the strong current that constantly runs
into the Medlterr1u1Mn from ,the ocean, and were
obliged to content ourselves and make the best of it for
about a week, between the City of Malaga and Gibraltar.
\Ve finally passed the Strait into a rough wintry ocean,
and fur two nwntns had a succesaion of severe gales from
N. W. to-S; "\V:.. It was iu our experience a perfect
contrast to our passage out, but at the expiration of that .
time found ourselves off tlie coast of NewfoundIand,
where to our discomfort, we experienced a perfect
hurricane, for about two hours ; the old brig lay ue:u·ly ou
her beam ends, tbe waves of the ocean wet!' beaten down
by the force of -the wind, and the ocean as for a11 could be
seen assumed a feathery white; we wer J preparing to cut
away the rigging, and let the mast go by the board, if it
should prove a necessity,
' but Pr,fllvidentially in au hour or two, the tern. p81!t
abated somewhat in force, although a versheary gale
continued for-twt:>.nty-four hours
.. ··1ttw.rward. \Ve had sprung our rudder, and
met wi.th much other damage. I have . seen many
gales of wind previous to this, and I saw m1111y
.aftP1·ward, but nothing in comparison; in a day or
two the wind aud we1tther were more .favorable, and
tu four or five days more we pa.saeil Bakar'a Island,
received i, pilot 011 board ttud came to anchor iu the
barbor late in the iweuing; immediately went 011
shorn, onlled on Mr. Peabody at hill house to
auuouuee our url'h'illl, and then tu ny own home to
111eet the cun,rratulntiomi of my family who lmd
become llO~tewhatau~ious In reg,u·d to my Sllf<,ty.
The old twig was 110011 afte1•w11rd sold to
!loi, in Gloucester,
o. ·r.
llll~l~!
mlif~
3 6234
�l\'i
N, B. BISTomo a11nALOG10AL socmn-
1912
Hoir. ED!'.tRD LlvnrGSToN DAVIB, A.M., of Worce1ter, Mus.,
elected a rea1dent member in 1890 and made a life member in 1891, wu
born at Worcester 22 April 1834, the aon of Iaao and lluy Holman
(.Eatabrook) Daria, and died there ha March 191!.
He wu graduated at Brown Univenity in 1854 and received the ~egree of
A.M. from that institution, studied at the Hanvd Law School in 1855-56, and
wu admitted f;o the bar in 1857. In the following year, however, he gave op
the prad.ice of law, and for a quart.er of a century wu engasecJ at W
orceeter in the IIUIDufactare of railway iron, locomotive tires, and ear
wheels, the Srm with whieJa he wu connected being incorporated in 1864 aa
the W uhbarn Iron Company. Since 1882 he wu chie8y occupied in the care
of pablic and private tru.ete, and wu a director in varioua railroad companiee
and banb. In 1865 he w11 elected to the W oroeater Commoa Coon~, being a
member of that body for three years and eening u preeident of the Council for
the lui year of hie membenmp. He was mayor of Worceater in 1874, a
member of the Maieachueu, Senate in 1876, a member of the American
Antiquarian ~' aening at one time on its Couneil, and a trustee of the
Epiacopal Theological School at Cambri•, .Mue. For maay yean be wu
eenior warden of All Sainte' Ch11l"ch, Worceater.
He married &rat, at Providence, R. I., in 1859, Hannah Gardaer A.dams,
daughter of Seth Adams, Esq., of Providence. She died in 1861, leaving a
son who aurvived her hut a few day1; and he married eecondly, in Boston, 2
December 1869, Maria Louisa, dauabt.er of Rev. Dr. Chandler and Mary
Elisa (Frothingham) Robbin,. Hie children by hie second marriage were
Eliza Frothingham, Thereaa, and Livingaton.
er. Harcl'1 Bi•~l'J' or Woroe,ter County, Ku,., 'Vol. l, pp. lld-hH ; Who', Wlao iJa Naw
England, p. ~
•
WD.LUx Foau GA.VBT of Salem, MUB., a reaident member ainoe
1902, wu horn in Boston H 4,pril 1888, the aon ol William Richardson and
France, Cordelia (Clapp) Gavet, and died in die early IUDllller of 1912. He
traced hie anoeetral line to Philippe• Gavet of the Iale of Jeraey, from whom
he wu deacended ~ Joseph' of Salem, Jonathan,• William,• and William
Richll'daon.•
He was educated in the puMic echoole ot Salem, and WU graduated at
the Salem High School in 1854. He eupplemented hia achool coune by
reading and -~1 special lines of study, As a boy he wu employed in the
oflioe of Wat.erst.own, Deane & Company, commiasion merchants, &om 10
Jan'IJ!l1'1 l855, and waa oonnected with diia house and its auooesaon,
Richardson, Deane & Company, George C • Richardson & Company, and
Smith, Hogg & Gardner, in ftlioua capacities, until l January 1896, when he
began huaineee for himael(as
•
�IDWOIBS
lvii
a note broker, his previoaa duties with the &-1111 mentioned having beea
GuaDCial and COIIDected with Joana for the accommodation of the varioue
.W. for which they were agent,. In thia buaineu he
waa ~ when he joined the New England lliatorio Geneal•ical Socie~ in
1902. Otber eubjeott t.o which he devoted hi, time were mathematica,
pbyaice, aud mueio. He waa OOIIDeoted with a number of organizations
for the. study of vocal and inatrumental mueio, wu a vem,man of St.
Pet.er', Epiaoopal Church in Sale111, and had beea engaged ia oollecting
material for a geuealogical ~ of his on family.
He married, 9 September 1862, Rebecca Oliver Thayer, who wa, bona
24 January 1840 and died 20 July 1897, daughter of Oliver and
.Rac~Bancrofi) Thayer, and by this marriage he had two
children,
el T.ba,er and Lowa Fobea.
RBv. ASA. D.u.roN, A.M., D.D., of Portland, Me., a reaident member
since 1892, wu born at Newfield, Me., 30 October 1824, the eon ot
Samuel' and Mary Ann (Huckins) Dalton, aud died at Portland 29 August
1912. He traced his lineage, through Samuel,• Samuel,• Samuel,•
Philemon, • and Samuel,• to Philemon I Dalton of Dedham, Maea. Bia
father waa a native of Pano.oafield, Me., and hie mother, alao a native of
Panonafield, waa tho ~hter of Joseph' Huckina, who waa a deacendant of
Robert• Huckins of Dover, N. H.
He Gtt.ed (or college at the Cambridge (Mus.) Latin School, wu
graduated wnh honor at Harvard in 1848, and received the degree of A.M.
from Banard in 1851. He was a student at the Harvard Divini~ School
in 1848-49, and wae gnduat.ed at the Newton (Maaa.) Theological
lnetitute in 1861. He waa ordained aa a deacon in the Protestant
Epiaoopal Church in 1866, and wu advanced to the prieathood in 1857.
He waa settled for aiz yean (1867-1862) aa rector of St. John's Episcopal
Church at Bangor,
ile., resigning to become editor of tbe ProtutGnt Okurclman and
'Uaiatant rector of the Church of the Aacenaioa in New York City,
whence he went in 1863 a, rector to St. Stephen'• Church in Portland ud remained in that charge until his resignation in 1906, when he
waa made rector emeritus. In November 1903 ha celebrated the fortieth
aDDiverwy of hie rectonbip. In 1885 Colby University had conferred on
him the degree of D.D.
Dr. Dalton waa a dinctor in numeroua city aad atate aocietiee, waa at
oae time pl'eliclent of the Harvard Club of Maine, and waa a member of
the Maine Historical Society. From 1866 to 1862 .he wrote various
articles for the Prot.eatant Episcopal Quarterly
. Bet1ieu, of New York at,, in 1876 hie diaooll1'88 entitled "The
Fulneu of Christ" waa pnnted b7 requeat, ia 188.2 he publiahed an
addreaa on Longfellow, and on 4 July 1886, at the centennial celebration
of the city of Portland, he delivered an addrese 011 the
�109
Hingham, Brnttleboro and several other places. He, however,
always considered Salem his home, and foi- the lu8t twenty
years bas permanently resided there, withd1·awing from
ministerial labors and devoting almost exclusive attention to
scientific investigation. He was eminently known ns a
botanist, particulnrly in the cryptogamic flom of this county.
He died on Saturday afternoon, June 7, 1873.
2nd. ,v1LLIA1't OLIVER THAYER, sou of Oliver and
Rachel (Bancroft) Thayer, of Salem. Iu his early boyhood
William brought to the horticultural exhibitions contributions
of fruits and flowers from his father's garden. Since that time
he has always been an interested member, nlthough hie
business avocations prevented him from taking an active part
in the meetings of the Institute. He died on Monday, Juno 9,
1873, aged thirty-nine years snd nine months.
3rd. Hon. RICHARD SALTONSTALL RooERS, well known
to those of a past generation as au active merchant in the firm
of N. L. Rogers & Bros., who were the pioneers and founders,
in the United States, of the Zanzibar and New Holland trades;
for many years, down to 1842, were acth·ely engaged in
foreign commerce mainly with the East Indies, 11ml were
among the most distinguished merchants of Salem. He was
son of Nathaniel and Abigail (Dodge) Rogers, who were both
eminent teachers in Salem. He was earnestly interested in
municipal uftilirs, a good citizen and 1111 energetic, enterprising
and efficient m1111 of business, and much respected fo1· his
many excellent qu1tlities; always a liberal patron of the
Institute and eonti-iuuted largely to its success. Ho died at his
residence in Salem, Juno 11, 1873, aged eighty-three years.
Expressing great pleasure at meeting so many of those
�.
,
-~ I
½*C.. i\ z_ l Cf'30) \ ')
-~~J~:,
Sarah Savage of Salem:
A Forgotten Writer
S.-\.R.-\.H S.A,. V .~GE OF S.-\LH.-1
By MARGARET B. !vlOORE*
the early part the
I1\1assachuseccs,ofwrotenineteenth century, Sarah Savage of Salem,
at least twelve books anonymously. Since
N
1
she was by profession a teacher, she wrote to edify children and young
adults with diction that reflected the rationalism of the eighteenth
century and the moral didacticism of the nineteenth century. This was a
time of transition from stem Calvinism to the milder tenets of
Unitarianism. The general shift \.Vas from dogma to reasoned, persuasive explanation, especially in religious literature. A letter in the Christian Registe1; a Unitarian magazine of the time, pointed out in 1825 that
the invention of moral and religious tales, adapted to the capacities
of children, calculated to take hold of their attention, to open their
understanding, to awaken their sympathies, and silently to impress
them with principles of virtue and piety, marks as decided an
advancement in the art of education, as the invention of the steam
engine does in navigation. :i
Savage was a pioneer teacher and writer in this transition.
"Margaret B. Moore, an independent scholar residing in Athens, Georgia, has published articles in
the Essex Institute Hiuorical C,,l/wi1111s, Studies i11 the ,l.111eric.i11 R~11,1iss,111ce, the Nathaniel H.1tl'l/wme
Soduy Ne!l's/ecce,; and Postscript. She is currently working on a book on Salem and Nathaniel' Hawthorne.
1. The word "books" is used loosely, since some of Savage's works are very brief tracts or tales, bur
they were all published separatdy, and the distinction between tales and novels was not so clear in the
early nineteenth century as it is now; To my knowledge, no source lists details of her life, includes a
substantial bibliography of her work, or discusses in any case more than four of her books. Recent critics
who memion Savage or a few of her works are Henri Petter, The E.11·ly .·fozeric,m No,•el (Columbus: Ohio
Stace University Press, 1971). 79-80, 418, .p.r; Cathy Davidson, Re1•,1/11tio11 and the Tlimf: The Rise ef the
Novel i11 .-lmeri.-,1 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), 28, 66, 69; David S. Reynolds, Beneath the
,-l.meric.111 Rc,wissm,ce: The S11b1•ersit•e Imagi11,1tio11 in the .1ge,:{E111erso11 and ,\Jeli•il/e (New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1988), 58, 3-U, 353; and Reynolds, Faith. i11 Fiction: The E111erg,·11ce of Religfous Liwmurc
i11 • ...\111eric,1 (Cam- . bridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1982), 104-5, r ro, 112, 119, 130, I./1,
228.
z. Chri~·ti,m Rt!gisrt,; 29 Jann.:1rr 1825.
240
:q
She was born in Salem on .:q August 1784, to Ezekiel Savage and r
Margaret (Vose) Savage. Her father was a descendant of the famous
Antinomian Anne Hutchinson and the.noted schoolteacher Ezekiel
Cheever. Her mother was the daughter of a Revolutionary soldier,
General Josepli Vose. Sarah and her younger sister, Margaret, were
born in Salem before the family moved to Boston for a few years
(1788-1794) where her father rook over the tobacco shop of his ailing
brother Habijah, the father of the antiquarian James Savage (17841873). There her brother Thomas was born.3 Upon her mother's death,
the family moved back to Salem, where Ezekiel had a shop
•adjoining that of Colonel John Hathorne. Ann, or Nancy, Hathorne,
Colonel Hathome's cousin, married Ezekiel Savage on 10 December
1797. 4 Soon there were three more children: Mary Hathorne, John
Touzel, and Ann. 5 These were Nathaniel Hawthorne's second cousins.
Their mother, Ann, died in I 806 not knowing that her strange but wealthy
sister Molly had left a will "in favour of Nancy" in I 802. The will was not
found until 18r8, .and was immediately stolen. Mark Pitman, a
cabinetmaker who lived in the Hathorne house at Essex and Cambridge
streets and who had found the will in a piece of furniture, was taken to
court by Ezekiel Savage in r 8 1 9 in an effort to recover the will, but
seemingly to no avail. 6 The Savages also owned the western part of the
house and land formerly owned by Molly Hathorne on the other side of
Essex Street. From the old two-story, gambrel-roofed house then on land
in fro~t of the present First Church, they moved in 1808 to a new home, a
"three-story, hipped-
3. Lawrence Park, "Old Boston Families No. 3: The Savage Family," l\"ew E11glm1ri Historical and
Ge11ea/ogic,1[ Regisce,; 67 (r9r3): 200, 323-:q; 68 (1Sq): 24-26; John T. Hassam, "Bartholomew and
Richard Cheever and Some of Their Descendants," !\"ell' E11gl.i11d Historical and Genealogical Register, 38
(r88~): r8o; The Hisco,}' qfMilco11, M,1s,·ad111setcs, 16-10-1887, ed. Albert K. Teele (Boston: Rockwell and
Churchill, 1887), j85; ':fohn Haven Dexter and the r789 Boston City Director};" ed. Ann Smith
Lainhart, New E11gla11d Histari,,1/ and Genealogical Registe1; 140 (1986): 2-14.
4- Salem Gazette, 28 November 1797; 12 December r;97.
5. Park, "The Savage Family," 67:323.
6. William Bentley, The Dim}' o.f Wi//im11 Bemley, D.D., 4 vols. (1914; reprint, Gloucesrer, Mass.: Peter
Smith, 1962), -1:565; "Mr. Jelly's Book," manuscript copied and annotated by Jonathan P. Felt,
Jonathan Porter Fdt Papers, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. He wrote that on 3 December 1818 "Mark
Pitman found Molly Hathorne's will, 40,000 her property. Someone stole the will" (Essex County
Probate Court, docket no. 12880).
�9.
242
ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
roof, wooden Federal dwelling," still extant, at 29 Broad Street. To that
house iri 1813 Ezekiel Savage brought his third bride, Parnell· Codman. 8
This is where Sarah wrote her books when she was hot teaching in her
private school. Here, too, she died, unmarried, on
February 1837. 9
Sarah's formal education, if any, is not known. Salem and Boston had
many private schools, one of which she may have attendei\ Moreover, her
father was a Harvard graduate (;r778) and presumablj._ helped in her
education; education was always important to him, as: his regular
membership on the Salem School Committee attested)1' Unquestionably,·
much of her continuing education came from
own efforts. At any rate,
she was literate beyond the limits of man_;:
young girls of her day. . ·
·
., ..
Her religious education mirrored the changing times. Her fath, had
studied to be a Congregational minister, but never assumed· ·a church
position. In Salem, he became an Episcopalian, largely throughthe
influence of the Hathomes and the Touzels who had been early members of
St. Peter's Church. The Savage family, however, is r~ ported to have left St.
Peter's for the Tabernacle Church in 1815 whe&;
•the very conservative Dr. Samuel Worcester was minister. It is unlik~l{
that Ezekiel also moved, but his wife and family probably attended
Worcester's church. Mrs. Savage's brother, John Cadman, was sternly
•orthodox to the point that he would not allow liberal preachers in]u~
pulpit." Much of Sarah Savage's early teaching was associated ~vi~ the
Tabemacle.. although she became increasingly Unitarian in he'r:_
7
2.J
her
.
.
.
.;:~~
7. I am indebted to Joyce King, a researcher in Salem, Mass., for information about the~ Savage
house. See also Oliver Thayer, "Early Recollections of the Upper Part of Essex Street, Essex Institute
Historical Collections, 21 (1884): 2r7. For the new house, see Bryant F. ToU Jr., with Carolyn K.
Tolles, An:l1itect11re i11 Salem: A11 Illustrated G11idc (Salem: Essex Insiicut· 1983), 219- ·.:..
8. Park, "The Savage Family," 67:323. 9. Salem Gazette, 28 February 1837.
10. Salem Gazette, 25March 1802, 18 March 1814, 26June 1819; WilliamCranch, "Sleet,
of Alwnni at Different Colleges in New England,'! New England Historical a,ul Genealogi, Register, I
( 1847): 82. See also Thomas Woody, A History of Women's Educatio11 i11 tile United Stat,.
2 vols. (New York: Science Press, ·19r9}, 1:145-46.
II. Bentley. Diary, 2:331; 3:39, 215. Bentley summed up Ezekiel Savage's career on~:i December
18 I 2 in his diary: "now an acting justice in Salem,. formerly a candidate in· d Congregational
Churches, then a bankrupt, merchant in Boston & since a pilgrim & now;_ magistrate" (4:141).
George Willis Cooke, Unitarianism i11 America: A History of Its OrigitJS an_ Development (Boston:
Unitarian Association, 1902), 102. '' ·
243
views, and this was evident in her books. David S. Reynolds calls her "the
first liberal writer to discover opportunity for oblique antiCalvinism in
contemporary life. "12 And though she never seemed
•.to become a member of a church, as did her sisters and brothers, she
doubtless preferred the non-sectarian stance of many early Unitarians;
Savage used her education and her religious training as a teacher and f- · as a
writer. Education and religion were so closely allied in those days - · . that
each was necessary to the other. She kept a select private school . in Salem for
many years. Aside from a few remarks in her obituary,
' the only definite account we have of her as a teacher comes from the
•book by Caroline King (1822-1909), vv1ien I Lived in Salem, 1822- 1866,
published posthumously in 193 7. Looking back, King found her
. to be fairly ineffectual:
a sweet gentle lady by the name of Savage, and it would have been
better for us all, if her nature could have in some slight
•degree corresponded with her name. But she had no force of character
and could never bring her mind to command or punish .... A picture
rises before me now of summer's afternoon in the hot stuffy. little
schoolroom, with a circle of perspiring · children sitting sadly round,
each struggling with little hot hands and sticky needles to do their
allotted task of sewing while their
'gentle teacher read to them selections from Plutarch's Lives!13
a
-Savage probably taught in different locations in Salem, but at one period
her schoolroom was in a building at the comer of Essex and Cambridge
streets, which the Hathomes had owned and which had
,aiso been used as a school byElizabeth Peabody, mother of Sophia
~Hawthome.14
~ ..
In 1813, Savage became involved in another sort of teaching. A [~ab
bath school was started in the Tabernacle Church during the sumf.mer, one
hour before the customary afternoon service. This continued
f::
f·
~·.
f
~1:
12. Reynolds, Fait/, in Fiction, 105_
·
.
.I3- CarolineHowardKing, Jlllm1ILi••edinSale111, 1822-1866(Brattleboro, Ve.z Stephen Daye , t&ress,
1937), 154; in Savage's obituary notice in the Essex Register, 27 February 1837, one ~bereaved writer said;
"the children ... even now ... recal[l] to each other the perfection and 'religious sanctity that was manifested
in every word and look, during the years they were under· ";her instructions."
.14. Essex Register, 19 March 1835; Salem Gazette, 3 March 1812.
f
�10.
244
··,
.
ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
.
'
for five years with one exception, according to Joseph Barlow Felt.I~:
These schools, modeled on those of the English reformer Robert-:. Raikes,
were not intended for the children of parishioners, but rather·,· for those of
poor families who could not go to school and who coulcf not read or write.
The orthodox churches were in the forefront of thi:: movement in Salem,
although other denominations followed sui{ later. By 1818, the Boston
Recorder was reporting of Salem that the'\'. "number ofleamers has varied
from one to two hundred, under the'. care of from ten to twenty teachers. "16 In
I 820, the Annual Report a{:
the Visiting Committee of Sabbath Schools reported that
·
the general plan upon which these schools have been organized · ':':_· is
similar" to that which has been adopted in other places-.:theO:_ · children
are formed into classes of from three to five, under : \," separate teachers,
who hear them recite what they have com- ·'·. mitted to memory, which is
usually some portion of the Scrip- __ :.:/ tures, after which they spell, and
read from the Bible, or some,_;,,:~, other book suitable for the day-the
teachers then take occasion· in a plain and familiar manner, to instruct
their respective dassesv .• in the general principles of religion, their moral
and social duties/ · \ and excite them to habits of industry, cleanliness, and
civility, and .. to an observance of the decencies of life; some task is then
assigned .: .. ·. them to learn for the next sabbath from the Bible or some
other'.?': book of a moral or ieligious tendency. The schools are opened -=;i
with prayer and closed with singing.17 • _.-. · :;e~~
t
. -:~-is
Moreover, in a related effort in 18 I 8, various ladies of Salem, includ-:
ing Savage, started an African Sunday school, "its object being
improvement of the religious and moral character of the coloured people. "18
The organization soon took the name of the Clarkson' Society after the
British organizer of antislavery societies, Thoma¥. Clarkson ( 1760- I 846), a
friend of William and Dorothy Wordswoid{ and Henri Christophe, King of
Haiti.19 In _1818, the school had
15. Joseph Barlow Felt, Annals of Salem, zd ed., 2 vols. (Salem, Mass.:W. &S. B. Ives, 18.j.5), ,'
th~·
15c\
1:496.
.
16. Boston Recorder,· 16June I 8r8.
17.Bssex Register, 23 November 1820. I 8.
Essex Register, 21 July I 8 I 9.
19. Earl Leslie Griggs, Thomas Clarkson, the Friend of Slaves (London: Allen & Unwin, 1936):--,
85-86, 122.
.
..
245
scholars. In July I 8 I 9, the Essex Register reported that several adult
_ women had learned to read and that many young pupils had committed long
passages of scripture to memory. The Register also reported that a large
room, formerly a dancing hall; was hired by the Clarkson
.Society:
20
The Clarkson Society are aware that a people, whose prevalent
characteristic is the love of amusement, cannot at once be made to
submit to the restraints of well ordered society, but it is hoped that
they have in some instances been the means, if not of subdu.· .. ing, at least of making that propensity subservient to useful in.. struction.
Since Sarah Savage was secretary of the Clarkson Society for the first year,
she may well have written this piece. 21
.· 'Dz William Bentley, meanwhile, was not confident of the school's
'prospects, He and Joshua Spaulding, minister of the Howard Street Church
in Salem, had planned a black school. In fact, Bentley had encouraged the
blacks to go to Spaulding's church since he thought it the most appropriate:
Certain devout women of the strictest sect have undertaken to '·
change our plans & have actually opened a place of worship on · _the
high land in the southern part of town, in a place to which
· the Africans formerly resorted for pleasure .... The Negroes ': .have
such a mixture of teachers as makes their instruction useless.
•.. They would have been content in their former state if left to : .·
proper directions. 22
,
,
.,.:.Jn August 1821, Sarah Savage was governess to the children of omas
Hansayard Perkins, a wealthy merchant of Boston, who had . ;uilt the first
summer cottage at Nahan_t, Massachusetts, and "in so
oing founded the first enduring summer colony on the North Shore."
Mary Williams of Salem wrote to Debby Fisher Dana in Ohio, forin,erly of
Salem, that "Sally is engaged as governess to the children of Mr. Perkins,
who passes the summer at Nahant. He has built a large stone house there.
Quitea pleasant thing for Sally, as she will have the
20. Boston Recorder, 27 July 18r8. 21. Essex Register, 21July 1819. ·22.
Bentley, Diary, 4:621.
~=i
'
..
-·._
,
�11.
246
ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
benefit of sea air, and see a great deal of company." Among others, Savage
may have taught a Perkins granddaughter, Elizabeth Agassiz,
later a founder and president of Radcliffe. 23
...
Savage's life as teacher must have been busy enough, but she also J found time
for writing, which complemented and reinforced her· :; teaching. Twelve of
her books have been found; there may well be more. 24 She always wrote
anonymously, although some of her fellow ·:; townsmen knew of her activity.
Only with her last book was her name_;; associated with her writings, and then
not in the book but in an _:_~advertisement in the paper. Of course, many
women did write anori2 ~ymously in that period. If they lived long enough,
they often ackni-Jwl- : edged their books later. One can only speculate what
Savage would : have done had she lived beyond the age of 52 and into a period
when
women writers routinely identified themselves.
Her first book, The Factory Girl, published in 1814, has been called 1 by Cathy
Davidson the "first factory novel in America. "25 The ma~ character, Mary
Burnham, works in a nearby factory. Savage depicts the factory as newly
established, with a work force of younger people_ of both sexes who often
come from nearby towns and who socialize at dances and in other ways. A
factory bell summons them to work,' and they labor for an agent, who
functions as boss. The real bosses. are the proprietors who are leading citizens
of the town. . .0
Factories were not unknown to Savage. There had been a cottoq'' factory
just across the North River in Beverly since 1789, which George Washington
had viewed in that year. It lasted through the,w~:of 1812 and then was
converted to a school: The nearby Danvers Cotton Factory was one of the
earliest in the United States. On\B;t March 1814, the Salem Gazette called
for "6 to 8 girls between the agci
of 14 and 20 of indu~trious steady habits and fair reputation" to bf weavers
in that factory. Dr. Bentley wrote in his diary on 2 I June I 814 of "the
Danvers factory . . . which at present employs 80 persons
,i
J
23. Joseph E. Garland, Boston's t'Jorth Shore (Boston: Little Brown, 1978), 29; "Salem S<i~ Life in the
Early Nmeteenth Century," annotated by George Rea Curwin, Essex lnstit11teHistorical Collectiqns 3 6 (r
900 ): 234; Barbara Clayton and Kathleen Whitley, Exploring Coastal Massad,usetis, (NewYork:Dodd,
Mead, 1983),344. . . ·:!~
24_ I have identified twelve titles by Savage, at least some of which had not been so identifi~
before; more may be found,
:·
25. [SaralrSavageJ, The Factory Girl, by a Lady (Bostoit:Munroe, Francis, and Parker, rSr,·
Davidson, Revol11tion and the Word, 28. ·
··
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
247
chieflychildrenmaleandfemaleinpicking, carding, quilling,Jennying
•Cotton & in spinning & weaving, a few looms being at work upon cotton
cloth of common Fabrick, "26
Not only is The Factory Girl an early factory novel, but it may also be the
first Sunday school novel in America. According to Earl Wilbur Rice, there
was no widespread movement in the church for Sunday schools until after
the War of 1812_ 27 Such schools were opened in Salem in the summer of
1813 at the Tabernacle Church and later at the Unitarian churches. In
Savage's book, Mary Burnham is called .upon to teach a Sunday school for
her fellow workers who may not
' have had the advantage of schooling. for as a proprietor maintains:
the labours of children are so useful, as to render their wages a
temptation to parents to deprive their offspring of education ....
Ignorance will necessarily lessen their future respectability in society,
and check the stimulating hope of rising into eminence, · which in a
free country like ours may and ought to be cherished (pp. 37-38).
. The school was carefully depicted in The Factory Girl. It met in the
·-,:.public schoolhouse (thus verifying Rice's opinion that many early ·
schools were often independent of churches) between the morning _ and
evening divine services. The six oldest pupils were to recite the
: · text and divisions of the morning sermon, and the one who excelled
.. was rewarded by being made an assistant to the teacher. There was a
_)recitation of tlie lessons of the week and certain passages of scripture i':is well
as words to spell. The pupils read from the New Testament /and had a prayer.
In order to help with the expenses of the school, the ·,)ninister formed a society
of one hundred people who gave twelve ··_cents :mnually for the purchase of
books, two-thirds of which was to • 'be spent for the school; the other third was
to buy moral tracts to be
•given as rewards (pp. 52-54). Mary'steachingisnotlimited to Sabbath
,._school scholars, however; she teaches by example all who come in _:
contact with her.
~- 26. Edwin M. Stone, History ef Beverly (Boston: James Munroe & Co., 1843), 85; Salem
:_Gazette, I8 March r814; Bentley, Diary, 4:262.
·
.;.,__ 27. Earl Wilbur Rice, The Sut1day School Movemeu, 1780-1917 and the American S1111day-School
"Unien, 1817-1917 (Philadelphia: American Sunday-School Union, I9[7; NewYork:Arno Press ·,:arid the
Neui }ork Ti,,,es, r97r), 29.
�12.
248
ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORICAL COLLE-CTIONS
At the factory, Mary meets William Raymond and agrees to let hirn ask her
grandmother for her hand when he is made, as he expects to be, foreman of the
factory: Mary's example makes William improve his character, but an illness
compels her to give up both the factory and Sunday school work, and he
gradually falls from the path of rectitude and falls in love with someone else.
Mary bears her disappointment with resignation and sees the hand of
Providence in it, as she does in the death of her grandmother and all the many
vicissitudes of her life. In the end, persistent virtue is rewarded, and she
marries a widower with children who love her. The reception: of this first
novel was not overwhelming. Only with the second edition in I 824 was.much
attention paid to it, although her intervening ;) books often said on the title
page, "];3y the author of The Facto1y GM,, __ : so that the book may have
attracted more attention than we can now: determine. 28 ·. •··
In 1820, again anonymously, she published her perhaps most am-.: bitious
work. Entitled Filial Affection; or, The Clergyman's Grmzddaugh- · ter; it was
brought out by Cummings and Hilliard in Boston. 29 In the t. preface, she states
that her object "is to exhibit a character, in the ;. middle walks of life, deriving
her eajoyment from the performance ~ of her duties, divested of all selfish
feelings, and only solicitous to' promote the happiness of others." This is the
story of Phebe Unwin_ who grows to maturity at her home with her grandfather,
as a shop-,. keeper's assistant in .Boston, and on an especially meaningful trip to
' Maine. As Phebe strives to do her duty, certain concerns of Savage_; emerge.
One is the theme of self-sacrifice, the value of usefulness to ·z others even if one
must deny one's own inclinations. Phebe gives rip·
a highly desirable trip to Washington in order to accompany to Maine;
28. [Sarah Savage], The Factory Girl, by the author of "Filial Affection," 'James Talbot," etc.;·,
2d ed. (Boston: Munroe & Francis, 1824).
29. (Sarah Savage], Filial Affection; ar, The Clergyman's Grandda11glz1er, a Moral Tale by the author of
The Factory Girl (Boston: Cummings & Hilliard, 1820). Phebe works for a Mrs, Lyman in Boston, who was
the "daughter of respectable parents" and who transacted her "business on·" an extensive scale which she
did in a manner very honourable to her character" (pp. 27-28): · Mrs. Lyman may well have been modeled
on Savage's third cousin, Ann Bent, a well-known seller of French goods in Boston, who took young
relatives into the shop wirh her, one of whom . was quite possibly the illegitimate half-sister of Herman
Melville. See Philip Young, "Small World: Emerson, Longfellow; and Melville's Secret Sister," New
England Quarterly 60 (1987): ·382-402.
·
t'
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEJ\,-I
249
an Unwin servant girl whose mother is dying and whose brother, an "idiot,"
must be taken care o[ Education also is valuable if it is not an end in itself
Arthur Stewart, a cha~acter in Filial Affection, learns that the acquiring of
knowledge is satisfying only if it is a means of usefulness. He confesses that
the amusements of literature engrossed my thoughts to the exclusion
of Him who awaked in me a curiosity for the investigation of His
works, who made me capable of entering into the feelings of the poet,
and of following the historian. I felt too independent, possessing as I
vainly thought, the means of happiness within myself {p. 43).
Another of Savage's concerns in this novel is with the education of ''.'
women. She has one of her characters assert a qualified demand for
- . such education:
It must be highly advantageous even to a woman to give a portion of
her leisure to the study of some branches of natural philosophy; for
though an acquaintance with household occupation is her appropriate
accomplishment ... I think whatever has a tendency to increase her
virtue should be added to this skill, where the
•means of acquiring knowledge are enjoyed (p. 127).
' Since the character then goes on to discuss quite intelligently the fields of
as.tronomy, chemistry, and biology, as well as religion, one is left · feeling
that Savage believes that more than a portion of one's leisure should be so
employed.
•- .. One of her major concerns is the problem of uneducated clergy. ·.
Savage wrote this book at the height of the Unitarian controversy, and · it was
addressed more to adults than to children. Phebe Unwin learns '.. in Maine of
a particular kind of clergyman different from her grand;. father, who had been
a teacher
anxious to give Phebe an early acquaintance with the principles of
religion, but he waited patiently for occasions calculated to
•inspire sentiments of love and gratitude, of cheerfulness and delight,
that those agreeable feelings might be associated with his instructions,
for knm,ving the influence of early impressions, he was particularly
desirous that her first ideas on that subject should
�13.
--~~250
ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
-~
1:::
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
be connected with pleasant emotions. Nothing of gloom or terror
had ever mingled with his religion (p. 8).
I cannot but hope your physician mistakes in supposing your disease
organic. I have been troubled very much with symptoms of a similar
character which were altogether nervous. You seem to have found in
your sickness the best comforts, those which arise from confidence in
God, and trust in the goodness of our blessed Savior. I can truly say
that I rejoice with those who find such consolations, however they
may differ from me in their particular tenets .... I know so well the
peculiar temptations of feeble health, that I could not forebear to warn
you against the intrusion of melancholy ideas. They are busy intruders
when we are sick, and are too ready to incorporate themselves with
our most cheerful and animating religion, with which they surely
have no natural connection. 30
In Maine, she learns of those unsettled, itinerant ministers who presuming to
consider themselves miraculously called to the ministry, sometimes
deceive themselves .... (O]ften tired of the . · labour of the plough or the
hatchet, they put on a black coat and .· • set out to earn their living by
labouring amongst holy things .. Their notions of religion are always
confused and often absurd, and the manners they assume are some-times
so ridiculous that the irreligious feel themselves at liberty to laugh, and
from scof- .. fing at .the men they come at last to ridicule the doctrines
they ·
profess to teach (p. 91).
She has characters describe them as "ranting visionaries" full of "folly~-· and
fanaticism . . . religious zeal," whose words often "pervert ; .: . '.. judgment,
darken ... imagination, or vitiate ... taste" (pp. 124,-93,; 140). Such words
appear to attack not so much conservatives like·;· Samuel Worcester of
Salem's Tabernacle and others of his ilk as· thl traveling Methodists and
Baptists who were not at that time requ4~~ to obtain ariy sort of formal
education. In contrast, Savage illustrai;_~· what a good minister in Maine
could be by the example of Mr. Merim of"pale pensive countenance" and
"clear exposition" (pp. 77, 93). He travels with Phebe on the ship to Maine
where he wants to preach and to establish a school. He is well educated and
has enough insiglii:t9 distinguish different religious needs among people. He
would not~~! as did one minister, a blacksmith by trade, who told a
womaxi"-''~f dreams, and visions, and represented the mild doctrines of
Christiaaj~ as so harsh, confused, and terrifying, that her reason was
affected',., (p. 96). Mervin was one of those men who could "at once ... judgs
of characters so as to adapt their conversation and instructions to'tli~ different
tempers and ·inclinations with whom they may converse" (p. 97). Mervin is
here portrayed as the ideal Unitarian minister, very_ similar to a Mr. Seymore
in The Factory Girl. _ . ,:
Savage also paints with sympathy a woman in the grip of depression. It
appears likely that Savage herself may well have suffered i_ ._ this way. She
wrote Debby Fisher Dana -on 20 April I 822 words·
this effect:
·
to
251
In Filial Affectio11, Savage draws the picture of Phebe's grandmother
•who is in the grip of a depression from which she cannot loose herself, ..-·
as much as she may wish to. Phebe, without judging her, attempts to £.: ·cheer
her and please her. Throughout this book, Savage's tilt toward ~ the "milder"
tenets of Unitarianism is evident.
Another evidence of her increasing Unitarianism is the fact that a ;
children's book of hers was the first production of the Publishing
fund, an
entity allied with, but not a part of, the not-yet-official l Unitarian Church.
This fund was established in November r821 by {liberals to counteract the
tracts of the New England Tract Society, later ~o be subsumed by the
American Tract Society, which had a Calvinist w.- orientation, Some of the
leaders of the enterprise were Joseph TuckerJoh-11 Gorham Palfrey, and George Ticknor, all Unitarians. They
"trefused, however, to print doctrinal tracts and wanted "stories of a ~~<lactic
character, in which the writers assumed the broad principles i <>f Christian
theology and ethics which are common to all follow.ers
!of Christ, without meddling with sectarian prejudice or party views." tThe
fund continued until 1827-28 when it was felt that secular pub§. Iishers were
printing so many books for children that the fund could {~ot compete.31James
Talbot was published by it in November r821.32
i '.,
l
f•
hnan,
f'
30. "Salem Social Life," 3!5:236-37.
~··JI. Cooke. UnitarianinninAnrerica, zo7;ChristianExa111iner, ~7JanuaryI82,j.;ChristianRegister, i 12
February I831; Christia11Regi.rter, 30January 1824; Christian Register, 9January 1824~- ; · 32. [Sarah Sa~-ageJ,Jame.- Talbot (Cambridge. Mass.: Printed for the Trustees of the Publishing fl
Fund by Hilliard & Metcalf, 1821).
�14.
25
2
ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
A thirty-seven-page tract, it sold for six cents in I 82!. Lucy Talbot, a
domestic in the employ of Mrs. Mansfield, is urged by her employer to go
home and look after her family when her mother dies. There she has the care
of her crippled brother William, her brother James, and her father. James,
between three and four years old, is sent unwillingly to school. The rest of the
book deals withJames's growing into · maturity. One of his lessons, which is
a constant theme of Savage's,
is the answer to a question in a catechism: Does God always see you? The answer
is "God sees me at all times, all the night and all the day: · he sees me when I am
alone when no other person sees me" (p. q). ·. James works for a shoemaker
after school and becomes an apprentice_·,;at 14 and prospers from then on. His
cheerfulness is credited to his · :good conduct. In the end, he has an excellent
wife and fine children. ·. Savage ends the tract by saying "Few are better
acquainted with Mr,'. _; James Talbot than myself, and though Providence has
placed me in y different rank of society, I can truly say I honor him" (p. 37).
Manf ,:· ofher books are either about or written to a "different rank of society." ·
This 'was a successful book. From November to May; three thou- "
sandcopies weresold. 33Reviews were, forthemostpart, good.Joseph. T.
Buckingham noted that one child had been so impressed that he ~imitated the
hero by making his own shoes." A second edition was. pririted in early 1824,
and it was reprinted in Ireland in 1825 and ui:
England in 1840.33 One character in this book who will appear again is Miss Campbell, the lady who goes about doing good.
The second book by Savage produced by the Publishing Fund was
entirely different in format. A self-help manual entitled Adi,ice to ·J Young
Woman at Service was published in 1823. 36Lois writes to Rebecca a number
of hints about doing well at domestic service. The ~t~ consist,
primarily, not of better housekeeping (although there are?few of these)
but of the desirability of individual honesty, integrity;
a
33. Christian Disciple 27 (r 823): r66.
34.Christian Disciple and Theological Re,;iew 20 (I822): IOI. .. , 35.James Talbot was published in r840
in London with the subtitle "The Importance of
Recollecting 'God Sees Me at All Times."' The second American edition was published at the ·
Clzrislia11 Register office. . :
36. [Sarah Savage ], Advice to a 101111g H'cm,an at Service, i11 a Letter Ji·om a Friend, by the author.;
of "[ames Talbot," "The Factory Girl," etc. (Boston: Printed for the Publishing Fund by John ~
R. Russell, 1823). ·
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
253
and improvement in Christian life. The manual gives concrete details of
what to read, how to save money, and other things that give a good idea of
the life of a domestic at the time. One of the values of Savage's writings is
that they give us a picture of the options open to women
•at that time. Anne MacLeod in A Moral Tale mentions that women could be
teachers, seamstresses, and laundresses. Ann Douglas in The Feminization
of American Culture says that "we seldom learn of a fictional heroine's
activities even in a school or in a store." But in Savage, women function as
domestics, factory workers, Sabbath school teach
. ers, dairywomen, shop assistants and owners, and boardinghouse keepers as
well. 37
. In early r 824, another moral tale published by the Publishing Fund
appeared. The Suspected Boy is a cautionary tale. 38 Little Lewis White, who
is boarding with Miss Nancy Crane and attending the school next door, eats
some gooseberry tarts intended for a neighbor and then
-; . lies about it. When his lie is discovered, he finds himself suspected on . all
occasions, especially when a pedlar comes to show his wares and ' afterwards
discovers a knife is missing that all the boys had seen Lewis
handle. He protests his innocence in vain and is shunned by the other ~ lads at
school until Miss Nancy finally declares him innocent, and the pedlar returns
to announce that he had merely mislaid the knife. The : original bad example
of Lewis and his subsequent treatment is a vivid , .. warning to the readers.
· Savage's next book, The Badge, was publishec;i by the Christian ~. Register
in late December I 824. The Badge is the story of a little boy .who has been
selfish and is not allowed to wear his badge with the
:hero's picture on it when Lafayette visits Salem. Eventually he be\comes
unselfish to his little brother and is alla'wed to have the badge. ·This story is
based on an occasion in Salem in 1824 when Lafayette
appeared on his northern tour, and children wore miniature portraits j:ifhim
"stamped on satin ribbons for badges, watch-chains and Ladies' /sashes."
Salem is not mentioned, but the story very clearly takes place _·there. The
military companies go to the common as do the boys of
· 37- Anne Scott Macleod, A Moral Tale: Childre11'.i Fictio11 and American Culture (Hamden,
,Conn.: Archon Books, 1975), 96; Ann Douglas, Tiu Feminization of ,'!.merican Culture (New _ York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1977), 157.
·_: 38. [Sarah Savage], The Suspected Boy (Cambridge, Mass.: Printed for the Publishing Fund r by
Hilliard & Metcalf, 1824).
�15.
~
,·:
"
. -;~
..
254-
;,
.:_;z ~:
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ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
255
types had been promulgated about the Indian and tells Charles to "be a
I-' friend of Indians, and you will find those more capable than I am to direct
the school. There are red-and-blue flags with white stars; the trium- · if~ ~f ·
your efforts to promote their best interests" (p. 53). There was growing
. :\tr
1~-
phal arches are covered with evergreens and roses. Mrs. Edgerly tells -~~~
interest in the Indian at this time. Lydia Child had published in 1824 a
Charles about old Hanson, a seller of garden seeds, who gives up his ·. · _::~1
controversialnovelentitledHobomok, whose setting was partially in Salem.
dream of a farm in order to educate his dead brother's children. . :~
hi
Elias Cornelius, associate minister at the Tabernacle, had written a memoir
Lafayette has been generous to America. Charles Edgerly finally gets '}!t: ~:
of"The Little Osage Captive" in 1822. Furthermore, Samuel Worcester
c. b d h ge d" Id h -"Cc,. Ii.;
s Lafayette a h ·w en e,htoo,"IS generous an Is to t at e must . ·,-;;_.---;. ~was very concerned with the plight of the Indian. A fellowSalemite,
ever remember that the best proof oflove to your country is a virtuous . - ?:~ ff life"
constantly,
about
(p. 33). AsecondeditionofTheBadgeappearedinFebruary 1826. _
Ji· . -·-------= .. ~ ElizabethElkins Sanders, was writingSavage was if anonymously, concern,
America's poortreatrnentofthelndian.
not alone in her
One reviewer said that he hoped the "fair author" would receive more :··. ·f£t ~'but her work is primarily a history with fictional trimmings rather than
sufficient compensation for her labor than she had in the past. Whether _ -:}/~ ~"
non-fiction alone. 42
she ever did so is not known. 39
_
_·: · - ::.'i~
In l 829, Savage followed a trend, then popular, of writing narrative
. Another moral tale, The Two Birth-Days, was also published by th~ :_,~ Christian
conversations. Sunday-School Conversations, brought out by Cotton . and
Register in late I 826. Young Joseph Nelson, whose carpenter _ '. .;~,:, father drank
Barnard in Boston in 1829," concerned the stories of the New
and whose mother as a consequence became .. cross, idle,
Testament. 43 In 1831, Conversations on the Attributes of God was pub:
and sluttish," is befriended by a Miss Campbell who urges him to go
lished by L. C. Bowles in Boston. This book involved Lucy and ·: Martha and
to school. He does and, after several detours, is able to help the younger . ;
their Sunday school teacher, Miss Campbell. There are . nine conversations: a
boys with their lessons. He is taught by a lawyer not only moral lessons - :".·
general conversation on Sunday schools; on : obedience to God; on going to
but how_ to cipher. Miss Campbell teaches him one of Savage's con- : .)
church; and those on God's attributes - - - omnipresence, omnipotence,
stant lessons, that God sees him at all times. And he teaches his father > by
wisdom, holiness, goodness, and jusmeans of his exemplary life the value of work and temperance. 49 :-,:
- rice. The narrative framework is very slight; the question-and-answer
In Savage's only history for the young, Life of Philip, the Indian Chief ;: (I
format reminds one more of a catechism than anything else. 44
827), Mrs. Edgerly teaches her little son, an older Charles, not only · the facts
_ In 1833, a small book appeared that was Savage's contribution to a
of King Philip's War but also lessons of.compassion for and •. understanding
•fair in aid of the Boston Asylum for the Blind, the originator and founder of
of.the Indians. 41 Charles confesses at first that he had·. thought of the Indian
which was Samuel G. Howe, a philanthropist and a relative
"as a tall, straight-haired solitary man, with a':-. tomahawk in his hand,
. ,of Savage's. 'The little 16-page book was published in Salem at the
skulking behind rocks and fences, or darting :'
out upon some hapless victim as they used to do when our .country i was first
settled" (p. 8). But his mother says that Philip's story had :-;
42. Lydia Child, Hobo111ok (Boston: Cummings, Hilliard & Co-, 1824); Elias Cornelius, in
addition to his memoir, had resigned from the Tabernacle in r826 to become an agent of the
• been "clouded by prejudice. of his enemies from whose pen alone
•American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions among the American Indians (Boston Recorder,
receive all our information" (p. I 8). She.also notes that historians give, few
S June 1816; 23 March 1822; Christian Register, II January 1834). Elizabeth Elkins Sanders published
or no facts on the Indian women. She deplores the fact that stereo-_ ,
anonymously in 1828 Conversations, Principally 011 the "Aborigi11es of North America (Salem, Mass.: W. &
fi:
'I'
.#i
we :
39. [Sarah Savage], The Badge: A Moral Tale far C/1ildren, by the author of"The Factory Girl,'' ''.James
Talbot," etc. (Boston. Office of the Christian Register by T. q. Wells, 1824); Clzristia11 Register, 29
January I 825.
40. [Sarah Savage], The 1iva Birth-Days, A Moral Tale, by the author of "The Factory Girl,• - "James
Talbot," "The Badge," etc. (Boston: Christian Register office by Isaac R . .Butts, 1826). _ 41. [Sarah
Savage], Life of Philip, the Indian Cl,ief, by the author of"The Factory Girl,"
Badge," and "The Two
Birth-Days,• etc. (Salem, Mass.z Whipple and Lawrence, 1827).
-n
was
S. B. Ives); she
a "constant contributor ofartides to newspapers - and journals giving her views on the
government's treatment of the Indians from Andrew Jackson onward." The Papers of I.,everett Saltonstall,
1816-1845, ed. Robert E. Moody, 4 vols.
:"" (Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society, 1978), r:xvii .
• 43. [Sarah Savage], S1,nday-School Convenations (Boston: Cotton and Barnard, 1829).
44- [Sarah Savage], Co11versations an the Attributes of God, by the author of The Badge (Boston: . _ L.
C. Bowles, 1831).
�16.
256
-.i ~
.if
ESSEX INSTITUTE HISTORIC.'\L COLLECTIONS
~,,:;:
l
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
257
R,gi,t" office (probably the Essex Regi,te,). Blind Mirinn; Re,to,ed to
., ;
has gone to India, travej, to New Hamp,Inre to live with a farmer's
Sight is the story of Mn. Cooper and her selfish, inattentive niece who
· !;° family. Savage', knowledge of that stare came from hernwn visits to
has come to live with her. The two go to see old M,-,. Thompson, a
.• i j her brother, Thomas Savage, who was minister of the Presbyterian
wash«woman, who has a blind grandchild Sarah, a quick, attentive 'ii'£ ~- Church in Bedford, New Hampshire. She describes the countryside, learner, Mn. Cooper
makes application to the Trustees of the New- ;. ':
the weaving, the hop picking, and a minist<:t; Mr. Burnham, who ;, England Asylum for the Blind for Sarah,
who is accepred, Six month, . ,, :
mourning his dead wife, Phebe, who "gladden[ed] all with her sunlater, the asylum has an exhibition. Mrs. Cooper and
Miriam go and '· · ··., f shine" (p. 77). Another victim of depression is discussed, and more
are very impressed with what Sarah has learned. Afterwards, Mirian, · · . .. emphasis ensues on the lack of an educated clergy, thememminiscent exclaims that
it is she who is r<ally blind, but her delighted aunt says :_;_ S:-- of HIM 4fjidfon. After the death of Phillis, the family ;, enabled to that Miriam is now ttstored to
sight. From that time on, Miriam;,·, c-,;-' !'::· return to Woodland. Phillis is one of the primary characte,,; in the attentive. H« favorite motto is '~ttention is the eye
of the Mind.""
book, modeled, says Savage, on a woman she has known. Sbvery is
f, also discussed, especially in the We.st Indies. The judge says: "I rajoice Care at
In r 8 3 s, Henry Ware,Jt, Professor of Pulpit Eloquence and Pastoral
Harvan!, began to edit a series of novel, whose overal] title · ,;_ii-] j.;: for the master " well " the slave. For whereve, liberty has been given was Scene, and Charaau,
Rl,nuatU,g Chrutlan Tmih. The object Was
.,iL tohlmfromconscientiousmotivesinthemaster, thelatterhasacqnired "to present familiar illustrations of some of
the important practical · };'.\
a freedom rnore perfecr than that he can impart to another" (p. 7). . principles of religion I have been so happy as to secure several
able .
The fact that Savage's was the first in a prestigious series of Unitarian wri_ters who will be foun~ I trust not un~y to tr'."t the several ..
books
show, something of her increasing Unitarianism. God is portopics proposed to them. The first wnter m the series was Sarah . ~
trayed as a God of love, a
paternal figure. People are revealed as capable Savage. Trial '"d Selj-Dttdpllne was to be her last book, and lo many
Of goodness. Dogma isnot stressed;
yet, despite her obvious leanings
ways it sums up bee <=sitional role." The book deals with Emma
in tl,;s direction, Savage also reflected some earlier views. In this, she Spencer who
meets trial after trial and learn, through them the value ,-_!JF )1!- was typical of the earlier liberals whom Henry Ware, Jr, described as of self-sacrifice. Thi, heroine
is not of the lower rank,. At Woodland, . -~ --S,_ "doctrinally cautious.• She believed in Clnist" Saviour and Redeemer a spacious country home, financial rev=es
force the funily to move' ::~ : ';/ in contca.st to many Unitarian., who denied the divinity of Christ. She Emma's husband must leave to find work. The family,
including
;,!so believed in sin not justas the absetice of good, but as a war within. Emma', grandfathe,; Judge Thurston, aod little three-year-old Ellen,
·-~ ~ One of her most saintly charactcrs was Judge Thumon. Phillis and move into the city to live with an aunt. Also leaving with them. is . ~ ~ the garden«, John,
d~cuss Thurston's character afrer his death. When Phillis, a black woman of uncommon judgment and loyalty.· Emma :;Ji
says that the judge was perfect,
Philli, replies that he should read undergoes an intense period of self-<ducation in order to teach, but /f."' ; .1_1,;s Bible more carefully. "You would have learnt
there too much of her plan, go aw,y when little Ellen becomes ill. To aid her recovery, >Ji> f the character of God to think any creature good. ... the longest and the
family, without the judge who has died and Emma', husband whq -~ -4\,.holiest life that was ever spent will still come short of what God
·-- _.:required" (p. 29).
f.
J~
f
r,; ~-.
-'¾' ~
::;'J
ir
·?''
·''/! ~;
I~ I"
45. [Sarah Savage], Blind Miriam Restored to Sight, by rhe author of "The Faaocy Girl,"
"Sunday-Schoo[ Conversations," eec, (Salem, Mass.: Register Office, I 83 J). There is a copy of ·,
chis book with Sa,·age's penciled-in signature in the Salem Achenaeum.
46. [Sarah Savage], Trial and Self-Discipline, number I in Scenes and Clzaracters fllustrati11g Christian
Tnuh, ed. Henry Ware, Jr., by the author of "[ames Talbot," "The Factory Girl," ecc., (Boston and
Cambridge:James Munroe & Co., 1835). The quotation from Ware was found in· the front of the book.
The others in the series were (2) The Skeptic by Eliza Follen; (3) Home by Catharine Maria Sedgwick;
(4)·Gleams ef Tn,rh by Joseph Tuckerman; (5) The Backs/icier by
Hannah F. Lee; and (6) Alfred and The Better Flirt by Louisa Jane Hall.
1/J .,;;
fit·
{ff ;(:
,.;::John
Savage also shows in this book that she is nonsectarian, unlike the ·
other members of her family who were Episcopalian, orthodox Con.
gregationalist, Unitarian, or Presbyterian. Aunt Huldah Patterson in
_':1Nal and Selj-Discipli11e tells of a church with whose views she does
•not agree and which her neighbors criticize. She knows them "to be
•excellent folks-true Bereans, studying the scriptures daily and walking
in the fear of the Lord .... We h_ave no right to judge the hearts
�17.
258
ESSEX IN-STITUTE HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
of our fellow-creatures" (pp. 89, 91). This is similar to Savage's state
ment in a letter to Debby Fisher Dana in 1822:
I know that little variations of opinion have no influence on the
essence of religion, which, with faith in our Saviour, is love to
God, and submission to His will. 47
She may have been influenced in this nonsectarianism by one of her ·-;·
favorite and often-mentioned writers, Richard Baxter. In The Saiiits;
Everlasting Rest (1677), he spoke of"Unchristiari and Church-dissolv/::: ing
Division and Alienation which follows [separation]; ... Alas that·_; Pride and
Ignorance should have such power among Believers that·} men cannot be of
several Judgments in_ lesser points, but they be alsc · of several Churches!"48
_ · .,._
She is, I believe, transitional in that, although she becomes more ., liberal,
she does not leave the old behind. One of her characters i,,_ Tiial , and
Self-Discipline is not sorry for the improvement that factories have:/ made in
the life of New England, but she is concerned "for the spirit:' which I fear will
grow up with them=-a spirit of self-reliance, an:·j" earthly spirit, looking only
to this low world for aid, for support':) (p. 67). What is implicit in The Factory
Girl is explicit here. . - -,/
Trial and Self-Disdpli11e was successful. In 1838, after her death, a~
•fifth edition appeared. 49 Although her identity was not generally i known,
reviews of this book as well as those of her other books, '.') demonstrate that
her ideas found appreciation in that period. An anon,-:~ ymous reviewer in
the conservative Boston Recorder said that she had a, "thorough acquaintance
with the art of education." Her knowledge' of the ways of children was often
noted as was her easy, natural style.! She was compared with Maria
Edgeworth "by the felicity with whid; the most suitable occasions are seized
upon for making a moralimpression upon the youthful mind. "50 Joseph T.
Buckingham in reviewing James Talbot observed that "it is obvious that a
person of as much talent. and as strong religious impressions as the author 'can
hardly be more · usefully employed, than in furnishing our own community
with simi-
25
9
far works, suited to our particular wants with the skill shown in this. "51 A
writer in the New England Galaxy, which was generally critical of women
writers, approved of those who "can succeed well in works on education
and juvenile tales, calculated to assist and advance the labors of the sex in
their peculiar task of instructing the young; here is an immense field for
their labors, for the cultivation of
which they have adequate means and powers. "52
_
At the same time, there were some who saw that she rose above the
crowd of female writers of her time. Some virtues were not pointed out:
her psychological insight, as in her descriptions of women with clinical
depression in. Filial Affection and Trial and Self-Discipline, her
:_ · delineation of the idiot in Filial Affedion, or her use of a black female · as
a primary character in her last book. Yet her work was praised for : style,
design, and effect quite often. Joseph Emerson Worcester after
• her death pointed to her "rare intellectual attainments," which vv:as high
praise from the editor of so many atlases, gazetteers, and die. tionaries, and who was to become the special favorite of the Boston literati
in the great war of the dictionaries. 53 An unknown writer in ·:--the New
York Mirien•a said on 16 October 1824 that "we therefore ;, .consider it as no
slight merit in our author, that her works are free
.from designed resemblance to any popular writer, that they are not · i
servilely formed after any fashionable model, but are true and original f,
·.pictures of her own mind. "54 As a woman, a teacher, and a transitional
writer, Sarah Savage is a voice that should be recovered.
SARAH SAVAGE OF SALEM
r
51. Chiistian Disciple a11d Tlzeological Review 20 (1822): IOI.
'52. "Bluestockings," Ne11• Eugla111l Galaxy, 8 February 18·2s; "T.," Christian Register, 29Janu
47. "Salem Social Life," 36:236. . .. ,
48. Richard Baxter, The Sai11ts' Everlastitig Rest, I Ith rev. ed. (London: For Francis Tyton &,
Robert Boulton, 1677), Preface opposite B-3.
49. Christian Register, 7 April 18 J 8.
50. Boston Reconler, 24 February 1821.
;c·
. ary 1825.
53- LJoseph Emerson Worcester], American Alma11ac and Repository of Usef,,l Kt1owledge 9
J.~ (1837): 320 ..
'~;
54- 771e Minerua, r6 October 1824.
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i
Capt. Oliver Thayer Death Notification
OLD 8,\LEM CAPTA.IN DEAD.
Capt. Oliver Thayer WM a Type of tho · Cllppel'.'
Comme.nderw.
Sir.rm, ,Juue 1.-Cnpt. Oliver l'ba:ver. oae ol
B!lle.m'11 oldest clU:ums. died at the home of
his dlllllfhter, Mrs. ,JoRe Mari;ratl, 2ti!J
Lafayette 11t,, at 7 P, m. tonlirht. He bad been
sick tor 86veml month& ,
Cnut. Oliver Tbavor wu a 15pfomlld type · of
that cla&t of mariners, of whfch lie wrui,
1>0111ibly the loot, who:;o courai:e ,md enter.,
pr1110 oarrie<I tlle n1uno of Sllle1u to tile re- '
mntest part!! of ttu, world.
Be w1111 born In Salem l\f'arcb 12 1798, a1
nd !lhb his father amt 1rr:11u1!1ithe1· fol.
owe,, t o sea for many Year:11 at.Ht comurnmled. lnrf(e 11bios.
Wbeu a bov ho attendcd the famous scboo.l t .
d by l&111ie l:IMhr in 11ar;, ,
nn1l \'1'118 ti
111ombor of a class of 100
tbat atto.11
lbla wetl,known to1nple ot
loaming m l 800.
He
wu
»rose1n at ·me dedloat1on ot tho
Bottth Co111m::i:ationn.l enureu. ,Jan. 1, 1804,, and
for several •1mu11 hnd boon the only Person who
wa1/1rcs.cut ou &bat occasion.
ln 1816 lie sh fifltitl 1111 a sailor on the
Am~rloan 11btp A1tgust,a. which was bound for
l:ilU)•rna. flu romalno1l In tb11,t city tor aoverlll
mouths and tl1eo ret1.umo1l to U1111 oom1try.
Ho r-ontimuut lo . follow the ~ell, betmr
r11r11dly adva.uoed 111 his . J)rotosslou, an,t
wl1011 :18 rears ol!i was rnudo couunnn<lcr ot tbe brlir
l:itnrk.
• Ho 1mb_saquently comm11.11ded. some of tlio ,
np11t 11h1v11 uw.uod bv ,loseul11,cabody, 0110
o.f 8.atem'11 f1un,..,1111 morehante!
f
l ftiil lm1t VOYUll'O Wlll! made In tho llbil) Amazon
m 1632. ltotookthoves1mlt0Ne1v Orleans,
loaded, bor with cotton am1 r11ad0 • 11ucces11ful
voyui;co to l\:fnrsoll h111. Ou tbo voyage homo ho
l!toppod at MM1m:,;a11.
After Ms rotltemm1t frnm tht1 Roa, lie car:rled ou
the lumhor busiues:,i lu tlJts city for l!O!'Ofl\l
)'Ollf!I.
Of late years ho den>tcd his time t.o vad· ou.~
cl1t.ritl8l!, auil tVM ,·ic6'pre1mlent of tho
.1111.,ooiatu:m. for tho Holt t of Alil'll<l aml
De1:1t1tut&,Women, nnd one o.t tbo deaecms ot thu
Crombie Street Uo111tr111i1'nt1omll fi11urch.
IJ11tU l\'lthln n short. titno of his death 1l9 took a deep fntor st ht current ov1>uts,
uud manl!e.~t.od much pleasure iu reho,nsmir Search the Largest Onl
l!u-toents of >'Oars a11:o. I 'r, 1·0 wltltlu a tmil ,>wirs1/1e wa.'> a fre11uo11t rmtl
lutcrestlui; , c:outr u11tor to tbo loci~I J•••t•er11.
---------~
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l/1
�EARLY RECOLLECTIONS OJ!' TBE UPPER PORTION OJ!' ESSBX
STREET.
BY OLIVER TIIAYBB.
Fao11 1804 to 1820, on the right of the Salem end of the
Turnpike, there was a colony of ten or twelve negro families,
and on the left some four or five houses containing, probably,
altogether some fifty or sixty inmates. The principal
peraouagea on the right were Mumford-well fitted to be chief
of the tribe, Portsmouth, Newport, Tom Piper and others, with
their families. On the left, the most noted was Prince Savage,
an intelligent black man, highly respected, and probably well
remembered by many of our older citizens. He was a qative of
Africa and once a slave. These were all apparently happy in
their humble sphere, especially on Election week, when the
American flag was floating from above many of the
dwelli°c,as, and visits of girls and boys were made from all
quartera to listen to the sweet strains of the ~folio, as poured
forth by amateu1'8 of dark complexion.
We now pass f,he next building on the left going down, a
bake house, and then an old dwelling houae, where resided
for many years Mr. John Chipman; then the house on the
corner of May street, belonging to Capt. Samuel Very,
after1Vard purchased by Mr. Nathaniel Pitman. There had
formea•ly resided in the same house, the Turell family. Mrs.
Turell kept a school there for small children. Also, in the
same house, lived Mr. Clough, the treasurer of the Great
Puture Corporation.
The next, on the corner of May street, was owned by
Benjamin Thayer, and sold, I think, about 1808, to Rev.
(211)
�212
E.lllLY Rll00LLEO'l'JON8
Nathaniel Fisher, of St. Peter's church; born at Dedham, July 8,
1742 i gmdunted Harvard College, 1763; installed, Fe~. 25,
1782; he died suddenly Dec. 20, 1812. I would say, in
passing, that his son Theodore waa probably the 11nest penman
that ever g1·aduated from the Hacker school. Among the
scholars of 1800 to 1804., he certainly stood foremost.
The next building is the store on the corne1·. A.a early u
1815, it was a grocery and apothecary store, occupied by
Thomas Seccomb, afterwards by Nathaniel Wat.son and his son
Fenton, saddlers.
We now pDSs over to the eastern corner of Essex and Boston
streets, and find the atore, with houae attached, of Captain
Samuel Very, formerly engaged in the coasting trade with
Baltimore and other southern ports. He was a fine man and a
strong Jeft'ersonlan democrat, ever ready at the polJs on
election days.
Next we come to the old house belonging to the Grant family,
renovated and put in ftne order some forty yea1'8 since, as the
present edifice shows. Then two or three small houses, one of
which waa occupied by Mr. John Bird, a comb maker ; another
by a Mra. Day, a famous tailoress, formerly Mrs. Hart, and
mother of Capt. Charles Hart of Brig New P1•iscilla, which was
taken by the pirates near Cuba in 1829, the crew never being I
heard from. Next in order is the old Williams house, a relic of the
olden time. Some or the family resided there in 181,. There was
a large 6eld in the rea1· of the house, extending to gardens on
Federal street. Following this waa a tbreeatory wooden building,
used fur a grocery store, by Mr. Jamea Thorndike, more recently
occupied by John Ward, many years for the sume busineas.
Next in order was the Friends' meeting house, built in 1718,
with burying ground adjoining; and then came the
�OP UPPea PART OP BSSBX 8TBBBT.
113
, mansion of Mr. Robert Cowan. He and hia wife were of
English extraction, and had several sons and daughters. He was
a person of much ingenuity in the manufacture of lead pencils,
and waa, I have heard it said,' the first that brought into use gum
copal as a varnish for carriages. He ia also remembered as being
one of the crew of Privateer Schooner Pickering, commanded
by Jonathan Harraden during the revolutionary war, who was
eminently successful in hia enterprises against the English,
having captured a large number of armed veuels with many
guns. AU of the buildinga from the Grant House have been
since torn down or removed and the present edifices have been
erected.
·
From Mr. Cowan's house, we pass a large garden beautifully
laid out, in the highest state of cultivation, until we come to the
house of Major Hiller, the first United States Collector
nppointed by General Washington. He was superseded by Col.
William R. Lee of Marblehead, August 13, 1802, and soon
afterwar,ls removed to Lanoast.er, M'll88., and died there in
1814,. I recollect, perfectly well, seeing him at his home on
Essex Street, a abort time before his removal. Charles
Cleveland, Esq., nephew of Major Hiller, afterward City
missionary of Boston, who died some few years since nearly
100 years of age, acted as Deputy Collector to his uncle from
1789, until his resignation, and with Col. Lee to February,
1803 when he resigned, and William W. Oliver, Esq., who had
lived with Major Hiller for several years was appointed by
Col. Lee, to fill his pince, which position he held until April
10, 1839. The next occupant of this house was Judge Prescott,
father of the histol'ian : another occupant was Thom11a P.
Bancroft, who Jived there several years. It was then purchased
by Charles Saunders and a few years after was sold to Mr.
William Ives, who built the
�new house to theweatward. After the death otMr. Ives, the
house wu aold and torn down and the site converted into a
pleasure ground by Mr. Goldthwaite, owner of the new house
on the comer. Rev. James M. Hoppin occupied it for a few
years during his pastorate io Salem.
Next to Mr. Hiller's, wu the house Mr. Abner Chase, and
then the two-story grocery store of Capt. Stephen Osbom.
Passing to the opposite corner of Dean street, we come to the
mansion of Col. Sp1',c.ue, occupied by him and the Stearns
family. Col. Sprague died in 1808, and a portion of the Stearns
family have resided there ever since. It has been kept in good
order, and makes as fine an appea1-ance at the present time it
did half a century ago.
or
as
The next, where now stands the residence of John H.
Silsbee, Esq., was the site of one of Salem's ancient st111ct;..
ures, devoid of pa.int or beauty, and occupied by the families of
Hubbard Oliver, Mr. Johnson, and a.Mr. Pettiugell. :Mrs. Oliver
kept a school there for young children. Mr. Johnson was sexton
of the old South church,-Dr. Hopkins• church,- and of the new
church when fi11it1bed in 1805. A spacious room on the lower
floor was used as a dining hall fur the workmen omployed in
building the turnpike at the commencement of operations in
1802. It may not be gene1-nUy known that Dr. Stea1·us was one
of the prlme movers in the enterprise, and wns a large stockholder, and took much pride in the building of it, and \VRS bound,
as the sto1-y l'uns, to have it when 611ished, so level and straight
as to take a11 early look from Salem into the Boston market. This
old house wu.s the writo1"'11 birthplace. Some yeaa•s later it was
to1·n down, I think about 1806. The brick house now on the spot,
the 1'88idence of John II. Silsbee, Esq., was erected by Joseph
Sprague, 100 of Col. Sprague, who lived there with his family for
�OF UP.PER PART OP ESSEX STREET.
115
many years, when .it became the residence of Col. Francis
Peabody and family ; it was then aold to Samuel Williams,
Esq., brother of Bev. William Williams, and from him
purchaaed by Mr. Silsbee. The next house was the home of
Aaron Waite, Esq., and built by him in 1796; he and his
family lived there many years, and ofter his death it was
occu1>icd by hie eon-in-law,' Nathaniel L. Rogers, Esq., and
family, during his life, and by the remaining members of hie
family until the present time. The next house wna the estate of
Captain Nehemiah Buffington and now the home of George
Wheatland, Esq.
The house below was the Mackey house, the residence of Mr.
John Dodge, then of Capt. Philip P. Pinel, and next, of Miss
Plummer. Then followed Miss Higginson's, and Mrs. Wallis's
store. The last was built, as I learn, by a Mr. Very. The next,
was a two-story dwelling house with a shop below. These four
buildings, occupied tho site where now stands the beautiful
maµsio11 of the l11te Captain John Bertram. We pass over to
the next corner, the Ropes House, now belonging to Mrs.
Bertram, the residence once of Rev. Mr. Hoppin, Mr. Ezra
Northey, James B. Ferguson, and others. The next, end-ways to
the street, was the home of John Prince, Esq. The next, a little
west of the house of Mr. Emery 8 • .f ohnson, but of which I
have no recollection, was said t.o have been built by Mr.
Maule. Then we come to the so-called Cla1·k house, Mre. Clark
living in the \Vestern end, and various families at di1Ferent
times, occupying the premises. Next, the eatate of Capt. John
Buffington, end-ways to the street.
On the corner of Beckford street, stood a large. square
building, with an ell, venerable, but dilapidated in appearance, owned by Dr. Stearns. Various families occupied it,
from time to time. This house was built by Mr. Kitch-
�218
en, in 1874, and was torn down some forty yean since. We
now pass on to the next corner, and find au old wooden
building, jutting out from what ia now the corner house,
perhaps twenty to twenty-five feet, nearly t:o the edgest:ooe of
the sidewalk. The lower part was occupied as a shop for the
aale or smaU Yariety articles. The upper portion or the
building, was the paint and varnish shop of Mr. Cowan. Back
of this, on land of Warden, wu another little shop, kept by an
old-fashioned gentleman, whom the boys caJled "Daddy
KiJJen." He wu a pleasant man, and his shop was well
patronized. Next, came the house of Mr. John Warden, stilJ
standing, and occupied by memben or his family. Nezt, where
the house or the late Henry L. Williams, Esq., now stands, was
an old twost:ory house, very old, and setting back from the
street, ten or twelve feet. The upper story projected, and there
were atepa leading to the basement floor. This was the
so-called Puncbard house.
We now come to the saddlery and harness shop of Mr.
James Bott, corner of Bott's avenue. Thia avenue continued
north some two hundred feet or more, with a number of
mechanics' shops, one of which was Mr. James Goodhue'&
blacksmith shop. On the eastern corner of the avenue on
Essex street, stood what wu called the Ashton houae,
afterwtU"ds removed, and then a large wooden house, I think
on or near where the Pi~kman brick house now stands. The
new Dwyer house occupies the spot, or nearly so, where
stood the James Bott shop, and the nezt, the Holman house, a
portion of the avenue land.
Now, passing down, we come to the land of Mrs. Orne,
where we find four shops, respectively occupied by Benjamin Blanchard, hairdresser; Ma1·k Pitman, cabinet maker;
Nathaniel Lang, saddler; and Stephen D1·iver, boot and
shoemaker; all of which have boen removed.
�OP
lJ'PPJla PAar 0.1' us:n ITBBBT.
117
Next, Mn. Orne's hou11e, the west.em lower room a hardware
store, the proprietior of which was Thomas Robie, hie name
being in capital letters over the door; he waa an antique looking
old gentleman, wearing, I think, a wig and breeches ; a picture
of the olden time. He was, I believe, one of the loyalists who left
Salem during the revolution, and came back after the peace, and
engaged, as an account of him 1aya, in commercial punuit.a to a
limited extent. He wu, 1ays the account, amiable, inteJligent and
e~emplary. He died, in Salem, December, 1811, aged 84:.
We pass on to the office of Ezekiel Savage, Esq., and then to an
old, two-story, gambrel-roof house, with two tenements, in one
of which Mr. Savage lived, and from which he removed to his
new house on Broad, comer of Hathorne, street in 1808. The
house on Easex street was also, I think:, afterward occupied by
Daniel Dutch, Deputy sheriff, and Samuel K. Putnam and
others. Next below was Mr. Dutch's office, then two wooden
two-· and-a-half-story buildings, -Charles F. Putnam's grocery
store, and Thomas Perkins' warehouse. All these four buildings
were removed or torn .down before the erection of the North
church, in the rear of the lot,
We now pass to the next house, belonging to the family of the
late Capt. William Osgood. This was the home of Mn. Mercy
Gibbs, previous, I think, to 1810, and a dry goods sto1·e was
kept in the western end. The next house now occupied by Hon,
Joseph B. F. Osgood, was, in the early portion of the centua·y,
the home of Hon. Nathaniel Bowditch, the world-wide known
and celebrated astronomer and navigator, who, in our younger
dRya, when travening old ocean•s rough passage, was looked
to, through his instructions, to guide ua sufely on to our destined
port. In after years, this house was the home of David Cummins,
IIIIT, GOLL.
S:ll:I
�!1
8
lDABLT Bl!ICOLLBOn01'8
Esq., whose daughter gave to the world the pleasing tale of
"The Lamplighter."
Next, the ancient mansion of the Curwen family, standing
forth in full view of the obse"er, originally owned by Roger
Williams in 1635-6, and afterwards by Richard Davenport,
whoae administrators sold it to Jonathan Corwin, in 1675; in
the popular belief, the place of the examination and
commitment for trial of the so-called witches in 169!. Passing
on to the opposite corner, we 1ind an old irregular-shaped
dwelling house with dry goods store in front, kept by Mr,
Dutch, and above, the Winn house. On these two sites are the
brick houses now forming the soutbweaterly corner of Essex
and Summer streets, built by John Kinsman, Esq.
The next house above, on Essex street, was that of Captain
John Ropes, whose son was, in 1805, a acboolfelJow ot mine
at the school of Master A.mos Town, near where the First
Baptist Church now stands. For many years afterwarda the
house was occupied by Rev. Chas. W. Upham, our late highly
esteemed citizen, and is still remaining in the family. The next
was the home of Cap. t.ain Carnes, well remembered as the
pioneer in the pepper trade with Sumatra. I well remember his
wife, who lived many years after his decease. The next
building was a small two-story house, very old, in which lived
a Mrs. Pike, an old lady who kept a little variety-shop
supplying articles for children-purchasers. Her son-a
eailor-and his family Jived with her. They were very poor and
in this respect they were not alone, for it was war time, and
moat of the people were faring hard, as I well remember; and
when he was asked how he got along, replied, "Pretty well; I
feed the children on salt fish, and give them all the water they
cun drink."
In the next house, on the corner of Cambridge street,
�OJ!' 'OPP.ER PART 0.1' ll8SU 8T.UEi'.
219
lived Dr. Barnard, apothecary, his shop being in the front part
of the house on Essex street; in after years, Mr. Daniel Pierce
and daughters occupied the house. On the opposite corner was
the William Hathorne house. About 1812 to 1811;, I think, Dr.
N. Peabody occupied the eastern part and Mr. Hathorne the
western. We now pass two small shops belonging to Deacon
Samuel Holman, and then to his house, old and
quaint-looking, and setting some fifteen feet back from the
street. It waa built by Thomas Maule in 1681; or 1686. My
maternal grandparents were living in this house, in 1770, Mr,
Holman was a picture of the olden time, wearing a "cocked"
hat, smalJ-clothes, buckled shoes, etc. He was an excellent
gentleman and for many years an officer in the North Church.
The next house stood eodwiae to the street and was the
tin-plate workshop of De~on Richard M. Chipman. This house
was afterwards, for many years, the home of Capt. Thomas
Holmes and then of Mr. Abbott Walker.
It is now in the possession of Mr. Frank Cousins.
The next in order was the estate of Mr, Gabriel ·Holman,
father of Jonathan Holman, f'or many years an officer in the
Salem Custom House, Next, an old house belonging to the
Bott family, and another, I think, owned by Mr. Mugford,
which was removed to Bott's Court, aud the New Jerusalem
Church was built on the spot. The two houses on either corner
of Bott's Cowt belonged to some of the Bott family. Above
this were three two-aud one-half story ahops extending to the
corner of Hamilton street. One was there as early aa 1812, and
waa occupied by Mr. John Ferguson as a grocery store. The
lower front of the one on the corner was the apothecary shop
of Joseph D, Chandler. There was a school in the second story.
On the site of these three houses, Dr. Benjamin F. Browne
afterward erected his house. On the opposite
�IJO
BAB.LT UOOLLl:anoxs
corner was the old house of Mr. Moses Wallis, now the
property of Joseph Hanson, Esq, 1 renovated, and I may say,
rebuilt, making a very fine appearance.
The next was the houso of Capt. John Foster, afterward of
Capt.ain Stephen Field, then of WiJJiam H. Foat.er, the son of
Captain Foster, who still resides on the premises. The next,
Captain Samuel Endicott's house, was occupied by him as early
as 1815. It is still occupied by his 1011, Mr. William P. Endicott
and family. The ne::it houae was Michael Webb's. It was there
certainly as early aa 1804. His son Michael and myself were
BChool-fellows, and I frequently visited the place. In after
yeara, it waa sold to Capt. Benjamin Creamer, and is atill
retained bytbe family. Next on the Cabot land was a large
two-and-ouehalf story wooden building. As late as 181!, there
was a grocery store in the lower story, kept by Mr. Corneliua
Briggs; and William Newhall, our late City Crier, was his clerk. I
think it was removed to Bost.on street. Next, the Cabot house. It
was built by an ancestor of the late Joseph S. Cabot in 1744, and
is now in posseaaion of Judge William C. Endicott. Long may it
remain a beautiful memorial of the style of old English
architecture.
Next to Judge Endicott's stands the Jeft'rey Lang house, built by
him iu 17 40 ; he had quite a large family and died in 1758. His
oldest son Richard, a silversmith, in the early years of the
century, occupied the eastern front of the house, and I think the
Leach family the western end; Mr. Laug died in 1820. There
were three 1001 of the Leach family : Geo1-ge, Hardy, and
&pee. The two eldest were members of the first clue, in the
Hacker school, rankiug high in penmanship, which woa then
thought to be more important than all othe1· branches of
learning combined. Next wu the old Holmes house so called, a
twostory old building with a pitched roof, eud to the street,
---
�01' 11PPBB PABT 01' l!SSU ft'BBn.
,221
occupied by several fa1nilies; the front room waa a small shop
kept by Sally Bacon for many years. Thia was taken down
some years since by Mias Mary Ann Ropes, now Mn. John
Bertram, who built the present house on it.a site. The house
next above waa the ho1ne of Capt. Timothy Ropes and family.
Next, that of Rev. Dr. Daniel Hopkins, of the South Church.
This house was built in 1764, by Mr. James Ford and
pul'chased by D1•, Hopkins in 1788. He was the aon of
Timothy and Mary (Judd] Hopkins, born in Waterbury, Conn.,
Oct. 16, 1734; a graduate of Yale College, 17 58 ; ca1ne to
Salem in 1766, and for some years kept a young ladies• school,
preaching occaaionalJy, until his ordination, Nov. 18, 1778 ;
manied in 1771 to Susanna, daughter of John Saunders of
Salem, by whom he had six children. He was the sole pastor
until 1804, in which year he received the aid of a colleague, in
the person of the late Rev. Dr. Brown Emerson, who
subsequently became his son-in-law. He is spoken of in his
biography, written by Dr. Emerson,
aa a gentleman of highly polished manners, and a kind and
amiable disposition. He waa tall and manly in bearing, hia
figure being sunnounted by a high triangular hat, and there
were grace and dignity in his movements. The remark waa
often made, that, Iu his looks and bea1•ing, he strikingly
reaembled Washington. He was a favorite with the children,
and once a month, being one of the boys of his pariah, I made
a visit to his house to receive religious iustru.ction, and
repeat the Assembly'• Shorter Catechism.
He died December 14, 1814. Dr. Emerson and family
occupied the house until his death, which occurred July
25, 1871, after a past.orate of sixty-seven years. It was
afte1·ward pu1·cbased by David P: Ives, Esq., 1111d is now
in his possession and is in a fine state of prese1-vation.
Next camo three small houses, oue of which still re-
�maina. The si~ or the other two is where Grace church now
stands. Nezt came Ebenezer Smith, baker, wit.ha bakery in
the rear of the house, and roadway passing to Chestnut atreet.
Above were two small bou11es one of which I think was
occupied by Mr. Roman's family, and the other by Mr.
George Mullett, a blind man, who was for many years the
Town Crier. On the site of these two houses stands the
residence of Lemuel Higbee, Esq.
We now come to the Cabot house, on the corner of Flint street.
It was, as I understand, built about 1810, an old house having,
before this, occupied the place. I do not, however, remember
it. This house was purchased about 1820, by Capt. Henry
King, and remained in his possession, and that of his family,
until sold a few yea1'8 since. It was afterward torn down, and
the present edifice erected. On the opposite corner, on Flint
street, within my earliest recollections, was a very old wooden
building, occupied as a dwelling house and groce1y, by Mr.
John Kimball, and for some years after, say from 1806 to
1810, by John N. Sleeper (and brother), who did a large
husineas for that time, in W eat India and other fo1•eign
goods. I well recollect the crowd, of teams from New
Hampshire and Vermont, with country produce, which came
there for the exchange ()f commodities. It was for many years
afterwards owned and occupied by Stephen Fogg, who
continued in the same buainess ; and who took down the old
building, erecting the present brick structure on the site.
W,e now come to the home of the venerable and good old
Dr. Barnard, pastor of the North Church. The house was of
the old English style, and built, as I lea1·n, by Judge Lindall,
in 1740. A large garden was attached, and kept In fino
order. On holidays, especially, the old geutlcmau dealt out
his flowe1"S with a liberal hand, to the
-- -- -
----.
�OF UPPER PART OP ESSEX STREET.
!23
girls and boys as they paeeed by, for he thought very much of
young people, and the feeling'waa truly recip1·0- cated. He
was the 10n of the Rev. Thomas of Newbury and of the Firat
Church, Salem; born in Newbury, Feb,, 5, 1748; graduated at
Harvard C.Ollege, 1766; ordained, January 13, 1773 ; died
October 1, 1814, regretted by all. Bia father, an uncle, a
grandfather, and great grandfather were all ministera and had
been settled over churches in this county, in Andover,
Haverhill, Newbury and Salem. In 1816, the estate was
purchaaed by John H. Andrews, Esq., who lived many years
after, and now (1884), is in poaeeaaion of two of his children,
Capt. John P • .And1-ews and sister,
We now pass on to the next houee, belonging to Mr.
Austin, with his cabinet shop attached, The house was sold
yeara afterward, and put in fine order by Capt. Charles Hart,
and is now the residence of Wm. Northey, Esq. The house
next, on the corner of Pine street, was built about 1806 or
1807, by Jabez Smith, and sold eeveml years after to Capt,
James Silver, who occupied it until his cleatb, and it has
since remained in the family,
The next, on the comer of Pine street, opposite, was known
by the name of the Osborne house, purchased by Capt,
Nathaniel Osgood, I think, about 1807 or 1808, where he and
his family resided some years, The house was then sold and
removed to Jtfarlborough (now Federal) street. Upon this
site, Capt. Osgood built a new brick edifice, now standing.
Above, we come to the mansion of Hon, Benjamin Goodhue,
built, as I understand, about 1780. It has passed through
several hands since his death. The present owner is John M.
Anderson, Esq. In a notice of Mr. Goodhue (whom I well
recollect), it is stated that he was early engaged in successful
commerce.
�2!4
JWII.T BBOOLLBorl01'8 01' ll8811X ft'BBBT.
He was a Whig of the revolution, Bia politica were of the W
11hi11gton school. He waa a senator from the county of Esaex
in the Maaaachuaetta Legislature, from 1784 to 1789, when he
waa elected a representative to the fi1'8t and three succeasive U.
S. Congreaaea, under the new Coaatitution, 1789-96; in 1796,
a senator in U. S. Congreaa for Mass., retiring from public life
in 1800. He was aon of Benjamin and Martha (Hardy)
Goodhue, born at Salem, 20 Sept., 17 48; graduated Harvard
College 1766; died 28 July, 1814; leaving an irreproachable
name to hie then only au"iviug eon, Jonathan Goodhue of New
York, a merchant who in character and credit st.ood second to
none in that commercial emporium.
The house above was built by a Mr. Luther, and the next, the
brick house, by Samuel K. Putnam,-I ehould tliink between
1806 and 1810. These two houeee now belong to John M.
Anderson, Esq. I have an indistinctrecollectiou of the first
named, and Mr. Putnam, I knew very well. These two houses,
were tenanted by various families, from 1810 to 1820, many ot
whom I knew, but can now recollect but one, as living at the
present time, and that one is a gentleman, well known and highly
respected, residing in Peabody ,-Major Lewis Allen, who will
be, if living, ninety years old next July.
One house still remains, the next above, the Mrs.
Greenwood house, removed there, I think, about 181!, from the
upper portion of Chestnut street to make room for the houses
of the Messrs. Saltonetall, Eaqrs., now standing on the location.
I have no doubt that some mistakes may be point.ad out in
these notes, and many omisaioos, but should think thoy were
substantially correct.
" .,,.
P' ,;,,,H', "'-,,, .. \ 1100"-'
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�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Broad Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
29 Broad Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Ezekiel Savage,
Esquire And his children
1808
Home of
Captain Oliver Thayer And
wife Rachel Bancroft
And remains in possession of their descendants
1839 to 2020
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1808
House History Written: Feb. 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1808
1839
2020
29/Broad Street
Bancroft
Massachusetts
Salem
Savage
Thayer
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/772451ff819ae7bdb39fdc78beebb9fe.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=Fztz0LJd5R5fOUFn9mfPWu5K5UVXz-iNRPi3NbBR3MVKXXRxwfCdQ1rls7sfDR8JmKsG7CcbHJh%7EdWeJ77udY6VYShKeinRPSMw5ZXBOaRV7RKARnMQJ9T3KkNsct521wVoW5-MWFM%7E9Scr45gwbqggUPa7f0wh7wPVz30w7yXrB55KIWq7Z5giNfbAaKXo19uAESNkg-oYBLWQy9VeL4NApptH%7EbWgSFDdYs-1TlkZJ--3rhr3rbKOcprW01tPAv%7EEGlUdAjAodaC5DXmJg-zYb8x%7E28ynYc5p031jLXoS%7Efwr%7EqHD9IF3KgKS7gziJ8u1UTgDitf4WZ%7E4JfLSxFA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
fd5dc89dd4b39d150fc4bfe3f7d6546a
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
21 ½ Buffum Street
Built for
John
Broadley
tannery
owner
1905
Research Provided by
Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc.
December 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 I HistoricSalem.org
©2019
�Owners & Occupants
21½ Buffum Street, Salem
By Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc., December 2019.
According to available evidence, this house was built in 1905 for John
Broadley, tannery owner.
In October, 1898, John Broadley bought from Christopher McGrane "a certain lot
of land" with buildings, bounded n.e. on Buffum Street, n.w. on land of Buffum,
s.w. on land of Mayo, and s.e. on land of Hanson (ED 1558:419). The 1897 atlas
of Salem shows the footprint of only one house on this lot-the one now #23, plus a
small shed. This house (#21½) would be built between 1905 and 1906 in the rear
of that lot, which was empty in 1897. Prior to 1906, the Salem directories have no
listing for a house in this location; starting in 1906, the directories do show a house
here at 21½.
John Broadley (1867-1907) was born in the Wyoma section of Lynn, the son of
Hugh Broadley and Johannah Keefe.
In 1860 in Salem (per census, h. 389) Hugh Broadley, 33, born in England, was
working as an engraver and residing in the house of John Jones, 45, also born in
England, a cotton printer. They worked in a textile factory, perhaps together, Hugh
engraving the patterns and John printing them onto the fabric.
Hugh Broadley came from a textile-printing family (info from Internet source). He
was born 1826 in Great Harwood, a small town in Lancashire, England, the son of
John Broadley & Maria Ryding. His father, John, was a block-printer of textiles
and later a fabrics dealer. Hugh was apprenticed to a calico engraver in Enfield,
England; and in 1850 he left for America. As we have seen, he was living in Lynn
by 1860; and on Dec. 24, Christmas Eve, of that year Hugh, 35, married Johannah
(Hannah) Keefe, 34, born in Ireland. By 1865 the couple and two children were
living in South Danvers (soon to be renamed Peabody), where (per census, h.
124) they resided in a house also occupied by the family of George Orr, 56, an
Englishman working as a cloth printer. Hugh was then described as 39, an
engraver, with wife Hannah, 38, and children Maria, 3, and John, one. In the
1860s Hugh changed his specialty from textile engraving to leather engraving,
much in demand in Salem.
In March, 1867, Hugh Broadley for $1300 purchased a house and land on
Phillips Street in Salem, and the family moved in. In 1870 (per census) the
�Broadleys rented out part of the house to tenants, Joseph Tomlinson, 29, an
English-born engineer, and His wife and three children, while the Broadleys
occupied the rest: Hugh, 44, machinist, wife Hannah, 43, and children Maria, 9,
John, 7, and Mary E., five.
John Broadley and his two sisters would grow up in this general
neighborhood, above Harmony Grove and Mack Park.
Salem, formerly an important seaport, had become a manufacturing center by
the 1870s. The largest textile factory was that of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Company, at the foot of Harbor Street, on the Point; but the major employer was
the leather industry, whose factories and tanneries lined Boston Street and
Mason Street, near the Broadley house.
Salem continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by manufacturing,
especially of leather and shoes and textiles. The managers and capitalists tended
to build their new, grand houses along Lafayette Street (these houses may still be
seen, south of Holly Street; many are in the French Second Empire style, with
mansard roofs).
In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor earthquake. In
the U. S. centennial year, 1876, A. G. Bell of Salem announced that he had
discovered a way to transmit voices over telegraph wires.
In this decade, large numbers of French-Canadian families came to work in
Salem's mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The
better-off workers bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their
families in the outlying sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam
Cotton mills would employ 1500 people (including hundreds of children) and
produce annually nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Forty shoe factories were
employing 600-plus operatives. Tanning, in both Salem and Peabody, remained
a very important industry, and employed hundreds of breadwinners. On Boston
Street in 1879, the Arnold tannery caught fire and burned down.
Salem kept building infrastructure; and new businesses arose, and
established businesses expanded. Retail stores prospered; horse-drawn
trolleys ran every which-way.; and machinists, carpenters, millwrights, and
other specialists all thrived. In 1880, Salem's manufactured goods were valued
at about $8.4 million, of which leather accounted for nearly half.
In 1880 (per census, h. 102), the Broadley family, on Phillips Street, consisted of
Hugh, 54, "engraver for pebbling leather," Hannah, 50, daughter Maria 18,
working at shoe stitching in a factory, Mary E., 14, at school, and John, 16,
2
�working "at tanning." In fact, John Broadley was learning the trade of a
leather-engraver from his father-but he was also paying attention to the big picture
of leather-manufacture. Much later, in an August, 1921, issue of "Hide and Leather
News" trade magazine, there appeared a brief piece on the "The Broadley Rolls"
from an old tanner who recalled watching Hugh cut steel rolls by hand. "He cut a
pebble grain on them and tanners used them to give that effect to their leather."
His son John "cut pebble, seal, alligator, and other fancy grains on the rolls."
The family would remain intact for the next ten years, during which John
Broadley advanced in his trade as an engraver and tanner of leather.
By the mid-1880s, Salem's cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed 1400 people
who produced about 19 million yards annually, worth about $1.5 million. The city's
large shoe factories stood downtown behind the stone depot and on Dodge and
Lafayette Streets, and off Jefferson Avenue near St. Anne's Church. A jute
bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry Street and English Street; its
products were sent south to be used in cottonbaling. Salem factories also
produced lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern Railroad yard on Bridge Street, cars
were repaired and even built new.
In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the
manufacturers for a ten-hour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers
imported labor from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out, and
there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners prevailed, and
many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their families,
through a bitter winter.
In 1887 the streets were first lit with electricity, replacing gas. The gas works,
which had stood on Northey Street since 1850, was moved to a larger site on
Bridge Street in 1888, opposite the Beverly Shore.
More factories and more people required more space for buildings, more roads,
and more storage areas. This space was created by filling in rivers, harbors, and
ponds. The once-broad North River was filled from both shores, and became a
canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill
Pond, whith occupied the whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue,
Canal Street, and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage areas,
junk-yards, rail-yards, and parking lots. The South River, too, with its epicenter at
Central Street (the Custom House had
opened there in 1805) disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza and
New Derby Street, and some of its old wharves were joined together with much
in-fill and turned into coal-yards and lumber-yards. Only a canal was left,
running in from Derby and Central Wharves to Lafayette Street.
3
�On Nov. 4, 1890, Hugh Broadley died of Bright's disease, in his 55th year. He left
Hannah, 63, and their three grown children. John took over, and conducted
pebble roll cutting in 1893 from the home on Phillips Street.
In February, 1893, John Broadley, 29, engraver, married Harriet E. White, 24, a
native of New Brunswick, Canada. By 1895 (per directory) the couple resided at
then-13 Mason Street, and John was working as a pebble roll cutter at 19
Goodhue St. John & Harriet would have five children, 1893-1902. By 1897 (per
directory) they resided at 11 Tremont Street, and John had started the Salem
Shoe Stock Company, situated at 63 Flint Street, soon to be relocated to Mason
Street.
As mentioned, John Broadley purchased the house at 23 Buffum Street in
1898, to serve as the family residence.
By 1900 (per census), the family was fragmenting: Harriet, 31 resided at then-28
Grove Street with children Edith, 5, Francis, one, and infant George, while John,
37, listed as an engraver, resided at #23 Buffum with son John H., 7, housekeeper
Elizabeth Whitmore, 31, a widow, and boarder Michael Bellew, 23, a teamster.
Meanwhile, John's mother, Hannah, was residing at 15 Phillips with her daughters
Maria, 38, a shoe stitcher by trade, and Mary E. (Broadley) Sullivan, 35, a widow,
with daughter Helen F. Sullivan, 12. John & Harriet had a last child, Charles V.,
born in June, 1902.
In July, 1902, John's mother, Johannah (Keefe) Broadley, died of heart
disease, aged 65 years.
John operated the Salem Shoe Stock Co. and founded the Broadley Leather
Co., with factories at then-67 and 69 Mason Street. Although the business
prospered, things turned tragic in the family. In 1903, Harriet moved to Danvers,
where she would be an inmate at Danvers State Hospital asylum
. (per 1910 census). On July 12, 1905, their son John H. Broadley was killed in an
electric-trolley accident in Salem, three days before his 12th birthday.
John Broadley remained in Salem, attending to his businesses and his children
evidently. In the 1905 City Valuation, John Broadley, newly residing at 162 North
Street, was assessed for various real estate holdings (ward 6, p. 95). In the 1906
City Valuation (ward 6, precinct 11, p. 95), John Broadley, 162 North, was
assessed for real estate including the house at 23 Buffum (valued at $1600) and,
newly, at "house, rear 23 Buffum" (valued at $1800). At 162 North Street he
evidently resided with his sister Maria and some or all of his children. While in
Somerville, on May 16, 1907, John Broadley, fifty, was killed in a car crash.
4
�In 1910 Mrs. Mary E. Sullivan was residing at 23 Buffum, working as the
bookkeeper of the Salem Shoe Stock Co., assisted by her daughter Helen
(stenographer) and by Edward Curran, who superintended the operation and
boarded at #23. At the same time, Maria Broadley, 48, resided at then-162 North
Street with two of her Broadley nephews, George, 10, and Charles, 7 (1910
census, h. 280). Charles would be sent to the Lowell Textile School, from which he
would graduate, with distinction. Mrs. Sullivan and Mr. Curran would run the
Broadley tannery into the 1930s.
The new (1905) house at 21½ Buffum remained in the family and was leased out.
In 1906 the tenants were Walter Stuart Frisbee, thirty, a bank clerk working in
Boston, and Alice M. (Leighton) Frisbee, 34, a Salem school teacher. They had
married on April 12, 1906.
Alice was the daughter of Engllsh immigrants, Thomas and Ann Maria Leighton,
who had come to Salem in 1870 from Britain with a family of three children, to
which a fourth (Henry) was added soon after arrival. By trade Thomas was a
"morocco dresser," a specialty of leather-making. In 1880 the Leighton family
(now including Alice, 8, and Emily, 6) resided at then-14 Ord Street, near the
Peabody Line. By 1900 they resided at then-10 Mason Street, Thomas, 62, still
working as a morocco dresser, Henry, 30, as a store clerk, and Alice, 28, and
Emily, 26, as school teachers (per 1900 census, h. 337)
Walter S. Frisbee was born in Salem in 1876, the last of five children of Andrew
Frisbee, a Maine-born shipwright and spar-builder, and his wife Abby (nee
Burnham). In 1880 the Andrew Frisbees had resided at then-33 Turner Street, and
he had a shop at Hunt's Wharf.
Walter and Alice would have no children.
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th century by
large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who settled primarily in the Derby
Street neighborhood, and by Sicilians, in the High Street neighborhood. By the
eve of World War One, the bustling, polyglot city supported large department
stores and factories of every description. People from the surround_ing towns,
and Marblehead in particular, came to Salem to do their shopping; and its
handsome government buildings, as befit the county seat, were busy with
conveyances of land, lawsuits, and probate proceedings. The city's politics were
lively, and its economy was strong.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street at Proctor),
a fire started in small wooden shoe factory and soon raced out of control, for the
west wind was high and the season had been dry. Out of
5
�Blubber Hollow the fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke,
wiping out the houses of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street,
and then sweeping through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential
streets. Men and machines could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into
South Salem and destroyed the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then
devoured the mansions of Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the
wooden homes of The Point. Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews
from many towns and cities, the fire overwhelmed everything in its path: the
Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company factory complex exploded in an inferno. At
Derby Street, just beyond Union, after a 13-hour rampage, the monster died,
having consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses, and 41 factories, and leaving three
dead and thousands homeless. Some people had insurance, some did not; all
received much support and generous dona~ions from all over the country and the
world. It was one ofthe greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States.
In short order, businesses were rebuilt and new houses and apartment buildings
went up; and several urban-renewal projects (including Hawthorne Boulevard,
which involved removing old houses and widening old streets) were put into
effect.
By 1915 Walter Frisbee had become a construction engineer for a Boston
bridge-building firm. On March 21, 1916, Mrs. Alice (Leighton) Frisbee died.
Walter moved to then-25 Dearborn Street, and later to 32 Fairmount Street. He
married again; and he and Florence had a daughter, Janet, born in 1921. By 1930
the family resided in Hamilton and Mr. Frisbee was prospering in the business of
"bridge works" (1930 census, Hamilton, h. 388).
The John Broadley heirs still owned the two houses here on Buffum Street. In
March, 1920, Edith Broadley sold her one-fourth interest to her brother Francis J.
of Boston (ED 2441:558). In April, 1921, he sold his half-interest to his aunt, Mrs.
Mary E. Sullivan (ED 2485:499). She bought out George H. Broadley, of Salem, in
May, 1923 (ED 2552:579). In May, 1925, Charles V. Broadley sold his interest to
'Mrs. Sullivan, who thus became sole owner of the premises (ED 2640:571),
which she would remain for many years.
Salem was once again a thriving city; and its tercentenary in 1926 was a time of
great celebration.
In 1926 and perhaps before, this house was occupied by August Wagner and
family. He was a German-born dealer in dry goods. He had married Sarah E.
Swett; and they had one child, Otto Swett Wagner, born in 1897 in Lawrence and
raised in Salem. Otto was a smart boy, and went from Salem High School to
Harvard College (A.B. 1920, A.M. 1921). In 1918, during World War One, he
enrolled in the Navy Reserve and then in the Army as an infantry private.
6
�The war ended before he was deployed, and he resumed his studies at Harvard in
1919. Otto chose teaching as his profession, and resided here with his parents.
August died in 1929 or 1930, aged 64; in 1930 his widow, Sarah, 63, resided here
with her son Otto, 33; and they had moved by 1931. Otto, a high school teacher in
Amesbury, would marry Mildred Woodard and live on until 1960.
In 1931, the house was vacant, at least for a while (per directory). By 1934 (per
directory) the occupants here were E. Parker Hopkins, an insurance agent,
wife Marjorie, and whatever children they may have had.
The Great Depression continued through the 1930s. Salem, the county seat
and regional retail center, gr.adually rebounded.
By 1940 the occupants here were Earl G. Pauley, in the leather business, and
wife Evelyn, 34, both recently arrived from Shirley, Mass. (per census).
After World War II, Salem prospered through the 1950s and into the 1960s.
General Electric, Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills (formerly Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Co.), Almy's and Newmark's and Webber's department stores,
various other retailers, and Beverly's United Shoe Machinery Company were all
major local employers.
In June, 1947, Mrs. Mary E. (Broadley) Sullivan having died, the devisee under
her will, Edward J. Curran (the longtime superintendent of the Broadley tannery),
conveyed the two houses and land to himself and Mary's daughter, Helen F.
Sullivan (ED 3555:417,417).
In 1979, the devisees/heirs of Helen and/or Edward, Herbert & Grace Hill,
subdivided the lot and sold the two houses separately. To Charlene D. Long
went the house at 21½ and its land (Lot 2) in May, 1979 (ED 6596:280).
7
�•
•
.• , .... ,,..,.,.
·-""","r,o': ~- ·- ...
iJOHN,'.BRQA'DLEY
OF SALEM!
lKl~tEo·ey HIS AUTOMOBILE
.---·--.
''.·---c'iJl'itlnUl!'IJ""fl'IIM-Jl'~e·--------
r
.
liquor saloon,. a~ .5!> Citus"C!'Way · ~treet." i
Boston. and hves at 42 Adnms street, ] 1\faldf~n.
j
The . Injured women were
; taken to Mr. Brock's home, on High-· ! land
·nn:inu~. " · \ ; -~Jecllfal ·Ex.1minor Durrell or
Someri Yil1e "t\·ns notllled anrt he .. gave1 orders
cpRns±,d~it:'.){f ,.:: .. ,, ... •.,• ·. ,,,
! that the bnd:r of l\tr. ~rof.i.dley he
RAN INTO'
JAM:F;S R " PAT'.t:ERS.0N· ;. O;t.'K_\f'MA
: given In charge of llilrlertnl<er A. N .
. \Vard of l\lalclen. Rnd ft wns taken
!:~~il?. :t1!:i ·.
.. . . .
_ to the In tt_er'5 place, l\'hPro ·t.ho rl1e(lj ...
. .................·;:·,··~··· . ·. ................................................ - .. ,.·_ ,· ·:.·.· .......... :···· ;\.:_:,'!:~-."~-'.;,;1,\·'~
~:r;~-~:,::·:;i:.:
·wi1hi' ANJJ··?-ouR)Sff~"
LE.A vss
. ··1··•-!"" ·:-~-- ......... ~~7-_:_. ..
.. ·-.-~~- ·;' . .
. cal examiner vlewNJ It this mon,Jng.
I News nf the aecl<lent wns l'<'c61,,ec1 : h~ .. the
SR1em · pollen nbm1t 2· o'6Jock
this morning n11tl the lieutenant at once ni,tlfle<I
lllr. Drondi'ny'g stotar. Miss Marfa llrondl.-y, who
keeps hous,.
, f11r. .. hlm at his 1·ecc•ntly acquired home, i 16"2
I
Nor~th e:trr.ct. "··ore) WaR nlso sent 1 tn anothE>r
sister, .l\1rs. l\I. E. Sullivan 'of i.1""B'rrn•t,m
~~~--····--.:~~:)it:~2;;
1\rc~1. this city. Both
.hy,the sudden
John Brm1dley, of the, Salem Sh_<ie Stoc_l< _.llhd 1i1r011dl.~ri:•. iLe~.
panloe, reeldlng'. .. at 162 North· street In .this city, w~·s ,·fn~tantly;i,;.'kliled-i;)1'Jia
night by the o~erturnlng o fhls autoti,oblle ·on the. Sorrterviii~·::'il,;iii'·\· · ·;;""
Wellington h1•ldge..
r
: ..
-. . . '"' · .. :. ·:· ... · .. ::.,:.':\.::.~·:.;.·.'i._.\{t¼_
James F. Patterson. of Malden sustaln~d a. fractured···Jcg an.~<yt.ll,lif ..
to the Malden. ho•pltal.
.
..
· ·: •·:···.\··•·\·:·:·; . .;;,:·:·:,,1,y
The lndles ~i the party, Miss Ellen 'Darcy or' Roicli'Jry, Mr~t.(j,;;j}_,'I,
of M~lden, nnrl Mloa Margaret Glynn, also of.Malden,: wero,
I
wns about i ,15 :\'ears or ng1~ n01l rnc-P.iVer] hl5
cdnen tinn fn t 1,,, · Bo'l'l:;lltch nnd Salem High
schools .
k,
'.l'he lfal'h\ .w,rn .. 1·otu.1:J;1hi_g;,·_£,:f•: .~
·l
from ·· n. -noolti I ·•-'1.tlhqj"h,g\1.:jq;4Rli;ll .
I
Tho l1lg c111·. was ow1JecFli.n't:'krlr:lven·,
_1t,·.,v.1UJ,j~en~l.ri~;'.l'll91i'l1\
M.r. Brourj loy H~d.
nt n.-lllgh··r,1le of·,ip~od,; i'MISR'.Glynn/
wna on tho tr/int
•
s~n/·,._WIUfl\:lh.t#(',n~,;;j
,,
Iov, 'fhe ronrt \\)n~·lflar)c• n.l\i, ·~ll.11,:11:,rJ'II,\!~,:'.'
dhl not SA!.l 111R wny clell,r::;Alli.ha',n,11(1et "·
sJ1,n•p
turri.
Tho,_,
1'P.lililt.''•joiis·-.tlfat1···
.~hilJ:s,i,r:'\l!f1f:1ds ilfr1iiiitlltli·/¢Urh.il1tt":ii',,4 ~
·,tho cm- · w1iN overt u1•11e1J;:,:,Mr,,·:-Broli1l~ ':
Jt,j• wns ·hurlorl-· Ar>1ii11~ rl_l~I11:1fcp\1i}Jd:,;~hti~·
I
otltP.rn J°v<!ro ·throw11·. 1111.~,: !l)·.~,
.. o,.;/1\e!,~{
I Mr. iBrou,lli,y wa a-, ln~t.n.!\t! ,',eltfll,_1\q:f:;J
.. n, A noj hnr. ... ;! 11hm10.]1.U,
Uliio~,;,,.
tor-wm-d c,.ruuY ,q1nn th
·-:.(\])-';
wc,rc, 1.1.~l!i,11 _ t_r:i_.ll!nlcfo111: ... "', . . .. •.
.-ai.~;;
.tcrson wus s11nt t,i
hflRllll1'il,·-c;,-,:rl1e•
101111,rn.
•
1111• ·
w"rr-.
auiir,i)tl\t::.~~:::):!f·' "'::." ·
'-.::: :smith of $•11nm·\l.lllo. '. · · ·· .... ;; .. ,.
:~~ ~ ""''TJrnf'IJrllir.:ti.
,. ~t·:
:\(!'.',-.'·:
, Pntrolmnn F'fntrl~~teh1: .qi'::.thj,,'."'-i'>llrki. , po)lco
nurl P.ollco(1ic11.0'.'t-I!lt~H-;:ji.i\iVFiil•:/;
r1 Im· Cl( Sorn,,tvHH,.-"·rcii\1.Qt~d:, :1011,l,~~~!7i• . (.',lj,
-.~a,1,tn.11,r.~ t.o, t-110· 1n.11.,_re,1.n,ar.ty.,._,:n. :·;
,:kf'1,
. ',· ·
.I< II IN i'lltO,\ I 11,1,;y.
i J111-~t1111tly l\illi•d
in
:111
.
,\11t11mnhllt
Ac,•l,t,•111 nt Ro1111·n·IH,•
·.thn.,.~!.i_,_1l_JO
'.•
'UJl'!JI
.. ,. ,·.T11n--·ph'i·~lr,hi-11":.:who--•Wl1R,\ ~~,11",'lf'!~4i
thnt. Mt',,. B1·1.1,ul101,1 dl!!!l ·fron~,:<-!.~t.en:ial._.
he!11101Thl1[.t'CH, . -~: ...
_.·:.··.;·'J· _ _-·,_t,.i·: .. -,,.;·:'.('::-'!,
Mi'. Pn.l:te'raon ·ls:t.l\c:1':P~(?.l,),~.l_~:~\'l.:/ <;1f\~
1
(;on~i)1ti~~.Bfu~~=;:i
···w...---~:,~,.:.1,·, · ,. ·. ,·1},1.,,
.
i:arl
s-·waa·a·'·r
versity of things, while life 1n one (ll- 1·,•r.Uon
sr.nmP.£t° to be ·r;;nf. 8.gnln~,t htrri, hiR
pm~prrlt,Y In the material ,,,world
grew apn.ce.
,.
Frnm a .,;mnll brglnnlng In the shnefh1,llng hUAln,~Rs llrn ·Jmlnstry g,·ew mpfrlly
until tofla.y, the $iilem. Shoo Stock Cn. nm!
tho B1·011<1ley Lertther ;c,1 .. of whl.cll he wn~
·the proprietor, :irN1ul'rerl tltP exteti~lvn·; plant
w,tth it::t
, strP.et.
::,:, '!:!:~r,~-I1Ju~,t, ..
1,1~t/~~:;:,'~~f.\.!.\1:t;.
£len. · .: , . · i • • -: :·:~\;· ,
. juJy ·13. 1905, 1\:Jr. Broarlley'A aon, John H ..
was killed by an elllctrlo cn·r on Buffum street.
The boy -,..·ns cnn~tlng drrn·n a 1lecllno In the
y:ird 1 nn rt trm·.l<fo cart arnl shot. out ncroAs i lhP
sld£'wnll~ anrl upon the eloctrl.c
t raclrn just.
a~ R ear cn.n1e alnng. BC\fnro t.he molnrmnn
cotlld bring the car to n stop, the llttln -folow hnd.,
been crushed beneath the cnr and lnstnntly
klllc<l •
·
------- .. Th I
crrrb,e··a1ow::---- ... , tri the father; In fnct h" never sormed tn hfl.vc
fully·"'rc(fOVct:e<1 f.rom lh.o Shook 'of ii. Yet ..svllh
,,flrnt Reernhig per-
l·numcrot/B bt11ld.lng11 .· nt 69
nifi,...,-:'l\tJtlcl,1,,:,.:1_tlf - -~~~ 1.mvt'lln!I'.
rn.-.\'.~.r~.: ·A.~.J.\! ..
.I..- , {,,;; trufflo n,t. nli;lrt .. hul:··n\'I ;,.
'T"t"!ll!\Wny
·
nn
rn~~/i'/i,~A~,·
.. . . , . .'.' .. ·. =::·<-~(-(:·'.·/.z.;~})('.;:.
wen, pn,atrntcd
; The deceas•'d Jem·es a widow, Neille i 'White
Jn,•alld In J the DanvPr"s
llromlley; who !~
hospital. and four. chll. rlpm, ri:,lllh.,..alonnt 12
.Yr.nrs .... of_"li(,age.:. I !"rank. 10; ·oroi'i?,!. R;
·,rnd C-harh;s, fl yenrR of ·Ag~. i\ir. R1·oncllC!y
:r ·
J11r,,t1.
'l'l'.DITJ.Q_n
;shock. ·
, Mason
.
The hotrne wlwrc ho lived when ·.1-ile JIHJ~
hoy \:\'AA klJUuJ hecnmc dlatns.~_!-3- .ful to him,
,111<1 Nhortly -nrter the ne~ cldent ho bought tho
Ifonson e~tate tm· North street, faC'lng MnmlY.
sq11a.1·e • ThlA ho remoclel'ed Into ono rif tho
Jlne~t eBtnteH In the m•.ctfon, ·and re.c.1ont1y
CH'PC1fl£l nnother · hnnclRomq
1 hotl~e on ncljolnlng ln11,1.
·
j .' lte• -~lso ow11od. co1rnlfle.r1tblo o_tlror
roa:J. ,!i.!itlt1!J. . .Jmtl-4rnW .. r.~_<,IJrJ!10.cl- ,flll ·
one
ilftf11i.
wenlthlr,~t
0.nil
mo1<t--s11C'c.o~Rful ·yntin'g rnnnurn.cturers In
thecl_ty, Ho WAR quilt, n. lover of athlotlcs!
h!\l.rut,vr-t:" ·01;,, tlnrn n merr1bnr ·or the
olil·'-~hn,nl-· ·pion Snl~m bowl.Ing c!.t.tb
:w,ibh-fn,,~1..ite· Arthur F. Hl.111, Ulkk .. A.
·H1'6JilW,:Wllflnnl G: I-lllHse.y nn'd Chitrftjs
Ji{i\y.· :'·.'·
,vithl·n •tlu, 'p,iat twg ..
;1l)a. tri'/11,
lo nutomOl/lllng n.ncl W:IIS_ .qultiJ.":;!·O' -~_1V,
i.,t.J.1.m~trrnt· rrt1·c1_ ~~1y a ·_fe? (lnyH_ "flg~ ,!1":~ .
purchnsml .. n. naw ·.Oldl'm.0J1H~, .... 101,1 h11!'. !
~nr, ,1jli' whf~Jj hq was .;,,f<lh)ll'"'.'!V.ll~h .\to
yenr~
!_met Ids unUr~ielf ilf!nth: · .. ' · .. :: .' .,· .,\t
�Glossary & Sources
A figure like (ED 123:45) refers to book 123, page 45, Essex South Registry of
Deeds.
A figure like (#12345) refers to Essex Probate case 12345, on file at the Essex
Probate Court, or on microfilm at Mass. Archives, Boston, or at the Peabody Essex
Museum's Phillips Library, Rowley.
Salem Crew Lists (SCL) found on-line at Mystic Seaport site.
MSSRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers & Sailors in the
Revolutionary War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
MSSCRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers, Sailors, &
Marines in the Civil War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
EIHC refers to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (discontinued), a multi-volume
set (first volume published in 1859) of data and articles about Essex County. The
indices of the EIHC have been consulted regarding many of the people associated
with this house.
The six-volume published S~lem Vital Records (marriages, births, and deaths
through 1849) have been consulted, and the Salem Directory and later Naumkeag
Directory, with data about residents and their addresses, etc.
Sidney Perley's three-volume History of Salem, 1626-1716, has been
consulted, as has the four-volume William Bentley's Diary, J. Duncan Phillips'
books, some newspapers, and other sources.
Salem real estate valuations, and, where applicable, Salem Street Books, have
also been consulted, as have genealogies.
There is much more material available about Salem and its history; and the reader is
encouraged to make his or her own discoveries.
--Public History Services
8
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Ancestry.com - Massachusetts, Death Records, 1841-1915
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Massachusetts, Death RE cords, :W41-191E, for John nro,HH<!Y
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190"1 , Somerville
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RETURN OF A DEATH ·
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salemdeeds.com/salemdeeds/bpimage.aspx?book=02552&page=579
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Previeus
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"-------~--------!
Otis J. Carlto.n
Justice o!' the Poaoe
.Essex as. Received. lfay 24, 1923 2f> in. :pa.st 10 A, ld, Record.ed and Exaudned Ii.NOW ALI.
J.tmr l!Y"t,!ES~ • l'lW:lia.'£S. that• l,. Geoi•ge H •• llroadley- of Salem,. C0Ul'.1t{ of Essex,
Oommonwealth ot' lllassachusetts, one or the four children and heij at law of John Broadley,
late or said Salem, deceased, in consideration
consideration to rue paid by
04 one dollar and other good. an/1 valuuble
my aunl lt;l.ry .1::. Sullivan of said !:lalem, its .receipt whereof is
hereby aolmowledgect do hereby give, grant, bargain, Sell and. convey unto the said JJary E,
SLll.j liva.n one uncU.vided fQurth part or that certain lot of l&id. with the buildl· 1ne;s
t.hereon 11ituated in said SALEM, on the westerly side of Bu1'f'um Streo , bounded and
Broadley
to
Sullivan
One $1.& One
,50
R,.Staill_PS
Documer.
tary
Canceled
descr1bod as follows: Beginning on Buttum Street at land now
or formerly 01' lianson, thanoe rramiu(! northerly by Buffum Stree·t about fif'ty one feet to land
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Additional References:
now or formerly o:t' Raymond; thence tu:mine; and running westerly by said limd of :Ba:,mond.
to land now or formerly of Mayo about 144 feet; thence turnilig and. x·unn1ng southerly by land
now or for'merly of' lt.ayo and. by land. now or formerly of t!onagl1an, in all about fifty one
f'eet to said land. o.t Hanson, thence turning and rw-u1il:lg easterly by said. land of lilmson
about 144 feet to the point ot besil1ning, Said :pai·ce ·being the same conveyed to the said
John llroadley by deed or Cllll'ietoph.er A{cGrull.l'l, dated October 8, 16'18, recorded with Essex
Sou.th Deeds Book 1568 Pago 419. '.i'.O HAV.E AND 'XO HOLD the grant,ed. premises, with all
the privi• leges and appurtenances thereto belon3ing to the said L!il.ry B. Sullivan a. hor heirs
e.ncl assif$DS to their own use ar.d behoot· :rorever. AJld. I do here y covenant for JllYSel:t' and
Electronic References
my nears , executors, and ad.rainistrators with the grant1:1e and her heirs and assigns that I
have good right to Gell and convey tne eaae as aroresatd , that I am lawfully seimid in fee
simple or the granted prenlises, that they are :free f'rom. all Lncumurancee , and that I wi· 1 and
my heirs, executors and adnu.nistratorll snau warrant ancl defend the same to the grantee and
her heirs and assigi:w foz·ever agaim,t the lawful claillls and d1i1111iu1cl.s of all persons • rn
WI'l.'liESS WHXE\IDF I the said George
H, .il!'oadley being Wl.lullrried., hereunto set my hand and seal this ·i'ourteenth day of JJa.y one thousand. nine hundred and. twenty tllree,
(seal)
County of Crarton ss. Ma.y 14th 1923 Th.en pensonally appeared the llll.id (}oorgi) li, llroadley
and acknowledged the t'orosoins instrument tq ·be hi.a free act
'and deed, before me William ;r. Williams Notary Public (n.ota:rial seal) .issex ss. Received
May 24, 1923 33 m. :past 10 A. ?!, Recorded ar.d Ex.e.nu.ned
salemdeeds .com/salemdeeds/bpimage.aspx?book=02552&page=579
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salemdeeds .com/salemdeeds/bpimage.aspx?book=02640&page=571
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~
______ 2640
~
Zoom In
_.KNOW ALL WN t.Mt I, Charles V .. Broad.le:,, of Saleu1, County of Essex, Uassa'.. llroa.dley
lj;,
Zoom Out
571
1c:nusetts,
to
one of the four cllildren and heirs at law or John llroadley, late -or se.1d Salem, 1n
Sullivan
oonsideration of one dollar and other good and valuable
lI
Download/Print
i
One $2,R,St.aml)
ons1derat1on to me _paid by Bl¥ Aunt, Ma.1,y E. SUll1van, of saia. Salem, the ecei:pt
Documentary
Canceled
whereof 1s hereby acknowledged., do heJ:'eby. give, grant,. bargain,sel,
. I and convey unto the said Mary B. Sul.11.van one undivided fourth part of the'.
certain .lot of land, with tl:le buildings thereon, situated in said Salem, ;
on the westerly side of lluf'1'ulll Street, bow:id.ed and described as follows: •.lleginn1ng on Buffum
si;reet at land now or formex·ly of Hanson, thence runnirie !northerly by 1:luff'urll Street about fifty
I
one feet. to land now or fo:rmerly of 1&,Ylllond; thence tum1nc am runnintS westerly by said
land ot l\aYJIIOnd about
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one hurulred and forty four feet. tu land now or fol'.'lllfl'rly or lllavo; tbence twnlng IIJJd runmng
southerly by said la.n:l of l!ayo and by land now or fol'-: 1r.erly or llionaghan, in all about
Add Page
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f11'ty one feet to said la:nd or Hanson;tbenoe
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Additional References:
!
tUining and l'Ulllline easterly by said land o:r Jlanson about one hundred. alld. 1
forty four :feat to· tl1e point or bet,1.nniug. Said parcel being the same conveyed to the sa1d
John Broadley by deed or Christophel' lloGrane dated Octd'blr
,
8, 18f8, reoo:rded ,;,1th Essex South Deeds, .Book 1558,, Page 419. TO HAVE
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AND ro HOLD the e;1•anted premises, with all the privileges and a;ppurtenanoJls thereto
belonging to the said liar:, :&. Sullivan and her heirs and assigns
; to their own use and behoof' forever. And I do hex·eby covenant, tor myself' I I
Electronic References
!and 01y executors a.nd administrators, with the sx·antee and har heirs am
•
iI
'assigns that I llave good rtf;b.t to sell and convey the same as aforesaid,
'ara tree :from all inoumbranoes, and that I will and m, heirs, :premises, that the1i
. 1 that I am law1\tlly seized in fee simple ol' the granted. executors
i
and adin1.n1strators shall W.i\l!JWIT AND DEFEND the· same to the
grantee amt her
heirs am assigns forever againat the law:t'Ul cla.1111S and demands or all pe1;-
1
sons. . In w1 tness whereof I. tha said Charles V, Broadley, being unrnarried',
. hereunto se-t my hand and seal tllis first day 01' May 1n the year nineteen
bund:l:ed and. twenty five,
I
Charles V. :Broadley
(seal}
ST.ATR OF lllillYLAND County of Anne Arundel ss; On this second day of' llay 1926
personally appeared the above navled Cliarlee V. Broadley and acknowledged
•the foregoing instrument to be his free act, and deed before me,
Elinore G, Girault
l&y oollllllission
Notary Public
(Notarial seal)
ex1,1res !4ay 2, 1927
Eseex_ss,0Beoeived _June 016, _1925. _li_m. past_1_P. IL._P.ecorded.aml. Examined
i
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I, Horace Dufour ot: Have1·llill, Esemx County, L:assaoh111Jetts, hold.er of a
'
'
Discharge
morflgage from l!lrred L. Duf'our of 1iei·rilnao in said County, to me dated De- Dufour
i, oember 16, 1922 recorded· w1 th Essex South District :Registry ot' Deeds llook 1
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1., CllARI . .JiNE D. LONG,
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fol' consid1.•rntio11 paid, mu.I in foll cou,idomlio11 of
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LESS THAN ONE HtlNDR.ED DOLLARS
gmn\ lo CH,\RLENE IJ. LONG, llf21 ½ Iluffi1m Street, Snlem, Rssex Couo!y, MossacJrnsorts, Trustees
p~f!;IE..t}'tljN,:.p ·y• 0 Oi"N,11/(. N. DONE-HAU' H!Jl'Flll\·I STREET REALTY lRlJST uld.lt dated
2016, 011,L recorded herewith,
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0TIF - PDF
Doc date:11/1/2016
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Granters:
with q11itchd111 c11vem11111
A certain parcel "f land, with the buildings locokd tliereou, on the Southwooterly side of 81tffum Stred in Sah,m,
E:;,,e11 County, sltOWJJ as Lot 2 on a p.l0n of hmd e11!llled "Pia" of Land in Salem" drnwn by fasi:~ Sum,y Service, lac.,
dut~d January 12, 197\l and recorded i11 the l!.•lil'x South J)istrict Regislryof Deeds iu book 6566 Page 459, bounded.
,md d,~uribed as follows:
Jlegiimi11g at a pouu on the Northwesterly comer of lnnd now or fonn;:rJy belon.1,.ing to Frank P .
Mh1uti110, as sllown 011 surd plall;
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Nor!l1 41' l6" 40' West by land now or formerly belonging ~fary A .Camey "ud by land now or fonncrly
b.,fo.nging 1,., Robert I'. and Fnmce M. Lipka, as shown 011 snid plan, a distance of.Sl.4(1 feet to a point;
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North45~0l" 28' East by land now or former!)• belonging lo Alice F.n11d Helen 'I', Ankeictl and by hmd now
or lbrmt~·ly belonging to Viillf•ni W, an,! louise .A. Lambert, a,s shown "" s11id plan.,~ distant~ of 62. l 6 feet lo a
p.iini; thence
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Grantees:
LONG CHARLENE D TR
TWENTY ONE & ONE-HALF BUFFUM STREET REAL.
South, 44" 30" 00' We~t l,y laud n1nv or formerly of said Minutillo, a disllln-.-o of 150.SS fwt to a poim;
to
South 45" OJ" (10' East by other lm1d llfthe &tmtor,,, shown a.s Lot l on said J>lan, n distance of 87.0l'i l\:ct
to a point; tJ1c11cc
- ---·---·---------Granters/Grantees
References
Abstract
..
.
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·North ,14• 31)" 00' Easi. by said !,0t I, a dist.ince of 87.0IHeet to a point; 1lie11ce
South 45• 03" 00' Bois! by said Buffum Street, a dista11c,; t1f 15.00 fe11t to the point of beginning. Said parrel
contoining 4,586 s,1u11ro. feet, 1110.00 01 los,, according to .said plan.
Subjecuu a 5 fool parking e.u..semcnt bdng adjacent lo the Nonlie~sterly bound flf the said Lor 1, •s
oflheowuers of said Lot 1. S..id
ea.scmcm to be used ~olcly for the, pttrJX>iil of pruking of mot-Or vchicle.1.
..i,,,.,•11<111 said plo11. Sold ••semcnt 10 run with the land aJ1d lo ho for the benefit
Together with an ""'eme111, 111id 0io1sement meant to nm with the food, lo inspect, maintain, and repalr the
sewer ancl wnt, ... pipes rmmins ai::mss said Lfll I 10 the premises fOClited on Lot 2, a, shown 011 said plan. Said
ease11wnts sba.11 fnclude the riglll ro enter int" tho basement oftl .. , buHding located or1 1.ot I and to tak.e any mid all
oilier 11ecessury .slef}:l in on!<Ji' to inspect, rejlllir 01• maint11in •aid w1tcr and ~ewer pipes.
For my title, see deed of Herner! H. Hilt and Grnce Hitl .11,'k/a Grace lvl. Hill ro me, ,lated May 29, l•l79, and
rec-0rded at wsex Snuth Dislricr R.egittry of Dee,!•, llook 65!>6, Page 280.
N(} Tl'l'LF. SEARCH
Wll'NESS my lumd Md •<>11! rhis
.J2_ duy of ~~2016.
al~AI2~1--0
CHARLllNE D. LONG
·
salemdeeds.com/salemdeeds/lmageDetail .aspx ?stype=recdoc&machme=&year=20 I 6&month-11 - &d -l&d
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ocnum =609&seqnum= &book=35409&page=006&clear ...
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Buffum Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
21 1/2 Buffum Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
John Broadley
tannery owner
1905
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1905
House History Written: Dec. 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1905
2019
21.5/Buffum Street
Broadley
Massachusetts
Salem
tannery owner
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/238c68b64d9e2451fad8ddbb349e305f.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=HEqFnbOIq-tSmc9Sr065nHo9rz%7EFrsqh7Jzs%7ExOHofLfq1otCzbERXeLbO%7ET7PO44U3rpPzmcNHghXladDvf2eELDTIuP-XY5WTCa9MBQmCq8M5tnOXxmO9tyHykQSUJ4yxJ83Tf9QkTbQU%7EbTWp3EtSQbjUW7velfqw51c2%7EnYuuQ2BBCKhaTj0peuIqi5gPLeE%7EwSFB58IOxz%7EDvaq3hi%7ENnhg1iQxweVdKIMicyx2DT%7Eg9M5XOBvpo23CmbXsSJgaiSSpUefc3HaZRvQeLAk0vmzX-IQNIRYxR0uaFzkaJP8T8ZhUthBfh4c%7E-uLfUb5VayXTu9suAd47i5X5Sg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
9e5a9a1477e09a95262383fc16db222e
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
2 ½ Essex Street
Salem, MA
Built for
John Waters
Carpenter & Mariner
And wife
Mary Felt
1850
Researched and written by Amy Kellett and Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc.
December 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 I historicsalem.org
©2019
�Owners & Occupants
Two and A Half Essex Street, Salem
By Amy Kellett & Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc., December 2019.
According to available evidence, this house was built for John Waters,
carpenter & mariner, and wife Mary Felt, in 1850.
On July 30, 1840, Nathaniel Weston, Salem merchant (and wife Christiana), for
$235 sold to John Waters Jr., Salem merchant mariner, a dwelling house and land
on Essex street which Captain Weston had bought of the estate of his
mother-in-law, Christiana Waters (ED 320:85). The grantee was brotherin-law of
the granter. No boundaries or measurements were given for the lot of land.
John Waters Jr., mariner and carpenter, held the property for ten years; and in
1850 he built a new house thereon-this one. The evidence is in the City
Valuations. In the 1850 valuation book, p. 70, we find, for Ward One, in pencil
"John Waters Jr., new house." The 1854 (p. 89) valuations show "John Waters,
house 2 Essex Street, $2500 (in pencil: $2000), and personal estate $1500 (in
pencil: $1000)."
John Waters (1791-1868) was born in Salem, the son of John Waters and
Christiana English. His mother was the daughter of Philip English, the longtime
sexton of the East Church, who owned a homestead here. His father, Capt. John
Waters, died on a voyage at Baltimore, offever, in August, 1797, aged 42 years.
John was just six at the time.
In 1814 the Philip English homestead (house and land) was sold to the widow
Christiana (English) Waters (ED 230:275, 285). Evidently she and some or all of
her children lived here in an old house that her father Philip English had bought in
1784 from the Cann heirs (ED 137:213). In that deed, the land was described as
bounded south on the main street, east on the sea or salt water, and north and
west on land of Masury.
In 1741 John Cann, tailor, had bought from John Masury, baker, for 70 Ii a house
and land bounded as in 1784, Canns to English (ED 82:55). Possibly this is the site
ofthe George Hodges house, standing by 1667, sold to Thomas Roots in 1681,
willed to Katherine (Hodges) Daland, and sold in 1700 to John Masury (per Sidney
Perley, "Part of Salem in 1700, No. 19" in "Essex Antiquarian" magazine).
�As a young boy in Salem in the 1790s, John Waters Jr. saw the old post-war
seaport transformed into a center of world commerce. New foreign markets
brought great riches to the Salem merchants, and raised the level of wealth
throughout the town: new ships were bought and built, more crews joined more
shipmasters, new shops and stores opened, new partnerships were formed, and
new people moved in. Salem's first bank, the Essex Bank, was founded in 1792,
although it "existed in experiment a long time before it was incorporated," per Rev.
William Bentley. From a population of 7921 in 1790, the town would grow by 1500
persons in a decade. At the same time, thanks to the economic policies of
Alexander Hamilton, Salem vessels were able to transport foreign cargoes
tax-free and essentially to serve as the neutral carrying fleet for both Britain and
France, which were at war with each other.
In 1793-4 there was a quasi-war at sea with Britain; and in the late 1790s, there
was agitation in Congress to go to war with France, which was at war with
England. After President Adams' negotiators were rebuffed by the French leaders
in 1797, a quasi-war with France began in summer, 1798, much to the horror of
Salem's George Crowninshield family (father and five shipmaster sons), which
had an extensive trade with France, and whose ships and cargos in French ports
were susceptible to seizure. The quasi-war brought about a political split within the
Salem population. Those who favored war with France (and detente with England)
aligned themselves with the national Federalist party, led by Hamilton and Salem's
Timothy Pickering (the U.S. Secretary of State). These included most of the
merchants, led locally by the Derby family. Those who favored peace with
republican France were the Anti-Federalists, who later became aligned with
Jefferson and his Democratic-Republican party; they were led locally by the
Crowninshields and Whites. For the first few years of this rivalry, the Federalists
prevailed; but after the death of Hasket "King" Derby in 1799 his family's power
flagged.
In 1800, Adams negotiated peace with France and fired Pickering, his
oppositional Secretary of State. Salem's Federalists merchants erupted in anger,
expressed through their newspaper, the Salem Gazette. At the same time, British
vessels began to harass American shipping. Salem owners bought more cannon
and shot, and kept pushing their trade to the farthest ports of the rich East, while
also maintaining trade with the Caribbean and Europe. Salem cargoes were
exceedingly valuable, and Salem was a major center for distribution of
merchandise throughout New England: "the streets about the wharves were alive
with teams loaded with goods for all parts of the country. It was a busy scene with
the coming and going of vehicles, some from long distances, for railroads were
then unknown and all transportation must be carried on in wagons and drays. In
the taverns could be seen
2
�teamsters from all quarters sitting around the open fire in the chilly evenings,
discussing the news of the day or making merry over potations of New England
rum, which Salem manufactured in abundance" (from Hurd's History of Essex
County, 1888, p.65).
The Crowninshields, led by brother Jacob, were especially successful, as their
holdings rose from three vessels in 1800 to several in 1803. Their bailiwick, lower
Derby Street, seemed almost to be a foreign country: in the stores, parrots
chattered and monkeys cavorted, and from the warehouses wafted the exotic
aromas of Sumatran spices and Arabian coffee beans. From the wharves were
carted all manner of strange fruits and blue and red patterned china and piles of
gorgeous silks and figured cloths.
By this time, John Waters Jr. had been apprenticed, evidently to a carpenter; but
he would earn his living as a mariner for many years.
The greatest of the Salem merchants at this time was William "Billy" Gray, who
owned 36 large vessels-15 ships, 7 barks, 13 brigs, 1 schooner-by 1808. Salem
was then still a town, and a small one by our standards, with a total population of
about 9,500 in 1800.
Its fierce politics polarized everything. The two factions attended separate
churches, held separate parades, and supported separate schools, military
companies, and newspapers. Salem's merchants resided mainly on two streets:
Washington (which ended in a wharf on the Inner Harbor, and, above Essex, had
the Town House in the middle) and Essex (particularly between what are now
Hawthorne Boulevard and North Street). The East Parish (Derby Street area) was
for the seafaring families, shipmasters, sailors, and fishermen. In the 1790s,
Federal Street, known as New Street, had more empty lots than fine houses.
Chestnut Street did not exist: its site was a meadow. The Common was not yet
Washington Square, and was covered with hillocks, small ponds and swamps,
utility buildings, and the alms-house. As the 19th century advanced, Salem's
prosperity would sweep almost all of the great downtown houses away (the brick
Joshua Ward house, built 1784, is a notable exception).
The town's merchants, among the wealthiest in the country, had, in Samuel
McIntire, a local architect who could help them realize their desires for large and
beautiful homes in the latest style. While a few of the many new houses went up
in the old Essex-Washington Street axis, most were erected on or near
Washington Square or in the Federalist "west end" (Chestnut, Federal, and upper
Essex Streets). The architectural style (called "Federal" today) had been
developed by the Adam brothers in England and featured fanlight doorways,
palladian windows, elongated pilasters and columns, and large
3
�windows. It was introduced to New England by Charles Bulfinch in 1790. The
State House in Boston was h'is first institutional composition; and soon Beacon
Hill was being built up with handsome residences in the Bulfinch manner.
Samuel McIntire (1757-1811), who was self-educated and who made his living
primarily as a wood-carver and carpenter, was quick to adapt the Bulfinch style to
Salem's larger lots. Mclntire's first local composition, the Jerathmeel Peirce house
(Federal Street), contrasts with his later Adamesque designs. In place of walls of
wood paneling, there now appeared plastered expanses painted in bright colors
or covered in bold wallpapers. The Adam style put a premium on handsome
casings and carvings of central interior features such door-caps and
chimney-pieces (Mclntire's specialty). On the exterior, the Adam style included
elegant fences; and the houses were often built of brick, with attenuated porticoes
and, in the high style, string courses, swagged panels, and even two-story
pilasters. The best example of the new style was the Elias Hasket Derby house,
co-designed by Bulfinch and
McIntire, and built on Essex Street in 1797-8 (demolished in 1815), on the site
of today's Town House Square.
A new bank, the Salem Bank, was formed in 1803, and there were two
insurance companies and several societies and associations. The fierce
politics and commercial rivalries continued.
On Union Street, not far from Bentley's church, on the fourth of July, 1804, was
born a boy who would grow up to eclipse all sons of Salem in the eyes of the
world: Nathaniel Hawthorne, whose father would die of fever while on a voyage to
the Caribbean in 1808. Untimely death was all too typical of Salem's young
seafarers, who fell prey to malaria and other diseases of the Caribbean and
Pacific tropics.
In 1806 the Derbys extended their wharf far out into the harbor, tripling its previous
length. This they did to create more space for warehouses and shipberths in the
deeper water, at just about the time that the Crowninshields had built their great
India Wharf at the foot of now-Webb Street. The other important wharves were
Forrester's (now Central, just west of Derby Wharf), and Union Wharf at the foot of
Union Street; and then, father to the west, a number of smaller wharves extended
into the South River (filled in during the late 1800s), all the way to the foot of
Washington Street. Each had a warehouse or two, and shops for artisans
(coopers, blockmakers, joiners, etc.). The waterfront between Union Street and
Washington Street also had lumber yards and several ship chandleries and
distilleries, with a Market House at the foot of Central Street, below the Custom
House. The wharves and streets were crowded with shoppers, gawkers, hawkers,
sailors, artisans
4
�("mechanics"), storekeepers, and teamsters; and just across the way, on Stage
Point along the south bank of the South River, wooden barks and brigs and ships
were being built.
The ferment of the times is captured in the diary of Rev. William Bentley
(1760-1819), bachelor minister of Salem's East Church and editor ofthe Register
newspaper. His diary is full of references to the civic and commercial doings of the
town, and to the lives and behaviors of all classes of society. By the end of 1806,
when Rev. William Bentley reflected in his diary that (Dec. 2 entry), "while Salem
was under the greatest aristocracy in New England, few men thought, and the few
directed the many. Now the aristocracy is gone and the many govern. It is plain it
must require considerable time to give common knowledge to the people."
Salem's boom came to an end with a crash in January, 1808, when Jefferson and
the Congress imposed an embargo on all shipping in hopes of forestalling war with
Britain. The Embargo, which was widely opposed in New England, proved futile
and nearly ruinous in Salem, where commerce ceased. As a hotbed of
Democratic-Republicanism, Salem's East Parish and its seafarers, led by the
Crowninshields, loyally supported the Embargo until it was lifted in spring, 1809.
Shunned by the other Salem merchants for his support of the Embargo, the
eminent Billy Gray took his large fleet of ships-fully one-third of Salem's
tonnage-and moved to Boston, whose commerce was thereby much augmented.
He removed a large amount of Salem wealth, shipping, import-export cargos, and
local employment. Gray soon switched from the Federalist party, and was elected
Lt. Governor under Gov. Elbridge Gerry, a native of Marblehead. Salem resumed
its seafaring commerce for three years. We see John Waters at sea in 1811, aged
twenty. He had probably completed an apprenticeship as a carpenter, and had
chosen to try the life of a mariner.
John was 5' 5" tall, light-complected and fair-haired, when a seaman on board
the Salem 240-ton ship "Mary Ann," departing for Russia on May 6, 1811
(SCL). He was home by early 1812: on Jan. 31, 1812, the 220-ton brig
"Diomede" cleared for Madras, India, with John among the crewmen.
The British preyed on American shipping; and in June, 1812, war was declared.
Although the merchants had tried to prevent the war, when it came, Salem
swiftly fitted out 40 privateers manned by Marblehead and Salem crews, who
also served on U.S. Navy vessels, including the frigate "Constitution." Many
more local vessels could have been sent against the British, but some of the
Federalist merchants held them back. In addition, Salem fielded companies of
infantry and artillery. Salem and Marblehead privateers were largely successful
in making prizes of British supply vessels.
5
�While many ofthe town's men were wounded in engagements, and some were
killed, the possible riches of privateering kept the men returning to sea as often as
possible. The first prizes were captured by a 30-ton converted fishing schooner,
the "Fame," and by a 14-ton luxury yacht fitted with one gun, the "Jefferson." Of all
Salem privateers, the Crowninshields' 350-ton ship "America" was most
successful: she captured 30-plus prizes worth more than $1,100,000.
Salem erected forts and batteries on its Neck, to discourage the British warships
that cruised these waters. On land, the war went poorly for the United States, as
the British captured Washington, DC, and burned the Capitol and the White
House. Along the western frontier, U.S. forces were successful against their
weaker opponents; and, as predicted by many, the western expansionists had
their day. At sea, over time, Salem vessels were captured, and its men imprisoned
or killed. After almost three years, the war was bleeding the town dry. Hundreds of
Salem men and boys were in British prison-ships and at Dartmoor Prison in
England. Perhaps one was John Waters.
At the Hartford Convention in 1814, New England Federalist delegates met to
consider what they could do to bring the war to a close and to restore the region's
commerce. Sen. Timothy Pickering of Salem led the extreme Federalists in
proposing a series of demands which, if not met by the federal government, could
lead to New England's seceding from the United States; but Harrison G. Otis of
Boston and the Federalist moderates prevailed in sending a mild message to
Congress.
At last, in February, 1815, peace was restored.
Post-war, the Salem merchants rebuilt their fleet and resumed their worldwide
trade, slowly at first, and then to great effect. Many new partnerships were formed.
The pre-war partisan politics of the town were not resumed, as the newly powerful
middle-class "mechanics" (artisans) brought about civic harmony, largely through
the Salem Charitable Mechanic Association (founded 1817) ..
John Waters resumed his seafaring as a merchant mariner on board the brig
"Mercator," which departed for South America on Aug. 30, 1816. John would have
a berth on this vessel, commanded by Samuel B. Graves, for the next several
years, during which he rose to the rank of Second Mate (1817) and then First Mate
(in November, 1818). In the years 1816-1823 he made ten voyages on board the
"Mercator," usually to Brazil, but finally to Antwerp (departing May 21, 1823)
(SCL).
6
�During this period, too, he purchased (in 1820, from Joseph Waters) a
homestead at then-19 Daniels Street (ED 225:30). John, 25, had married a
widow, Mary (Felt) Kinsman, 31, in August, 1816; and they may have had
children by 1820.
Rev. William Bentley, keen observer and active citizen during Salem's time of
greatest prosperity and fiercest political divisions, died at the end of 1819, the year
in which a new U.S. Custom House was built on the site of the George
Crowninshield mansion, at the head of Derby Wharf. Into the 1820s foreign trade
continued prosperous; and new markets were opened with Madagascar (1820),
which supplied tallow and ivory, and Zanzibar (1825), whence came coffee, ivory,
hides, and gum copal, used to make varnish. This opened a huge and lucrative
trade with East Africa in which Salem dominated.
John Waters found a new berth on board the Salem brig "Mercator," commanded
by his brother-in-law Nathaniel Weston (1793-1868). From 1826 to 1830 he made
nine overseas voyages on board this vessel, always as First Mate, and always
under Captain Weston except for the last voyage, to Havana, departing Sept. 15,
1830, under Capt. Seth Rogers. Usually there were 5-8 crewmen on board. Most
of these voyages were to ports in Brazil, to get cargoes of hides for the leather
trade; some were described as having the West Indies (Caribbean) as the
destination.
Salem's general maritime foreign commerce fell off sharply in the late 1820s.
Imports in Salem ships were supplanted by the goods now being produced in
great quantities in America. The interior of the country was being opened for
settlement, and some Sale mites moved away. To the north, the falls of the
Merrimack River powered large new textile mills (Lowell was founded in 1823),
whose cotton cloth, sold at home and overseas, created great wealth for their
investors; and it seemed that the tide of opportunity was ebbing away from Salem.
Salem's merchants and capitalists were already prospering from ownership of an
iron-products factory in Amesbury and from a textile factory they had built in
Newmarket, NH, so they saw the potential of manufacturing in Salem. In 1826, in
an ingenious attempt to stem the flow of talent from the town and to harness its
potential water power, they formed a corporation to dam the North River for
industrial power; but the attempt was abandoned in 1827, which further
demoralized the town, and caused several leading citizens to move to Boston, the
hub of investment in the new economy.
In 1830 occurred a horrifying crime that brought disgrace to Salem. Old Capt.
Joseph White, a wealthy merchant, resided in the house now called the
Gardner-Pingree house, on Essex Street. One night, someone broke into his
7
�mansion and killed him in his bed. All of Salem buzzed with the news of murderous
thugs; but the killer was a Crowninshield (a fallen son of one of the five brothers; he
killed himself in jail). He had been hired by Capt. White's own relatives, Capt.
Joseph Knapp and his brother Frank (they would be executed). The results of the
investigation and trial having uncovered much that was lurid, and several
respectable families quit the now-notorious town.
John Waters "swallowed the anchor" and came ashore in early 1831, aged about
forty, old for a mariner. Thereafter, he evidently worked in Salem as a carpenter.
He and his wife Mary had two children by then, Eliza and Edward.
As the decade wore on, Salem's remaining merchants took their equity out of
wharves and warehouses and ships and put it into manufacturing and
transportation, as the advent of railroads and canals diverted both capital and trade
away from the coast. Some merchants did not make the transition, and were
ruined. Old-line areas of work, like rope-making, sail-making, and ship chandleries,
gradually declined and disappeared. Salem slumped badly, but in 1836 the voters
decided to charter their town as the third city to be formed in the state, behind
Boston and Lowell. City Hall was built 1837-8 and the city seal was adopted with an
already-anachronistic Latin motto of "to the farthest port of the rich East" -a far cry
from "Go West, young man!"
The Panic of 1837, a brief, sharp, nationwide economic depression, brought
economic disaster to many younger businessmen, and caused even more
Salem families to depart in search of fortune and a better future.
Salem had not prepared for the industrial age, and had few natural
advantages. The North River served not to power factories but mainly to
flush the waste from the 25 tanneries that had set up along its banks.
Throughout the 1830s, the leaders of Salem scrambled to re-invent an
economy for their fellow citizens, many of whom were mariners without much
sea-faring to do. Ingenuity, ambition, and hard work would have to carry the
day.
One inspiration was the Salem Laboratory, Salem's first science-based
manufacturing enterprise, founded in 1813 to produce chemicals. At the plant
built in 1818 in North Salem, the production of alum and blue vitriol was a
specialty; and it proved a very successful business.
Some Salem merchants turned to whaling in the 1830s, which led to the building
of two small steam-powered factories producing high-quality candles and
machine oils at Stage Point. The manufacturing of white lead began in the
1820s, and grew large after 1830, when Wyman's gristmills on the Forest River
were retooled for making high-quality white lead and sheet
8
�lead (the approach to Marblehead is still called Lead Mills Hill, although the
empty mill buildings burned down in 1960s).
These enterprises started Salem in a new direction. In 1838 the Eastern Rail
Road, headquartered in Salem, began operating between Boston and Salem,
which gave the local people a direct route to the region's largest market. The new
railroad tracks ran right over the middle of the Mill Pond; the tunnel under
Washington Street was built in 1839; and the line was extended to Newburyport
in 1840.
The 1840s proved to be a decade of explosive growth in Salem's leather industry,
still conducted largely as a mass-production handicraft, and its new textile
manufacturing, applylng leading edge machine technology.
John Waters, of 19 Daniels Street, appears in the Salem Directory in 1837 as a
laborer, and thereafter, through the 1840s, as a carpenter. Perhaps he had
become a building contractor, or perhaps a specialist in some aspect of carpentry
such as stair-building.
The tanning of animal hides and curing of leather, a filthy and smelly enterprise,
took place on and near Boston Street, along the upper North River. In 1844, there
were 41 tanneries; a few years later, that number had doubled and in 1850 they
employed 550 workers. Salem had become one of the largest leather-producers
in America; and it would continue to grow in importance throughout the 1800s.
In 1847, along the inner-harbor shoreline of the large peninsula known as Stage
Point, the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company completed the construction of the
largest steam cotton factory building in the world, four stories high, 60' wide, 400'
long, running 1700 looms and 31,000 spindles to produce millions of yards of
.first-quality cotton sheeting and shirting. It was immediately profitable, and 600
people found employment there, many of them living in new houses on The Point.
The cotton sheeting of The Point found a ready market in East Africa, and
brought about a revival of shipping, led by the merchants David Pingree
(president of the Naumkeag company) and John Bertram.
In Lynn, the factory system was perfected, and that city became the nation's
leading shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe workers
from outlying towns and the countryside. Even the population changed, as
hundreds of Irish families, fleeing the famine in Ireland, settled in Salem and gave
the industrialists a big pool of cheap labor.
9
�The Gothic symbol of Salem's new industrial economy was the outsized twintowered granite-and-brick train station-the "stone depot"-smoking and growling
with idling locomotives, standing on filled-in land at the foot of Washington Street,
on the site of shipyards and the merchants' wharves.
In general, foreign commerce waned: in the late 1840s, giant clipper ships sailing
from Boston and New York replaced the smaller vessels that Salem men had
sailed around the world. The town's shipping consisted of vessels carrying coal
and importing hides from Africa and Brazil, and Down East coasters with cargoes
of fuel wood and lumber. A picture of Salem's waterfront is given by Hawthorne in
his mean-spirited "Introduction" to The Scarlet Letter, which he began while
working in the Custom House.
In September, 1850, John Waters, identified as a mariner, for $1225 sold the
Daniels Street homestead to Dennis Lynch, trader (ED 434:1). It would seem that
this house {2½ Essex) had been built by then, as we find in the 1850 valuation
("new house"). It is unknown if the old house, once John's grandfather English's,
was still standing by then.
John Waters (1791-1868), born May, 1791, son of John Waters & Christiana
English, died on May 17, 1868, aged 77 years, paralysis. Hem. 19 Aug. 1816
Mary Felt {1785-1859}, dtr. of John Felt & Susannah Ropes, died 30 June 1859,
paralysis, 74th year. She had m/11806 Jacob Lakeman (died 1814). Known
issue, surname Waters:
1. Edward, 1819, died 2 Jan. 1821, 17 mos.,consumption.
2. Elizabeth, 1823, died 2 Feb. 1882.
3. Edward, 1826-1911, m. Elizabeth Ellen Mullen {1833-1906}, dtr. of John
Mullen (b. Scotland) and Sarah Trefry of Marblehead; she died 12 Nov.
1906, Chelsea.
In 1850, still residing at Daniels Street, the Waters family (census, h. 113)
consisted of John, 59, carpenter, $800 in r.e., Mary, 63, and offspring Eliza, 27,
and Edward, 24, a mariner.
The family moved that year, into the new house here.
Edward Waters was a diligent young mariner, starting at the age of fifteen, on
board the bark "Brenda," Capt. Andrew Ward, departing Oct. 13, 1841, for Ceylon
and Bombay. Edward was then 4' 9", light complected and fair-haired (SCL). Sor
the next few years he shipped out as a seaman on eight more voyages, one to
India, two to Zanzibar, four to South American ports, and
one to Cayenne. In 1849, at 22, he had a growth spurt and went from 4' 11" to 5'
4". He sailed as Second Mate of the brig "Gambia", Capt. George E. Bailey, for
South America, departing June 6, 1849. He then rose to First Mate,
10
�sailing in April 1851 on board the brig "Garland," Capt. Richard Savory, for
Paramaraibo, Surinam, and in August, 1851, on board the brig "Elizabeth
Felton," Capt. Henry B. Manring, for the same port.
After that, he probably sailed out of Boston
In 1855 (per census, h. 274), this was the home of John Waters, 64, carpenter,
Mary, 69, Eliza, 32, and Edward, 29, mariner. At that time, John was making $1
a day as a carpenter (see ED 461:82).
In the late 1850s Edward Waters married Elizabeth Ellen Mullen, the
daughter of a Scotsman, John Mullen, who had married a Marbleheader,
Sarah Trefry. They would live elsewhere.
Salem's industrial growth continued through the 1850s, as business expanded,
the population swelled, new churches were built, new workingclass
neighborhoods were developed (especially at The Point, South Salem along
Lafayette Street, in North Salem, off Boston Street, and along the Mill Pond
behind the Broad Street graveyard); and new schools, factories, and stores were
erected. A second, even-larger factory building for the Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Company was added in 1859, down at Stage Point, where a new Methodist Church
went up in 1852; and many neat new homes, boarding-houses, and stores lined
the streets between Lafayette and Congress. The tanning business continued to
boom, as better and larger tanneries were built along Boston Street and Mason
Street; and subsidiary industries sprang up as well, most notably the J.M.
Anderson glue-works on the Turnpike (Highland Avenue).
As it re-established itself as an economic powerhouse, Salem took a strong
interest in national politics. It was primarily Republican, and strongly antislavery,
with its share of outspoken abolitionists, led by Charles Remond, a passionate
speaker who came from one of the city's leading black families. At its Lyceum (on
Church Street) and in other venues, plays and shows were put on, but cultural
lectures and political speeches were given too.
On June 30, 1859, Mrs. Mary (Felt) Waters died, of paralysis, aged 73 years.
She was survived by her husband and two offspring.
With the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, it was clear that the Southern
states would secede from tile union; and Salem, which had done so much to win
the independence of the nation, was ready to go to war to force others to remain
a part of it.
1
1
�In that year, this house (per census, h. 2016) was the home of John Waters, 69,
carpenter, with r.e. worth $2000, his daughter Eliza, 37, and his son Edward,
mariner, 34, and Edward's wife Elizabeth, 26.
The Civil War began in April, 1861, and went on for four years, during which
hundreds of Salem men served in the army and navy, and many were killed or
died of disease or abusive treatment while imprisoned. Hundreds more suffered
wounds, or broken health. The people of Salem contributed greatly to efforts to
alleviate the suffering of the soldiers, sailors, and their families; and there was
great celebration when the war finally ended in the spring of 1865.
At that time this house was occupied by John Waters, 74, carpenter, and his
daughter Eliza, 42 (per census, h. 584).
Through the 1860s, Salem pursued manufacturing, especially of leather and
shoes and textiles. The managers and capitalists tended to build their new, grand
houses along Lafayette Street (these houses may still be seen, south of Holly
Street; many are in the French Second Empire style, with mansard roofs). Factory
workers, living in smaller houses and tenements, wanted something better for
themselves: in 1864 they went on strike for higher wages and fewer hours of work.
On May 17, 1868, John Waters died in his 77th year. The property descended to
Elizabeth and Edward.
In 1870 Salem received its last cargo from Zanzibar. By then, a new Salem & New
York freight steamboat line was in operation. Seven years later, with the arrival of
a vessel from Cayenne, Salem's foreign trade came to an end. After that, "the
merchandise warehouses on the wharves no longer contained silks from India, tea
from China, pepper from Sumatra, coffee from Arabia, spices from Batavia,
gum-copal from Zanzibar, hides from Africa, and the various other products of
far-away countries. The boys have ceased to watch on the Neck for the incoming
vessels, hoping to earn a reward by being the first to announce to the expectant
merchant the safe return of his looked-for vessel. The foreign commerce of Salem,
once her pride and glory, has spread its white wings and sailed away forever"
(Rev. George Bachelder in History of Essex County, II: 65).
Edward Waters and wife Elizabeth moved to Boston. He added the middle
initial S., for Stanley.
1
2
�In 1870 (per census, h.161) Eliza Waters, 47, resided here, as did tenants
Albert Cummings, a Maine-born merchant with $4000 in property, and his son
William, 21, born in New Hampshire.
In April, 1872, Edward Waters, of Boston, for $1000 sold his half-interest in the
homestead to his sister Eliza, who lived there and owned the other half (ED
853:132). The lot was bounded south on Essex Street and west on the Saul
heirs.
Salem continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leathermaking
business. In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor
earthquake. In the following year, the large Pennsylvania Pier (site of the present
coal-fired harborside electrical generating plant) was completed to begin
receiving large shipments of coal, most of it shipped by rail to the factories on the
Merrimack. In the neck of land beyond the Pier, a new owner began subdividing
the old Allen farmlands into a development called Salem Willows and Juniper
Point. In the U. S. centennial year, 1876, A. G. Bell of Salem announced that he
had discovered a way to transmit voices over telegraph wires.
In this decade, large numbers of French-Canadian families came to work in
Salem's mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The
better-off workers bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their
families in the outlying sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam
Cotton mills would employ 1500 people (including hundreds of children) and
produce annually nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Shoemanufacturing businesses
expanded in the 1870s, and 40 shoe factories were employing 600-plus
operatives. Tanning, in both Salem and Peabody, remained a very important
industry, and employed hundreds of breadwinners. On Boston Street in 1879, the
Arnold tannery caught fire and burned down.
In 1880 (per census, h. 234), this was the home of Eliza Waters, 57, in one unit,
and in the other Charles Converse, 44, a railroad engineer, wife Olive, 41, and
son Frederick W., 20, a brass finisher.
Eliza Waters died on February 2, 1882, aged 59 years. She was survived by her
brother, Edward S. Waters of Chelsea. Evidently she willed some or all of her
property to Lakeman relatives of her mother's first marriage. In May, 1882, these
heirs sold their interest in the homestead here to Edward S. Waters of Boston (ED
1083:117). He would lease it out for 13 years.
In the 1880s and 1890s, Salem kept building infrastructure; and new
businesses arose, and established businesses expanded. Retail stores
1
3
�prospered; horse-drawn trolleys ran every which-way; and machinists,
carpenters, millwrights, and other specialists all thrived. In 1880, Salem's
manufactured goods were valued at about $8.4 million, of which leather
accounted for nearly half.
In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the
manufacturers for a ten-hour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers
imported labor from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out,
and there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners prevailed,
and many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their families,
through a bitter winter.
By the mid-1880s, Salem's cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed 1400 people
who produced about 19 million yards annually, worth about $1.5 million. The city's
large shoe factories stood downtown behind the stone depot and on Dodge and
Lafayette Streets. A jute bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry
Street and English Street; its products were sent south to be used in
cotton-baling. Salem factories also produced lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern
Railroad yard on Bridge Street, cars were repaired and even built new. In 1887
the streets were first lit with electricity, replacing gas-light. The gas works, which
had stood on Northey Street since 1850, was moved to a larger site on Bridge
Street in 1888, opposite the Beverly Shore.
In December, 1895, Edward S. Waters, of Chelsea, for $2400 sold the
homestead to John I. Comstock of Salem (ED 1465:102). The lot, which had
not previously been described in dimensions, was recorded as fronting on
Essex Street 76.5' and running back about 47' in depth.
Thus after 45 years the house passed out of the name of Waters. The land
here had been in the family since 1784.
John I. Comstock was a native of Lewiston, Maine. In 1900 (per census, h. 249,
2½ Essex) he, 40, resided here, working as the chief stationary engineer at the
Pennsylvania Pier (large coal and railroad facility on Salem Harbor), with wife
Anna/Annie (nee Henningsen), 39, and son George, 17, a piano tuner. Also
residing here were Charles Kent, 38, a baker from Woburn, wife Rebecca (nee
Liebsch), 30, and Charles' daughter by a first marriage, Josephine L., 13. Anna
and Rebecca were perhaps cousins; the parents of both were born in Denmark,
as was Annie.
John I. Comstock died of heart disease on January 10, 1904. His remains were
interred at Greenlawn Cemetery. In March, 1904, his son George J.
1
4
�Comstock, having moved to Washington, DC, conveyed the premises to his
mother, Annie E. (Henningsen) Comstock, Salem widow (ED 1737:247).
More factories and more people required more space for buildings, more roads,
and more storage areas. This space was created by filling in rivers, harbors, and
ponds. The once-broad North River was filled from both shores, and became a
canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill
Pond, which occupied the whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue,
Canal Street, and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage areas,
junk-yards, rail-yards, and parking lots. The South River, too, with its epicenter at
Central Street (the Custom House had
opened there in 1805) disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza and
New Derby Street, and some of its old wharves were joined together with much
in-fill and turned into coal-yards and lumber-yards. Only a canal was left,
running in from Derby and Central Wharves to Lafayette Street.
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th century by
large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who settled primarily in the Derby
Street neighborhood, and by Sicilians, in the High Street neighborhood. By the
eve of World War One, the bustling, polyglot city supported large department
stores and factories of every description. People from the surrounding towns, and
Marblehead in particular, came to Salem to do their shopping; and its handsome
government buildings, as befit the county seat, were busy with conveyances of
land, lawsuits, and probate proceedings. The city's politics were lively, and its
economy was strong.
In September, 1912, the Comstocks sold the homestead to Helen Zaborowski,
whose husband was named lgnecy (ED 2167:458). For almost 50 years they
owned the premises.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street at Proctor), a
fire started in small wooden shoe factory. This fire soon raced out of control, for
the west wind was high and the season had been dry. Out of Blubber Hollow the
fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out the houses
of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping
through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men and
machines could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and
destroyed the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the
mansions of Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the tenement district of
The Point. Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and
cities, the fire overwhelmed everything in its path: the Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Company factory complex exploded in an inferno. At Derby Street, just beyond
Union, after a 13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed 250 acres,
1
5
�1600 houses, and 41 factories, and leaving three dead and thousands homeless.
Some people had insurance, some did not; all received much support and
generous donations from all over the country and the world. It was one of the
greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States, and the people of
Salem would take years to recover from it. Eventually, they did, and many of the
former houses and businesses were rebuilt; and several urban-renewal projects
(including Hawthorne Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and
widening old streets) were put into effect.
By 1920 Salem was once again a thriving city; and its tercentenary in 1926 was
a time of great celebration. The Depression hit in 1929, and continued through
the 1930s. Salem, the county seat and regional retail center, gradually
rebounded.
Salem prospered after Worlc'.:I War II through the 1950s and into the 1960s.
General Electric, Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills (formerly Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Co.), Almy's and Newmark's and Webber's department stores,
various other retailers, and Beverly's United Shoe Machinery Company were all
major local employers.
Eventually the Salem Savings Bank foreclosed on its mortgage and in 1961
conveyed the property Lauren R. L'ltalien (ED 4754:160). That same year the
premises were sold to Mary E. Carr & Mary E. Grocki (ED 4826:288). In 1994 the
Grocki Family Realty trust sold to the Opie & Pelletier (ED 14006:147). In 2004
the Pelletiers sold to Sanprasert & Phongrong (ED 22741:381). The homestead
has been sold several times since then.
1
6
�Glossary & Sources
A figure like (ED 123:45) refers to book 123, page 45, Essex South Registry of
Deeds.
A figure like (#12345) refers to Essex Probate case 12345, on file at the Essex
Probate Court, or on microfilm at Mass. Archives, Boston, or at the Peabody
Essex Museum's Phillips Library, Rowley.
MSSRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers & Sailors in the
Revolutionary War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
MSSCRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers, Sailors, &
Marines in the Civil War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
EIHC refers to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (discontinued), a
multi-volume set (first volume published in 1859) of data and articles about
Essex County. The indices of the EIHC have been consulted regarding many
of the people associated with this house.
Salem Crew Lists (SCL), online at Mystic Seaport website.
The six-volume published S~lem Vital Records (marriages, births, and deaths
through 1849) have been consulted, and the Salem Directory and later
Naumkeag Directory, with data about residents and their addresses, etc.
Sidney Perley's three-volume History of Salem, 1626-1716, has been
consulted, as has the four-volume William Bentley's Diary, J. Duncan
Phillips' books, some newspapers, and other sources.
Salem real estate valuations, and, where applicable, Salem Street Books,
have also been consulted, as have genealogies.
There is much more material available about Salem and its history; and the
reader is encouraged to make his or her own discoveries.
-Public History Services
1
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
2 1/2 Essex Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
John Waters
Carpenter & Mariner
And wife
Mary Felt
1850
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1850
House History Written: Dec. 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy Kellett & Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1850
2.5/Essex Street
2019
Carpenter
Felt
Mariner
Massachusetts
Salem
Waters
-
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HISTORIC
SALEM INC
7 Williams Street
Salem, MA
Built for Nathaniel
Weston Merchant
1856
Researched and written by Amy Kellett and Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc.
December 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 I historicsalem.org
©2019
�Owners & Occupants
7 Williams Street, Salem
By Amy Kellett & Robert Booth, PHS, December 2019
According to available evidence, this house was built in 1839 for Nathaniel
Weston, merchant, and was renovated in 1856. It occupies the site of an
earlier house built c.1797 for Nehemiah Adams, cabinet maker.
In August, 1827, Mrs. Eliza (Story) White for $4200 sold the property, with
house and store, to Nathaniel Weston (ED 247:30).
Nathaniel Weston Jr. (1793-1868) was born in Woburn, the son of Nathaniel
Weston and Hannah (Richardson) Weston who had come to Salem by 1800 and
had a house (now gone) on North Street, near the "Witch House."
Nathaniel Weston (Jr.) was bred to the sea as a mariner. He went privateering
during the War of 1812 and was captured and imprisoned at Dartmoor Prison,
in England. He returned to Salem in 1815, at the end of the war. In October,
1815, he shipped out as a crewman on board the brig "Hope," for South
America (~CL). He was described as 22, light complected and 5' 4" tall. By
Octobeer, 1817, he was a mariner on board the brig "Betsey," sailing for
Matanzas (SCL).
Capt. Nathaniel Weston became a shipmaster and in 1819 married Christiana
Waters (1795-1877), of an old Salem family. They would have four sons and a
daughter. He was successful as a mariner and was able to come ashore c.1829
and set up as an import-export merchant. In 1830 they moved to Williams Street
and resided in a house which may have occupied the site of this one. It is evident
that some houses that stood hereabouts in the early 19th century were removed.
Early history.
In October, 1789, John Gardner, merchant, for 150 Ii sold to Henry Williams,
mariner, a store or warehouse, part of a barn, and a well on about 20 poles of
ground bounded s. on a way by the north side of the Common, w. on land of
Putnam, and n. & e. on land of Williams (ED 148:248). Capt. Henry Williams
would proceed to lay out Williams Street through this and adjoining parcels of
land. Just as that was happening, in February, 1796,
�Captain Williams for $850 sold to Nehemiah Adams, cabinet-maker, the same 20
poles of land and buildings that he had bought in 1789 (ED 159:232); and in
September, 1796, Williams sold to Adams (for $511.50) the adjoining piece of
land (46.5.poles in area) fronting 80' on Williams Street (ED 161!55).
Nehemiah Adams had a house built on the land. He took out a mortgage in
March, 1810, for $6500, from Henry White Jr., merchant, who soon foreclosed
and in October, 1811, sold the premises (house, shop, land) for $6500 to his
brother Col. Joseph White Jr., merchant (ED 202:182). Colonel White, who
lived nearby in a brick mansion, died in 1816; and the Williams Street property
remained in his estate for eleven years.
In August, 1827, Mrs. Eliza (Story) White for $4200 sold the land, house, and
store to Nathaniel Weston (ED 247:30}.
Captain Weston and family moved from Pickman Street evidently, for in 1829 he
("merchant") sold a house and land on Pickman Street (corner of Pleasant) to
Capt. John Bertram. This was the first mention of Weston as a merchant; hitherto,
he had been a shipmaster. In 1831 (valuation) Nathaniel Weston and Benjamin
Stone were listed at the same house, Williams Street.
The Weston homestead at Williams Street included a house worth $3000$3500, and the shop worth $500 (per valuations, 1830 p. 40, 1831 p. 59}.
Presumably these were the buildings owned by Nehemiah Adams, cabinet
maker, when, in 1810, he had mortgaged the property for $6500.
The house evidently stood on the site of this one, but was a different house,
purely on stylistic grounds-a house dating from 1796-1810 would have been built
in the "Federal" style, whereas this house is in the Greek Revival style, which
would not appear until 1835 or so in Salem.
Evidence from Valuations.
In 1831 (per valuation), Nathaniel Weston and Benjamin Stone occupied a house
on Williams Street. In the 1832 valuation (p. 59} Captain Weston was assessed
for a house, Williams St., and land under Adams' shop, total $3500, and also for a
house on Essex Street, $1000. Likely Adams's shop stood on the corner.
In 1838 (p. 66), Nathaniel Weston was assessed for "new house at 9 Brown," not
yet valued, also for house "9 Williams" valued at $3500, also "65 Essex" worth
$1000. Note that the "shop" had disappeared. The new house is the
2
�one now fronting on Washington Square, next to the Witch Museum (formerly
the East Church) and at the corner of Williams Street. Evidently mason
Benjamin Stone occupied the old house on Williams Street (p. 61, notation in
pencil).
In the 1839 valuation (p. 67), Nathaniel Weston was assessed for his own house
at 9 Brown, $2500, for an "unfinished house" (pencil notation) $2500, and for 65
Essex, $1000.
The "unfinished house" is probably this one (the brick double house at 7-9). The
former house was probably removed, perhaps farther down Williams Street. In
the 1840 valuation, the house (formerly "unfinished") was valued at $4000. At
that time, Benjamin Stone was listed as occupying 9 Williams.
Having resided here in the late 1830s, Mr. Stone may have been the mason
involved in the construction of this house for Captain Weston.
In the 1841 valuation (p. 59), Benjamin Stone was listed at 9 Williams Street,
while (p. 49) Thomas Kinsley was listed as having come from Ward 3 to Williams
Street, a move which perhaps placed him here, since the 1842 valuation (pp.
48-9, p. 58) shows Benjamin Stone and Thomas & John Kinsley at "9 Williams"
(with James Kinsley at "7 Mall Street").
In 1844 (per Street Book), John Messervey and family resided here (#7).
In the 1845 valuation, Nathaniel Weston resided at 9 Brown ($2500), while his
house worth $4500 was evidently occupied by James Kinsley (#7, p. 47) and by
Benjamin Stone (#9).
Per the 1850 valuation (p. 71) Nathaniel Weston owned houses worth
$4500, $2500, and $1000 (locations not noted).
The 1851 Henry McIntyre atlas shows a modest-sized rectangular building on
this spot (#7-9), fronting the street, without rear ells.
In 1854, Captain Weston's valuation (p. 89) shows his house at 9 Brown as
worth $5000, 65 Essex at $1000, and 7 Williams at $2000. Evidently 9 Williams
was then assessed separately.
The 1855 valuation assessed Nathaniel Weston (p. 86) for 9 Brown Street
($6000), 65 Essex ($1000), and 7 Williams ($2000), with personal property
worth $30,000.
3
�So it remained in 1856 (p. 9~); but in 1857 the value of the "Williams Street" house
had jumped to $7000. The long-time tenant, Benjamin Stone (who likely had paid
taxes on #9), had just moved to another house on Williams Street, so (evidently)
Captain Weston had proceeded to enlarge and remodel the double house at 7-9.
The 1857 valuation was no fluke, and was confirmed by the same valuation in
1858.
It is impossible to say what changes were made in 1856 to the house that was
completed by 1840.
People who lived here.
James Kinsley (1811-1852) was born in Salem in 1811, the son of James Kinsley
& Lydia Owens, who had married in 1805. Evidently his siblings were Jane,
Lydia, Thomas, and John. His father, probably a mariner, died in 1834, aged 48;
and his mother would die in 1854.
James Kinsley (Jr.) was a mariner. In 1830, aged 20, he was described as 5' 8"
tall, fair complected and fight haired, sailing on board the brig "Plato," Capt.
George Creamer, bound for Maranham in Brazil. The first mate was Samuel B.
Kehew and there were four other crewmen. James does not afterwards appear
in the usual Salem records, so he may have sailed out of Boston or perhaps
primarily sailed as a coaster, to American ports rather than overseas.
In the 1830s, Salem's main business was leather-making, for the city's maritime
commerce had failed in all but Brazil, Zanzibar, and a few other markets. Salem's
remaining merchants took their equity out of wharves and warehouses and ships
and put it into manufacturing and transportation, as the advent of railroads and
canals diverted both capital and trade away from the coast. Some merchants did
not make the transition, and were ruined. Old-line areas of work, like
rope-making, sail-making, and ship chandleries, gradually declined and
disappeared. Salem slumped badly, but in 1836 the voters decided to charter
their town as the third city to be formed in the state, behind Boston and Lowell.
City Hall was built 1837-8 and the city seal was adopted with an
already-anachronistic Latin motto of "to the farthest port of the rich East"-a far cry
from "Go West, young man!" The Panic of 1837, a brief, sharp, nationwide
economic depression, brought economic disaster to many younger
businessmen, and caused even more Salem families to depart in search of a
better future.
In September, 1836, James Kinsley married Mahala Cheever (1814-1852), born
in Beverly, daughter of Ebenezer Cheever and Hannah Coffin. Evidently
4
�they had no children. In the 1837 Directory, James Kinsley, mariner, is listed at 7
Williams, while his mother, Mrs. Lydia (Owens) Kinsley, is at 9 Williams.
Salem had not prepared for the industrial age, and had few natural
advantages. The North River served not to power factories but mainly to flush
the waste from the 25 tanneries that had set up along its banks. Throughout
the 1830s, the leaders of Salem scrambled to re-invent an economy for their
fellow citizens, many of whom were mariners without much sea-faring to do.
Ingenuity, ambition, and hard work would have to carry the day.
One inspiration was the Salem Laboratory, Salem's first science-based
manufacturing enterprise, founded in 1813 to produce chemicals. At the plant
built in 1818 in North Salem, the production of alum and blue vitriol was a
specialty; and it proved a very successful business.
Some Salem merchants turned to whaling in the 1830s, which led to the building
of two small steam-powered factories producing high-quality candles and
machine oils at Stage Point. The manufacturing of white lead began in the 1820s,
and grew large after 1830, when Wyman's gristmills on the Forest River were
retooled for making high-quality white lead and sheet lead (the approach to
Marblehead is still called Lead Mills Hill; the empty mill buildings burned down in
1960s).
These enterprises started Salem in a new direction. In 1838 the Eastern Rail
Road, headquartered in Salem, began operating between Boston and Salem,
which gave the local people a direct route to the region's largest market. The new
railroad tracks ran right over the middle of the Mill Pond; the tunnel under
Washington Street was built in 1839; and the line was extended to Newburyport
in 1840.
By 1842 (per directory) James Kinsley, now a cooper, resided here with
Mahala, and so did Benjamin Pearson, tobacconist, and family (soon he
would have a house built on Howard Street).
Note: On Oct. 15, 1844, Nathaniel Weston, Salem merchant (assent of wife
Christiana) for $4500 sold to the proprietors of the East Church (he being one) a
lot fronting 133' 3" on Brown Street, running back about 120' between his land
on the n.e. and land of Samuel Johnson on the s.w. (ED 368:121). On this land
the new East Church would be built.
The 1840s proved to be a decade of explosive growth in Salem's leather
industry, still conducted largely as a mass-production handicraft, and its
new textile manufacturing, applying leading edge machine technology.
5
�The tanning of animal hides and curing of leather, a filthy and smelly enterprise,
took place on and near Boston Street, along the upper North River. In 1844, there
were 41 tanneries; a few years later, that number had doubled and in 1850 they
employed 550 workers. Salem had become one of the largest leather-producers
in America; and it would continue to grow in importance throughout the 1800s.
In 1847, along the inner-harbor shoreline ofthe large peninsula known as Stage
Point, the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company completed the construction of the
largest steam cotton factory building in the world, four stories high, 60' wide, 400'
long, running 1700 looms and 31,000 spindles to produce millions of yards of
first-quality cotton sheeting and shirting. It was immediately profitable, and 600
people found employment there, many of them living in new houses on The Point.
The cotton sheeting of The Point found a ready market in East Africa, and brought
about a revival of shipping, led by the merchants David Pingree (president of the
Naumkeag company) and John Bertram. Probably Nathaniel Weston was
involved as well.
In Lynn, the factory system was perfected, and that city became the nation's
leading shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe workers
from outlying towns and the countryside. Even the population changed, as
hundreds of Irish families, fleeing the famine in Ireland, settled in Salem and gave
the industrialists a big pool of cheap labor.
The Gothic symbol of Salem's new industrial economy was the outsized
twin-towered granite-and-brick train station-the "stone depot"-smoking and
growling with idling locomotives, standing on filled-in land at the foot of
Washington Street, on the site of shipyards and the merchants' wharves.
The town's shipping consisted of vessels carrying coal and importing hides
from Africa and Brazil, and Down East coasters with cargoes of fuel wood and
lumber. A picture of Salem's waterfront is given by Hawthorne in his
mean-spirited "Introduction" to The Scarlet Letter, which he began while
working in the Custom House.
Per the 1850 directory (based on 1849 data), this house (#7) was occupied by
John Carlton Jr., probably a mariner, son of John Carlton, chaplain at the Alms
House, who lived in the other side with his family. The 1849 Street Book shows
the heads of household at #7 as John Carlton and James Kinsley.
In 1850 (per census, h. 309) '#7 was occupied by the Kinsleys (James, 36,
mariner, Mahala, 34, and Mahala's mother, Mrs. Hannah (Coffin) Cheever,
6
�80), and the Browns (William, 42, English-born mariner, Sarah, 27) and the
Restells (John, 76, born in England, and Thomas, 26, a cigar maker).
Tragically, in 1850 James Kinsley fell desperately ill and became "so furiously
mad, as to render it manifestly dangerous to the peace and safety of the
community." His brother-in-law, Alexander Donaldson (husband of Lydia Kinsley),
petitioned that James be placed in the Lunatic Hospital at Worcester. The probate
court agreed, and the Sheriff, or Rev. James Thompson, was ordered to carry out
the order. James may have been able to return to Salem, where his death, by fits,
was recorded as occurring on July 26, 1852. His widow, Mahala, also died in
1852.
Salem's industrial growth continued through the 1850s, as business expanded,
the population swelled, new churches were built, new workingclass
neighborhoods were developed (especially at The Point, South Salem along
Lafayette Street, in North Salem, off Boston Street, and along the Mill Pond
behind the Broad Street graveyard); and new schools, factories, and stores were
erected. A second, even-larger factory building for the Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Company was added in 1859, down at Stage Point, where a new Methodist
Church went up in 1852; and many neat new homes, boarding-houses, and
stores lined the streets between Lafayette and Congress. The tanning business
continued to boom, as better and larger tanneries were built along Boston Street
and Mason Street; and subsidiary industries sprang up as well, most notably the
J.M. Anderson glue-works on the Turnpike (Highland Avenue).
As it re-established itself as an economic powerhouse, Salem took a strong
interest in national politics. It was primarily Republican, and strongly antislavery,
with its share of outspoken abolitionists, led by Charles Remand, a passionate
speaker who came from one of the city's leading black families. At its Lyceum (on
Church Street) and in other venues, plays and shows were put on, but cultural
lectures and political speeches were given too.
Per the 1855 census (h. 350Y this house was occupied by Jonathan S.
Temple, 45, cabinetmaker, wife Frances, 39, and children Howard, 15, and
infant Frances. This family would soon move to Gloucester.
It should be noted that the owner, Nathaniel Weston, was still residing in his
house overlooking the Common, at the head of Williams Street.
In the late 1850s (once it was renovated and enlarged) this house (#7) was
occupied by Capt. Edward Weston, a son of Nathaniel, and his family
members.
7
�Edward Weston (1825-1863) was a mariner at sixteen, sailing as a seaman (5' 2",
light complected) on board the brig "Rattler", Capt. John F. Webb, for Zanzibar,
departing Aug. 6, 1841. He made the same voyage in 1842 under Capt. John
Lambert. In 1845 he sailed on the bark "William Schroeder" for India; and in 1847
and 1848 he sailed on board the brig "Emily Wilder" on voyages to Zanzibar.
Edward Weston, 24, was first mate to Capt. Daniel H. Mansfield on board the brig
"Cherokee," bound for the East Indies, departing Salem on June 1, 1849.
Edward Weston became a shipmaster, perhaps sailing out of Boston. In 1856 he
married Angeline McKenzie (1833-1892), 23, daughter of Isabel (Hutchinson)
McKenzie, a native of Scotland, and her late husband Reuben, a Maine-born
Salem shipmaster. In 1857 the Westons had a son Edward S.
In 1860, this house was occupied by Capt. Edward Weston, 35, mariner, wife
Angeline, 27, son Edward, 3, and domestic Susan Bosman, 21, of Nova Scotia;
also by Angeline's mother Mrs. Isabella McKenzie, 62, and brother Roderick
McKenzie, 19, a mariner. Also living here were Joseph H. Millett Jr., a dealer in
hats in Boston, and his wife Isabella, another McKenzie daughter.
With the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, it was clear that the Southern
states would secede from the union; and Salem, which had done so much to win
the independence of the nation, was ready to go to war to force others to remain
a part of it.
The Civil War began in April, 1861, and went on for four years, during which
hundreds of Salem men served in the army and navy, and many were killed or
died of disease or abusive treatment while imprisoned. Hundreds more suffered
wounds, or broken health.
Capt. Edward Weston died in 1863, aged 37 years. He left his wife Angeline, 32,
and three young sons, Edward S., 8, Henry E., 4, and William H., 3, who lived
here with Isabella McKenzie, 68, and son Roderick, 25, mariner (1865 census,
h. 419).
During the war, the remaining leather workers went on strike against the owners
for a 10-hour workday, better pay, and improved working conditions. The strike
lasted for weeks, and was non-violent. At the end, the owners won and most of
the men went back to work.
As to the men in uniform, the people of Salem contributed generously to efforts
to alleviate the suffering of the soldiers, sailors, and their families; and there was
great celebration when the war finally ended in the spring of 1865.
8
�Through the 1860s, Salem pursued manufacturing, especially of leather and
shoes and textiles. The managers and capitalists tended to build their new,
grand houses along Lafayette Street (these houses may still be seen, south of
Holly Street; many are in the French Second Empire style, with mansard roofs).
Factory workers lived in smaller houses and tenements.
In 1868, Nathaniel Weston died. By his will, this house evidently stayed in trust
for the benefit of his widow and other family members, no doubt including his
widow Christiana, 73, and his three fatherless grandsons here. Their mother
was well-provided-for. In 1870 (per census, h. 380) the occupants were Mrs.
"Anna" Weston, 37, with $17,000 in r.e. and $40,000 in p.e., with sons Edward,
13, Henry, ten, and William 8, also her mother Mrs. Isabella McKenzie, 73.
In 1870 Salem received its last cargo from Zanzibar. By then, a new Salem &
New York freight steamboat line was in operation. Seven years later, with the
arrival of a vessel from Cayenne, Salem's foreign trade came to an end. After
that, "the merchandise warehouses on the wharves no longer contained silks
from India, tea from China, pepper from Sumatra, coffee from Arabia, spices
from Batavia, gum-copal from Zanzibar, hides from Africa, and the various other
products of far-away countries. The boys have ceased to watch on the Neck for
the incoming vessels, hoping to earn a reward by being the first to announce to
the expectant merchant the safe return of his looked-for vessel. The foreign
commerce of Salem, once her pride and glory, has spread its white wings and
sailed away forever" (Rev. George Bachelder in History of Essex County, II: 65).
Salem continued to prosper, carried forward by the leather-making business. In
1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor earthquake. In the
followtng year, the large Pennsylvania Pier (site of the present coal-fired
harborside electrical generating plant) was completed to begin receiving large
shipments of coal, most of it shipped by rail to the factories on the Merrimack. In
the neck of land beyond the Pier, a new owner began subdividing the old Allen
farmlands into a development called Salem Willows and Juniper Point. In the
U.S. centennial year, 1876, A. G. Bell of Salem announced that he had
discovered a way to transmit voices over telegraph wires.
Mrs. Christiana (Waters) Weston, Nathaniel's widow, died in April, 1877. There
was a lawsuit involving family members in 1878. As a result, in November,
1878, trustees under the will of Nathaniel Weston conveyed to Lawrence W.
Jenkins one-half undivided ofthe real estate bounded e. on
9
�Williams Street, s. on land willed to Weston's widow, w. on now/late land of Estes
and Ruee, and n. on land of the late Daniel Perkins (ED 1013:8). It was subject to
the right of Angeline Weston under the will, and of Charles T. Jenkins (father of
Lawrence, whose mother was Lucy Weston Jenkins, a daughter of Nathaniel
Weston), and the trustees under the will.
In this decade, large numbers of French-Canadian families came to work in
Salem's mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The
better-off workers bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their
families in the outlying sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam
Cotton mills would employ 1500 people (including hundreds of children) and
produce annually nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Shoemanufacturing businesses
expanded in the 1870s, and 40 shoe factories were employing 600-plus
operatives. Tanning, in both Salem and Peabody, remained a very important
industry, and employed hundreds of breadwinners. On Boston Street in 1879, the
Arnold tannery caught fire and burned down.
In 1879 Mrs. Angeline (McKenzie) Weston married, second, Charles T. Jenkins
(1823-1885), who had married, first, her sister-in-law Lucy D. Weston
(1834-1874), with whom he had a son Lawrence Jenkins. The Jenkinses resided
at then-129 Essex Street in 1880 (per census). It should be noted that Angeline's
eldest son, Edward Stanley Weston, was a graduate of Harvard in 1879. In 1882
he and a chum, L. A. Plumer, went to Europe to make a Grand Tour; but Edward
died in London of typhoid.
After 1877, the house was rented out to non-Weston tenants. In 1880, per
Directory, Josephine J. Mahers lived here. In the 1880s the occupants were
Frederick S. Poor and his family, he being a principal of Buffum, Poor & Co.,
livery stablers, at then-23 Brown Street (per Directory).
In the 1880s and 1890s, Salem kept building infrastructure; and new
businesses arose, and established businesses expanded. Retail stores
prospered; horse-drawn trolleys ran every which-way; and machinists,
carpenters, millwrights, and other specialists all thrived. In 1880, Salem's
manufactured goods were valued at about $8.4 million, of which leather
accounted for nearly half.
In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the
manufacturers for a ten-hour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers
imported labor from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out,
and there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners prevailed,
and many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their families,
through a bitter winter.
10
�By the mid-1880s, Salem's cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed 1400 people
who produced about 19 million yards annually, worth about $1.5 million. The
city's large shoe factories stood downtown behind the stone depot and on Dodge
and Lafayette Streets. A jute bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry
Street and English Street; its products were sent south to be used in
cotton-baling. Salem factories also produced lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern
Railroad yard on Bridge Street, cars were repaired and even built new. In 1887
the streets were first lit with electricity, replacing gas-light.
Note: In June, 1897, the trustees under the will of Nathaniel Weston sold the
former Nathaniel Weston homestead, fronting on Washington Square
(formerly Brown Street) 57.8' and running 166.8' down Williams Street.
In the 1890s, the house was tenanted by Albert A. Blossom, a traveling
salesman, and family (per Directories). The Blossoms were here until 1899.
In 1900 (per census) the house was occupied by Arthur Quincy, 35, a native of
New Hampshire, working as a bookkeeper at Merchants Bank, Boston; his family
consisted of wife Maud, 29, and sons Lyman, 6, and Josiah, 3. They resided here
for some years.
More factories and more people required more space for buildings, more roads,
and more storage areas. This space was created by filling in rivers, harbors, and
ponds. The once-broad North River was filled from both shores, and became a
canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill
Pond, which occupied the whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue,
Canal Street, and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage
areas, junk-yards, rail-yards, and parking lots. The South River, too, with its
epicenter at Central Street (the Custom House had opened there in 1805)
disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza and New Derby Street, and
some of its old wharves were joined together with much in-fill and turned into
coal-yards and lumber-yards. Only a canal was left, running in from Derby and
Central Wharves to Lafayette Street.
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th century by
large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who settled primarily in the
Derby Street neighborhood, and by Sicilians, in the High Street neighborhood.
By the eve of World War One, the bustling, polyglot city supported large
department stores and factories of every description. People from the
surrounding towns, and Marblehead in particular, came to Salem to do their
shopping; and its handsome government buildings, as befit the county seat,
were busy with conveyances of land, lawsuits, and
1
1
�probate proceedings. The city's politics were lively, and its economy was
strong.
In 1910 the house was vacant for a while.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street at Proctor), a
fire started in small wooden shoe factory. This fire soon raced out of control, for
the west wind was high and the season had been dry. Out of Blubber Hollow the
fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out the houses
of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping
through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men and
machines could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and
destroyed the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the
mansions of Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the tenement district of
The Point. Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and
cities, the fire overwhelmed everything in its path: the Naumkeag Steam Cotton
Company factory complex exploded in an inferno. At Derby Street, just beyond
Union, after a 13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed 250 acres,
1600 houses, and 41 factories, and leaving three dead and thousands homeless.
Some people had insurance, some did not; all received much support and
generous donations from all over the country and the world. It was one of the
greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States.
In September, 1914, the trustee under the will of Nathaniel Weston for $9000
sold John Ganey of Peabody "the double brick dwelling house now numbered
7 and 9" on Williams Street, bounded east on Williams Street, north on land of
now/late Cousins and formerly of Ray, etc. (ED 2272:419). The lot's
dimensions were not described in feet and inches.
By 1916 #7 was occupied by James E. Fitzgerald and family. Mrs. Mary J.
Fitzgerald was a daughter of the owner, John Ganey. James was a druggist
with a store at then-169 Essex Street. In 1920 he was 53, his wife Mary J., SO,
and their children here were Catherine V., 18, James E., 16, and Geraldine, 12.
In January, 1917, John Ganey sold the unit #7 to his daughter, Mary
Josephine Fitzgerald (ED 2356:576).
Many years later, in 1946, Dolores E. Labrie acquired the property (ED
3444:535, etc.).
1
2
�Glossary & Sources
A figure like (ED 123:45} refers to book 123, page 45, Essex South Registry of
Deeds.
A figure like (#1234S) refers to Essex Probate case 12345, on file at the Essex
Probate Court, or on microfilm at Mass. Archives, Boston, or at the Peabody
Essex Museum's Phillips Library, Rowley.
MSSRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers & Sailors in the
Revolutionary War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
MSSCRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers, Sailors, &
Marines in the Civil War, at the Salem Public Library among other places.
EIHC refers to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (discontinued), a
multi-volume set (first volume published in 1859} of data and articles about
Essex County. The indices of the EIHC have been consulted regarding many
of the people associated with this house.
Salem Crew Lists (SCL}, online at Mystic Seaport website.
The six-volume published salem Vital Records (marriages, births, and deaths
through 1849} have been consulted, and the Salem Directory and later
Naumkeag Directory, with data about residents and their addresses, etc.
Sidney Perley's three-volume History of Salem, 1626-1716, has been
consulted, as has the four-volume William Bentley's Diary, J. Duncan
Phillips' books, some newspapers, and other sources.
Salem real estate valuations, and, where applicable, Salem Street Books,
have also been consulted, as have genealogies.
There is much more material available about Salem and its history; and the
reader is encouraged to make his or her own discoveries.
-Public History Services
1
3
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Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System
Scanned Record Cover Page
•invent6r{No: ..
i,.
Historic Name:
·::-.
SAL.2402
Common Name:
Address:
7-9 Williams
St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood: Salem Common
Local No:
35-164
Year Constructed:
c 1837
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Greek Revival
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HW: Salem Common Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'I Register District (05/12/1976)
Building Materials(s):
Wall: Brick; Wood; Stone, Cut
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing projects to
scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth apd National Register of Historic Places nominations for
Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to this resource may be available in
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Massachusetts Historical Commission
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This file was accessed on: Sunday, September 8, 2019 at 1 :02: PM
�•
FORM B - BUILDING
. Sr-h .240 2.
AREA ! : , .,J
FORM NO.
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--·-·-------------------C
'l-9 Williams Bt. ·-~rfc
------------
Name
Present HA Fri dn:ntin1
Orfgfnal Residential
~RIPTION
~ _ j);y 1837.
tee Ci tv Di:i~ecto1•itrn !
Exterior Wall Fabric
Outbuildings
\
Condition
\
\
o\
1\
f-\ '(-.')
' .
·1- ~
(....\
\
\
..
... ~'P
~ ll<..-£M
---
Brick
-------.....
Major Alterations (with dates)
V\Jl(..C.-(AM.i '::.JI
--- ....
-----
-...i..i.='--------------
Moved ________________ Date _________________ _
Under 4 acre
Acreage
Setting Be~,; denti aJ v 11-rban
( 0 JVl/rl,(){'J
UlM REFERENCE _____________________________________________ _
USGS QUADRANGLE
_________________________________ _
SCALE _______________________________________ _
Recorded by Debra Hilbert 8.-. Ki.m ·withers
Brengle Organization ,Salem PJ ;uminr.i: Ikmt.
~ · -~ 0_-_, _E_1r7·
Date :tlPJ:i.:.,.1_, ~ _
\,
·.·
.•.
(
.··
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C
~'J i j •"I
:.)/ /, • 1~-·1·1.h ..•
NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA STATEMENT (if applicable)
Oont.r-Lbutring building in existing Na ti oneI Heci..r::.iter dI strict.
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE Describe important architectural features and evaluate in terms of other buildings
within the corrmunity.
This structures is a fine example of a Greek Revival brick double house. While not numerous in
Sa Lem, variations of this type can be found in this and other neighborhoods (39-41 Washington
Square North, 5-9 Summer St., 2-4 Chestnut St.). Symmetrically arranged, the house has a gable
roof and six-bay facade. The two recessed entries
are located at the center of the building, each with 4-panel doors, full-length sidelights,
transoms, and stone lintels. The windows also have stone lintels as
well as sills. Another feature is the dentiled cornice. Altogether the structure
is restrained, yet elegant in its simplicity.
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE Explain the role owners played in local or state history and how the building
relates to the development of the conmunity.
Williarns __ Street was opened .fromthe .. Common to ... Bridg_e __ ~treet. :in 1796~y Captain
lt~P.rL.W.;i.lliams tti.I.'...QJJg_b_J,§,_lJ.g___Jb.~l..h~ .. QWP.~Q.. The street developed rapidly with at
least five ___ houses buil t ... bY 1800., .. and.several others .. movEtd there. . This double
house appears to date from the 1830s, and was occupied in 1837 by James Kinsl'ey, mariner, Benjamin
Stone, mason, and Lydi Kinsley. Still occupied by Stone, in 1851 the hQ.use_was .. owned __ by
mer•chant .. NathanieLWe;:iton., a merchant who lived at 21 Washington Square North at the corner of
Williams Street. We.s..t..on..! . .s. .... l:!e.ir._~ st:i.11_ »J-1ned7-.9 W;ill.iaml:l street in. 187A •- ...
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Ci.t;y Directories, 1B37
18.51 Map
1874 Atlas
te,
'I'o'ILe a Br'v arrt Ii'. Are hi tectu:re.i n Da1.em: An IJJ uat.r-at cd Guirfo • .G.:,lem.: Er:w0.x
In13tJ. tu
"I 9g3·: p. ·1 L/..
··-··-·- _ , .. .. _______ ..... _ --··-···---·--·····
8/85
�11.,11,,~v1:,,
Edward Weston ( 1825-1863) - Find A Grave Memorial
Added by: RememberMe on 18 Oct 2019
hllps://www.tindagrave.com/memorial/2039561461/view-photo= 194257054
1/
1
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Williams Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
7 Williams Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Nathaniel Weston
Merchant
1856
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1856
House History Written: Dec. 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy Kellett & Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1856
2019
7/Williams Street
Massachusetts
merchant
Salem
Weston
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/0f8e1b99a7ad5d67777388e9626ad85b.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=rIaaNFrF9MJ0MUWMrwAs%7EsAB%7EnQAJ%7E1qLqETgRkedqCExZ5A4svLfaKRsIZXgKZzzdWCfe6xytMCJEC1TTZtyolnks4lk2QEmD0ZLfs%7EFPryomlMuMC-Duwo2iswERE94V08Rjh-0VqB64ofshbOgR-LnRlZ%7EG3X%7EBiE37FA2o8rKtnE9fjCMMP5I3rWKWAyrM7MFtJzm4JIxqNo-F1Vee-ZIBWTfJBWgKhwq4lNmVhtWMWuS1Ynqthoe6W%7EoF0DJGLTV%7EZaRGAmN5n7SfkWTwRqlAgeGoaZ-Qu0cLt-2m62V9ZTenugmgW69d6Z8HUF4RPZwXV-7fsNVV5-GouipA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e44a771b29cd799d0d52a8f1172099fd
PDF Text
Text
118 North Street
Built for
Joseph Baldwin
Carpenter
& the Misses Baldwin
Harriet B. & Caroline Baldwin
Bookkeepers
c.1841
Research Provided by
Amy Kellett
2020
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2020
�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
118 NORTH ST. SALEM, MASS.
SUGGESTED HISTORIC PLAQUE TEXT:
Joseph Baldwin
c.1841
Carpenter
OPTIONAL PLAQUE DETAILS:
the Misses Baldwin
Harriet B. & Caroline Baldwin
Bookkeepers
CHAIN OF TITLE (DEEDS) — SOUTHERN ESSEX CO. REGISTRY OF DEEDS
1. 1840 — Book 318; Page 85 — Gorham BURNHAM to Joseph BALDWIN
2. 1940 — Book 3221; Page 450 — Est. of Harriet B. BALDWIN to Francis G. &
Ruth G. HAYWARD
3. 1976 — Book 6302; Page 618 — Francis G. HAYWARD to (daughter) Ruth G.
HAYWARD
4. 2001 — Book 16930; Page 81 — Ruth G. HAYWARD to Caroline LUCAS
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�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
The Greek Revival home now numbered 118 North Street was built between 1840
and 1842, but the story of the property begins decades earlier with the house
located on the adjoining property, 120 North Street, on the corner of North and
Osborne Streets in Salem, Massachusetts.
1851 Salem, Mass. Map — North Street
Between ‘Mechanic’ and ’N. Flint’ Streets (now ‘Osborne’ and ‘Foster’) — L. Baldwin &
J. Baldwin — Loammi & Joseph Baldwin Homes, now 120 & 118 North St. (respectively)
The older of the two homes, (on the corner of North and Osborne Streets) stands
as an example of the late-Georgian Style which was prominent in New England
from the early-to-mid 18th century through the American Revolution (variations
of the Georgian building traditions survived in vernacular examples through the
early 19th century). Loammi Baldwin (1773-1851), a carpenter, moved from
Tewksbury, Massachusetts to Salem, purchased land in the 'Northfields’, now
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�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
North Salem, from Samuel Symonds in May of 1797, and set to work building a
home for himself and future family. Upon his marriage in 1799 to Salem native,
Sarah Swan (1778-1864), the couple lived in the Georgian home on the corner of
North and Osborne Streets and raised eight children (born over the course of
twenty years): Loammi Baldwin, Jr. (1799-1874), Sally Baldwin (1800-1867), Mary
Baldwin (1803-1887), Joseph Baldwin (1805-1867) Benjamin Baldwin (1807-1886),
Emeline A. Baldwin (1816-1885), Ebenezer S. Baldwin (1816-1862), and Annie M.
Baldwin (1819-1885).
Joseph, the Baldwin’s fourth child and second boy followed in his father’s
professional footsteps and became a trained carpenter. In 1840, at the age of 34,
Joseph Baldwin purchased the lot adjacent to his father’s home and built the
more modern Greek Revival home which now stands at 118 North Street.
[…] I, Gorham Burnham1 of Gloucester […] victualler,
in consideration of Four hundred dollars to me in
hand paid by Joseph Baldwin of Salem […] do hereby
give, grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said
Joseph Baldwin, and his heirs and assigns forever,
Two certain Lots of land situated in said Salem: The
first lying in North Fields, so called, and bounded
Westerly on the Main Road leading to Danvers forty
two feet & six inches; Northerly on land of Sally the
wife of Loammi Baldwin Eighty three feet; Easterly on
land now or late of Jonathan M. Farnham forty feet &
Southerly on heirs or assigns of James Symonds,
deceased, Eighty three feet […] The other lot
adjoining, is bounded fronting Northerly on the Road
or lane leading from North Street to the River by
Stephen Osborns house, there measuring forty feet,
Easterly on land of William P. Symonds, & extending
Southerly to the land of the heirs of James Symonds,
then bounding Southerly on said heirs forty feet,
then Northerly bounding Westerly on land of Sarah
Swan to the bounds on the land aforesaid […]2
Gorham Burnham (1799-1878); husband of Sally Baldwin (1800-1867); Son-in-Law of Loammi Baldwin, (1773-1851); Brother-in-Law of
Joseph Baldwin (1805-1867)
1
2
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds; Book 318: Page 85
3
�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
The following excerpts found in Virginia & Lee McAlester’s text, A Field Guide to
American Architecture, elaborate on the provenance, occurrence, details, and
elaborations that define the Greek Revival Style:
By the 1840s, a new trend toward competition among several acceptable
architectural fashions was taking shape. The harbinger of this movement
was the publication in 1842 of the first popular pattern book of house
styles with full-facade drawings—Andrew Jackson Downing’s Cottage
Residences. Downing illustrated several new fashions he considered
suitable alternatives to the prevailing Greek classicism.
Original Print of Andrew Jackson Downing’s ‘Cottage Residences
and Cottage Grounds’ — Published in 1842
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�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
Greek Revival was the dominant style of American domestic architecture
during the interval from about 1830 to 1850, during which its popularity
led it to be called the National Style.
The final years of the 18th century brought an increasing interest in
classical buildings to both the United States and western Europe. This
was first based on Roman models, but archeological investigation in the
early 19th century emphasized Greece as the Mother of Rome, which, in
turn, shifted interest to Grecian models. Two additional factors enhanced
Greek influence in this country. Greece’s involvement in a war for
independence (1821–1832) aroused much sympathy in the newly
independent United States; at the same time, the War of 1812
diminished American affection for British influence, including the still
dominant Federal style in domestic architecture.
Most domestic examples date from the period from 1830 to 1860.
Among the earliest was a Greek remodeling of the Custis-Lee House in
Arlington, Virginia, completed in 1820. The style was spread by
carpenter’s guides and pattern books, the most influential of which were
written by Asher Benjamin (The Practical House Carpenter; The Builder’s
Guide) and Minard Lafever (The Modern Builder’s Guide; The Beauties of
Modern Architecture). These illustrated building details rather than views
of overall houses.
The wide band of trim beneath the cornice of both the main roof and the
porch roofs is an almost universal feature of Greek Revival houses.
Commonly the band is made up of undecorated boards, but complex
incised decorations also occur. In gabled houses the trim band may be
variously treated along the gabled walls.
As in the preceding Georgian, Federal, and Early Classical Revival styles,
elaborated door surrounds are a dominant feature of Greek Revival
houses. The door itself is either single or paired and is most frequently
divided into one, two, or four panels. The door is usually surrounded on
sides and top by a narrow band of rectangular panes of glass held in a
delicate, decorative frame.3
Joseph Baldwin’s purchase of land and subsequent home construction coincided
with Jackson Downing’s publication of Cottage Residences, no doubt which
influenced the design of the early Greek Revival home, then numbered 64½
3
McAlester, Virginia & Lee. A Field Guide to American Houses: Colonial Houses: Greek Revival
5
�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
North Street, in 1842. Shortly after the home was finished, Joseph Baldwin met,
courted, and married Salem native Sarah L. Hood, daughter of James and Sally
Hood. The newlywed Joseph and Sarah L. Baldwin welcomed two daughters in
the years to come: Harriet B. Baldwin on May 30th, 1850, and Caroline Baldwin,
born in December of 1852. Joseph, Sarah, Harriet and Caroline Baldwin lived a
modest but comfortable life on North Street through the mid-19th century,
residing adjacent to family on either side.
1846 Salem City Directory — Page 10
Three Baldwin brothers, Ebenezer S. (cordwainer) at 66 North; Joseph (carpenter)
at 64½ North, and Loammi, Jr. (farmer) at 72 North St.
When the property at 118 North was constructed in the early part of the 1840s,
Salem was in flux — the Town had officially become a City in 1836, and the
economy, once supported by the booming maritime trade of earlier decades,
had waned sharply since the 1820s. Long-established traditions of trade for
Salem natives, such as rope-making, sail-making, and other maritime occupations
gradually declined and eventually disappeared altogether. To the North, the
falling waters of the Merrimack River powered new textile mills in Lowell,
Massachusetts (incorporated 1823), and later mills in Manchester, New
Hampshire (incorporated 1846), and Lawrence, Massachusetts (incorporated
1847). A handful of Salem capitalists saw potential of manufacturing in Salem and
established various types of mills throughout Salem, including cotton sheeting,
leather tanning, lead mills, and other production plants. As the 1830s wore on,
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�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
Salem’s remaining merchants took their equity out of wharves, warehouses and
ships, instead investing their remaining fortunes into manufacturing and
transportation, as the advent of railroads and canals diverted both capital and
trade away from the coast. Salem’s leaders struggled to rebuild an economy that
was sustainable for the City’s population, and the changing dynamics of life in the
late 1830s forced Salem to start anew. By 1838, the Eastern Railroad (then
headquartered in Salem began transporting people and goods between Boston
and Salem, giving the local population a direct route to New England’s largest
market. New railroad tracks ran over the middle of the Mill Pond; the tunnel
under Washington Street built in 1839; and in 1840 the line extended to
Newburyport.
1850 Salem City Directory
City History Summary, Population Changes, & Ward Boundaries
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�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
As a carpenter, Joseph Baldwin no doubt had a hand in constructing the rapidly
developing urban landscape of Salem’s earliest years as an incorporated city. The
1840s proved to be a decade of explosive growth in Salem’s population and
industry, including leather, textile manufacturing, and the like. In 1847 the world’s
largest steam-powered cotton factory building was completed along the innerharbor shoreline of Salem: the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company. Thousands
moved to Salem’s newly developing neighborhoods from throughout New
England, as well as a large influx of Irish immigrants fleeing the potato famine,
and a developing French Canadian population in South Salem.
In 1867 Joseph Baldwin passed away from a ‘Disease of the Stomach’ at the age
of 61 leaving a widow, 53-year-old Sarah L. Baldwin, and two teenage daughters,
Harriet B., then aged 17, and Caroline, aged 15. The Widow and Two Misses
Baldwin remained living in the Greek Revival home on the easterly side of North
Street.
More factories and more people required more space for buildings, more roads,
and more storage areas. This space was created by filling in rivers, harbors, and
ponds. The once-broad North River was filled from both shores, and became a
canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill
Pond, which occupied the whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue,
Canal Street, and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage areas,
junk-yards, rail-yards, and parking lots. The South River also disappeared under
the pavement of Riley Plaza and New Derby Street, and some of its old wharves
were joined together with much in-fill and subsequently turned into coal-yards
and lumber-yards.
8
�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
While the home now standing at 118 North Street witnessed the rapid
industrialization that took place in Salem, the residents therein participated fully
in the changing culture and dynamics during the second half of the 19th century.
The Widow Baldwin’s mother, Sarah Hood, lived with her daughter and two
granddaughters. The Misses Baldwin, Harriet and Caroline, finished their
education and entered the work force, making them among the first women in
Salem with an occupation and place of work listed by their names in the City
Directory. Historic records indicate that both young ladies went to work by the
ages of 18 and 20; in the 1870 US Federal Census, both are listed as ‘Book
Keeper[s] in Store’. Neither of the Misses Baldwin ever chose to marry (nor did
the Widow Baldwin ever remarry), instead the young ladies chose to build
careers for themselves with Almy, Bigelow, & Webber, located by that time at 188
Essex Street in Downtown Salem.
1875 Boston Globe Advertisement
Almy, Bigelow & Webber advertising
their recently renovated store space
at 188 Essex Street, which had been
the store’s location since c.1860,
where it remained in business until
1985.
9
�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
The Misses Baldwin’s employer, James F. Almy, had opened the original Almy’s
location in Salem at the end of 1854. A 1908 publication recalling the first halfcentury of business at 188 Essex Street, the Proprietor is described as a pillar of
the community during the latter half of the 19th century in the City of Salem:
He was always ready to recognize ability in others, and by his advice,
encouragement and practical assistance led many young men and
women toward success in life.
He loved Salem and had great faith in her future. So much so,
that he turned away from opportunities for success elsewhere, and by
self-sacrifice and constant effort built up a business remarkable in size
and strength for a city of the population of Salem.
But not only as a merchant was he loyal to the city. He was active
in advancing her prosperity in many ways. In 1867 he with two associates
bought the Derby estate of more than a hundred acres in South Salem
from the heirs of Elias Haskett Derby, the famous ship owner. This
immense estate he laid out in streets and house lots which he offered for
sale.
c.1908 Photo | 188 Essex St. Salem, Mass.
Almy, Bigelow & Washburn (formerly Webber)
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�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
The bringing into the market of this tract of unproductive and
unimproved property was a great stimulus in the buying of land and
building of homes in that section of the city. It brought new residents to
Salem, enlarged the city, increased its beauty and added greatly to the
amount of taxes to flow into its treasury.4
Eventually, Almy, Bigelow & Webber (which became Almy, Bigelow & Washburn
after 1885) opened four other department store locations outside of the City, and
offices in Switzerland, Germany, England and New York City, all while maintaining
and growing the original Almy’s location in Salem.
Harriet B. Baldwin and Caroline Baldwin began working for Almy’s department
store shortly after their father, Joseph Baldwin, passed in 1867. It is of significant
note that these two young, single women worked and supported themselves (as
well as their aging mother and grandmother) in the latter half of the 19th century
and into the first decades of the 1900s.
1870 US Federal Census | Ward 6, Salem, Essex, Massachusetts
Household number 486 marks 118 North Street — the Widows Mrs. Hood & Mrs.
Baldwin, as well as the Misses Harriet & Caroline Baldwin, Bookkeepers
4
1908 Publication. Almy, Bigelow & Washburn: Fifty Years 1858-1908, Digital Commons at Salem State University
11
�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
Sarah 'Sally' Hood, maternal grandmother to Harriet B. & Caroline Baldwin, and
mother of the Widow Baldwin lived to the age of 86, passing away from an
influenza infection exacerbated by the cold winter months in January of 1879.
The Widow Baldwin, Sarah L., remained living in the home at 118 North Street for
fifteen more years after the passing of her mother, herself dying in March of 1895
of 'paralysis of [the] brain'. The Baldwin Sisters worked their way up through the
bookkeeping department at Almy, Bigelow, & Washburn at 188 Essex Street, and
by the beginning of the 20th century Harriet B. Baldwin is listed in the Salem City
Directory as the department store’s head bookkeeper.
c.1908 Photograph — 'Employees of Almy, Bigelow & Washburn, Inc.'
For the celebration of the company’s 50th anniversary, the employees of the
downtown department store posed for a group portrait. Undoubtedly pictured
(but not identified) are the Baldwin Sisters, Harriet and Caroline.
Caroline Baldwin passed away, unmarried and childless, at the age of 73 in 1925
— her older sister Harriet had retired some ten years before and remained living
in the home at 118 North Street, while also renting the house to other single
women, including widows and fatherless daughters. Harriet Baldwin lived to the
12
�Historic Property Report
118 North St. Salem, Mass.
A. Kellett — 2020
age of 89, passing away on the 26th of June, 1939, at which point her estate
passed to the Sisters’ relatives on their father’s side, siblings Roger F. Nichols
(1881-1966) and Marion W. Nichols (1883-1978). The circumstances regarding the
property at 118 North Street and a portion of the Baldwin’s history is detailed in
an affidavit recorded in 1940 with the Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds:
[…]I, Marion W. Nichols of 153 Federal Street, Salem
[…] do on oath depose and say that I am the grandniece of Joseph Baldwin, who purchased the property
situate at 118 North Street in said Salem from Gorham
Burnham by deed dated April 10, 1840 […] I know from
my own knowledge and from family records that the
said Joseph Baldwin died in Salem December 5, 1867;
that he left a widow, Sarah L. Baldwin, and two
daughters, Caroline and Harriet B. Baldwin, as his
only heirs at law; that Sarah L. Baldwin died March
21, 1894 never having remarried, and leaving as her
only heirs at law the said Caroline Baldwin and
Harriet B. Baldwin; that Caroline Baldwin died March
22, 1925 never having married, and leaving has her
only heir at law the said Harriet B. Baldwin; that
the said Harriet B. Baldwin died June 26, 1939 and
her estate has been probated […] Harriet B. Baldwin
at the time of her death was the sole owner of the
premises situate at 118 North Street in said Salem.5
Recorded on the same day, husband and wife Francis G. & Ruth G. Hayward
purchased the property for twenty-five hundred dollars through the Executor of
Harriet B. Baldwin’s estate, Roger F. Nichols. For the first time since the property
was built a century earlier in 1840, the home at 118 North Street no longer
belonged to the Baldwin family. The house evidently proved to be a comfortable
home for the Hayward family too, as it remained in the family through the
remainder of the 20th century until it was finally sold in 2001 to Caroline Lucas.
5
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds; Book 3221: Page 449
13
�
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Title
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North Street
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Title
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118 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Joseph Baldwin
Carpenter
& the Misses Baldwin
Harriet B. & Caroline Baldwin
Bookkeepers
c.1841
Creator
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Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
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Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
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Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
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Built: c. 1841
House History Written: 2020
Contributor
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Amy Kellett
Language
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English
118/North Street
1841
2020
Baldwin
Bookkeepers
Carpenter
Massachusetts
Salem
-
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PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
13 ½ Meadow Street
Built for
Charles R. Banks,
machinist, and
Mary Mccusker, wife
1898
Research Provided by
Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc.
January 2020
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 j HistoricSalem.org
©2020
�Owners & Occupants
13½ Meadow Street, Salem
By Robert Booth, Public History Services Inc., January, 2020.
According to available evidence, this house was built in 1898 for machinist
Charles R. Banks and wife Mary Mccusker.
In April, 1894, Mary Lavery granted to Mary, wife of Charles R. Banks, of Salem,
a lot fronting 50' on Meadow Street, being formerly Lot 146 in the division of the
E. H. Derby estate (ED 1407:295). Her husband James Lavery had acquired it
in 1883 (ED 1115:152).
Charles Richard Banks (1864 .. 1925) was born in Annapolis, Nova Scotia, in
1864, the son of William Henry Banks and Phoebe J. Coombs. Charles was
among the eldest oftwelve children. Charles immigrated to the United States in
1888 and settled in Salem. He worked as a machinist and on April 27, 1893,
married Mary J. Mccusker of Salem.
Mary was born in Ireland, the daughter of John and Sarah Mccusker, who came to
Salem by 1870 with their family. John died in 1871, leaving Sarah with the care of
Patrick, Mary, Margaret, and Ellen, aged 17 to 11. Mary worked as a dressmaker
by 1880; her brother Patrick J. Mccusker became a lawyer; the McCuskers resided
at 2 Laurel Street in 1880 (see 1880 census, h. 222). Later Patrick J. Mccusker
would purchase the house at 15 Meadow Street.
In Salem, the McCuskers found a city (once an important seaport) that was a
thriving manufacturing and transportation center. The largest textile factory was
that of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company, at the foot of Harbor Street, on the
Point; but the major employer was the leather industry, whose factories and
tanneries lined Boston Street and Mason Street, near the Broadley house.
Salem was carried forward by manufacturing leather and shoes and textiles. The
managers and capitalists tended to build their new, grand houses along
Lafayette Street (these houses may still be seen, south of Holly Street; many are
in the French Second Empire style, with mansard roofs).
In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor earthquake. In
the U. S. centennial year, 1876, A. G. Bell of Salem announced that he had
discovered a way to transmit voices over telegraph wires.
�In this decade, large numbers of French-Canadian families came to work in
Salem's mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The
better-off workers bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their
families in the outlying sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam
Cotton mills would employ 1500 people (including hundreds of children) and
produce annually nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Forty shoe factories were
employing 600-plus operatives. Tanning, in both Salem and Peabody, remained
a very important industry, and employed hundreds of breadwinners. On Boston
Street in 1879, the Arnold tannery caught fire and burned down.
Salem kept building infrastructure; and new businesses arose, and established
businesses expanded. Retail stores thrived; horse-drawn trolleys ran every
which-way; and rnachlnlsts, carpenters, millwrights, and other specialists all
thrived. In 1880, Salem's manufactured goods were valued at about $8.4 million,
of which leather accounted for nearly half.
By the mid-1880s, Salem's cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed 1400 people
who produced about 19 million yards annually, worth about $1.5 million. The
city's large shoe factories stood downtown behind the stone depot and on Dodge
and Lafayette Streets, and off Jefferson Avenue near St. Anne's Church. A jute
bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry Street and English Street; its
products were sent south to be used in cottonbaling. Salem factories also
produced lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern Railroad yard on Bridge Street, cars
were repaired and even built new.
In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the
manufacturers for a ten-hour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers
imported labor from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out,
and there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners prevailed,
and many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their
families-through a bitter winter.
In 1887 the streets were first lit with electricity, replacing gas. The gas works,
which had stood on Northey Street since 1850, was moved to a larger site on
Bridge Street in 1888, opposite the Beverly Shore.
This was the point at which Charles R. Banks arrived from Nova Scotia.
More factories and more people required more space for buildings, more roads,
and more storage areas. This space was created by filling in rivers, harbors, and
ponds. The once-broad North River was filled from both shores, and became a
canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill
Pond, which occupied the whole area between the present
2
�Jefferson Avenue, Canal Street, and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath
streets, storage areas, junk-yards, rail-yards, and parking lots. The South River,
too, with its epicenter at Central Street (the Custom House had opened there in
1805) disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza and New Derby Street,
and some of its old wharves were joined together with much in-fill and turned into
coal-yards and lumber-yards. Only a canal was left, running in from Derby and
Central Wharves to Lafayette Street.
In 1894 the rest of the Banks family moved to Salem from Nova Scotia. Among
them was Henry E. Banks (1867-1953), who soon found work as a foreman at
the Forest River Lead Works. At that time Charles R. Banks was working as a
machinist. Charles soon joined Henry as a foreman at the Lead Works, a
complex that straddled the Forest River in Salem-Marblehead, at the head of
Salem Harbor.
Charles and Mary would have two children: Sarah E., born in July, 1894, and
James J., born in April, 1898. The family was Roman Catholic, the religion in which
Mary had been raised. At first they resided at 13 Meadow Street, their home
through 1897 (per Directory).
On the back of the lot, the Bankses had a new house built in _______ as their
new residence (#13½). The house on the front of the lot (#13) was rented to
tenants.
VALUATION
On Dec. 1, 1898, the Bankses took out a mortgage with the Salem Five for
$1000 (ED 1564:455).
In the 1899 Directory, we see Charles R. Banks, machinist, head of a household
residing at "rear 13 Meadow." In the 1901 Directory he is again identified as a
foreman at the Lead Works (as was brother Henry Banks, who lived in
Marblehead). The rest of the Banks family then lived at 33 Hazel Street, except for
the father William Henry Banks (1841-1916) who resided in Marblehead and
worked as a laborer.
In the 1900 census (house 29, ward five), we find Charles R. Banks, 37, at "13 rear
Meadow." He was working as a machinist. Mary J. was 41; Sarah was five and
James two. Charles continued to work as a machinist and foreman at the Lead
Works. His mother and most of his sisters moved to Lynn (1905). Charles
prospered, and he and Mary acquired more property in Salem, including (in 1907)
three lots on Hazel & Roslyn Streets.
3
�In 1910 the family resided here (13½) per the census (h. 343, ward 5):
Charles, 47, had become a painter, with his own art shop; Mary was 49, Sarah
15, and James 12. Charles' mother, Phoebe, 67, resided in Lynn with her
daughters Nettie, Wealthy, Helen, Ruth, and Louise, all working in sales
(census).
In 1910 and 1911 (per Directories) Charles was identified as working as a
machinist; but he was also a painter. In 1911-12 the family moved to then-11
Roslyn Street (per Directories): in 1912 Charles was identified as a machinist, in
1913 a painter.
The family did not return to 13½ Meadow Street, which, in 1913, was rented to
Elmer 0. Stanchfield, who kept a grocery store at 17 Meadow (per 1913
Directory).
In September, 1913, Charles and Mary again mortgaged the premises at 13
and 13½ Meadow Street for $2500 to the Salem Five bank (ED 2226:587).
In 1914 Mrs. Phoebe (Coombs) Banks would move to Somerville with two of her
daughters; and in 1935 she would die there at the age of ninety-two.
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th century by
large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who settled primarily in the Derby
Street neighborhood, and by Sicilians, in the High Street neighborhood. By the
eve of World War One, the bustling, polyglot city supported large department
stores and factories of every description. People from the surrounding towns, and
Marblehead in particular, came to Salem to do their shopping; and its handsome
government buildings, as befit the county seat, were busy with.conveyances of
land, lawsuits, and probate proceedings. The city's politics were lively, and its
economy was strong.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street at Proctor), a
fire started in small wooden shoe factory and soon raced out of control, for the
west wind was high and the season had been dry. Out of Blubber Hollow the fire
roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out the houses of
Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping through
Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men and machines
could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed
the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of
Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the wooden homes of The Point.
Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and cities, the
fire overwhelmed everything in its path: the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company
factory complex exploded in an inferno. At Derby Street, just beyond Union,
4
�factory complex exploded in an inferno. At Derby Street, just beyond Union, after a
13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses,
and 41 factories, and leaving three dead and thousands homeless. Some people
had insurance, some did not; all received much support and generous donations
from all over the country and the world. It was one of the greatest urban disasters
in the history of the United States. In short order, businesses were rebuilt and new
houses and apartment buildings went up; and several urban-renewal projects
(including Hawthorne Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and
widening old streets) were put into effect.
By 1917 the Banks family had moved from Roslyn Street to then-67 Ocean
Avenue (per Directory). The family of Edwin Dorrien (1868-1949) then moved in
here. He was working as a driver, daughter Alice was a shoe worker, son Walter F.
worked in Beverly at the United Shoe Machinery Corporation (per Directory). A
native of Cleveland, Ohio, Edwin was the son of John Dorrien, born in Scotland,
and Eliza Young, born in Ireland. In 1892, in Georgetown, Mass., he and Anne
Victoria Gilroy {1869-1922) had wed; and they would have many children. In the
1890s they moved to Haverhill, then to Somerville and environs; and by 1904 they
were in Salem. By 1910 Edwin was a driver (teamster) for a tonic company.
In 1920 (per census, ward 5, h. 118) the numerous Dorrien family lived here:
Edwin, 50, worked as a buffer at a leather factory; the others were Annie V., 49,
Leonard, 25, leather worker, Helen, 21, stenographer, Charles, 17, sorter in a
leather factory, Grace, 15, and Louise, 12. Older offspring Edwin L. and Alice F.
lived elsewhere. The Dorriens were residing here in 1922 when Mrs. Annie V.
(Gilroy) Dorrien died on May 18. Edwin would survive her by many years; he died
on June 24, 1949 .
.
In 1925, both Mary and Charles Banks died. Mary died on January
Charles died on April 23rd• Both died at home, 67 Ocean Avenue.
zz=.
In March, 1927, James J. Banks, 29, and his slster Sarah (Mrs. Harold Regan),
32, sold the premises at 13-13½ Meadow to Mrs. Marie Jeanne (Ouelette) Caron
(ED 2716:495). Her husband was Leon Jean Caron {1898-1980) who was born
in Salem. When Leon was a toddler (1900) his father, Arthur, worked as a
machinist (per census) and the family resided at 35 Lawrence Street. Leon had a
brother, Lionel, and sisters Odile and Marie. He would grow up in Salem and
learn the trade of a house carpenter. In 1926, evidently, he and Marie Jeanne
Ouelette were wed.
Mrs. Marie Jeanne Caron died in 1929, at thirty, leaving her husband, Leon, with
the care of sons Thomas, two, and Alfred, a newborn. Leon's grief may
5
�be imagined. He moved in with his parents (Arthur Caron and Alma Michaud of
Lawrence Street).
The house at 13½ Meadow was rented out for several years. In 1935 the tenant
was Louis Claise, a salesman at the Pelletier Shade Shop; he resided here with his
wife Laura and perhaps children (per 1935 Directory).
Leon J. Caron remarried, and in 1939 his wife Yvonne A. Ouelette (1895- 1990) gave
birth to a daughter, whom they named Catherine. The Carons were then residing here
(13½); and in 1940 (per census): Leon J. Caron, 42, Yvonne, 45, Thomas, 13, Alfred,
11, and Catherine, one. Next door (#15) lived old Miss Margaret Mccusker, 80, the
sister of Mrs. Mary Banks who had lived here many years before.
In September, 1941, the Carons sold a small slice of land on the west side of the lot to
James Banks and Sarah (Banks) Regan, who evidently had inherited or acquired #15
(ED 3277:346, also 345-6).
In July, 1950, Leon J. Caron became the owner of the property here, which had
technically been owned by his two sons as heirs of his deceased wife Marie
Jeanne (ED 3754:165, also 3658:136,137,275-6, and 3754:164).
In February, 1955, Leon & Yvonne Caron sold the premises to Leo & Rita
Turgeon (ED 4141:340).
The two houses and land were sold as follows:
1961 Turgeons to Pelletiers
1985 Pelletiers to Pelletiers
1986 Pelletiers to Romanovitz
1994 Romanovitz to Simonson
2015 Simonson & Tulle to Salem Residential Rental Properties LLP.
The latter sold the two houses separately as condominiums.
6
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�1/3/2020
13 Meadow St #13H, Salem, MA 01970 MLS# 72461451 - Movoto.com
X
$415,000 5 Bd 2.5 Ba 2,200 Sqft $189/Sqft
Request Info
https://www.movoto.com/salem-ma/ I 3-meadow-st-apt-13h-salem-ma-0 1970-300_ 72461452/#popphotoview
1/
1
�1/3/2020
13 Meadow St, Salem, MA 01970- realtor.com®
https://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/ 13-Meadow-St_Salem_MA_0 I 970_M44447-9928 I #photo2
1/
8
�Glossary & Sources
A figure like (ED 123:45) refers to book 123, page 45, Essex South Registry of
Deeds.
A figure like (#12345) refers to Essex Probate case 12345, on file at the Essex
Probate Court, or on microfilm at Mass. Archives, Boston, or at the Peabody Essex
Museum's Phillips Library, Rowley.
Salem Crew Lists (SCL) found on-line at Mystic Seaport site.
MSSRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers & Sailors in the
Revolutionary War1 at the Salem Public Library among other places.
MSSCRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers,Sailors1 &
Marines in the Civil War1 at the Salem Public Library among other places.
EIHC refers to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (discontinued), a multi-volume
set (first volume published in 1859) of data and articles about Essex County. The
indices of the EIHC have been consulted regarding many of the people associated
with this house.
The six-volume published Salem Vital Records (marriages, births, and deaths
through 1849) have been consulted, and the Salem Directory and later Naumkeag
Directory, with data about residents and their addresses, etc.
Sidney Perley's three-volume History of Salem, 1626-17161 has been
consulted, as has the four-volume William Bentley'sDiary, J. Duncan
Phillips' books, some newspapers, and other sources.
Salem real estate valuations, and, where applicable, Salem Street Books, have
also been consulted, as have genealogies.
There is much more material available about Salem and its history; and the reader is
encouraged to make his or her own discoveries.
--Public History Services
7
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Meadow Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
13 1/2 Meadow Street, Salem, MA 01970
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Charles R. Banks, machinist, and
Mary Mccusker, wife
1898
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1898
House History Written: Jan. 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
13.5/Meadow Street
1898
Banks
machinist
Massachusetts
Mccusker
Salem
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/cf90c7b72930c3657a455de1905fa63f.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=JT3pfO95NHsh8fOC3ieBvOgnGlLS2o28JU8DjSyrZckEHTLsmr9X1hMxZJFPRWPgDR-Sd88XyAr%7EKKG5qV1ITA0yrkAiRzEw1UfSSXo4pPHXXaewgpqMOn5qeNairscvq01juHPtYh6%7ElIlFwjt648wENB%7EXFhBCpNvsWuxcuHkybP4V30thvlrZzFga2GFfk9-ahT8z8URmxg3RL4gUFKPCQU1ilK%7E7EhVwv-yYIWdcXTLhS-wTUxScwCeDKDjiVOG0SIcCtPJEtwBIYbfn1IzmSS6wfFdxYpiGz80-A5vz13xOTAE8MXIMTuRa7a9yImesQ1WMIChWt-ShdIsfvw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
d8dddf006ece2636582309ba5263c08d
PDF Text
Text
16-18 Loring Avenue
Built for
Susan B. Moulton
Widow of Nelson H. Moulton
&
Lulu E. Moulton
Music Teacher
c. 1894
Research Provided by
Amy Kellett
September 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North St. Salem, Massachusetts
www.historicsalem.org
16-18 Loring Avenue | Salem, Massachusetts
Historic Property Report
September 2018
16-18 Loring Avenue | Salem, Massachusetts | Google Maps |Street View
Image from Eastern Angle showing the front entry to the building at 16 Loring Avenue
�Historic Property Report
for
16-18 Loring Avenue
Salem, Massachusetts
Prepared for:
Sandra Powers & Family;
Current Residents and Managers of 16- 18 Loring Avenue
16-18 Loring Avenue | Salem, Massachusetts | Google Maps | Aerial View
Image from Eastern angle showing 16-18 Loring Avenue, including the back gardens and neighboring properties
Research & report completed by Salem, Mass. historian;
Amy E. Kellett
www.amykellett.com
�16-18 Loring Avenue | Salem, Massachusetts | Google Maps |Satellite View
Birds eye view of the property at 16-18 Loring shows the property’s proximity to Salem State’s Edward Sullivan
Building, as well as Linden, Charles, and Lafayette Streets
Researcher’s Introduction:
The following is a compilation of research conducted by me, Amy E. Kellett, during the Summer and Fall
of 2018 for Historic Salem, Inc. of Salem, Massachusetts. The resources for this report were numerous but
consistent; all of the evidence accrued to support the timeline of ownership, tenancy, and events at 16-18
Loring Avenue was sourced from Salem City Directories, US Federal and State Censuses, the
Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System (henceforth ‘MACRIS’), Atlases and Records from
the Essex County Registry of Deeds, and historic documents provided to me by the current owner and
resident of 18 Loring Avenue, Sandra Power, who has lived at the property since 1963. This property’s
history is extensive and complicated, as it has been owned both by single entities and multiple entities at
different times in its past. For simplicity sake, I have broken this report into an overview of the property
and architecture, followed by a breakdown individual blocks of time as it relates to the ownership history
of the property, though the names of residents (according to City Directories) may not correlate to the
names of the property owners; such is the nature of a multi-family property. It should be noted, too, that
this report is subject to editing by the author should new evidence arise related to the property; while my
research has been extensive and exhaustive, I cannot preclude the possibility of new historic evidence
being discovered in my continued research of Salem, Massachusetts’ history.
— Amy E. Kellett, September 2018
�1874 Salem City Atlas showing area of 16-18 Loring Avenue, at the corners of Lincoln Street and Lynn Road
1874-1893 | Record of land preceding construction of Queen Anne Building at 16-18 Loring Avenue:
The earliest recorded image of the property at 16-18 Loring Avenue is found in the 1874 Salem City Atlas
(above), which shows that what is today called Loring Avenue, instead was named Lynn Road (until
1893-4 when it became Loring Avenue). The area that would ultimately become the building and lands at
16-18 Loring Avenue once belonged to John Hurley, an Irish immigrant who came to Salem through
Boston in 1852, and was naturalized in 1872. Prior to Hurley’s ownership of the property, it had been
owned by several of the prominent land-owning families of Salem, including the Almy’s, Ives’, Putnam’s,
and Wiggin’s. On the 30th of July, 1878 the Essex County Registry of Deeds Index lists the sale of the
property at “Lynn Rd. Park & Lincoln Ave. Lots 17, 18 & 20 Pl. Rec. 727-300” (though earlier, Hurley
had owned all the property bordered by Lynn, Lincoln, Park, and Maple) to George T. Flint. The sale was
the result of a public auction, as Hurley had defaulted on his loan from his neighbors, Almy, Wiggin &
Clark.
�On July 13, 1878 George F. Flint, an aging Salem farmer won the property auction for $500. The 1870 US
Federal Census lists George Flint as 62 years old, and living with two other Flint men, Charles Flint
(presumably George’s twin, as he is also listed as 62 years old), and John Flint, who was fifty years old in
1870, logically making him the brother of George and Charles — all are listed as living in the 6th Ward of
Salem, all having been born in Maine, and all who made their living as farmers. The deed describes the
parcel of land that Flint now owned as follows:
The lot of land in Salem which is bounded Southeasterly on the
Lynn Road seventy five feet, Southwesterly by lot no. nineteen on
the plan hereinafter described two hundred feet southeasterly
again by said lot no. nineteen seventy five feet Southwesterly again
by lot no. twenty two on said Plan two hundred feet Northwesterly
by Park Avenue one hundred and fifty feet and Northeasterly by
Lincoln Avenue four hundred feet. Being lots numbered seventeen
eighteen and twenty on a plan of that part of the Derby Estate
recorded in Essex Registry of Deeds South District Book 727 Leaf
300. Subject to all the restrictions and reservations as to building
with thin thirty feet of said Lynn road or said Park Avenue
continued in a deed of the presses from Nath. Wiggin estate to John
Hurley recorded in Essex Registry of Deeds So. District Book 786
Leaf 40.
** Note: The record entitled “Essex Registry of Deeds South District Book 727 Leaf 300” is the
recurring reference point that is key to tracing the rest of the property’s history at 16-18 Loring Avenue.
September 19, 1878, just a few months later, the land changed hands again from George Flint, et al. to
James F. Almy, again for the price of $500, recorded in the Registry of Deeds Book 1004 Page 195 for
“Lynn Rd. Park & Lincoln Avs. Lots 17, 18 & 20 Pl. Rec. 727-300.” The city directory from the same
year, 1878, lists James F. Almy as being of the dry goods company ‘Almy, Bigelow, & Webber’ at 188
Essex Street, while his home was located at 56 Lafayette Street. Almy was extensively involved in the
buying and selling of land throughout Salem, as evidenced by the baker’s dozen index pages filled with
transactions with virtually every person and business in the city at the time.
�Eventually the land came to be owned by brothers Albert and Joseph Poor, who sold the land in pieces,
one parcel to Charles Coulthurst in 1890, and then on 11 April 1892 Land Deed from Albert F. and Joseph
H. Poor records the sale of the property to Ira Vaughan, machinist & millwright, owned a business at 4
Broadway called Rood & Vaughan. He was likely also related to the Vaughn Machine Co.,
“manufacturers of hide and leather working machinery.”
In 1893, mother and daughter Susan B. Moulton and Lulu E. Moulton purchased the properties from
both Ira Vaughan and Charles Coulthurst. Thus begins the history of the Queen Anne multi=family
home that still stands on the property to this day.
16-18 Loring Avenue | Salem, Massachusetts | 1989
Image from MACRIS report, completed by a D. Hilbert with Northfields Preservation Associates for the Salem
Planning Department in July 1989.
�c. 1894 | Queen Anne home built at 16-18 Loring Avenue
At the end of the 19th century the world was changing rapidly, and Salem’s wealth and prominence set her
among the forefront of the incoming century. What was once rolling fields of farmland with a path named
Lynn Road was now Loring Avenue, and the Salem Normal School was being built at the corner of
Lafayette and Loring — Salem’s legacy of stunning architecture was expanding southward, beginning
with houses such as that of 16-18 Loring Avenue.
Susan B. Moulton and Lulu E. Moulton purchased the property from Ira Vaughan and Charles
Coulthurst for ‘consideration of One Dollar and other valuable consideration paid’ (a popular price for
the time) on March 6, 1893, and mortgaged the property with Salem Five Bank for approximately $9,000
in November of the same year. One then can deduce that it would have taken the rest of the following year
to build the multi-family home, hence the logical conclusion is to date the multi-family home on the
property to 1894, making it one of the first homes built on the newly-named Loring Avenue.
Architecturally, the home is one of the finest examples of Queen Anne architecture in Salem. The
MACRIS report of 1989 details the architectural design and significance of the building eloquently:
16-18 Loring Avenue is […] 2 1/2 stories high, with the complex
roofline characteristic of the style. It features a steep hipped roof
with two cross gables at the facade, and one at each side, as well as
a large, central gambrel dormer. Flanking the center entry are onestory paneled bay windows connected by a two-story porch with
paneled and dentilled [sic] entablature with decorative molding
exists at the cornice. Gable and gambrel ends feature fans, shells,
panelling and various window configurations. Other features
included corbelled [sic] chimneys, dentilled cornices, decorative
sash. The foundation is granite. The back yard of the house is
ornately landscaped and possess a terrace and pergola atop a six-car
cast-stone garage.
�According to the widely referenced text A Field Guide to American Houses by Virginia & Lee McAlester
(1984) the Queen Anne style was popularly built between 1880-1910, making the property on Loring
Avenue built essentially during the mid-point of this architectural time period:
This was the dominant style of domestic building during got period
from about 1880 until 1900 […] in the heavily populated northeastern
states the style is somewhat less common than elsewhere.
The style was named and popularized by a group of 19th-century
English architects led by Richard Norman Shaw… had little to do with
Queen Anne or the formal Renaissance architecture that was dominant
during her reign (1702-14). Instead, they borrowed most heavily from late
Medieval models of the preceding Elizabethan and Jacobean eras.
… by 1880 the style was being spread throughout the
country by pattern books and the first architectural magazine, the
American Architect and Building News. The expanding railroad
network also helped popularize the style by making pre-cut
architectural details conveniently available through much of the
nation.
In the decade of the 1890s the free classic adaptation became
widespread. It was but a short step from these to the early, asymmetrical
Colonial Revival houses which, along with other competing styles, fully
supplanted the Queen Anne style after about 1910.1
Other features described in this text are also apparent at the home on Loring Avenue, including varying
wall textures; shingles, clapboards, and detailed masonry — a few ornamental windows, and features
several porches. Also, since the house was designed and built as a multi-family property, we can assume
that Susan and Lulu Moulton intended this property to be a source of income, as well as a home, for
themselves and future owners.
1 McCalester, Virginia & Lee. A Field Guide to American Houses. 1984. Pages 263-268.
�1895–1902 | 16-18 Loring Avenue
The 1895 Salem City Directories list eight different people as living at 16-18 Loring Avenue, to include
Susan B. & Lulu E. Moulton, Miss Mabel. A Phillips, Jacob C. Batchelder and Irena B. Carlton at 18
Loring, while Charles A Ketchum and Ellis W. Andrews lived on the 16 Loring side of the house.
1897 Salem City Atlas
Centered is 16-18 Loring Avenue, with Susan B. Moulton’s name labeling the large property. Directly across the
street can be seen the ‘State Normal School’, which is now the Sullivan Building of Salem State University.
Susan B. & Lulu E. Moulton were the owners of the entire property as they were the ones to have it
commissioned and built in 1894. Susan B. Moulton was born Susan B. Carlton in Claremont, New
Hampshire in July of 1840 where she was raised and educated. She was married to Nelson H. Moulton, a
Salem clerk turned business owner and dealer of ‘ladies furnishing goods’ or ‘fancy goods’ living at 200
Lafayette Street, Salem. The couple welcomed their daughter, Lulu Eva, on January 1, 1874. However,
the family unit would not survive long — according to the Massachusetts Death Records of 1875, Nelson
H. Moulton passed away in Middleton, though his residence had remained in Salem. Locally, his cause of
death is listed as “debility” which is defined as dying from being weak and sedentary. Officially, Mr.
Moulton died from ‘consumption,’ also known as tuberculosis, at the Middleton Campus of the newlyopened (and later infamous) Danvers State Hospital on September 18th, 1875.
�c. 1893 Photograph of Danvers State Hospital
Susan B. Moulton would become a widow at the Middleton Campus of the hospital, where her husband Nelson H.
Moulton died at only 34 years of age of tuberculosis.
At thirty-five years old, Susan B. Moulton found herself a widow and new mother of a 20-month-old
daughter, Lulu. It seems that Susan did not despair, but worked through her grief to provide a life for
herself and her daughter. Susan and Lulu moved in with Susan’s parents, Irena B. Carlton and Rufus
Carlton at 20 Lafayette Street, and in 1886 is found in the Salem City Directory as working at 181 Essex
Street as a saleswoman.
Lulu Eva Moulton, Susan’s daughter, grew up in her grandparent’s home at 20 Lafayette Street, where
she attended area schools and studied music, specifically piano. She and her mother Susan purchased the
property together at 16-18 Loring Avenue in 1893, when Lulu was just nineteen years old. The 1895 Salem
City Directory lists Lulu as boarding at 18 Loring, and the 1897 City Business Directory lists her as a local
music teacher.
�1897 Salem Business Directory
Miss Lulu E. Moulton is listed under ‘Music Teachers’ in the City Directory (top of the right hand column); Miss
Moulton’s listing on this page denotes that she working out of her home as a music teacher at 18 Loring Avenue
�Jacob C. Batchelder is listed as living at 18 Loring in 1895 and was the proprietor of J. C. Batchelder &
Co. at 42 Central Street in Salem. According to the 1880 US Federal Census, Plainfield, Vermont native
Jacob Batchelder was a 35 year-old bachelor, boarding from the owners at 20 Lafayette Street, Susan B.
And Lulu E. Moulton, who he would later move with to 18 Loring Avenue after the house’s construction
in 1895. J.C. Batchelder & Co, a wholesale and commission dealer in produce, including butter, cheese,
eggs, and the like from the shop on Central Street (now the parking lot area behind the Lafayette Street
fire department building. He had formerly been a superintendent at Kernwood, which is likely the
Kernwood Estate as of 1893, which would become a private golf club in 1914 (and is still in business
today), Kernwood Country Club. (The Kernwood Estate had once belonged to the Peabody family,
located on the Danvers River off of Liberty Hill Avenue. Francis Peabody built the estate near the locallynamed ‘Cold Springs’.) According to the Salem City Directories, Charlie Ketchum both lived and
worked at the Estate until he moved to 20 Lafayette and then 18 Loring Avenue (with the Moultons). lived
at 18 Loring Avenue until heart disease took his life when he was only 54 years of age.
1895 Advertisement in the Salem City Directory for J.C. Batchelder
between a granite dealer and confectioner
J.C. Batchelder was the employer of Charles A. Ketchum the year that this advertisement was published, and the
same year that Ketchum is first seen at 16 Loring Avenue.
�Opposite Susan and Lulu Moulton, at 16 Loring Avenue lived Charles A. Ketchum, along with his family,
and a boarder named Ellis W. Andrews as of 1895. Charles A. Ketchum worked for J.C. Batchelder & Co.
at 42 Central Street, and after Jacob Batchelder’s passing in 1898, opened a flour and feed store (at the
previous J.C. Batchelder Location) ’Ketchum & Co.”. 1897’s Salem City Directory also lists a George
Smith as living at 16 Loring, with his occupation noted as ‘hostler,’ what would today be called a groom,
who likely lived and worked at the property caring for the Ketchum family’s horses and carriages.
The city directory of 1895 listed Ellis W. Andrews as living at 16 Loring — tracing the family names leads
to the logical conclusion that Ellis W. Andrews was likely Carrie Ketchum’s uncle, brother of Martin
Andrews.
Mr. Ellis W. Andrews is listed as a milk dealer in Lynn, and a boarder at 16 Loring Avenue in Salem.
While living at the house on Loring Avenue he would meet his neighbor, nineteen-year-old Mabel
Phillips, and introduce her to his son, Ellis M. Andrews, a bookkeeper. The two were married on
September 12, 1895, and went on to have a family of their own, eventually moving to 4 Charles Street, just
behind the property at 16-18 Loring where they first met.
1895 Massachusetts Marriage Records
Image showing record of marriage between Ellis M. Andrews and Mabel A. Phillips on September 12, 1895, just months
after the two likely met as neighbors at 16-18 Loring Avenue.
�The 1900 United States Federal Census confirms that Susan B. Moulton & Lulu E. Moulton, as well as
Charles A. Ketchum and family remained at 18 and 16 Loring Avenue (respectively). Also living with
Charles Ketchum was his father-in-law, Martin Andrews, a produce salesman.By 1902 records show that
Charles A. Ketchum was owner of a successful flour and feed dealing business, noted in the December
1902 Edition of Flour & Feed, “Mr. Ketchum succeeded J. C. Batchelder & Co., and reports a fine
business year” J. C. Batchelder, of course, being Jacob C. Batchelder, the Ketchum Family neighbors at
18 Loring Ave. until his death in 1898 — its
possible that Charles Ketchum purchased his
late neighbor’s business and simply renamed
it to ‘Ketchum & Co.”. Later in life Charles
became a Freemason at the Essex Lodge in
1906-7. His Mason Membership Card lists his
‘Nativity’ as being born in Barre, Vermont on
August 12, 1858, his Residence in 1907 in
Salem, and his ‘Occupation’ as ‘Hay &
Grain’. Finally, it lists his death date — the 5th
Source: December 1902 — Flour & Feed
of November, 1918.
18 Loring Avenue was the primary residence for Susan B. Moulton and Lulu E. Moulton, as well as
Susan’s Mother, and Irena B.Carlton (née Batchelder). Florence N. Snell, a 35 year-old single woman,
she was an Ohio native who is listed on the Census a teacher at the Normal School (directly across the
street from 16-18 Loring). Florence P. Salisbury boarded at 18 Loring as well, and like her roommate Miss
Snell was also a teacher at the Normal School. Alice E Barnard is noted in the 1899 City Directory as
living at 18 Loring, and then as the head of the household on the 1900 Federal Census. In 1900 she was a
45 year-old widow that found herself in the role of managing 16-18 Loring’s boarders. A Mrs. Lucy S.
Magoun lived in the home briefly as well in 1901, she was the widow of Elias Magoun, and had moved to
Oxford by 1903. Sophronia Woodward, at eighty-three, was also a boarder at 18 Loring, and was possibly
one of Irena B. Carlton’s friends as they were closest in age at the time to anybody else in the home.
Unfortunately, Irena passed away later that year, on August 11th, 1900 at the age of 88 after a hip fracture
and apparent subsequent heart failure.
�Lulu Eva continued to list herself in the local city
directory as a music teacher at 16 Loring through
1901, and apparently continued to enjoy success in
her endeavors beyond her time at 16-18 Loring
Avenue. At the age of 37 on the 17th of August, 1910,
Lulu was married to Horace F. Hutchinson, a
widower who worked aboard a transportation
steamship. After the marriage, Lulu moved just
around the corner from her mother to 10 Wisteria
Street and continued to teach piano. Susan B.
Moulton moved (after the sale of the property at
16-18 Loring to Edward L. Cleveland) to an
apartment at 35 Leach Street. After the Great Salem
Fire of 1914 in which Susan lost her home, mother
and daughter once again moved in together, this
1897 Salem City Directory — Susan & Lulu Moulton
time at Lulu’s home on Wisteria, where Susan B.
Moulton lived out the rest of her life until her passing in 1919.
1902-1907 | 18 Loring Avenue
As the 20th century began, the rapid pace of property exchange involving 16-18 Loring Avenue subsided,
and historic records indicate that families owned and lived in the home for much longer periods of time.
By 1901, both Susan B. And Lulu E. Moulton women are shown as having moved from 18 Loring to 16
Loring (for reasons yet discovered). Approximately one year later Susan B. Moulton and Lulu E. Moulton
sold the property to Edward L. Cleveland on July 11, 1902 for $14,500:
Know all men by these presents that we, Susan B. Moulton and Lulu
E. Moulton, both of Salem, in the County of Essex and
Commonwealth of Massachusetts in consideration of Fourteen
thousand five hundred dollars paid by Edward L Cleveland of
�Houlton, in the County of Aroostook in the State of Maine the
receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby give, grant,
bargain, sell, and convey unto the said Edward L Cleveland, the real
estate is situated in said Salem and is bounded Southeast on Loring
Avenue… 2
Cleveland came to Salem from Houlton, Maine. Houlton is situated on the eastern border of Maine,
neighboring New Brunswick, Canada, and was one of the 10 richest communities in the United States at
the beginning of the 20th century because of it’s flourishing logging and potato industries.3 Edward L.
Cleveland and his brothers William A. Cleveland
and Frederick G. Cleveland likely came to Salem
from Maine to expand their fortunes, and
considering Salem’s economy at the beginning of
the 20th century, especially in the South Salem
neighborhood of Loring Avenue, one can imagine
that the brothers achieved success indeed. In
1903, Edward’s brother William A. Cleveland is
listed as living at 18 Loring Avenue, while he
owned a wholesale produce business at 85–87
Lafayette Street, along with brother Frederick G.
Cleveland.
1903 Salem City Directory
Both Frederick G. Cleveland and William A. Cleveland
are noted as owners of the business ‘W.A. Cleveland’- a
local wholesale produce source. (Note that there is no
‘Edward L.’ Cleveland on the directory)
2 Essex County Registry of Deeds : Book 1678; Page 446, 1902.
3 Maine Office of Tourism Website, Aroostook County, Houlton. 2017.
�1911 Salem City Atlas — Showing 16-18 Loring Avenue property as being owned by Edward L. Cleveland
Researcher’s Note: Edward L. Cleveland is a bit of a mystery to me as an historian, as I am finding it
almost impossible to find any records of him in Salem other than in the Registry of Deeds — otherwise he
is seldom found elsewhere; in fact the only other official record that I can find with the name ‘Edward L.
Cleveland’ is on the 1911 Salem City Atlas, where the property is clearly labelled with his name.(See above
image.) The logical conclusion, according to the evidence, shows that Edward L. Cleveland owned the
property at 16-18 Loring Avenue in Salem, but continued to live in Houlton, Maine. — A.E.K. 2018
William A. Cleveland is listed as living at 18 Loring Avenue in the Salem City Directory only for 1903,
and contemporary City Directories continue to list him as a wholesaler working out of 85-87 Lafayette
Street.
�1903 Salem City Business Directory
Among other produce dealers in the area, W. A. Cleveland is listed as a ‘commission Merchant and wholesale produce
dealer’ located at 85—87 Lafayette Street. The business was run by brothers William A. Cleveland (who lived at 18
Loring Avenue at the time) and Frederick G. Cleveland (who lived and worked at the business on Lafayette)
�Salem City Directories list a J. B. Devine as living at 18 Loring from 1905 through 1909, likely J.
Benjamin Devine of the Sullivan and Devine law firm at 252 Essex Street. J. Benjamin Devine started his
professional career as a clerk, then became an Attorney-at-Law, and Justice of the Peace from as early as
1904. The 1908 Salem City Directory lists J. Benjamin as part of the legal firm, Sullivan & Devine (see
image below), located at 256 Essex Street (rooms 3 and 4, to be specific).
1908 Salem City Business Directory
Advertisement for M. L. Sullivan, J. B. Devine, and M. J. Reardon, attorneys at law working out of
an office at 252 Essex Street in Salem (now the location of Harrison’s Comic Book Store).
Charles Emmett Devine, a native Salem Catholic born c.1877, grew up in the Derby Wharf
neighborhood, and is listed as living at 18 Loring Avenue from 1905-1907 according to the Salem City
Directories where he would have lived between the ages of approximately 28 through his early 30s. The
Devine name would have been known around the city, as Charles’ brother was James B. Devine.
The 1905 Salem City Directory lists Charles E. Devine as an employee (and likely owner) of T. A. Devine
Co., a multi-location liquor dealer business in downtown Salem. Area directories as early as 1893 show
that the business first opened at the Lafayette Street location, and then expanded to include the Front
Street location. (See image on next page.) By 1908 Mr. Devine had moved from 18 Loring Avenue, but
continued to operate a successful liquor distribution business while boarding at the Hotel Washington.
1910’s Federal Census lists all members of the Devine family living at 18 Loring just before they moved,
which included J. Benjamin Devine, his wife
Catherine D. Devine, and their children, 2-yearold Thomas B. Devine and newborn daughter
named after her mother, Catherine.
1910 US Federal Census | James B. Devine & Family at 18
LoringAvenue
�1909 Salem City Business Directory
Among the other liquor dealers, brewers, and sellers of all varieties of liquor, the promotion for T. A. Devine Co.
advertises their distribution of Harvard Brewing Co.’s Ale, Pabst Milwaukee Lager (of course, later Pabst Blue
Ribbon) and proprietors of Daniel Webster Whiskey.
�c.1902—1921 | 16 Loring Avenue
Alonzo F. Titus first appears in the Salem City Directory as living at 16 Loring Avenue in 1903, within a
year of the property purchase by Edward L. Cleveland from Susan B. & Lulu E. Moulton. For about a
year Alonzo would have been neighbors with William A. Cleveland through 1903, after which Alonzo F.
Titus continues to be listed as the occupant of 16 Loring, while 18 Loring is listed as ‘Vacant’ in 1904.
The 1903 Salem City Directory gives some insight into Alonzo F. Titus and his career: Mr. Titus is listed
as the owner of A. C. Titus & Co. at 136 to 142 Washington Street, advertised as ‘house furnishers’ from
which he dealt and traded in antique and reproduction antique furniture, carpeting, upholstery, stoves,
and other home furnishings throughout the North Shore of Boston and the United States, and
incorporated in several locations from Salem, Massachusetts as far as Portland, Maine.
Alonzo Flint Titus — Freemason Membership Card
Mr. Titus’s membership with the secretive fraternal group known as the
Freemasons would have provided an excellent networking and socializing group
for Alonzo and the other members. Mason membership cards are also a wealth of
information for historians, as it details his date of birth as being April 1, 1870, in
Newport, Rhode Island, and he joined the Masons just after his 27th birthday
and was thus a member for life.
�1909 New England Magazine
Full page from New England Magazine, Volume 40, featuring Daniel Low & Company, The Hotel Westminster, New
York, The Salem Evening News, Locke Regulator Co., and A. C. Titus & Co. in Salem, Massachusetts.
�1909 New England Magazine
Clip from business page including A. C. Titus & Co.’s advertisement for ‘Modern Antiques’ and ‘correct
reproductions of genuine antiques’.
�Alonzo F. Titus and his wife Ramie, as well as their domestic staff including a live-in housekeeper, and a
resident ‘coachman’, George W. Hudson, moved in to 16 Loring Avenue on a lease from Edward L.
Cleveland:
…on Loring Avenue, which is bounded and described as follows: the
half of the house which is numbered sixteen Loring Avenue, also the
stable on said estate, excepting one stall, altogether with efficient
room for hay and feed for one horse, and also carriage room for one
carriage […] the lessee to also have the use of land on the easterly
side of the stable to Charles Street.
Alonzo F. Titus was not only a furniture dealer, but was also a skilled carpenter and contractor, which is
likely why Edward L. Cleveland signed a lease with Titus in 1902: This lease, recorded in 1906, gives
detailed instructions that Titus was expected to complete as part of the lease of 16 Loring Avenue, and
gives an incredible insight interior architectural detail that was altered by Alonzo F. Titus as directed by
Edward L. Cleveland between 1902 and 1910:
It is hereby agreed that the lessee shall make the following
alterations, improvements, and repairs: install a laundry with set
tubs in basement with all necessary plumbing, also hot water
apparatus in kitchen, all hardwood finish throughout to be scraped
and polished; all wood work other than hardwood to be painted
two coats throughout, all rooms other than kitchen and bathroom
to be papered with sealings tinted or papered and moulding,
radiators, and steam pipes reguilded, chandeliers lacquered, dining
room cupboard doors to be replaced with leaded glass doors,
kitchen walls to be painted, ceilings kalsomined, wood work
shellacked, and electric bell installed, plumbing to be overhauled
and refinished, bathroom walls and ceiling painted, woodwork
shellacked and plumbing renickled… said Lessee does promise to pay
the said rent in monthly payments of thirty seven dollars and a
half…
The Titus family is listed on the 1910 US Federal Census as living at 16 Loring Avenue, including Alonzo
F., Ramie W., Alonzo’s wife of 15 years (as of 1910), and their live-in ‘servant’ Nora Ganley, a 20-year-old
Irish (immigrant who was part of a much larger Irish immigrant population of domestic staff in Salem at
�the time). Alonzo’s occupation is listed as a retail dealer of furniture, while Ramie’s responsibility was to
the home and community, as was a common marital arrangement at the time. By 1912, Alonzo and Ramie
Titus had begun to employ Ethel L. Bassett, a widow, as a live-in maid at 16 Loring Avenue. After the
Great Salem Fire of 1914, A. C. Titus & Co. moved to Jefferson Avenue and the Titus family (and staff)
continued to live at 16 Loring Avenue through 1921.
1916 Salem Business Directory
Among advertisements for real estate, insurance, picture frames, and hair goods — Alonzo F. Titus’ furniture retail
store, Titus & Co. encourages buyers to ‘call us often’ and that the business makes ‘ever sale a saver’
�1910-1913 | 18 Loring Avenue
From the end of 1910 until 1911 Alonzo F. Titus worked to update 18 Loring Avenue as part of the terms
of his lease. Ownership wise, the property traded hands a couple of times in the same period. Edward L.
Cleveland sold the property, including the lease agreement with Titus, to Jean B. Leveille for $9,500.
After the updates, Jean B. Leveille again sold the property to Alfred Audet in 1913. Below is an image
from the Essex County Registry of Deeds listing Jean B. Leveille’s real estate transactions from 1888
through 1913.
1888-1913 Jean B. Leveille, Sr. Real Estate Transactions
Included in this listing of deeds and mortgages grated by Jean B. Leveille notes the mortgage of ‘Loring
Av, Lots 23 & 25 Pl. Rec. 727-300’ to Edward L. Cleveland in 1910 (as well as an Arthur Jodoin who
never appears again in relation to the property), and then the deeded sale of the same property from Jean
B. Leveille, Sr. to Alfred Audet on January 16, 1913 recorded in Book 2193, Page 402-3:
Know all men by these presents that I, jean Baptiste Leveille Sr. of
Salem in the County of Essex and Commonwealth of Massachusetts
in consideration of one dollar and other valuable considerations
paid by Alfred Audet of Said Salem the receipt whereof is hereby
acknowledged, to hereby give, grant, bargain, sell and convey unto
the said Alfred Audet, a certain parcel of land with buildings
thereon situated in said Salem and bounded Southeast on Loring
Avenue … being lots numbered 23 and 25 on a plan of part of the
Derby Estate which plan is recorded in Essex South District
Registry of Deeds in Book 727 Leaf 300.
Upon the sale of the entire property (including the Titus’ as lessees and tenants) to Alfred Audet (who
also happened to be Jean B. Leveille’s son-in-law), a new era began at 16-18 Loring Avenue, upon which
it would become known as ‘The Audet House’ and for good reason.
�1913—1955 | Becoming ‘The Audet House’ : 18 Loring Avenue
A bit of Audet Family background is necessary to introduce their ownership at 16-18 Loring Avenue:
Alfred Audet was born in Québec, Canada in 1875 and immigrated to the United States in 1893,
according to the 1900 US Federal Census that lists the Audet Family as living at 40 Congress Street. In
1900 the new family included Alfred, a twenty-five year old contractor, his wife of two years Eugenie, and
their daughter, Marie L. Audet, born in 1899.
1899 Salem Business Directory
In the same year that Alfred and Eugenie Audet welcomed their daughter Marie, this advertisement appeared for
Alfred’s contracting business, announcing Audet’s skills as a builder and painter, declaring: “jobbing of all kinds
promptly attended to” — also noted is the Audet’s residence, at 40 Congress Street.
Eugenie Audet, née Leveille, was also born in Québec, Canada in 1875 and immigrated to Salem,
Massachusetts in 1886 with her family at the age of nine. Eugenie was the daughter of Jean Baptiste
Leveille and Demerise Michaud Leveille, making Alfred Audet the son-in-law of 16-18 Loring Avenue’s
owner from 1910-1913.
The 1910 United States Federal Census records the Audet family’s move from Congress Street to 65
Palmer Street, an apartment building owned by Alfred and Eugenie, where they were neighbors with the
extended Audet family, including 21 different aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents for a total of 24
Audet family members under the same roof.
�After the death of Eugenie’s mother, Demerise, in 1907, J. B. Leveille purchased 16-18 Loring from
Edward L. Cleveland in 1910, updated the home (the work for which was completed between 1902-1921
by Alonzo F. Titus), and presented the property (probably intended as a source of income) for his
daughter Eugenie, son-in-law Alfred, and granddaughter Marie. Jean B. Leveille subsequently deeded
the property to Alfred for the proverbial ‘one dollar and other valuable consideration’ (as noted on the
previous page) in 1913.
After renovations had been completed, 18 Loring was occupied by several boarders from 1912 through
1915. In this 3 year period there were at least seven different boarders including Elizabeth T. Smith, a
clerk who is listed as boarding at the address in 1912 and 1913, and again in 1914 as a bookkeeper. Harry
H. Hames, a traveling salesman, is listed as boarding at 18 Loring only for 1912 (which might not come as
a surprise, given his occupation). Helen W.Lund, Howard C. Lund, and their mother Martha J. Lund
(widow of Henry Lund) resided at 18 Loring from 1912 through 1913, and presumably into 1914.
June 25, 1914 changed everything for Salem — the Great Salem Fire burned more than 250 acres of the
city, leveling entire neighborhoods to their foundations and chimney stacks, transforming Salem’s treelined-streets into empty, skeletal remnants of what they once were. The Audet family lost thousands of
dollars in property throughout the city, Alfred Audet
in particular lost 9 buildings, including their own
residence, as well as stores, apartments, and multifamily properties and the homes of their neighbors,
made mostly of their extended family, as well as other
tenants. Fortunately for the Audet family, although
they had suffered an enormous financial loss due to
the conflagration, they still owned several dozen
properties throughout Salem, including at 16-18
Loring Avenue on the South end of the city, which
must have seemed a world away from the piles of ash to
be found less than a mile down the road.
1914 Data on the Burned District of Salem
This clip from the official report notes the various
types, materials, values, and insurance on the
burned buildings owned by Alfred Audet.
�Alfred, Eugenie, and 15-year-old Marie likely lost many of their possessions in the loss of their home, but
were fortunate to not lose their lives. By 1915 Alfred Audet’s home address is listed at 18 Loring Avenue,
along with a painter named Edward Brochu (only in 1915) and Eugenie’s aging father, Jean Baptiste
Leveille still resided with his daughter and son-in-law until his passing in 1918.
1918 World War I Draft Registration | Alfred Audet
At 43 years old, Alfred Audet was not likely to be called into service for the Great War, but was required to
register regardless. This registration card gives a wealth of information about Mr. Audet, including his home
address of 18 Loring Avenue, Salem, Mass.
The First World War required Alfred to register for the draft, even though he was forty-three years old in
1918, the insight that the report gives us into Mr. Audet’s physical appearance is intriguing at the very
least — I like to imagine the brown-eyed, brown-haired, 5’10” contractor, fit from his years of hard labor;
a man of great integrity and sense of community that drove him to help in the effort to rebuild Salem after
the Great fire of 1914, and continued to dedicate his life to the city he so clearly loved.
Alfred Audet was a prolific real estate contractor and developer in early 20th century Salem; there is not a
main street in Salem that Audet did not own or build property at one point or another. According to the
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Audet owned property on every main road in Salem, including
�Lafayette Street, Dodge Street, Congress Street, Dow Street, Derby Street, Palmer & Naumkeag
Streets, Hancock Street, Leach Street, Washington Street, and Ocean Avenue — the list is virtually
endless as it is nearly impossible to trace each and every property that Audet owned, sold, rented, or
otherwise had a hand in constructing. Quite literally, the architectural landscape of Salem today would
not be what it is without Alfred Audet and his work throughout the city.
Even in his own back yard, quite literally, Alfred Audet was innovative and built structures to last. The
six-car garage that faces Charles Street is the back side of the property at 16-18 Loring (pictured below) —
this was installed after the Salem fire, largely using rubble from the city’s ruins, and served as not only a
place to store automobiles, but at 35 feet deep, it serves for storage space, and was rumored to be a
neighborhood bomb shelter after its completion in 1937. The surface that functions as a roof to the sixcar garage has served many purposes, but was originally intended to be a garden of repose for a city with
all the growing pains of an industrial revolution; while the space was intended to be functional, it also was
important to the Audet’s to have a quiet space for nature on their property.
16-18 Loring Avenue Garage| Charles Street — Salem, Massachusetts | 1989
Image from MACRIS report, completed by a D. Hilbert with Northfields Preservation Associates for the Salem
Planning Department in July 1989.
�The uniquely designed garage-gardens proved to be popular enough to gain the attention of Popular
Science Monthly — a May 1918 article featured the technological advancements utilized in the building
and maintenance of the six=car garage and the gardens (and at one time tennis court). Coincidentally,
these are also likely the earliest images to exist of the garage and yard of 16-18 Loring Avenue.
Popular Science Monthly | May 1918
Detail view of article images featuring the garage=gardens engineered and
constructed by Alfred Audet at 16-18 Loring Avenue.
(Please see next page for full ‘Popular Science Monthly: May 1918’ article)
��The Audet gardens were of particular interest for many years, enough so that the regional newspaper,
Boston Evening Transcript, featured an article by Elizabeth Messer that gives a beautiful
contemporaneous description of the ‘hanging gardens’ to be found behind the Queen Anne home at
16-18 Loring Avenue (see image below).
Boston Evening Transcript — Image from article written by Elizabeth Messer (Exact Date unknown, post=1937)
Original Image Caption: The two views above show Salem’s unique garage- garden looking from the house
toward the per-garden. The upper picture is a vista of the gods. The lower scene shows the garage from a
lower level in back of the pergola.
�Alfred and Eugenie’s only child, a daughter they named Marie Laure A. Audet, was born at the tail end of
the 19th century, on December 14, 1898, and would have been a young lady of about 16 years old when
she and her family moved in at 18 Loring Avenue, after having lost many of their worldly possessions in
the 1914 fire. It is possible (if not probable) that she had a hand in designing, planting, and maintaining
the garden behind the home her parents owned, and where she lived through 1932. As a child of means
she would have been well educated and expected to develop her talents, hers being in the field of music.
As late as 1931, Marie L Audet is listed among the Music Teachers in the Salem Business Directory at 18
Loring Avenue.
Mr. Audet seems to have decided it was time to expand his real estate and contracting business to include
owning ‘National Bowling Alleys’ as of 1929 — what had once been the garage of legendary Salemite Zina
Goodell at 92-96 Lafayette Street became Audet’s bowling alley (and later a furniture store). The
building still remains at it’s original address on Lafayette Street, near the Point neighborhood of Salem,
and has housed dozens of businesses throughout the last century.
92-96 Lafayette Street | c.1979
Once the site of Alfred Audet’s ‘National Bowling Alley’ in the 1930s and 40s
�In addition to general contractor, Salem real estate mogul, and bowling alley owner, Audet added ‘liquor
store owner’ to his repertoire by 1934 with his store at 11 Front Street in Downtown Salem:
1934 Salem City Business Directory | Alfred Audet Liquor Store Advertisement
Listed first under ‘Bottled Goods’ in the 1934 edition of the Salem City Directory, it seems that Alfred Audet may
have benefited from the fact that both his first and last name always arrange him at the front of any alphabetical
list, thus making his many businesses often the first listed under any service he provided, of which there were many.
�After several decades of being a general contractor and
entering into his retirement years, Alfred Audet succeeded
Paul N. Chaput as Salem’s Park Commissioner in early
1939, according to a 1938 Boston Globe article published on
December 11, 1938.
Contemporary City Directories also list Mr. Audet and
Eugenie as the owners of the liquor store on Front Street,
and as Alfred Park Commissioner, a position which he
served in for the rest of his life.
Audet had a hand in the expansion of more than 25 public
parks all around the city of Salem, including architectural
landscaping, and installation of picnic tables and benches
throughout. Alfred Audet was also responsible for building
one of the most unique pieces of playground equipment this
December 10, 1938 Boston Globe Article |
Salem City Hall “Family” Changed
Details of the change of power from Paul N.
Chaput to Alfred Audet as Park
Commissioner of Salem
side of the Mississippi: the concrete slide at Forest River
Park.
1940s Image of the Slide at Forest River Park, Built by Alfred Audet
�1945 The American City | Article Featuring Alfred Audet’s concrete slide at Forest River Park in South Salem.
�After their daughter Marie grew up and moved on from 16-18 Loring Avenue, Alfred and Eugenie moved
to the Audet Apartments at 259 Washington Street (still standing today), until Alfred’s passing in 1960.
The Boston Globe featured an honorary article about the legendary Salem contractor and carpenter upon
his passing:
1960 Boston Globe Article | Rites for Audet Saturday in Salem Church he Built
1922—1926 | 16 Loring Avenue
For the first eight years of their time at 18 Loring Avenue, the Audet’s neighbors remained the Titus
family, including Alonzo and Ramie Titus along with their domestic staff. Then, in 1922, Thomas M.
Richards and Isabella G. Richards appear on the Salem City Directory at 16 Loring Avenue. Thomas is
listed as a ‘general agent’ working from 141 Milk Street, and later at 80 Federal Street in 1926. Effie M.
Bodfish served as as maid for the Richards, according to the 1922 Salem Directory, and Annie F. Gilbert
is listed at 16 Loring Avenue in 1924. Isabella and Thomas Richards moved on from Loring Avenue,
according to contemporary records, by 1928-9.
�c.1929—c.1955 | 16 Loring Avenue
John V. Downing, Maebelle A. Downing, and their 19-year-old daughter Zelia B. Downing are found in
the Salem City Directory as early as 1929 at 16 Loring Avenue. The 1930 US Federal Census taken the
1930 US Federal Census | Clip showing 16-18 Loring Avenue Neighbors
including: John V. Downing, Maebelle A Downing, Zelia B. Downing and J.
Voeper Downing at 16 Loring, and Alfred & Eugenie Audet at 18 Loring
Avenue.
next year gives more specific details about the Audet’s new neighbors at 16 Loring Avenue:
John Downing’s father had come from England to Massachusetts, and his mother was a Massachusetts
native. In 1930 he was 51 years old, while his wife Maebelle was 47. He and his wife were married at ages
30 and 26 (respectively), and had been married for more than two decades by the time they took up
residence at 16 Loring Avenue. Also listed as living at 16 Loring Avenue in 1930 were the two Downing
children: Zelia B. Downing, 20, and J. Vasper Downing (first name ‘John’), who was just 10 in 1930. John
V. Downing’s occupation is listed as a Superintendent at the Power Company as of 1930, and by the 1940
Census he is listed as a superintendent for a construction company.
The Downing children likely had two very different sets of memories from their time at 16 Loring Avenue
as Zelia was nearly an adult by the time the family relocated to Loring Avenue, and at the time was listed
as a student. Younger brother J. V. Downing Jr., alternatively, was only 10 years old and would likely have
remembered his time at 16 Loring as the place where a better part of his growth took place. By 1936 Zelia
had become a Clerk working for a company in Boston, though still living at 16 Loring Avenue. J. V.
Downing Jr. is listed as being among those enlisted in the United States Army in 1943, during World War
II, when he was just 23 years old.
�The Downing family left a lasting
impression on the property at 16-18
Loring Avenue, and when the house
sold from the Audet’s to the Jalbert’s
in 1955, the Salem Evening News
published an article about the
property’s history, a paragraph of
which describes the Downing’s history
in the city.4
1955 Clip from Salem Evening News Article | 60-Year-Old South
Salem House Sold — Describes Mr. Downing’s participation in the
reenactment of the landing of the Arbella in 1930.
1930 Landing of the Arbella Reenactment | Salem, Mass. | Photo by Leslie Jones
Among those aboard the replica Arbella would have been John V. Downing, resident of 16 Loring Avenue, and a
descendent of one of the original Arbella’s passengers that arrived in Salem in 1630, three hundred years earlier.
4 Photo Source: Jones, Leslie. "The Arbella in Salem." Photograph. June 1930. Digital Commonwealth.
�1955—1963 | 16-18 Loring Avenue
Alfred Audet and his wife Eugenie owned the
property at 16-18 Loring Avenue for a total of
forty-two years, and lived there for nearly four
decades, appropriately giving the property a
neighborhood nickname of ‘The Audet
House.’ (The Downing family’s time at 16 Loring
Avenue holds an impressive second-place title
having lived there from 1929 until 1955: twenty
six years; more than a quarter century.
Alfred Audet sold 16-18 Loring Avenue to Robert
J. Jalbert on May 23, 1955 (see document image
on next page). The sale of the Audet house
prompted the Salem Evening News to write a
column about the house’s history, (the images
and transcription for which can be found on the
1955 Salem City Directory | 16-18 Loring Avenue
This clip from the city directory in 1955 is
contemporaneous to the sale of 16-18 Loring Avenue from
Alfred & Eugenie Audet to Robert J. Jalbert, and the
subsequent updates to the property
pages following the image of the Deed from Audet
to Jalbert,) that beautifully illustrates the transformation of Lynn Road to Loring Avenue in the mid-20th
century: “Horses plodded over dusty Loring avenue, hauling hay wagons and produce wagons, some
going to Boston market. Now autos almost exclusively use the avenue.” It’s a nice reminder of what the
area that has become so developed and laden with buildings, was once pasture land for the local farmers,
and before that part of the Derby Estate.
�Essex County Registry of Deeds — Book 4167 : Page 446 | Sale of 16-18 Loring from Audet to Jalbert
�The Salem Evening News— Salem, Mass., Wednesday, July
15, 1955
60-Year-Old South Salem House Sold
Built in ‘90s by Storekeeper’s Wife, Loring Avenue Dwelling
Long Home of Alfred Audet
By Fred A. Gannon
The large house at 16-18 Loring avenue, the opposite
the State Teachers college, was sold recently. It is commonly
called the Audet house. Alfred Audet had his home in it until
he moved to the mall house that he built at 259 Washington
street, on Mill hill. Recently he sold the Audet House.
Mrs. Susan Moulton earlier lived in the house. She
had it built in 1894. Mr. Audet, then a journeyman carpenter,
stopped his wagon on Loring avenue, and watched mechanics
frame the Moulton house. He also looked on the other side of
Loring avenue and watched masons building the Normal
school, now the Teachers college.
After the big fire of 1914, Mr. Audet, in need of a
house for his dwelling place had been burned, bought the
Moulton house and made it his home in one half of it. Alonzo
Titus, of the furniture store, lived in the other half. Later Mr.
Titus moved to Swampscott and Mr. and Mrs. John V.
Downing moved into the Audet House.
1930 “Pioneer”
Recently, the Downings moved to a house in Andover, which
Mr. Downing built on the ancestral farm. In 1930, during the
Salem tercentenary celebration, Mr. Downing, then living on
Loring avenue, joined the “pioneers” who sailed into Salem
harbor on the Arbella as did their ancestors in 1630.
�William Cleveland owned the house in the ‘90s, lived in it
and kept his horses in the stable. He was in the wholesale
produce business. Old timers recollect Bill Cleveland for his
witty criticism of politicians in Salem. He had one of his
advertisements in The News.
Mr. Audet kept his automobiles to the carriage shed
of the barn and transformed the hay loft into a workshop in
the he experimented with inventions. He fitted up a
recreation room in which friends gathered to play games,
some of them being of Mr. Audet’s invention.
He later built a garage of concrete on the Charles
street side of the property. On its roof he planted a rose
garden and to it added a fish pool and a swing. During World
War Two he built a bomb shelter and invited the neighbors to
seek its protection if the enemy started to drop high
explosive[s] on the city.
Rooms Large
When the house was built in 1894 it was one of the
largest in the city. Its 21 rooms and the hall were of ample
size. Mrs. Moulton, its builder, was the wife of Nelson
Moulton, who kept a store on Essex street.
Houses were few and far between on Loring avenue
in 1894. John West lived in the old homestead on the corner
of Lafayette street and Loring Avenue. The ancestral lands
extended to the shore at Forest River park. “Wes’s field,” on
West avenue was sold a few years ago and houses are now on
it. The Kelly farm, a landmark of South Salem for a century
and more, is now the site of a veterans’ settlement of houses
of brick and of 100 and more families.
The Sylvania factory and the Atwood & Morrill
machine shops are on marsh lands over which the sea flowed
when tides were high long ago.
Ste. Chrietienne academy rises on the Loring farm
and Pickman park, site of Amy houses, was the Pickman farm
a century ago.
Horses plodded over dusty Loring avenue, hauling
hay wagons and produce wagons, some going to Boston
market. Now autos almost exclusively use the avenue.
�In August 1955 the Jalbert’s request to have 16-18 Loring Avenue to function as a lodging house
(although the house had already been home to many boarders over the years) for the Normal School
students and teachers was granted. However, come November of the same year, the Salem Fire
Department decided that a second means of egress was necessary for the third-floor lodging space, and
thus the fire escape was added to the back of the building at 16-18 Loring (see document image below).
Essex County Registry of Deeds — Book 4167 : Page 446 | Sale of 16-18 Loring from Audet to Jalbert
�The house remained a lodging house for dozens of local students and teachers, as well as the home
address for Robert J. Jalbert, his wife Jeanne I. Jalbert, at 18 Loring, as well as Robert’s parents Emile J.
Jalbert, and Ida Jalbert at 16 Loring Avenue from the completion of the 1955 renovations until c.1962-3.
An article in the local newspaper detailed the vivacious energy of the 23 students of the Salem State
Teachers’ College living at 16-18 Loring Avenue at the time:
Salem News Article | c.1957-62
Featuring a photo of the girls that were boarding
at 16-18 Loring while owned by the Jalbert’s. Please
see next page for full transcription of article text.
�Dormitory Atmosphere for Teachers College Students
Although the Salem State Teachers college does not
Victoria, Plymouth; Roberta Scott, South Barre;
provide living accommodations for its students, the
Diane Casali, Natick; Bernice Medeiros, New
need for dormitory space has been partially met this
Bedford; Cristine Preis, East-hampton; Dolores
year by the boarding house with needs geared to the
Almeida, Plymouth; Pat Lange, North Brookfield;
life of students by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jalbert, 16
Lucille Gilbert, Webster; Carol Brown; Helen Flyn,
Loring avenue. Students, left to right, are: Elaine
Barre, and Maxine Sealund, Hingham.
Coccione, Clinton; Ellen Dowling, Springfield; Ann
(Salem News Photo)
Manzi, Webster; Dorothy Urban, Fall River; Claire
In an atmosphere long dreamed of by students of the Salem State Teachers’ college, 23 girls are enjoying
the privileges of a dormitory-like atmosphere at 16 Loring avenue, I proximity to college activities.
Responsible for the ambitious project are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jalbert, both former students of the
college.
Mrs. Jalbert, the former Jean Mercer of Salem, who is only 24, admits that the idea was born when, even as
a president, she recognized the problem for out-of-town students. Other than single rooms available in the
neighborhood of the school it was necessary for the students to take rooms at business clubs where it was essential
to add transportation costs to their other expenses.
The present “house mother,” who was married in 1951 at the conclusion of her sophomore year, returned
last year to complete her junior year. It was at that time that she first realized the possibilities of the former Audet
house and, as her idea grew proportionally, she re-scheduled plans for her senior year for a plater date and last May
she and her husband, a teacher at the Pickering school, bought the property and spent the summer preparing for
the first college season.
Mrs. Jalbert prepares and serves breakfast and dinner each day during the week and three meals weekends for 21 girls, while her mother-in-law, Mrs. Ida Jalbert, who has an apartment in the same house, gets meals for
the other two girls.
In addition to the large bedrooms, each shared by two girls, the house contains a large well-lighted and
comfortable study room. A large room over the two-car garage is designated as a recreation room, and television
and a ping-pong table afford an opportunity for relaxation. The large tree-filled yard, which was once a tennis
court, has a future date with a badminton net.
The Jalbert’s own enthusiasm for the future of the project is shared by all the girls and their willingness to
help has made the new dormitory-like accommodations a dream come true.
�Prior to Robert J. Jalbert purchasing the property at 16-18 Loring Avenue from Alfred Audet in 1955, Robert J. &
Jeanne Jalbert are listed in the Salem City Directory at 17 Station Road in 1953. Robert was a local elementary
school teacher and a graduate of Salem State Teachers college, as was his wife Jeanne. Robert’s parents Ida and
Emile Jalbert also lived in one of the apartments at 18 Loring Avenue, and while Ida Jalbert helped her daughter-inlaw Jeanne manage the home as a lodging house for dozens of students. Ida Jalbert, Robert’s father, is listed as a
chauffeur for the North Shore Gas Co. through 1959. The Jalbert family continued to operate the home at 16-18
Loring Avenue as a boarding house for local students until the most recent sale of the home to Walter Power III in
1963, the deed for which is the final document of this report:
�Researcher’s Conclusion:
As an historian, it would be presumptuous and wrong of me as a professional to write the history of the home of
residents who still live, manage, and maintain the home at 16-18 Loring Avenue. I have intended this report to be as
complete as possible, but do reserve the right to change this report should new historic documentation come to my
attention. History is often viewed as a finite subject of study, but in reality is much more fluid than most give it credit
for. The story of 16-18 Loring Avenue has been a complicated and at times confusing one, but fascinating through
every generation to have called this address ‘home’. I look forward to witnessing the history still to be made there.
— Amy E. Kellett, September 2018
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Loring Avenue
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
16-18 Loring Avenue, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Susan B. Moulton
Widow of Nelson H. Moulton
&
Lulu E. Moulton
Music Teacher
c. 1894
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: c. 1894
House History Written: Sept. 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
16 Loring
16-18/Loring Avenue
18 Loring
1894
Massachusetts
Moulton
Music Teacher
Salem
-
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Chain of Title, 0 N Pine St, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
1887 June 22
John F Saul and Sarah Saul (wife)
Grantee(s)
Consideration Conveyance of
Ellen D. Looney (wife of John Looney)
$1
lot of land in said Salem which is bounded Southerly by
Essex St twenty nine feet and six inches,
Westerly by North Pine St one hundred feet;
Northerly by land late of Richardson thirty seven feet
Easterly by the Friends Burying Ground ninety five feet and five inches
Together with the buildings thereon
Josephine E. Looney and Mary L.
a certain parcel of land situated in said Salem, and bounded
Looney
Southerly by Essex St, 29 feet 6in
Westerly by N Pine, 100 feet
Northerly by land late of Richardson, 37 feet
Easterly by the Friends Burying Ground 95ft5in
Source Document
Deed Essex Registry of Deeds
Book : Page
Bk 263 : Pg 200
Bk 1200 : Pg 253
Deed
Bk 2264 : Pg 94
A certain parcel of land in said Salem, with the building and improvements
thereon, known as 2-A North Pine St, and bounded and described as follows:
Westerly by N Pine, 22 feet
Northernly by land formerly of Richardson 37 feet
Easterly by Friends Burying Ground, 22 feet
Southerly by land now or formerly of Bresnahan, 37 feet
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds
Bk 6667 : Pg 323
0 North Pine St,
Westerly by N Pine 22 feet
Northerly by land formerly of Richardson, 37 feet
Easterly by Friends Burying Ground, 22 feet
Southerly, by land now or formerly of Bresnahan, 37 feet
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds
Essex Registry of Deeds
Bk 6882 : Pg 792
Bk 12753 : Pg 69
1914 July 20
Ellen D. Looney
1979 Dec 28
Elizabeth Boardman Shea
Paul D Landry and Sara Landry of
118 Derby St
$9,500
1981 Nov 13
1994 Sept 21
Paul D Landry and Sara Landry
John D Spinale
John D Spinale
Corinne A. Geary
$17,000
$66,500
Notes
814 square feet of land more
or less
Shea receives power of attorney
from Looney 1958 Sept 4
See Bk 4491 Pg 284
814 square feet of land more
or less
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
North Pine Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
0 North Pine Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Documents provided are of research conduction on house; formal house history unavailable.
Built for
John & Sarah Saul
c. 1872
Extended to carriage house for
Ellen D. Looney, dressmaker,
and her husband, John, tanner
c. 1890
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
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Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: c. 1872
Extended: c. 1890
Title Search: 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Dan Graham
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/1002f6f03ca35108b5e4d18d535755b2.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=rztcHXD6uotcdJcSu2dua9DUrlyWSBCzVCnBe-d4u7azqA0RWT1eb3gd7WLF-G9s8dVLr7wKyMPLrbpt87UuzSf5QXGWKGqPQbO7JXru-QMqtlqQce6FQ2jw2g1HnTkokHQ6n6BpFbRg1-hlGjjWk5zZW9kK1XfHe9TRxXbLmgw3GnkCCr4O3yWI15eSqbgLewAgUoxgy7cTY-%7E1NtY6XTOSy4cPdkQbN1YuqA6bccdFB1WxHEOmkPwMYKnCRamnKt5Wj9LqxuIBuD6IeOxRqhOHZQTiNzT6wBESjDYl%7EwyOddy3k8rws4F8F45Yn%7Eh1Du93aa7HzfggDl8H-v1gMw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
39bf14e7c9084e23aa3fe7dc143068aa
PDF Text
Text
42 Warren Street
Salem, MA
Built for
Mary J. Sheehan
1915
After the great Salem fire
Researched and written by Amy Kellett, Public History Services Inc.
March 2020
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745–0799 | historicsalem.org
©2020
�42 WARREN STREET | SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS
COLONIAL-REVIVAL STYLE HOME BUILT IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT SALEM FIRE OF 1914
BUILT FOR
MARY J. SHEEHAN
1915
AFTER THE GREAT SALEM FIRE
HOME OF SALEM HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL
MAURICE B. SMITH
1920-1935
Researcher’s Note:
The contents of this report are based on research done through the Southern Essex County
Registry of Deeds, the Salem City Directory archives, Salem Street Books, Tax Assessment
Records, and other primary sources. (Where secondary sources have been quoted or otherwise
referred to, there are corresponding citation footnotes and/or appendices.) This report is
completed to the best of my knowledge at the time of its publication. However, I reserve the right
to update, revise, and otherwise edit this report if and/or when new information is discovered.
This report is published and copyrighted by Historic Salem, Inc. and Public History Services, Inc.
March 2020
Amy E. Kellett
Researcher & Author
�Index of Images
Cover
42 Warren Street — Salem, Mass. (1915)
Page 2
Portrait & Obituary Title — Caleb Foote (1894)
Page 3
Salem Gazette & Essex Mercury Advertisement (1880)
Page 5
Bird’s Eye View of the Great Salem Fire (1914)
Page 6
Fire Losses of Mary J. Sheehan — Salem, Mass. (1914)
Page 6
Area of 44 Warren St. — Salem City Atlas Excerpt (1911)
Page 7
Rebuilt Area of 44 Warren St. — Salem Ins. Map (1915)
Page 10
Pages 11-14
Page 16
WWI Draft Registration — Maurice B. Smith (1918)
Maurice B. Smith — Boston Globe Articles (1920-1934)
SHS Yearbook Portrait — Maurice B. Smith (1935)
�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
The home that now stands numbered 42 Warren Street in the McIntire District of
Salem was built in the aftermath of the Great Salem Fire of 1914. Prior to the
disastrous conflagration that destroyed more than 250 acres of Salem’s homes
and businesses, the plot of land which now stands underneath both 42 and 44
Warren Street belonged to a single home (built prior to 1851), and was the
residence of Caleb Foote until 1894. Mr. Foote made his fortune in the journalism
and printing business, becoming a publisher of the Salem Gazette and the Essex
County Mercury newspapers during the latter half of the 19th century. Upon his
death at the age of 91 in June of 1894, the Boston Globe published a long article
recounting his illustrious life, declaring Foote to be "truly a self-made man, and a
noteworthy instance of the admirable substitute which the printing office and
editorial chair may be for the training school and college to an apt pupil."
18 JUNE 1894 BOSTON GLOBE OBITUARY OF CALEB FOOTE
SALEM’S LEGENDARY JOURNALIST AND PUBLISHER PASSED AWAY IN 1894 AT THE AGE OF
91, AND HAD BEEN A RESIDENT OF 44 WARREN STREET SINCE PRIOR TO 1851.
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1880 SALEM CITY DIRECTORY ADVERTISEMENT
THE SALEM GAZETTE AND ESSEX COUNTY MERCURY, PUBLISHED BY CALEB FOOTE &
N. A. HORTON, IN HALE’S BUILDING LOCATED AT 223 ESSEX STREET
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
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Amy Kellett
After the passing of Caleb Foote, the home numbered 44 Warren Street became
the residence of local grocer, Lewis R. Pratt and his wife, Mrs. Mary W. Pratt.
Lewis Pratt lived in the home until his passing on July 5th, 1899, after which time
his widow continued to live in the home until 1903. For two years, the house was
occupied by furniture pattern maker, Clarence R. Jameson. In 1905 the property
was sold from the Estate of Mary W. Pratt to Salem local, Mary J. Sheehan:
[…] I, WALTER P. PRATT OF SALEM […] AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE
ESTATE OF MARY W. PRATT LATE OF SAID SALEM, DECEASED […] SOLD
THE REAL ESTATE OF THE SAID DECEASED, HEREINAFTER DESCRIBED AT
PUBLIC AUCTION ON THE TWENTY FIRST DAY OF JUNE A.D. 1905 TO
MARY J. SHEEHAN, WIFE OF JOHN J. SHEEHAN, OF SAID SALEM, FOR THE
SUM OF THIRTY NINE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY SIX DOLLARS, WHICH
AMOUNT WAS BID BY THE SAID MARY J. SHEEHAN […] A CERTAIN PARCEL
OF LAND WITH THE BUILDINGS THEREON SITUATE ON WARREN STREET IN
SAID SALEM, BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS, VIZ.: SOUTHERLY
BY WARREN STREET EIGHTY NINE AND TWO TENTHS FEET (89.2);
SOUTHWESTERLY BY LAND NOW OR LATE OF AUSTIN FIFTY NINE AND ONE
TENTH FEET (59.1); NORTHWESTERLY BY LAND CONVEYED BY SAID MARY
W. PRATT TO THE CITY OF SALEM, ON FOUR COURSES MEASURING
RESPECTIVELY FORTY ONE AND FOUR TENTHS FEET (41.4) NINE FEET (9),
ONE AND FIVE TENTHS FEET (1.5), FIFTY EIGHT AND FIVE TENTHS FEET
(58.5); NORTHEASTERLY BY LAND NOW OR LATE OF HATHAWAY FORTY SIX
AND FIFTY FIVE HUNDREDTHS FEET; AND BY LAND LATE OF VARNEY FIFTY
FOUR FEET (54). 1
Mary Sheehan resided around the corner at 400 Essex Street while renting the
property at 44 Warren Street to various tenants. For the first year of ownership,
Sheehan kept the pattern maker, Clarence Jameson, as a tenant through 1905.
From 1906 through 1909 the home was occupied by Boston-based traveling
salesman, Thomas R. Sheehan (undoubtedly a relative of the property’s owner,
Mary J. Sheehan). The subsequent three years the property served as a home for
Boston insurance agent, John P. Hart, through 1913. In 1914, Boston clerk Ralph
SOUTHERN ESSEX CO. REGISTRY OF DEEDS — BOOK 1785; PAGE 436 — ESTATE OF MARY W. PRATT (WALTER P. PRATT,
ADMIN.) TO MARY J. SHEEHAN (1 JULY 1905)
1
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Amy Kellett
Lawson was renting the property at 44 Warren Street from Mary R. Sheehan when
a fire sparked in the nearby Blubber Hollow neighborhood of Salem. During the
late-morning hours of Thursday, June 25th in 1914 a spontaneous explosion of
combustible materials in the Korn Leather Factory ignited a fire, which soon
raced out of control, as the west wind was high and the season had been dry. The
next building caught fire, and the next, and out of Blubber Hollow the fire roared
easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out the houses of Boston
Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping through
Warren, Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets.
25 JUNE 1914 — THE GREAT SALEM FIRE
APPROXIMATELY 256 ACRES OF THE CITY BURNED TO THE GROUND IN 13 HOURS, DESTROYING
THE HOMES AND BUSINESSES OF THOUSAND’S OF SALEM RESIDENTS.
Mary J. Sheehan lost two properties in the conflagration, both the former
residence of Caleb Foote at 44 Warren Street, and her own home at 400 Essex
Street. Fortunately, both properties were insured, (albeit underinsured,) making it
possible for Sheehan to commission the rebuilding of the home that now stands
at 400 Essex (on the corner of Essex and North Pine Streets), and the two homes
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1914 PUBLICATION — DATA ON THE BURNED DISTRICT OF SALEM, MASS.
MANY OF SALEM’S RESIDENTS WERE UNDERINSURED AGAINST THE FIRE IN 1914, INCLUDING
MARY J. SHEEHAN WHOSE PROPERTIES AT 400 ESSEX AND 44 WARREN STREETS WERE VALUED AT
$8900, WHILE THE BUILDING AT 44 WARREN WAS THE ONLY ONE INSURED, FOR $2000.
1911 SALEM CITY ATLAS — PLATE 16 — 44 WARREN ST. SALEM, MASS.
MARY J. SHEEHAN, NOTED AS THE OWNER OF 44 WARREN STREET, ALONG WITH HUNDREDS OF
OTHER HOMEOWNERS, LANDLORDS, AND THOUSANDS OF RESIDENTS, LOST EVERYTHING JUST
THREE YEARS AFTER THIS PUBLICATION.
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
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Amy Kellett
that now stand numbered 42 and 44 Warren Street. As many of Salem’s property
owners did in the aftermath of the Great Fire of 1914, Mary J. Sheehan rented the
two homes at 42 and 44 Warren Street to recoup a portion of her Estate’s value
that had been lost in the flames. Evidently, Sheehan wasted no time rebuilding,
and by the time City-wide fire insurance map was drawn in April of 1915, both the
newly built 42 and 44 Warren Street appear as completed dwelling houses. It is
likely that the two homes were built (at least partially) on the footprint that
remained from Caleb Foote’s home after the fire debris was cleared — thus,
Sheehan doubled her income from what had been a single rental property.
1915 INSURANCE MAP — AREA OF WARREN, ESSEX PINE STREETS — SALEM, MASS.
IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT FIRE, MARY J. SHEEHAN QUICKLY REBUILT HER HOME AND
RENTAL PROPERTIES, MARKED ON THIS APRIL 1915 MAP WITH A 'D' AT 42 AND 44 WARREN
STREET (BOTTOM RIGHT) AND 400 ESSEX STREET (TOP LEFT).
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
Salem’s City Resident directory in 1916 lists Charles F. Morey, a Boston-based
clerk, and his wife Bessie W. Morey, as the first residents of the newly constructed
home, followed by Charles C. Dodge and his wife Alice in the 1917-1918
directories. Charles Dodge served as the Sub-Principal at Salem High school
while living at 42 Warren Street until his death on the 25th of March in 1919. The
widow Alice R. Dodge resided in the home for another year through 1920, until
the property’s owner, Mary J. Sheehan, passed away during the beginning
months of 1920. Subsequently, the Executor of Sheehan’s Estate, Ansel J.
Cheney, sold the home at 42 Warren Street to Maurice & Beth Sylvia Smith in
September of 1920:
I, ANSEL J. CHENEY OF BEVERLY […] EXECUTOR OF THE WILL OF MARY J.
SHEEHAN, DECEASED, LATE OF SALEM […] FOR EIGHT THOUSAND
DOLLARS PAID, GRANT TO BETH SYLVIA SMITH OF SAID SALEM, THE LAND
IN SAID SALEM WITH THE BUILDINGS THEREON BOUNDED AND
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: SOUTHERLY ON WARREN STREET FORTY FIVE
(45) FEET; SOUTHWESTERLY BY LAND NOW OR LATE OF LYNCH FIFTY FOUR
(54) FEET; NORTHWESTERLY BY LAND OF SAID SALEM FIFTY FIVE 25/100
(55.25) FEET; NORTHEASTERLY BY LAND NOW OR LATE OF FREEDMAN
FORTY SIX 55/100 (46.55) FEET; AND SOUTHEASTERLY BY LAND NOW OR
LATE OF COLE FIFTY FOUR (54) FEET.2
The newly-married couple took up residence at the nearly-new Colonial Revival
house at 42 Warren Street, and mortgaged the home to the Salem Savings Bank
for $5000 the following month on the 25th of October. Maurice Smith, then aged
47, had just taken the position of Principal at the Salem Public High School when
he and his wife, Beth Sylvia Smith (née Hayward) made their home at 42 Warren.
Beth Sylvia was eighteen years her husband’s junior, turning twenty-nine on the
9th of November in 1920, the same year the Smith couple purchased the home.
SOUTHERN ESSEX CO. REGISTRY OF DEEDS — BOOK 2467; PAGE 462 — ESTATE OF MARY J. SHEEHAN (ANSEL J. CHENEY,
ADMIN.) TO BETH SYLVIA SMITH (9 SEPTEMBER 1920)
2
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
While Beth Sylvia originated from the Easton, Mass. area, Maurice B. Smith had
made his home in Salem (as well as several other cities and towns throughout
Massachusetts) earlier in his career. Maurice Billings Smith was born in Ohio on
the 28th of November, 1872 to Jerusha Augusta Bushnell and Judson Smith — A
publication entitled 'The Descendants of John Mack of Lyme, Connecticut'
provides details about Maurice B. Smith’s ancestry, especially the academic and
professional achievements of Maurice’s father, Judson Smith:
Judson Smith b. June 28, 1837, Middlefield, Mass., m. Aug.
1, 1865, Jerusha Augusta Bushnell (dau. Seth A. Bushnell, of
Hartford, Ohio), b. Feb. 16, 1843, Hartford, Ohio. For years she has
been President of the Woman’s branch A.B.C.F. Missions.
He pursued his predatory studies at home and at Williston
Seminary. He was an undergraduate in New York Central College
[…] tutor in Eleutherian College, Indiana […] completed the
studies of the junior year in Oberlin College, Ohio, and spent the
senior year at Amherst College, Massachusetts, where he
graduated with the class of 1859.3
Judson & J. Augusta Smith raised four children — three girls and one boy:
Gertrude Bushnell, born March 10th, 1870 (who went on to graduate from
Wellesley College, and then become a Greek professor at Plainesville, Ohio);
Maurice Billings, born on the 28th of November 1872 (eventually became the
Principal of Salem High School and resident of 42 Warren Street in Salem); Mary
Caroline, born on March 2, 1880 (became a teacher at her own Alma Mater,
Wellesley College); and Margaret Augusta, who was born March 2, 1884 (her
sister, Mary’s, 4th birthday). The children were raised in Ohio while their father,
Judson Smith, served in several positions, including Professor of Church History
and Modern History at Oberlin College, as well as President of the Board of
Education for the village of Oberlin from 1872 to 1884. Certainly, academics and
education was an important part of the Smith family experience and legacy.
3
MACK GENEALOGY: THE DESCENDANTS OF JOHN MACK OF LYME, CONN. PAGES 185-187. (1905)
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Amy Kellett
Property History Report
As a young man, Maurice B. Smith attended Amherst College beginning at the
age of 21 in 1893, earning his teaching degree by the end of the 19th century.
Regional directories through the first years of the 20th century note Mr. Smith as
working in Holliston, Quincy, and Penn Charter School in Philadelphia. The 1910
Federal Census shows Maurice B. Smith made his living as a Public School
teacher, and home in South Salem, boarding with the Williams Family (along with
a half-dozen other public school teachers) at 255 Lafayette Street. The following
year, the Boston Globe featured single-sentence story at the bottom of the ninth
page of
the Wednesday, November 1st 1911 edition: "Salem Submaster to
Leave —Salem, Oct 31—Maurice B. Smith, submaster of the Salem High School,
was today elected principal of the Gardner High School and accepted the
position.4 For the next nine years, Mr. Smith served as the Principal of the
Gardner High School while making his home at 35 Cedar Street in Gardner, Mass.
1918 U.S. DRAFT REGISTRATION
— MAURICE B. SMITH
MAURICE BILLINGS SMITH
REGISTERED FOR THE DRAFT IN
1918, AT THE AGE OF 45, WHEN
HE WAS LIVING IN (AND WORKING
FOR) GARDNER, MASS. AS THE
HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL. HE
NOTES HIS NEAREST RELATIVE AS
HIS OLDER SISTER,
GERTRUDE B.
SMITH, THEN LIVING IN
MIDDLEBURY, CONNECTICUT.
4
THE BOSTON DAILY GLOBE (VOL. LXXX—NO. 124) — SALEM SUBMASTER TO LEAVE — 1 NOV 1911
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
Maurice B. Smith began the second decade of the 20th century living, working,
and renting in Gardner, Mass. — but 1920 would prove to be an eventful year for
the middle-aged educator. To begin, he met and married a young woman, a
fellow educator (who happened to be eighteen years younger than himself)
Easton, Massachusetts native, Beth Sylvia Hayward. Then, by the end of the
academic year in June of 1920, Maurice B. Smith accepted the position of
'principal' at Salem High School, and agreed to relocate himself and his new wife
to Salem, a city with which he had called home earlier in his life, as the Boston
Daily Globe 5 reported in July, 1920:
1920 BOSTON GLOBE ARTICLE — MAURICE B. SMITH BECOMES SALEM HIGH PRINCIPAL
AFTER SERVING NINE YEARS AS PRINCIPAL OF THE GARDNER HIGH SCHOOL, MAURICE B.
SMITH (ALONG WITH HIS NEW WIFE, SYLVIA) RELOCATED TO SALEM, WHERE THEY
PURCHASED THE HOME AT 42 WARREN STREET SHORTLY THEREAFTER.
Maurice, and his wife Beth Sylvia Smith, purchased the home at 42 Warren Street
in September of 1920, at about the same time that the Fall semester began for
the first of fifteen years of tenure at Salem High School for Mr. Maurice B. Smith.
He was an involved and even-handed leader as principal at Salem High School,
detailed in the following Boston Globe articles through Mr. Smith’s career:
5
THE BOSTON DAILY GLOBE (VOL. XCVIII—NO. 29) — GARDNER PRINCIPAL TO COME TO SALEM HIGH — 29 JUL 1920
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
1924 BOSTON GLOBE ARTICLE
— MR. & MRS. MAURICE B.
SMITH AT SALEM HIGH JR. PROM
THE 1924 GRAND MARCH FOR
THE SALEM HIGH JUNIOR PROM
OF 1924 WAS LED BY THE
PRINCIPAL MR. MAURICE B.
SMITH AND HIS WIFE, MRS. BETH
SYLVIA SMITH, ALONG WITH THE
SALEM HIGH SCHOOL VICE
PRINCIPAL AND HIS WIFE, MR. &
MRS. WILLIAM R. BARRY. ALL
FOUR SERVED AS PATRONS AND
PATRONESSES OF THE PROM.
1926 BOSTON GLOBE ARTICLE —
POLISH CITIZENS OF SALEM & PRINCIPAL
MAURICE B. SMITH HONOR FIRST POLISH
SALEM HIGH FOOTBALL CAPTAIN
MAURICE B. SMITH ATTENDED (ALONG
WITH 300 OF SALEM’S POLISH RESIDENTS)
A TESTIMONIAL BANQUET BY THE POLISH
STUDENTS SOCIETY RELATING TO THE
ELECTION OF THE SALEM HIGH SCHOOL
CAPTAIN-ELECT, CESLAUS ANTOSEWSKI,
THE FIRST POLISH STUDENT TO BE
'HONORED WITH THE FOOTBALL
CAPTAINCY’ IN THE HISTORY OF SALEM
HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETICS IN THE CITY OF
SALEM’S TRICENTENNIAL YEAR.
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
1926 BOSTON GLOBE ARTICLE — FOUR
SUSPENDED SALEM HIGH FOOTBALL PLAYERS
REINSTATED BY PRINCIPAL MAURICE B. SMITH
PRINCIPAL MAURICE B. SMITH SUSPENDED
FOUR SALEM HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL PLAYERS
FOR 'UNAUTHORIZED ABSENCE' — ONE
STUDENT, ACCORDING TO PRINCIPAL SMITH,
WAS AN 'AGGRAVATED CASE'.
1931 BOSTON GLOBE ARTICLE — 31 MARCH —
SALEM MAYOR REQUESTS CHECK ON ATHLETIC
SPENDING
MAYOR GEORGE J. BATES PROPOSED LEGISLATION
TO CURTAIL SALEM HIGH SCHOOL AND THE
SCHOOL COMMITTEE’S SPENDING ON SALEM HIGH
SCHOOL ATHLETICS. THE ATHLETIC INSTRUCTOR
AND FOOTBALL COACH, ROBERT W. BRODERICK,
WAS PAID SEPARATELY FOR EACH ROLE: $4000
ANNUALLY AS ATHLETIC DIRECTOR, AND $2700 AS
FOOTBALL COACH, FOR A TOTAL $6700 ANNUAL
SALARY. MEANWHILE, PRINCIPAL MAURICE B.
SMITH’S SALARY AMOUNTED TO $4000 ANNUALLY
— NOTING A DISPROPORTIONATE SPENDING ON
ATHLETICS (THAT CONTINUES A CENTURY LATER).
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
1934 BOSTON GLOBE ARTICLES — 26 & 29 JANUARY — MAURICE B. SMITH AND SALEM
HIGH SCHOOL BOARD ATTEMPT TO EXTEND SCHOOL DAY FROM 8:15AM TO 1:10PM
CIRCUMSTANCES NEARLY TURNED VIOLENT BETWEEN THE SALEM HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS AND
ADMINISTRATION WHEN THE BOARD ATTEMPTED TO IMPLEMENT AN ADDITIONAL HOUR TO THE
— WHEN PRINCIPAL MAURICE B. SMITH INTRODUCED THE IDEA TO STUDENTS, THEY
RESPONDED BY BOOING, HISSING, AND THREATENING TO STRIKE AGAINST THEIR PRINCIPAL. THE
STUDENTS’ TACTIC PROVED EFFECTIVE, AND THREE DAYS LATER THE BOSTON GLOBE REPORTED
THE SCHOOL EXTENDED SCHOOL DAY IN SALEM WOULD NOT BE IMPLEMENTED AT THAT TIME.
SCHOOL DAY
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�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Amy Kellett
Property History Report
Just a year after the drama at Salem High School over the potential of an
extended school day, Maurice B. Smith took ill and required surgery at Salem
Hospital. Unfortunately, an infection in Mr. Smith’s kidneys set in and his body
gave out — Maurice B. Smith passed away on the evening of July 21st, 1935,
aged just 62. The Salem Evening News reported the sad event the following day:
MAURICE B. SMITH, PRINCIPAL
SALEM HIGH SCHOOL PASSES
OF
PRINCIPAL OF THE
GARDNER, MASS. HIGH
SCHOOL WHERE HE SERVED FOR NINE
YEARS.
HOSPITAL LAST EVENING FROM A KIDNEY
THEN IN 1920 HE CAME TO SALEM
HIGH SCHOOL
WHERE HE HAD ALREADY SERVED AS SUBMASTER FROM 1905 TO 1911.
HE WAS A MEMBER OF THE
TABERNACLE CHURCH OF SALEM, OF THE
PSI UPSILON FRATERNITY, THE QUINTIPED
CLUB OF BOSTON, THE SCHOOLMASTERS
CLUB AND THE TEN OF US CLUB.
IN 1920, HE MARRIED BETH SYLVIA
HAYWARD OF SOUTH EASTON, MASS.,
INFECTION
WHO SURVIVES HIM TOGETHER WITH ONE
SUCCUMBED TO KIDNEY INFECTION
FOLLOWING MAJOR OPERATION; HEAD
OF L OCAL S CHOOL S INCE 1920;
NOTABLE CAREER
22 JULY — MAURICE BILLINGS SMITH,
PRINCIPAL OF THE SALEM HIGH SCHOOL,
DIED AT THE AGE OF 62 IN THE SALEM
FOLLOWING
A
MAJOR
OPERATION.
AS PRINCIPAL OF THE
HIS FATHER,
JUDSON SMITH, WAS A PROFESSOR AT
OBERLIN COLLEGE BEFORE HE BECAME
SECRETARY OF THE AMERICAN BOARD OF
FOREIGN MISSIONS IN BOSTON. HIS
MOTHER , J. A UGUSTA S MITH , ALSO
TAUGHT IN OBERLIN AND WAS LATER FOR
S YLVIA B USHNELL . M R .
S MITH ’ S THREE SISTERS ARE M ISS
G E R T R U D E S M I T H , R E C E N T LY O F
P ITTSBURGH , M ISS M ARY S MITH OF
MONTCLAIR, N.J., AND MISS MARGARET
SMITH OF CONWAY, MASS.
ALWAYS A STRICT DISCIPLINARIAN, MR.
S MITH NEVERTHELESS EXERCISED A
FAIRNESS IN DEALING WITH HIS STUDENTS,
MANY
THE
WHICH WON FOR HIM THE ADMIRATION
CONGREGATIONAL WOMEN’S BOARD OF
MISSIONS. MR. SMITH WAS BORN IN
OBERLIN BUT WAS EDUCATED AT THE
ROXBURY LATIN SCHOOL OF BOSTON. HE
GRADUATED FROM AMHERST COLLEGE,
PHI BETA KAPPA, IN THE CLASS OF 1895
WHOSE 40TH REUNION HE HAD JUST
ATTENDED WITH HIS FAMILY. HE WAS A
CLASSMATE OF THE LATE P RESIDENT
CALVIN COOLIDGE.
AFTER TEACHING IN HOLLISTON AND
Q UINCY AND THE P ENN C HARTER
SCHOOL IN PHILADELPHIA, HE BECAME
AND RESPECT OF THE ENTIRE STUDENT
MR. SMITH
DAUGHTER ,
CAME FROM A FAMILY OF
TEACHERS AND EDUCATORS.
YEARS
PRESIDENT
2020 © Public History Services, Inc.
OF
BODY.
HE
TOOK AN INDIVIDUAL INTEREST
IN ALL HIS PUPILS AND COULD ALWAYS BE
RELIED UPON TO DO ANYTHING WITHIN
HIS POWER TO AID THEM IN THEIR
SCHOOL WORK.
OUTSIDE
OF SCHOOL ACTIVITIES HE
ENJOYED TRAVELING AND WAS A TENNIS
ENTHUSIAST.
15
�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
1935 PORTRAIT — MAURICE B. SMITH — SALEM HIGH PRINCIPAL — 1920-1935
FEATURED IN THE 1936 SALEM HIGH SCHOOL YEARBOOK, PRINCIPAL AND LONG-TIME RESIDENT
OF 42 WARREN STREET, MAURICE B. SMITH AFTER HIS UNTIMELY PASSING IN 1935.
2020 © Public History Services, Inc.
16
�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
At just 44 years old, Beth Sylvia Smith found herself a widow with a young
daughter, Sylvia Bushnell Smith (then aged just 10), to raise on her own.
Evidently, she could not bear continuing to live in the home that she had shared
with her husband Maurice, and she sold the property at 42 Warren Street just one
month after her husband’s passing on the 21st of August, 1935:
I, BETH SYLVIA SMITH OF SALEM, ESSEX COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
BEING UNMARRIED, FOR CONSIDERATION PAID, GRANT TO HOWARD S.
BEECHEY AND ELLEN J. BEECHEY HUSBAND AND WIFE AS TENANTS BY
THE ENTIRETY AND NOT AS JOINT TENANTS OR TENANTS IN COMMON OF
DANVERS IN SAID COUNTY WITH WARRANTY COVENANTS A CERTAIN
LOT OR PARCEL OF LAND WITH THE BUILDINGS THEREON, SITUATED IN
SAID SALEM ON THE NORTHERLY SIDE OF WARREN STREET AND
BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS, VIZ.; SOUTHERLY BY SAID
W ARREN S TREET THERE MEASURING FORTY FIVE (45) FEET ;
SOUTHWESTERLY BY LAND OF ONE LYNCH THERE MEASURING FIFTY FOUR
(54) FEET; NORTH WESTERLY BY LAND OF THE CITY OF SALEM THERE
MEASURING FIFTY FIVE AND TWENTY FIVE HUNDREDTHS (55.25) FEET;
NORTH EASTERLY BY LAND NOW OR FORMERLY OF ONE FREEDMAN THERE
MEASURING FORTY SIX AND FIFTY FIVE HUNDREDTHS (46.55) FEET; AND
SOUTH EASTERLY BY LAND NOW OR FORMERLY OF ONE COLE THERE
MEASURING FIFTY FOUR FEET. BEING THE SAME PREMISES CONVEYED TO
ME BY […] MARY J. SHEEHAN BY DEED DATED SEPTEMBER 9, 1920 AND
RECORDED WITH ESSEX COUNTY SOUTH DISTRICT DEEDS BOOK 2467
PAGE 462.6
The Widow Smith and her daughter Sylvia relocated back to Beth Sylvia’s
hometown of Easton, Massachusetts. When the Smiths had vacated the property
at 42 Warren Street, the Beechey family took up residence — Howard S., Ellen J.,
and their five-year-old daughter, Janice. Howard S. Beechey made his living as an
Assistant Secretary for Holyoke Mutual Fire Insurance Co. at 39 Norman Street in
Salem. The Beechey family remained the owners of 42 Warren Street for the next
fifty-five years, until 1990.
SOUTHERN ESSEX CO. REGISTRY OF DEEDS — BOOK 3043; PAGE 509 — BETH SYLVIA SMITH TO HOWARD S. & ELLEN J.
BEECHEY (21 AUGUST 1935)
6
2020 © Public History Services, Inc.
17
�42 Warren St. Salem, Mass.
Property History Report
Amy Kellett
CHAIN OF TITLE — 1905-2002 — SOUTHERN ESSEX CO. REGISTRY OF DEEDS
1. 1905 Deed (44 Warren Street) — Book 1785 Page 436 — Estate of Mary W.
Pratt to Mary J. Sheehan — Executor: Walter P. Pratt
2. 1920 Deed (42 Warren Street) — Book 2467 Page 462 — Estate of Mary J.
Sheehan to Beth Sylvia Smith — Executor: Ansel J. Cheney
3. 1935 Deed — Book 3043; Page 509 — Beth Sylvia Smith to Howard S. & Ellen
J. Beechey
4. 1990 Deed — Book 10518 Page 43 — Estate of Howard S. & Ellen J. Beechey
to Margaret H. & Russell J. MacDonald — Executor: Janet L. Howat
5. 2002 Deed — Book 19034 Page 299 — Margaret H. & Russell J. MacDonald
to Victor G. Simonians
2020 © Public History Services, Inc.
18
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Warren Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
42 Warren Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Mary J. Sheehan
1915
After the great Salem fire
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1915
House History Written: March 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/1c87a1139d91001a945acaf8e05ca3f7.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=aidadAo3R3HUJuknzNUFOz6k4OHxMPpe8QBsHqHtPXIBh2gxX%7EWTE-%7EQY1FtWWpaB-hRo5QCW6ycfzDem9oAjkeNAbOz%7ELLVovVlcm8-WmMg7S%7ElT6FsBlbeMiOOruR68aj5cZCoEBqk6OLQQHWh1htEb1dGocyhflLDHqJDu1GDVz1W1Eq9IL9HQK9Ve-NXZg73bWc73Oi9WunCu4Jh8SrcBbopK2evITvIrP0CIREWQ6TCQPEw9tS0qjsuYTjPvDCKeC0xQCPKPHyATzRC60cg7w4ma0W%7EkxYi4DVK2M0wOBClvA7erdvRuuyHNS2P88TqKMC-ExNHzCswk%7EEbYw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
43fc919e5f4761089bb8b5afb91c3d32
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
3 Hamilton Street
Built for
Sarah White Pickering and Mary Orne Pickering
by John Pickering the 9th
c. 1923
Moved to this site from 2 Pickering Street in 1962.
Researched and written by Amanda R. Eddy
February 2020
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2020
�2 Pickering Street appears for the first time in the 1924 City Directory. It does not appear in the 1922 Directory, and there is no 1923 Directory
available.
Name
Sarah White Pickering
Mary Orne Pickering
John Pickering the 8th
John Pickering the 9th
Years of Ownership
Seacoast Realty Co.
Number of
Years
Purchase Price
Deed
Referenced
Notes
Circa 1924-1935
2 Pickering
St.
10
n/a
1842-483
Circa 1924-1961
37
n/a
n/a
3
Hamilton St.
1
Mary died in 1930 and Sarah in
1935. John Pickering the 9th
inherited the entire Pickering
estate in 1919 when his father,
John Pickering the 8th, died,
including the subplot in which
Sarah and Mary had a homestead.
According to “The House That John
Built”, John Pickering and his family
(including his mother) swapped
from 2 Pickering St to 18 Broad St a
few times before John Pickering
the 9th decided to move his family
to 30 Chestnut Street. John owned
the house until 1961. When him
and his family moved, he rented it
out.
$20,000 (for multiple
properties)
4784-266
1961-1962
Amanda R. Eddy | amandarobineddy@gmail.com
Executor of Rebecca Benson’s
(landlord of 3 Hamilton Street
property) will (Parcel 1): Peter B.
Seamans.
With additional properties on
Hamilton Street and Botts Court.
�Frank A. Mason Jr.
Joan M. Mason
1962-1965
3
“Consideration paid”
4991-157
Assumed $22,000 mortgage.
Had the house moved from 2
Pickering St to its present location
in June 1962.
Edward J. Marrs
Eleanor C. Marrs
1965-1983
18
“Consideration paid”
5284-481
Assumed $17,000 mortgage.
Richard B. Paul
1983-1996
13
$134,900
7294-591
Richard S Jendrysik
Pamela M Jendrysik
1996-2020+
24
$290,000
13821397
Richard S Jendrysik
Pamela M Jendrysik
Edward Jendrysik
Meghan Jendrysik
2015-2020+
5+
$1 and other considerations
Amanda R. Eddy | amandarobineddy@gmail.com
34284383
Children own house as of 2015;
they have life lease.
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�I, PETER B. SEAMANS, Administrator with the will annexed of
'
the ESTATE OF REBECCA A. BENSON, by power conferred by said will
I
and every other po er, for Twenty Thousand Dollar, ($20,000.00)
Se ci.
00-.'i
t "R..... 1 -ry C0, Inc of- Mcir-b le. Ii ~,:,.,J
paid, grant toA''~,.Yil~iB--Hst~Eri':1!"-ttlrtem, Essex County, Massachusetts,
four certain parcels or land, together being known as and numbered 3 and 7 Hamilton Street and 4 and 6 Botts Court, consisting in
'
the ag~regate of Eleven Thousand Seven Hundred Eighty(ll,780)
square feet of land more or less, as follows:
Parcel 1
A certain par~el of land with the buildings thereon situated
in said Sale:n bounded and described as follows:Be~inning at the Southwesterly corner thereof at land now or
late of the ~rantee, formerly of Low, thence running Easterly by said land of the grantee sixty-five and eieht tenths
I
•
I
feet to 19.nd now or late of Low, thence running Northerly by
said lane. of Jl.,ow sixty-seven and two tenths feet to land now
or late of Brown, thence running Nesterly by said land of
Brown to Ham! ~ton Street, thence running Southerly by
Hamilton Street fifty-one and six tenths feet to said land
of Brown and the point begun at.
in,' :nore or less.
All said measurements be-
Being a portion of the premises conveyed
to Joseph Smith by deed of George Osborne dated March 22,
le44 and recorded at Essex So. Dist. Reg, of Deeds Book 342
Leaf 233 and deed of Nathaniel Frothillp'ham dated May 27, 1867
and recorded at said Registry Book 725 Leaf 2.
Being the
same pre:nises :conveyed by deed of William Kingston dated
November 10, 1906 and recorded •1th said Deeds Book 1850,
Page 350.
Parcel 2
A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situated
in said Salem, bounded and described as follows viz Beginning at ~he Southwesterly corner or the prend.ses by
land of Endicott on Hamilton Street and running northerly by
said Street Ntnety-four and five tenths feet (94.5), thence
�Easterly by land now or formerly or the Estate of Joseph
Smith Sixty five and Eight tenths !eet (65.8), thence Southerly by land now or for!llerly of Daniel Low and land now or
formerly of Cloutman Ninety two and three tenths (92.3),
thence Westerly by land of Price and land now or formerly of
Endicott Sixty one feet to the point of beginning,
Being
the same premises conveyed hy deed of Alfred W. Putnam dated
January 12, 1905 and recorded with said Deeds Book 1766 Page
52.
Parcel 3
A
certain parcel of land, with half of a dwelling house
thereon, situate on Botts Court in said Salem, and numbered
Six on said Court and bounded Easterly by Botts Court;
Southerly by land now or late of the heirs of Sarah B.
Cloutman; 'Neste!'ly by land of Jo3eph Pl'ice and land of
Henry P. Benson, and Northerly by land late of said
Cloutman, now of the grantee.
Being the same premises
conveyed by deed of Frank T. Goodhue dated April 22, 1901
and recorded with said Deeds Book 1639 Page 515.
Parcel 4
A
certain parcel of land in said Salem, with the portion of
the dwellin,iz house thereon, bounded beginning at the north•
east corner on Bott' s Court, thence running southerly thirty
feet on said Court to a point opposite the centre of the
front door of the dwelling house, thence running westerly
through the centre of said door through said house to land
formerly of Joseph Smith, now of said Henry P. Benson, forty'
five feet, more or less, thence running northerly by said
last na~ed land thirty feet to land of Low, thence running.
east~rly by said Low's land to said Bott 1 s Court forty six
feet to the corner begun at; the tront door, entries and
stairways to be used in common with the owners and occupants
or the southern part of said house; see deed from Thos. B.
i
Ferguson to George A. Goodridge, dated June 18, 1868, record-'
�-
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ed with Esse,x So. Dist. Deeds Book 749 Leaf 113; will of
George A. Goodridge duly proved in said County first Tuesday
of January 1871 and will of Caroline M. •Colby proved in said
County third'Monday of June 1884; deeds to Sarah B, Cloutman
recorded B, 1209
P. 279 and 280 and settlement of Sarah B.
/
Cloutman's estate in said County March 1, 1901, the granters
beiw her sole heirs at law; subject to the drain right referred to in said deeds.
Being the same premises conveyed
by deed of Ellen B. Cloutman, et al dated April 11, 1901 and
recorded with said Deeds Book 1639 Page 516.
'
For probate of Estate of Rebecca A. Benson see Essex Probate
Docket No. 265,605.
WITNESS my hand and seal
THE co·,11,!0NWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Suffolk, ss.
June '29, 1961
Then personally a'ppeared the above-na:ned PETER B. SEAMANS and
acknowledged the foreiroin" instrument to be his free act and deed,
as Administrator aforesaid, before me
Notary Pubic
My commission e x p i r e s ~ 3c,, 1'169.
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Esssx ss. Recor ded J\Jllg 23 , 1961 •
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52 m. pe.st 2 P.M.
JJ.155
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We, Seacoast Realty Co.,Inc.,
a corporation duly established under the laws of M
assac husetts
and having its usual place of business at Salem
✓~•
Essex
of
County, Massachusetts, for consideration paid,
Frank A. Nason; and .Joan IVJ. f•iason as tenants b y t be entirety
grants to
with quttdatm tnu.enunts
Salem, Essex County, M
assa chu s etts
tbe..lan.d-.ia
J\ certai_ parcel of l a nd wi t h bu i l ding t he reon situat ed in
n
said Salem and described as follows :
(Description and encumbrances, i( any]
'Tla.~t-[inning at a ston e bound at the southeasterly corne r of t he
lot Arunning northly 53. 5' hy l a nd now or l a t e of Marcha nd and of
M
aloy thence running we sterl y by l a nd now or l a t e of Tra c ey a.nd
L'Heure ux 66' to Hamilton Street, the nce r unning s outh erly by
-Ha milto n Stre et 55', thence t urning easte r ly 6 f eet f rom a nd par all el to'
a g r a ni t e house fou nd a t i on 65 ' t o a p oint o f b eginnin& All measur e;•
raent s beint.: mor e or les s. Being a port i on of premis es co nv eyed t o
Seacoast Eeal~y Co. Inc. by Peter B. Seaman s, Adrnini s ~rator wi th th e
will anne xed of the Estate of Rebecca A. Benson, dated Jun e 23 r d , 1 961 a na
r ecord ed with Ess ex South Dee ds.
:We.aa. ~ta~ Stqp3 $ cz?..S:-~ a.ttued
~nd e~m~lltd. on bl.ck: of' this instruaen.t
In tttitne!i!i mqrrrnf~
delivered in its name and behalf by
its
Pre sident
day of
U.- s.· Dooum: 6taml)~
and oanoelled on b~Qk of thtij tn€tf\.1.lll~nt
the said
V!ilfre d H. Hall"
hereto duly authorized, this
September
t e:J '-I. 7f_ _ ~:ff+;~q
_
o<.
-Jl__
1 -l)\ -
A
in the year one thousand nine hundred and s ixty - t wo.
Signed and sealed in presence of
.....
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�wqr <!!nttunnmuraltlt nf fflu,matlµutt:tbi
September
ss.
\':ilfred H• Hall
Then personally appeared the above named
Sea coa st
and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be the free act and deed of the .
Eealty Co . , Inc .
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' before me,
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. ·, ,:,. ✓- ·.7 k '7-,f:~..d;:.r::;.·.-~~1.......................... . ' ~ ..
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· ........................... ........ " ·. ·.. Nobicy ·Public - jun.ire-of 1:he ..Pea~
' . ~ COMM,:;;:;,,-.,,,
My commission expires
·
"-Ar'lRQ
19
·JtOVF.MnR ae, ·• •
A specia l me etin g of the Boar d o f Directors of Sea coa st Realty
Co.,Inc. was held on 3eptenib er
~f,
19A2, at the office of th e
corporation, all the Directors having waived notice ther eof and all
be i ng present .
On motion, dul y made and seconded , i t was
VOTED:
To authoriz e
Wilfred 8 . Eall, President, to execute a
j~_
de ed to Frank A. Mason/and Jo a n~. Nason for t he propert y at
#7
Eamilton Street, in Sale~, Massachusetts.
There being no furt her business , the me eting was adj ourned • .
Essex ss. Recorded Oct. 1, 1962. 20 m.past 3 P.:.M. #135
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�800~5284
PAGE
481
QUITCLAIM DEED IINDIVII?UAL) 881
FRANK A. _MASON, JR. and JOAN M. MASON, husband and wife, both
· of
Essex
Salem
County, M~ssachusetts,
bei11gmm1arried, for consideration paid, grant to EDWARD j. MARRS ANO ELEANOR c.· MARRS,
husband and wife, as tenants by the entirety, and not as tenants in common, and not" as joint
tenants, both
·
.
.·
·
·. ' •
,·
· of
Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
'
with quttdaint raurnauts
i:bu<boooo<
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~lp>(Ob<~vohaoa,>di~
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A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situated at 3 Hamilton Street~ Salem, Massachusetts, and bounded and described as follows:
BEGINNING
at a stone bound at the Southeasterly corner of the Lot, thence running
NORTHERLY
Fifty-three and 05/100 (53.05) feet by land now-or late of Marchand, and of
Maloy, thence running
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WESTERLY
by land now or late of Tracey and L'Heureux, Sixty-six (66) feet, to Hamilto_ ·
n
Street, thence running
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SOUTHERLY
by Hamilton Street, Fifty-five (55) feet, thence turning_
•
EASTERLY
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six (6) feet from and parallel to
'feet, to the point of begin~ing
.
·1
a granite house fou~dation, Sixty-five (65)
This parcel is conveyed subject to and with the benefit of easements, restrictions, agreements, and
reservations of record, if any there be, insofar as the some may be in force and applicable • .
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For my title, see deed from Seac:o~st Realty Co1 Inc; to Frank A. Mason, et ux dated September
.,
29, 1962 and recorded in Essex South District Re·gistry of Deeds, Book 4991, Page 157. .
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Nass, Excise Stamps $ JJ.
f4.
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affixed
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and cancelled on back of this inDtI'UClent
•
· U. · s. Dooum. Stamps $
J /. .J.S:
affil'ed
and cancelled on back of this 1nstrum~nt
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~-~~ JUJ11DJ1111~oiadc u~~
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)(-•-•-·····-,,..;,l~~.L~ . . . t , , ~
r.
-Essex
. June
ss.
.' Then personally appeared the above n~cd
~d acknowledged _ 'fo«8Qing ins:m~t
ilie
1.ti·
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Frank A. Mason, Jr.
'✓~~~
Samuel Edward Zoll,
.j
My (O~issior, npiru
November 15, 1969 .
I•
(•Indlvidual - Join_t Tenants -Tenants in Common-Tenant, by the ~tirdy.)
·Essex es. Recorded July 14.1965. 32· m _ past 9 A! M. #62
.
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Notary P u b l i c - ~
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1965
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Pl's
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800~5284
~'1~ 3.
5'=, C(·
482
PACE
Edn~.J•..Mana.. ~.. Eleanor. ..C •.. Mans.,. ..husband.&nd..wife.. aa ..tenanta.. l)y..the ..entl~ety
IO ♦♦
0 • 0 0 • • • o o
♦o ♦
o o o oo oo o o oooo o o
•• ♦ •It t
O O O O I O O O
♦0
I 0 0 0 o o o O o O O IO IO O o o<O Oo o • 0 o o •
0 0 00 0 0 0 0 I
00 ♦ 10 0
0 o o
o♦O•
o o
oo ♦
0 0 0 0 0 0 I o 0 0 0 0 I I O • • • • • • • o IO o O
♦O
O I o O oO O o o O 00 IO O O
♦♦ I O
4 0 • 0 0 •,• • • • o O o O O o I
I ♦♦♦o
O
♦
0
····················..···························································································································································
of"::::.Salem. ......................... ,., .......................................................Easex ................... County, Mcueac:huaet,■,
,
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i,m,r-,,,,,..,.,;,,J, for cozwderatlon pal~ grant to the SALEM FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BAN~ a Corpo-
ration duly eetabll■hed by law ln Salem, County of Eeaez and Commonwealth of Ma.seac:huaette,
with
mortgage.~, to ■ecure the payment of~"'"'·"'·""""""·.,.;"'"""'"'·....................................·....,._.
S.e.v.ente.en .. :[bousand•.~~:--:.....~~,.,:--:.....~~"'"'·"'·"'·l'!"'~·"'·~""'"'·"'·"""""'"·"'·,.·""'·..,·..,·"',;,.,............,......................,........-l>ollara
.. ·············································································································································································
.
.
···································································•:••··········································································································
..................................................................................................................................................................................
wlth lnlereat thereon, or on auch part thereof a. ■hall from tlme to time remain ·unpaid, payable m
provided ln a certain note of even date: and al■o to aec:ure the performance of all agreement■ hereln
eet fort}:i and aet forth ln aaid note
A parcel of land, togefo~r with the buildlnga thereon ln ........ Salem. ........ :....................................... ..
situated on Hamilton ·street
ln the County of .. .Esssex ........ .... and eaid Commonwealth and bei:&9Jww•1N. a■.Jle. ..........................
Street- ln eaid ......Salem.............................. more partlcularly bounded and described a.a follow■:
.
Beginning at a stone bqund at the Southeasterly cor~er of the lot. thence
running Northerly fifty-three and05/1Q> (~3.05) feet by land now or late of
Marchand and of Maloy; thence running
Westerly by land now or late of Tracey and L'Heureux 1 6~xty-six (66) feet
to Hamilton Street; thence running
Southerly by Hamilton Street, fifty-five (55) feet1 thence turning and.
running
Easterly six (6) feet from and parallei to a granite house foundation
sixty-five (65} feet to a point of beginning.
I
All measurements being more or less.
Being the same premises conveyed to us by deed of Frank A. Mason, Jr.,
et ux. dated.IJ.a.ri4· 30, 1965 to be recorded herewith
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�600~5284
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PAGE
483
Also. insofar as the same are. or can by agreement of the parties be made a part of the realty, all
of the following articles now or hereafter on the above described premises or used therewith: Portable
or sectional buildings; bathroom, plumbing, healing, lighting, relrigerating, lee making, ventilating
and air conditioning apparah1s and equipment; garbage incinerators and receptacles; elevators and
elevator machinery; boilers; stoves; tanks; motors; sprinkler and fire extinguishing systems; door bell
and alarm systems; window shades; screens; awnings; screen doors; storm and other detachable win•
dows and doors; mantels; built-in cases, counters, closets, cheats of drawers and mirrors; trees. hardy
shrubs and perennial flowers: and other fixtures whether or not Included In the foregoing enumeration.
The mortgagor agrees as lollows:-ln case any default in any condition of this mortgage shall
exist for more than thirty days, the entire mortgage debt shall become due at the option of the holder;
-in case any default in any condition of this mortgage shall occur, the holder, lo cure such default,
may apply any deposits or any sums credited by or due from the holder to the mortgagor without first
enforcing any other rights of the holder against the mortgagor, any endorser or guarantor ol the mortgage note, or the mortgaged premises;-no sale of the premises hereby mortgaged.. no forebearance
on the part ol the holder, and no extension, whether oral o:: in writing, ol the time for the paymer:it of
the whole or any part ol the debt hereby secured or any other indulgence given by the holder to any
persons other than the mortgagor, shall operate to releas~ or in any manner affect the original liability ol the mortgagor, notice of any such extensions or indulgences being walved;-to keep the mortgaged premises in repair and permit the mortgagee to inspect the same al such !ime as it desires.
The holder of thili! mortgage ls hereby authorized to pay when due, or at any time thereafter; all
Federal. Stale and municipal taxes, charges or asseBBments, and insurance premiums, upon the mort•
gage, note and mortgaged properly and lo charge ihe same to the account of the mortgagor, regard•
lea11 of whether levied agalnsl the holder or mortgagor. In order to provide the mortgagee wllh suffl•
clenl funds with which to make said payments the mortgagor shall pay to the mortgagee on the
thirteenth
day of each month In addition to. the payment of principal and interest
provided for in the note secured by this mortgage. a monthly apportionment of the sum estimated by
the mortgagee to be sufficient lo make all said payments as they shall become due, and If the sum
so estimated shall ·prove insufficient, the mortgagor shall pay the deficiency to the mortgagee upon
demand..
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The holder of this mortgage is hereby authorized to make partial releases at any time and lo
receive therefor such sum as shall seem proper to the holder and the amount so received shall be conclusive upon the mortgagor;·
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This mortgag(t, in addition to the other conditions contained herein and to the statutory conditions, is subject to the further condition that the mortgagor, in addition to insurance against fire, shall
(when required by the mortgagee) Insure the buildings now or hereafter standing on the premises
against war risks and damages and against other casualties and contingencies ln sums satisfactory
to the mortgagee; and all insurance on said buildings shall be for the benefit of and first payable in
case of loss to the mortgagee, and the mortgagor shall deposit all of said policle• with the mortgageo.
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BOOK5284
PAGE
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484
.The word "holder" ~ uaed hereln shall be conatrue(i aa descriptive of the mortgagee named
hereln ~d of any subsequent holder or holders hereof;--and the word "mortgagor" aa uaed hereln
shall be construed as descrlptlve of the mortgagors naJned herein and of ·any subsequent owner or
owners of the ·equlty of redemptl~n of the mortgaged premises. ·
·
. All of the within covenants and· agreements of the mortgagor are made ~y the mortgagor or ~ortgagors named herein for themselves, their heirs, ezec:utors, administrators, suc:cassora and a11&lgns..
.
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Thia mortgage la upon the Statutory Condition and upon further c:onditlon that all covenants and
agreements on the part of the mortgagor herein contained or referred to shall be kept and fully performed, for any breach of which .conditions or ln the event of a sale or transfer of the mortgaged
premises by the mortgagor the holder shall have the Statutory Powe~ of Sale .
-bud,st1~
..........................................................................................,......................... , ........... .
of-said-mot tgagot
wUe
T~trtotm,, wvatgugee
ti
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aH rights of Mi.turey by 1119 eaitusy and--otaep,1atetee+e-io--th1t-t11.o•tgagell
duwez aud homestead
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premlses.
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.......... .................. ...........................,......................... .. ......?.~!.. L . u.iL~................
···········.•·-······ . ········ . ·····•............................................. ......~~~}l··• fl.~ ...·..."J?.7:·····.................. ·
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~ihtess ..~ur.................. hands
and seal s thla....... ./.~ ....=.day aL .......)~ul-y. ........~ ....... 19 65
............... .... ...............................................................
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......... ~ _ _ . . b . ~....C..,..... ~z~
Eleanor C. Marrs·
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Oiommomuealth of ~~
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...:......·....I; Ii.!i.e.x ............................u.
l....J.............:.... 19 65
..·..........................................,, .............lU1¥_...'..
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Then personally appec&Nd the above named ..~dw.ud..J.....Mar.r.a.. and...E~eanor.. C.....Marl!s .......
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and acknowledged the fo~olng l~trument to be .. Jhd.r............. free act and dz:fore·me
.
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. .
Notary Public
illr Ooliiddwal-npnwr .. ,,............................._..:...:,........~.:_..····--·
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:
ClARK S. SEARS
· NOTARY PUBLIC
Mv
.
Commission Expires Aprif 13, 1 ~
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Essex es.Recorded July 14.1965. 32 m. past 9 A.M. #63
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591
Pl.LE
IIAS•ACHU•rrr• QUITCl.AIM DEED •Koltt' P'OftM (tNDtVlDUAt.) aat
I, Edward J. Marrs
r .cu:~
'..I!'(~-=:::
3 Hamil ton Street, Salem,
Essex
<;aunty, Massa.chusetts
Lhlfbtl~orron.,idcration paid, and in full consideration of One Hundred Thirty Four
Thousand Nine Hundred·.and 00/100 ($134,900.00) Dollars
gm1tsto
Richard B. Paul, Individually
*
of
~.s-tSalem, Essex County, Massachusetts
OJ
with qultdtt!m tlilltllttnfll
.jJ
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~
.c:
{De,aiptl011 and eacumbrmc:a, ii any]
0
111
A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situated at
;i
3 Hamilton Street, Sale~, Massachusetts and bounded and described
as follows,
e
Q)
BEGINNING
at a stone bound at the Southeasterly corner of the Lot,
thence running
NORTHERLY
Fifty-three and 05/100 (53.05) feet by land now or late
of Marchand, and of Maloy, thence running
WESTERLY
by land now or late of Tracey and L'Heureux, Sixty-six
(66) feet, to Hamilton Street, thence running
.8
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SOUTHERLY
by Hamilton Street, F~fty-five (55) feet, thence turning
~
EASTERLY
Six (6) feet from and parallel to a granite house foundation, Sixty-five (65) feet, to the point of beginning.
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This parcel is conveyed subject to and with the benefit of easements,
restrictions, agreements, and reservations of record, if any there
be, insofar as the same may be in force and applicable.
For title see Deed from Frank A. Mason, Jr. and Joan M. Mason to
Edward J. Marrs and Eleanor c. Marrs, dated July 14, 1965 and
recorded with Essex south District Registry of Deeds in Book 5284,
Page 481.
mit1tt1U1 .....IJ}Y. •• hand
and seal
this ...... H!:~........... day of •h••·.!?r::~~!?!;E........• 19....~.~
·······-·········•-»--••················································
.....................................
.(~~1t.l(.Jtr:hLla..LV_······-···
ID,t CIInm11UJtt11trttW, nf
;_.:;;,.,,. cs.
P..:CCO!UlED~U
· · · · · · · · · · · . . ~1. . . . . . . . . . . .-----·
Sttw1tttlpulrtt11
..1}_){.PAST.Jl. ..LiJL IHST./f2-.
�MORTGAGE
THIS MORTGAGE is made this . ..• . ... 14th ....... . .• . •• day of . .. December .. . . . . .. . . . .••
19 . !3;1. , between the Mortgagor, •.. l!-il'l>!t.r.c\ .V,. ?.a.11\,. ;tµ_d.~V:l-41'll.l.l_x •••..• . .. •. .•...• . • .•• •..•• •••
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . (herein "Borrower"), and the Mortgagee, ........ .. ..... . . . .. .• . .. •..
. . . . . . . llMt;l1. fJ:l'A .GJ::~7=:l..&~VJtl!lli. .JWI\C. ...•.• . . •. •. •. .. .. .. , a oorporation organized and existin&
under the laws of . tbl! . .C:QIUlllOP.W.e.altb. Pt. .Ha11:<i!.Ch11sett.s. . .. , whose address is ZlD. .E,;sei<. .S.ti:eet...
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~!'~~."!~ .~!'!'~',~';':l!'~.t.~ -~~~.7.0. ...... .. .... ..... .... ... ... (herein "Lender").
:.
WHEREAS, Borrower is indebted to Lender in the principal sum of . .Qm:. RUJIIll!.et>. J;;J;GJIT. l'JlP.1/S~•.
. ~. 99!.1•0.~. f~1?.~ ~~99:?~>.......... .. . DcilJ'cirs~wnich indebtedness is evidenced by Borrower's note
.
dared . .Qe,;,;111),.q,: .H, ..l.~~~ -... .. (herein "Note"), providing for monthly lnMallmcnts of principal and
interest, with the balance of the indebtedness, if not sooner paid, due and payable on . .JADuaQ'• •1 •. . . .. .
· · · ·2014· · · · · · · · · .;
To SECURE to Lender (a) the repayment of the indebtedness evidenced by the Note, with interest thereon,
the payment of all other sums, with interest thereon, advanced in accordance herewith to protect the security
of this Mortgage, and the performance of the covenants and agreements of Borrower herein contained, and
(b) the repa>mcnt of any future advances, with interest thereon, made to Borrower by Lender pursuant to paragraph
21 hereof ('1erein "Future Advances"), Borrower docs hereby mortgage, grant and convey to Lender, with power
of sale, the following described property located in the City/llla!Qh of .... Salem .....•...• .• .. . ...• •. •.
County of .......... . -~~~!lit.. . . . . .. . . . ... . .. .. . . . . . . ... .. . .. .. . , Commonwealth of Massachusetts:
A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situated at 3 Hamilton Street,
Salem, Massachusetts, and bounded and described aa follows:
BEGINNING
at a stone bound at the Southeasterly corner of the Lot thence rUMing
NORTHERLY
Fifty-three and 05/100 (53,05) feet by land now or late or Marchand, and
of Maloy, thence running
WESTERLY
by land now or late of Tracey and L'Heureux, Sixty-six (66) feet, to
Hamilton Street, thence rUMing
SOtrrl!ERLY
by Hamilton Street, Fifty-five (55) feet, thence turning
EASTERLY
aix (6) feet from and parallel to a granite house foundation, Sisty-five
(65) feet, to the point of beginning,
This parcel is conveyed subject to and with the benefit of easements, restrictions,
agreements, and reservations of record, if any there be, Insofar as t he same may be
in foa:ce and applicable.
Fµ.r title I seia. deed of Edlf&rd J.t & El,;onor C, Marrs, to bu recorded herewith,
UllllrCSS of., .~ ,\l1 lll,l.~~Qy, ;;,t.r.'1<:~ 0, ,,,,,,,., • ,,,,,, , • ,,. , ,,.., •,,,., • •. • .... .'l.a.tclJI,,
wnid, Im, ti C
(SU«tJ
(City)
. l!A. .0197.0 . . .. .. (herein "Property Address");
(Stat< and Zip Cod<)
TOGHlll:R with all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property, and all easements, rights, appurtenances, rents, royalties, mineral, oil and gas rights and profits, water, water rights, and water stock, and
all fixtures now or hereafter attached to the property, all of which, including replacements and additions thereto,
shall be deemed to be and remain a part of the property covered by this Mortgage; and all of the foregoing,
together with said property (or the leasehold estate if this Mortgage is on a leasehold) are herein referred to
as the " Property".
Borrower covenants that Borrower is lawfully seised of the estate hereby oonvcyed and has the right to
mortgage, grant and convey the Property, that the Property is unencumbered, and that Borrower will warrant
and defend generally the title to the Property against all claims and demands, subject to any declarations, casements
or restrictions listed in a schedule of exceptions to co,1
erage in any title insurance policy insuring lender's interest in the Property.
Sf CSD 9 I ~
�UNIFORM COVENANTii. Borrower and Lender covenant and agree as follows:
1. Payment of Principal and Interest. Borrower shall promptly pay when due the principal of and interest on the indebtedness evidenced by the Note, prepayment and late charges as pro,ided in the Note, and the principal of and interest
on any Future Advanoes secured by this Mortgage.
2. Funds for TaxH and Insurance. Subject to applicable law or to a written waiver by Lender, Borrower shall pay
to Lender on the day monthly installments of principal and interest are payable under the Note, until the Note is paid
in full, a sum (herein "Funds") equal to one-twelfth of the yearly taxes and assessments which may attain priority over
this Mortgage, and ground rents on the Property, if any, plus one-twelfth of yearly premium installments for hazard insuranoe, plus one-twelfth of yearly premium installments for mortgage insurance, if any, all as reasonably estimated initially
and from time to time by Lender on the basis of assessments and bills and reasonable estimates thereof.
Toe Funds shall be held in an institution the deposits or accounts of which arc insured or guaranteed by a Federal
or state agency (Including Lender if Lender is such an institution). Lender shall apply the Funds to pay said taxes, assessments,
insurance premiums and ground rents. Lender may not charge for so holding and applying the Funds, analyzing said account, or verifying and compiling said assessments and bills, unless Lender pays Borrower interest on the Funds and applicable law permits Lender to make such a charze, Borrower and Lender may agree in writin& at the time of execution of
this Mort&age that interest on the Funds shall be paid to Borrower, and unless such agreement is made or applicable law
requires such interest to be paid, Lender shall not be required to pay Borrower any interest or earninzf on the Funds. The
Funds arc pledged as additional security for the sums secured by this Mortgage.
If the amount of the Funds held by Lender, together with the future monthly installments of Funds payable prior
to the due dates of taxes, assessments, insurance premiums and ground rents, shall exceed the amount required to pay
said taxes, assessments, insurance premiums and ground rents as they fall due, such excess shall be, at Borrower's option,
either promptly repaid to Borrower or credited to Borrower on monthly installments of Funds. If the amount of the Funds
held by Lender shall not be sufficient to pay taxes, assessments, insurance premiums and ground rents as they fall due,
Borrower shall pay to Lender any amount necessary to make up the deficiency within 30 days from the date notice is mailed
by Lender to Borrower requesting pa}ment thereof.
Upon payment in full of all sums secured by this Mortgage, Lender shall promptly refund to Borrower any Funds
held by Lender. If under paragraph 18 hereof the Property is sold or the Property is otherwise acquired by Lender, Lender
shall apply, no later than immediately prior to the sale of the Property or its acquisition by Lender, any Funds held by
Lender at the time of application as a credit against the sums secured by this Mortgage.
3. Application of Pa)·ments. Unless applicable law pro,idcs othernise, all pa)ments reoeived by Lender under the Note
and paragraphs I and 2 hereof shall be applied by Lender first in payment of amounts payable to Lender by Borrower
under paragraph 2 hereof, then to interest payable on the Note, then to the principal of the Note, and then to interest
and principal on any Future Advances.
4. Charges; Liens. Borrower shall pay all taxes, assessments and other charges, fines and impositions attributable to
the Property which may attain a priority over this Mortzage, and leasehold payments or ground rents, if any, in the manner
provided under paragraph 2 hereof or, if not paid in such manner, by Borrower making pa}ment, when due, directly to
the payee thereof. Borrower shall promptly furnish to Lender all notices of amounts due under this paragraph, and in
the event Borrower shall make payment directly, Borrower shall promptly furnish to Lender reoeipts e>idencing such payments.
Borrower shall promptly discharge any lien which has priority over this Mortgage; provided, that Borrower shall not be
required to discharae any such lien so long as Borrower shall agree in WTiting to the pa}ment of the obljzation secured
by such lien in a manner acc-eptable to Lender, or shall in good faith contest such lien by, or defend enforcement of such
lien in, legal proceedings which operate to prevent the enforoement of the lien or forfeiture of the Property or any part thereof.
5. Hazard Insurance. Borrower shall keep the improvements now existing or hereafter erected on the Property insured
against loss by fire, hazards included within the term "extended coverage", and such other hazards as Lender may require
and in such amounts and for such periods as Lender may require; provided, that Lender shall not require that the amount
of such coverage exoecd that amount of coverage required to pay the sums secured by this Mongage.
The insurance carrier pro,iding the insuranoe shall be chosen by Borrower subject to approval by Lender; prmided
that such approval shall not be unreasonably withheld. All premiums on insurance policies shall be paid in the manner
pro,ided under paragraph 2 hereof or, if not paid in such manner, by Borrower makin& pa)ment, when due, directly to
the insuranoe carrier.
All insurance policies and renewals thereof shall be in form acceptable to lender and shall include a standard mongage
clause in favor of and in form aettptable to Lender. Lender shall have the right to hold the policies and renewals thereof,
and Borrower shall promptly furnish to Lender all renewal notices and all receipts of paid premiums. ln the event of loss,
Borrower shall give prompt notice to the insurance carrier and Lender. Lender may make proof of loss if not made promptly
by Borrower.
Unless Lender and Borrower otherwise agree in writing, insurance proceeds shall be applied 10 restoration or repair
of the Property damaged, pro,ided such restoration or repair is economically feasible and the security of this Mongage
is not thereby impaired. If such restoration or repair is not economically feasible or if the security of this Mortgage would
be impaired, the insuranoe proceeds shall be applied to the sums secured by this Mortgage, 1,i1h the excess, if any, paid
to Borrower. lf the Property is abandoned by Borrower, or if Borrower fails to respond to Lender within 30 days from
the date notice is mailed by Lender to Borrower that the insurance carrier offers to settle a claim for insurance benefits,
Lender is authorized to collect and apply the insurance prooeeds at Lender's option either to restoration or repair of the
Property or to the sums secured by this Mortg:,ae.
Unless Lender and Borrower otherwise :,arce in writing, any such application of proceeds to principal shall not extend
or postpone the due date of the monthly installments referred to in paragraphs I and 2 hereof or chan&e the amount of
such installments. If under paragraph 18 hereof the Property is acquired by Lender, all right, title and interest of Borrower
in and to any insurance policies and in and to the proceeds thereof resulting from damage to the Property prior to th•
sale or acquisition shall pass to Lender to the extent of the sums secured by this Mortgage immediately prior to such sale
or acquisition.
6, Preservallon and Maintenance of Property; Leaseholds; Condominiums; Planned Unit De,·elopments. Borrower
shall keep the Propeny in good repair and shall not commit waste or permit impairment or deterioration of the Property
and shall comply with the provisions of any lease if this Mortii:,ac is on a leasehold. If this Mortgage is on a unit in a
condominium or a planned unit development, Borrower shall perform all of Borrower's obligations under the declaration
or covenants creating or governing the condominium or planned unit development, the by-laws and regulations of the condominium or planned unit development, and constituent documents. If a condominium or planned unit development rider
is executed by Borrower and recorded together with this Mortgage, the cm·enants and agreements of such rider shall be
incorporated into and shall amend and supplement the covenants and agreements of this Mortgage as if the rider were
a part hereof.
7. Protection or L<nder's Security. If Borrower fails to perform the covenants and agreements contained in this Mortgage, or if any action or proceeding is commenced which materially affects Lender's interest in the Property, including,
but not limited to, eminent domain, insolvency, code enforcement, or arrangements or proceedings involving a bankrupt
or decedent, then Lender at Lender's option, upon notice to Borrower, may make such appearances, disburse such sums
and take such action as is necessary to protect Lender's interest, including, but not limited to, disbursement of reasonable
�attorney's fees and entry upon the Propeny to make repairs. ff Lender required mon1age insurance as a condition of making the loan 5eCUred by this Mongage, Borrower shall pay the premiums required to maintain such insurance in effect until
such time as the requirement for such insurance terminates in accordance with Borrower's and Lender's written agreement
or applicable law. Borrower shall pay the amount of all mortgage insurance premiums in the manner pro,idcd under paragraph
2 hereof.
Any amounts disbursed by Lender pursuant to this paragraph 7, with interest thereon, shall become additional indebtedness of Borrower secured by this Monsage. Unless Borrower and Lender agree to other terms of pa)ment, such amounts
shall be payable upon notice from Lender to Borrower requesting pa)ment thereof, and shall bear interest from the date
of disbursement at the rate payable from time to time on outstanding principal under the Note unless payment of interest
at such rate would be contrary to applicable law, in which event such amounts shall bear interest at the highest rate permissible under applicable law. Nothing contained in this paragraph 7 shall require Lender to incur any expense or take any
action hereunder.
I. ln~on. Lender may make or cause to be made reasonable entries upon and inspections of the Propeny, provided that Lender shalJ &ive Borrower notice prior to any such inspection specifying reasonable caust therefor related to
Lender's Interest in the Propeny.
•
9. Condemnation. The proceeds of any award or claim for damages, direct or consequential, in connection with any
condemnation or other taking of the Property, or part thereof, or for conveyance in lieu of condemnation, are hereby
assigned and shall be paid to Lender.
In the event of a total takiDi of the Propeny, the proceeds shall be applied to the sums secured by this Mong31C,
with the excess, if any, paid to Borro\\er. In the event of a pan!al taking of the Property, unless Borrower and Lender
otherwise agree in writing, there shall be applied to the sums secured by this Mortgage such proponion of the proceeds
as is equal to that proportion which the amount of the sums secured by this Mortg31e immediately prior to the date of
takina bears to the fair market value of the Propeny immediately prior to the date of taking, with the balance of the pro•
cccds paid to Borrower.
If the Propcny is abandoned by Borrower, or if, after notice by Lender to Borrower that the condemnor offers to
make an award or settle a claim for damages, Borrower fails to respond to Lender within 30 days after the date such notice
is mailed, Lender is authorized to collect and apply the proceeds, at Lender's option, either to restoration or repair of the
Ptoperty or to the sums secured by this Mortgage.
Unless Lender and Borrower otherwise 31ree in writing, any such application of proceeds to principal shall not extend
or postpone the due date of the monthly installments referred to in paragraphs I and 2 hereof pr ch31\ie the amount of
such installme11ts.
10. Borro'fer Nqt ~eased. Extension of the time for payment or modifielltion of amonization of the sum~ secured
by this Mangas• granted by Lender to any suocessor in interest of Borrower shall not operate to release, in any manner,
the liability of t~e ori&inal Borrower and Borrower's successors in interest. Lender shall not be required to commer.ce proceedings against such successor or refuse to extend time for payment or othernise modify amonization of the sums secured
by this Mongage by reason of any demand made by the original Borrower and Borrower's successors in interest.
It. forbuflln« by Lender Not a Waiver. Any forbearance by Lender in exercisina any right or remedy hereunder,
or otherwise afforded by applicable law, shall not be a waiver of or preclude the exercise of any such right or remedy.
The procurement of insurance or the payment of taxes or other liens or charges by Lender shall not be a waiver of Lender's
right to accelerate the maturity of the indebtedness secured by this Monsagc.
12. Remedies Cumulathe. All remedies provided in this Mongage are distinct and cumulative to any other right or
remedy under this Mortgage or afforded by law or equity, and may be exercised concurrently, independently or successively.
13. Suecesson and Assigns Bound; Joint •nd Se>eral Liability; Captions. The covenants and agreement• herein contained shall bind, and the rights hereunder shall inure to, the respective successors and assigns of Lender and Borrower,
subject to the provisions of paragraph 17 hereof. All co,·enants and agreements of Borrower shall be joint and several.
The captions and headi1J$S of the paragraphs of this Mortgage arc for convenience only and are not to be used to interpret
or define the provisions hereof.
14. Notice. Except for any notice required under applicable law to be given in another manner, (a) any notice to Borrower pro,ided for in this Mortgage shall be &iven by mailifli such notice by certified mail addressed to Borrower at the
Property Address or at such other address as Borrower may designate by notice to Lender as provided herein, and (b)
any notice to Lender shall be given by certified mail, return receipt requested, to Lender's address stated herein or to such
other address as Lender may designate by notice to Borrower as provided herein. Any notice provided for in this Mongage
shall be deemed to have been given to Borrower or Lender when given in the manner designated herein.
15. Uniform Mortpgr: Governing Law; Sn-mbllity. This form of mongage combines uniform covenants for national use and non-uniform covenants \\itb limited variations by jurisdiction to constitute a uniform security instrument
covering re;iJ property. This Mortgoae shall be aovemed by the law of the jurisdiction in which the Propcny is located.
In the event that iUIY provision or clause of this Mongagc or the Note conflicts with applicable law, such conflict shall
not affect other provisions of this Mortgage or the Note which can be given effect without the conflicting provision, and
to this end the prmisi011$ of the Mongage and the Note are declared to be severable.
16. Borrower's Copy. Borrower shall be furnished a conformed copy of the Note and of this Mortgage at the time
of execution or after recordation hereof.
17. Transfer of th• Propnty; Assumption. If all or any part of the Propeny or an interest therein is sold ortransfcrred
by Borrower without Lender's prior written consent, exdudifii (a) the creation of a lien or encumbrance subordinate to
this Mortgaae, (bl the creation of a purchase money security interest for household appliances, (c) a transfer by devise,
descent or by operation of law upon the death of a joint tenant or (d) the grant of any leasehold interest of three years
or less not containing an option to purchase, Lender may, at Lender's option, de.:lare all the sums secured by this Mortgage
to be immediately due and payable. Lender shall have waived such option to accelerate if, prior to the sale or transfer,
Lender and the person to \\hom the Propcny is to be sold or transferred reach agreement in writing that the credit of
such pcnon is satisfac'tory to Lender and that the interest payable on the sums secured by this Monaage shall be at such
rate as Lender shall request.
·
If Lender exercises such option to accelerate, Lender ~hall mail Borrower notice or acceleration in nccordance with
raral(rnph 14 hrrc!Of. Such notke shall provide a period of not less than 30 days from the date the notice is mailed within
"hkh Borrower may pay the sums declared due. If Borrower fails to pay such sums prior to the expiration of such period,
Lender may, without funher notice or demand on Borrower, invoke any remedies permitted by paragraph 18 hereof.
NON-UNIFORM COVENANTS. Borrower and Lender further covenant and agree as follows:
18. A,..:clcr-Jtlon: Remedies. Except as pro,ldtd In paragraph 17 hon,of, upon Borrower's bttacl1 of any co>rnant
or lljlr.. mcnl of Borro¥1cr in this Mortp&t, ln<ludlng the co•enanls lo pay wbtn dut any sums secuftd by Ibis Mortgagt,
I.ender prior to acceleration shall owl notice to Borrower as provided In paragraph 14 hereof spodf1ing: Ul lh• bttach;
(2) the action required to cure such breach; (31 a dale, not less than 30 days from Ille date !hr notice Is mailed to Burrower,
by which such breach must be cured; and (4) lhat failun, lo cure such breach on or before the date sptdR,d In the notice
ma1· result In a«dcrplion or lhe sums secured by tills Mortgagt and sale of me Property. If th• breach is not cured on
or brfon, lht date specified In the not!«, I.ender at undrr'• option may declare all of the sums secured by this Mortgag•
�to be lmmtdlately due and payable t'1thout further demand and Lender may Invoke the STATUfORY POWER OF SALE
and any other remedies permitted by applicable law. Lender shall be entitled to collect all reasonable costs and expenses
incurred in pursuin& the remedies prodded in this paragraph 13, indudlng, but not limited to, reasonable attorney's fees.
If Lender invokes the STATUfORY POWER OF SALE, Lender shall mail a copy of a notice or sale to Borrower,
and to any other person ffi!Ulred by applicable law, In the manner pro,ided by applicable law. Lender shaU publish the
notice of sale and the Property shall be sold In the manner prescribed by appllcable law. Lender or Lender's designee may
Property shall be sold in the manner prescribed by applicable law. Lender or Lender's designee may purchase the Property
at any sale. The proceeds of the sale shall be applied in the foUowlng order: (a) to all reasonable costs and expenses of
the sale, including reasonable attorney's fees and costs or title e\idenee; (b) to au sums sc.:ured by this Mortgage; and (c)
the excess, If any, to the person or persons l,gally entitled thereto.
19. Borrower's Ri&ht to REDEEM. Notwithstanding Lender's acceleration of the sums secured by this Mortgage. Borrower shaU have the right to have any proceedings begun by Lender to enforce this Mortaage discontinued at any time
prior to the earlier to occur of (i) the fifth day before sale of the Property pursuant to the power of sale comaincd in this
Mortgage or (ii) entry of a judgment enforcing this Mortgage if: (a) Borrower pays Lender aU indcbtednesfincluding all
principal, accrued interest and other charges under this Mortgage, the Note and notes securing Future Advances, if any;
(b) Borrower cures aU breaches of any other covenants or agreements of Borrower contained in this Mortgage; and (c)
Borrower pays all reasonable expenses incurred by Lender in enforcing the covenants and agreements of Borrower contained in this Mortgage and in enforcing Lender's remedies as provided in paragraph 18 hereof, including, but not limited
to, reasonable attorney's fees.
20. Assli:nmrnt of Rents; Lender In Possession. As additional security hereunder, Borrower hereby assigns to Lender
the rents of the Property, prmided that Borrower shaU, prior to acceleration under paragraph 18 hereof or abandonment
of the Property, have the right to collect and retain such rents as they become due and payable.
Upon acceleration under paragraph 18 hereof of abandonment or the Property, Lender shall be entitled to enter upon,
take possession of and manage the Property and to collect the rents of the Property including those past due. Ali rents
coUected by Lender shall be applied first to payment of the costs of management of the Property and collection of rents,
including, but not limited to, reasonable attorney's fees, and then to the sums secured by this Mortpge. Lender shaU be
liable to account only for those rents actually received.
ll. Future Advances, For the purposes permitted by applicable law and upon request of Borrower, Lender, at Lender's
option prior to release of this Mortgage, may make Future Advances to Borrower. Such Future Advances, with interest
thereon, shall be secured by this Mortgage when evidenced by promissory notes stating that said notes are secured hereby.
At no time shaU the principal amount of the indebtedness secured by this Mortgage, not including sums advanced in accordance herewith to protect the security of this Mortgage, exceed the original amount of the Note plus USS ........•..
ll. Release. Upon payment of all sums secured by this Mortgage, Lender shall discharge this Mortgage without cost
to Borrower. Borrower shaU pay aU costs of recordation, if any.
23. This mortgage is upon the STATIJTORY CONDITION for any breach of which the mortga&ee shaU have the
STATIJTORY POWER OF SALE.
IN W1TNr.ss W1t[RtoF, Borrower hns executed this Mortaaae under sen!.
Witness:
Richard B, Poul
..
,~
......,,._____
�ADJUSTABLE RATE NOTE RIDER
NOTICE: TIIE SECtJRIT\' lNSJ'R\JMENT SECURF.S A NOTE WHICH CONTAINS
A PR0\1SION ALW\\lNG FOR CHANGES IN TilE INTEREST RATE. IN•
CREASES IN THE INTEREST RATE WILL RF.SULT IN IUGHER PAYMENTS.
DECREASES IN TIIE INTEREST RATE WILL RESULT IN WWER PA¥MI-:NTS.
~
This Rider is made this ..... .1.4~1\ .... day of .... !l!'.<;~\11!>.'l'i'., 19 .!!~ ... and is incorporated into and shall
be deemed to amend and supplement the Mortpae, Deed of Trust, or Deed to Secure Debt (the "Security Instrument")
of the same date given by the undersigned (the "Borrower") to secure Borrower's Note to .......•...•..•..•••••••.
. . . . . ••. . . . •••liMP.l .HY.IL ~1!.N.1'$ •.!i"'-YW.(:$. .ll"'-fiK ...................................................... .
(the "Lender") of the same date (the "Note") and covering the property described in the Security Instrument and
located at . . ... ~. ~H~.qll.~.t.1::<:H.-... lii'.1.t;l!l, . ~'!\l!IJ:.IJY!'!'.t.~,;. P.l.rn>... .. .. ...... ...... ... .......... .
l"ropnt1 Addtr•
Modlllcalions. In addition to lhe covenants and agreements made in the Security Instrument, Borrower and Lender
further covenant and agree as follows:
A. INTEREST RATE AND MON111LY PAYMENT CHANGES
The Note has an "Initial Interest Rate" of 10• .5'it. The Note interest r~.,_~ be Increased or decreased on the
.. ls.tday of the month bcainning on ... Marc.h . l. . ....... .......... , l~c,and on that day of the month every
.. 12. months thereafter.
M
Changes in the interest rate arc eovcrned by changes in an interest rate im;lex called the "Index". The Index is the:
[C1vd; -
"°"lo_ ,Nla./
(I) & "CQntract Interest Rate, Purchase of Previously Occupied Homes, National Average for all Major Types of
Lenders" published by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board.
(2)
□• ······· ···················· ······ ·········································· .. ·············"····
/C1t«IC OM box to ln,t/Ja:lJ.- wlwt/wr thaw is-,y ~ limll Mc/wni!IS"' tlttiltlff'd l'flttOII ffJds CJt.u,r /lltt; If IIO bcaK ildwdtd dttt'f,... bt ltO "1llX1mllllt lilnll Oft cltt,tta,J
(I) 0 There is no maximum limit on changes in the interest rate at any Change Date,
(2) ix The interest rate cannot be changed by more than •. 2 •• percentage points at any Change Date.
If the interest rate changes, the amount of Borrower's monthly payments will change as pro,ided in the Note. Increases
in the interest rate will result in higher payments. Decreases in the interest rate will result in lower payments.
B. WAN CHARGES
It could be that the loan secured by the Security Instrument is subject to a law which sets maximum loan charges and
that law is interpreted so that the interest or other loan charges collected or to be collected in connection with the loan would
exceed permitted limits. If this is the case, then: (A) any such loan charae shall be reduced by the amount necessary to reduce
the charge to the permitted limit; and (B) any sums already collected from Borrower which exceeded pcnnitted limits will
be refunded to Bo"ower. Lender may choose 10 make this refund by reducing the principal owed under the Note or by
making a dirC\.'l pa)ment to Borrower.
C. PRIOR UENS
If Lender determines chat all or any part of the sums secured by this Security Instrument arc subject to a lien which
has priority over this Security Instrument, Lender may send Borrower a notice identifying that lien. Borrower shall promptly
act with regard to that lien as pro,ided in paragraph 4 of the Security Instrument or shall promptly secure an agreement
in a form satisfactory to Lender subordinating that lien to this Security Instrument.
D. TRANSFER OF THE PROPERTY
If there is a transfer of the Property subject to paragraph 17 of the Security Instrument, Lender may require (I) an
increase in the current Note interest rate, or (2) an increase in (or removal of) the limit on the amount of any one interest
rate chan2e (if there is a limit), or (3) a change in the Base Index figure, or all of these, as a condition of Lender's waiving
the option to accelerate pro,ided in paragraph 17.
By signing this, orrow agrees to all of the above.
Witness;
.... - ~ .. R.~ ..f>'-AJ.✓.-(Scal)
Richard B. Paul
- Borrower
............................................ (Seal)
- Borrower
•IJ mort th.JR ont bor Js dt«bd or if no ba.t' Is dt«hd. ad i...,,,,... A,m)Mllff' do tlOI
ol~.,,,,,
at wrlfin6, the /Int INWX ,..,,_ will -,,ply.
SFCSB 9/ll
Esae« es. RJ:CORDED.a:M.}
~.PAST_JJ _B.:.\I. IBST./t'..3
�I0t;50l96 02121
Inst 486
BK 13821 PG 39?
Richard B. Paul for consideration paid, and in full
consideration , of Two Hundred and Ninety Thousand (29~COO.OOI
Dollars grants to Richard S. Jendrysik and Pamela M. Jendryaik,
Husband and Wife as Tenants by the entirety
of 3 Hamilton Street,
quitclaim covenants.
Salem Essex County,
Massachusetts with
certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situated at 3
Hamilton Street, Salem, Massachusetts and bounded and described as
follows:
A
BEGINNING:
at a stone bound at the southwesterly corner of the
Lot, thence running
NORTHERLY:
Fifty-three and 05/100 l~.05) feet by land now or
late of Marchand, and of Maloy, thence running
WESTERLY:
by land now or late of Tracy and L'Heureux, Sixtysix (66) feet, to Hamilton Street, thence running
SOUTHERLY,
By Hamilton Street, Fifty-five 155) feet, thence
turning
BMTERLY:
Six (6) feet from and parallel to a granite house
foundation, Sixty-five (65) feet, to the point of
*.!
beginning.
This parcel is conveyed subject to and with the benefit of
easements, restrictions, agreements, and reservations of record, if
any there be, insofar as the same may be in, force and applicable.
For title see Deed from Edward J. Marrs and Eleanor C. Marrs dated
December 14, 1983 and recorded with Essex South District Registry
of Deeds in Book 7294f'•:,t" s.:,,.
WITNESS my hand and seal this 30th
day of October 1996
~ ◄ 1-,.... 4
itkhard Paul
B-~
Essex, sa.
THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSE'ITS
October 30, 1996
Then personally appeared the above named Richard B. Paul and
acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free act and deed
before me
Notary Puliir. · MassacllasellS
My ~ I l l ' l:laresAp,9 24, 1998 -
�BK 13921 PG 398
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SO.ESSEX ~336 Bk:34284 Pg:383
08/10/2015 12:28 DEED Pg 1/2
We, Richard S. Jendrysik and Pamela M. Jendrysik, Husband and
Wife
of Salem, Massachusetts
For consideration paid, and in full consideration of One Dollar
($1.00)
Grant to Edward S. Jendrysik and Meghan A. Jendrysik as tenants
in common reserving a life estate in the grantees, Richard S.
Jendrysik and Pamela M. Jendrysik
of 3 Hamilton Street, Salem, MA
with Quitclaim Covenants
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A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situated at 3
Hamilton Street, Salem, Massachusetts and bounded and described
as follows:
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BEGINNING
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at a stone bound at the Southwesterly corner of
The Lot, thence running;
Fifty-three and 05/100 (53.05) feet by land now
or late of Marchand, and of Maloy, thence
running
by land now or late of Tracy and L'Heureux,
Sixty-six (66) feet, to Hamilton Street, thence
Running
by Hamilton Street, fifty-five (55) feet,
thence turning
Six (6) feet from the parallel to a granite
House foundation, sixty-five (65) feet, to the
Point of beginning
This parcel is conveyed subject to and with the benefit of
easements, restrictions, agreements, and reservations of record,
if any there be, insofar as the same may be in force and
applicable.
The grantors herein reserves the right to use and occupy the real
estate and the right to sell or mortgage during their lifetime.
No notice to, or assent by, the grantees, herein or their assigns
shall be necessary in connection with any exercise of the rights
retained by the grantor herein.
�Meaning and intending to convey and hereby conveying the same
premises conveyed to us by Deed of Richard B. Paul dated October
30, 1996 and recorded in Book 13821 Page 397.
Witness our hands and seals this
d-;1
day of July, 2015
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Middlesex, ss
July
d-f'
, 2015
On this ~q day of July, 2015 before me, the undersigned
notary public, personally appeared Richard S. Jendrysik and
Pamela M. Jendrysik, proved to me through satisfactory evidence
of identification, which were
/// 1-f 7Jct' 6 · j_, '<
or is
personally known to me, to be the person whose name is signed on
the preceding or attached document, and acknowledged to me that
they signed it voluntarily for its sta,t,ed.~ rpose ·,..,-"',,,~ _
~I-/~~~
Notary/'/
My Commission Expirey.
~
tm~
\W
ROBERT L. BELL JR.
Nolary Public, Commonwealth of Massachusells
My Commission Expires on February 19, 2021
�Inventory No:
SAL.1032
Historic Name:
Pickering, John House
Common Name:
Donnell, S. Howard - Benson, George House
Address:
3 Hamilton St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Central Salem
Local No:
25-422
Year Constructed:
c 1922
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Colonial Revival
Use(s):
Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HJ: Chestnut Street Historic District
SAL.HU: McIntire Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (08/28/1973); Local Historic District
(03/03/1981)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Slate
Wall: Wood; Wood Clapboard
Foundation: Concrete Unspecified
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FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
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Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Monday, January 20, 2020 at 2:00: PM
�NRDIS 8/2 8/73 ; LHD 3/3/81
FORM B - BUILDING
USGS Quad
Assessor's number
Area(s)
Salem
Town
Form Number
HU
1032
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village) Central Salem
Address 3 Hamilton Street
Historic Name John Pickering House
Uses: Present
Residential
Original Residential
Date of Construction
Source
c.1922
directories
Style/Form Colonial Revival
1·
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
.
Foundation Concrete
'
Wall/Trim
Wood Clapboard
Roof
Slate
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
Major Alterations (with dates)
1962 - moved to present
site.
Condition
Moved
excellent
D
Acreage
Recorded by
Lisa Mausolf
Organization
Salem Planning Department
Setting
no
IZ!
yes
Date 1962
3539 SF
densely built-up area of 19th and early 20th
century residences
RECEIVED
Date (month/year) June 1998
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commissi~~ ,Oa+9~nstructions for completing this form.
(
.
MASS. HIST. COMM
�BUILDING FORM (3 Hamilton Street)
ARCIBTECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the
community.
3 Hamilton Street is a 2 1/2-story, clapboarded dwelling set above a concrete foundation, reflecting its move to its present site
in the 1960s. The house is oriented with its gable end to the street, the west gable is fronted by a narrow, two-story, gabled
addition which is aligned with the north wall of the main block. Centered on the south elevation, the main entrance displays a
trabeated surround adorned by modillions with a horizontal panel over the door opening. To either side of the doorway is a
small 2 x 4-light, hinged window, capped by a small shelf. Above the entrance there is a 8/8 window with molded surround.
The remaining facade windows consist of paired 6/6 windows, with each pair separated by a raised vertical panel. Those on
the first floor are capped by angled lintels supported by small brackets; the tops of those on the second floor lack the lintels
but extend to the eaves which project slightly. Three pedimented dormers rise from the south slope of the slate roof. Two
modem brick chimneys rise from the ridge above.
A secondary entrance is located in the enclosed single-story porch on the south side of the west wing. The modern wooden
door is sheltered by the overhang of the hip roof, which is supported by a single bracket. A wooden deck fronts the wing,
shaded by a tree. Extending behind the east end of the main block is a 2 1/2-story ell displaying the same 6/6 windows with
angled lintels . The windows on the rear elevation of the main house have plain surrounds .
A narrow border of plantings is located in front of the facade which is nearly the south lot line. There is a six-foot high
vertical board fence along the street and enclosing the rear yard.
IBSTORICAL NARRATIVE
Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building and
the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
This house was moved to its present site from 2 Pickering Street about 1962. It was originally constructed for John Pickering
c.1922 in the yard of the Pickering House at 18 Broad Street. John Pickering, employed in the cotton waste trade, lived here
with his wife, Ruth until about 1935 when they moved to 30 Chestnut Street. The house was occupied by the family of
Peabody lawyer, S. Ho\Yard Donnell from about 193 7 until 1945. George Benson occupied the property from c.1950 to
c.1960. The house appears to have been moved in 1962 for Frank and Joan Mason. Frank Mason was employed as a broker
with Meredith and Grew in Boston. The house has changed hands several times since that time and continues to be used as a
single-family residence.
This house was preceded on the Hamilton Street site by an early 20th century residence. By 1941 directories no longer
include a listing for 3 Hamilton Street; the fate of the earlier house in unknown.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
!fopkins, G.M. Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts . Philadelphia: 1874 .
McIntyre, Henry C.E. Map of the Citv of Salem. Philadelphia: 1851.
Reardon, Elizabeth. Salem Historic District Study Committee Investigation, 1969.
Richards, L.J . Atlas of the Citv of Salem. Massachusetts, 1897.
Salem City Directories, 1836-1970.
Wa?ker isithograph and Publishing Compl1tiy'. 1'.tias of the Citv of Salem, Massachusetts . Boston: 1911 .
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places . If checked, you must attached a completed
National Register Criteria Statement form .
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
SALEM
3 HAMILTON ST
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
SAL.1032
SAL.HJ, SAL.HU
Supplemental photograph by Patti Kelleher, Salem Department of Planning & Community Development, May 2017
RECEIVED
JUN 20 2017
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Continuation sheet 1
�NRDIS 8/28/73; LHD 3/3/81
Assessors'
Number
USGSQuad
25-422
Salem
Town
Area(s) Form Number
HU
1032
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village)
Address
Central Salem
3 Hamilton St.
Historic Name Frank Mason House
Uses:
Present Single-family dwelling
Original Single-family dwelling
Date of Construction
Style/Form
c. 1963
Colonial Revival
Architect/Builder
Exterior Material:
Foundation
concrete
Wall
clapboard
Roof
slate
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
Major Alterations (with dates)
none
Condition
excellent
Moved x
Acreage
no
yes Date
less than 1 acre
Recorded by
Kim Withers Brengle
Setting Densely built area of 19th and early
Organization
Salem Planning Department
20th century residences.
Date Recorded 1 /96
RECEIVED
. JUL O8 1996
MASS. HIST. COMM.
'
'
(
�(
BUILDING FORM
3 Hamilton St., Salem
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION __ see continuation sheet
Describe architectural features . Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings
within the community.
3 Hamilton Street is one of very few mid-to-late twentieth century houses in the district (see also 4
Pickering Street). It is a Colonial Revival style house, well-designed to be compatible with its
surroundings. Oriented with its end to the street, standing close to the south edge of the lot, it is a
two-and-one-half-story house on a rectangular plan with a two-story ell extending from the west end.
A one-bay hip-roofed section projects south from the ell, and contains a secondary entry. The main
block of the house is five bays wide by two bays deep; the ell extends one bay. It has a side-gable
roof pierced by four pedimented gable dormers (three at the Sand one at the N) and an interior end
chimney at each end. The foundation is concrete, and the walls are clapboard. The center entry is set
in a trabeated surround. Most windows have 6/6 sash, some paired. Slightly projecting window caps
supported by tab brackets exist at the south elevation. Small windows flank the main entry. A one
bay by one bay ell extends from the rear elevation, and has a rear entry. The yard is enclosed by a
wooden fence .
see continuation sheet
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses
of the building, and the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
3 Hamilton Street was constructed c. 1963, probably for Frank A. and Joan M. Mason. Frank Mason
was a broker with Meredith and Grew in Boston. The house has changed owners several times since
its construction, and continues to be used as a single-family residence .
The site on which it stands had been developed by 1851, when Joseph Smith's Livery Stables stood
between 1 Hamilton Street and 20-22 Chestnut Street. Several buildings stood on the property, which
was owned by Smith's estate as late as 1897. By 1911 a house stood on the site. According to the atlas
of that year 5 Hamilton (as it was then listed) was owned by Rebecca, who owned and occupied the
adjacent house at 7 Hamilton Street. City directories list the occupant of this house between 1910 and
1940 as Anna Fessenden, assistant librarian at the Salem Athenaeum. The address disappeared from
city directories in 1941; the fate of the earlier house is unknown.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
,,
see continuation sheet
Hopkins, G. M . Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts. Philadelphia, 1874.
McIntyre, Henry C. E. Map of the City of Salem. Philadelphia, 1851.
Richards, L. J. Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts .... 1897.
Salem City Directories, 1836-1970.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Co. Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts.
Boston, MA, 1911.
_ _ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must
attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form .
�tµ:1
2. Town _
__.~~~~~~==--_:~~i:=..!..Ju...t)/,-
0
Street address
' .
-
Name_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Original use
----=-------------
~
Present use
@_Q
Present owner
-------------
Open to public_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
\C\ G ~
Date
Style _ _ __\C • __
C __
Source of date_ _ _ _.....:H O-S C. ,~ -,,...---S ...... ~ ~
<; <2.Q. (<~~
Architect_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ve-ve·1 0pu1tau u1 wwu11;n
MUSIC
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------_-:-:-:-:-
4. DESCRIPTION
J
Material:
j FOUNDATION/BASEMENT:
-pALL COVER:
Wood
.,t-~....a::::~~. #1-'=:.i.:::a::~~=-@
Brick
ROOF: ~Gambrel Flat Hip Mansard
Tower Cupola Dormer windows Balustrade
CHIMNEYS:
@23
STORIES: 1
2 4
@
4
~
Front: Center/Side
Other
Grillwork
Cluster
Elaborate
Irregular
hed Dependency
Portico
Ornament:
Stone
End interior
---- - - - - - - - - - -
Gable end
Entrance: ®
End
ATTACHMENTS: Wing@
PORCHES: 1 2 3 4
FA CADE:
-------------- l
~
Balcony
Recessed:
---------
----------------------
Details: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
~
Windows: Spacing: R e g u l a r ~ Identical/Varied
!
Corners: Plain Pilasters Quoins ~
<:/
.~
-------------------
OUTBUILDINGS
.,,,.,.
6. Footage of structure from street
~
Property has_ _ _ _ feet fronta_g_e on-s.....
........... tr_e_e.,.t
5. Indicate location of structure in relation to
nearest cross streets and other buildin s
X:
Recorder
----------------
For
Photo
i.!
Date
NO~T~E~:7
~~~~~~:;:;~~;;=;;;;;;;:;;:;~::;:;::~ from
Commission or sponsoring organization
before using this form.
FORM
MHC-B
I0M-4-67-944872
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SE,E REVERSE
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�RELATION OF SURROUNDING TO STRUCTURE
Neighboring structures
Style: Colonial Federal Greek Revival Gothic Revival
Venetian Gothic Mansard Richardsonian
~Buildings: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Use: Residential Commercial Religious
I-
I
Landscape Features: Agriculture
Predominent Features
Landscape Architect
Open
Italian Villa
Lombard Rom.
Conditions: Excellent Good Fair Deteriorated
Proximity:
Wooded
Garden: Formal/Informal
--------------------------------------------------------,,-
GI VE A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC IMPORTANCE OF SITE (Refer and elaborate on
theme circled on front of form)
-
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BIBLIOGRAPHY AND/OR REFERENCE
RESTRICTIONS
------------------------------------------------ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Registry of Deeds
- - - Page- - - - _
Original Owner:
Deed Information: Book Number
(
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Hamilton Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
3 Hamilton Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Documents provided are of research conduction on house; formal house history unavailable.
Built for
Sarah White Pickering and Mary Orne Pickering
by John Pickering the 9th
c. 1923
Moved to this site from 2 Pickering Street in 1962.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: circa 1923
Moved: 1962
Title Search Conducted: Feb. 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amanda Eddy
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/3b2fdf85269b711cb7e4d76c0d73feb9.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=cusYI2rYK5EhI24TXIMbsnaAk6mApRL3TzE61D%7Eo9WWITmpTgH3Oo5OrODmk5Fb7bzF9%7EH%7ELj2Ow-5KlIut3w4DvtbUlqwGc1%7EJJBpoco4ZoZ1T%7ELZA9BtYv1y9mri8IYyfHW7xyyNX-jRzSR0fH5mvm%7Enb2XoUO994pAt8BpDLeyuZAl9SMzyViL8VwpH9XqkImdHp%7EiKLYgaMW5viJ2H9snF%7Exy1UYbDWM%7E0eCR-3j6V-es40c9o6yOMeQ8iXLy8VfsWnZ801U-7OcBJBaoQwA0AXP3BerbgGvmcLQE-%7ERfa4%7ExzdkdjJuOeOixngeBbevu2sYiKTjmRataFFGCg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
fde694cc048b458ef1d561f2812032f5
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
5 Phelps Street
Built for
Paul N. Chaput
Real Estate and Insurance Broker
1916
Replaced a single-family house burned in the Great Salem Fire of 1914
Researched and written by Jen Ratliff
March 2020
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2020
�5 Phelps Street, c. 2018
City of Salem Assessor’s Office
Despite sitting on the outskirts of downtown Salem, the history of the Greater Endicott
Street Neighborhood has deep colonial roots. During King Philip’s War a large palisade wall was
constructed near the present intersection of Broad and Jackson streets to defend Salem’s
western edge against French and Indian attacks. This wall intersected the farmland of Col. John
Hathorne (1641 - 1717), who would serve as a magistrate during the Salem Witchcraft Trials in
1692. Famously, Hathorne is the great-great grandfather of author and Salem-native, Nathaniel
Hawthorne (1804 - 1864). 1
Development from pastureland to residential and commercial use in this area came
slowly. Phelps Street would later be laid out on Hathorne’s former farmland. The street first
Perley, Sidney. “Part of Salem in 1700. No. 6.” The Essex Antiquarian. Vol. V, No. 3 (March 1901), Salem, MA. p.
34
1
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
1
�appears as Phelps’ Lane on an 1820 map, running parallel to Circus Street (now Hathorne
Street.) 2 The neighborhood continued to develop as Salem expanded southwest. At the end of
the 19th century, industrial jobs in nearby Blubber Hollow attracted local laborers and immigrants
to the area, causing a surge in construction of single and multi-family homes.
On June 25, 1914, the Great Salem Fire began at the Korn Leather Factory on Boston
Street, less than .5 mile from 5 Phelps Street. This conflagration destroyed greater than 1,600
buildings over 250 acres, including all of Phelps Street. More than 14,000 Salemites were
displaced from their homes.
Present day 5 Phelps Street is an example of a Colonial Revival, multi-family home,
constructed after the Great Salem Fire of 1914. Like other homes on the street, such as #2, #7,
and #20, this structure features two-story bay windows and Doric columns. The home replaced
the single-family home of Ellen Lever Thornton (1849-1936) and her family.
Ellen Thornton was born in Ireland in 1849, at the age of 16, she immigrated to the
United States. On October 24, 1875, she married Peter Thornton, a teamster, also from Ireland,
at the Church of Immaculate Conception in Salem. 3 Together the couple had eight children, at
least two of which died before age 5. 4 In 1886, Ellen purchased 5 Phelps Street for $1,000. Her
husband, Peter co-signed for a mortgage of $500. 5 In 1898, Ellen’s husband, Peter passed away
at the age of 49. The cause of his death is unknown. Ellen and her children continued to live at 5
Saunders, Jonathan Peele. “Plan of the Town of Salem in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts from actual
Surveys made in the years 1796 & 1804: with the improvements and alterations since that period as Surveyed by
Jonathan P. Saunders.” Map, 1820.
3
New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; Massachusetts Vital Records, 1911–1915
4
Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. Census Place: Salem, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: 532; Page: 589C;
Enumeration District: 230
5
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 116-194
2
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
2
�Phelps Street until June 1914 when the Great Salem Fire destroyed their home and much of the
surrounding area. Ellen claimed $3,000 in insurance following the fire and removed her family to
nearby 3 Warren Court. 6 Following the Fire, 5 Phelps Street sat vacant until May 31, 1916, when
Ellen Thornton sold the land to Paul N. Chaput. 7
Paul N. Chaput, (1864 - 1945) was a prominent member of Salem’s French-Canadian
community. Paul was born in Canada in 1864 and immigrated to the United States in 1870 at age
6. 8 By 1887, Paul married his wife Josephine and together the couple adopted two sons, Joseph
and George. In the early 20th century, Paul owned several businesses in Salem’s Point
Neighborhood. These businesses included a grocery store at 17 Congress, a shoe store at 83
Harbor Street, and an appliance and housewares store at 16 Congress Street. 9 Around 1906,
Chaput transitioned to working as a real estate and insurance agent. He is listed on the deeds of
dozens of homes. 10
Due to the Great Salem Fire of 1914, Paul and his wife Josephine lost five properties
including their businesses on Congress Street and their family home at 11 Gardner Street, an
estimated loss of $30,500. 11 Following the fire, Paul and his family moved to 21 Hancock
Street. 12 Over the next few years, Paul purchased multiple plots in Salem’s burned-out areas to
rebuild and sell new homes. This included 5 Phelps Street, which Chaput and contractor
F. W. Dodge Company, "Data on Burned District at Salem, Mass." (1914) Salem State University Archives and
Special Collections
7
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 2332-481
8
1910 United States Federal Census, Salem Ward 5, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: T624_588; Page: 15A;
Enumeration District: 0473; FHL microfilm: 1374601
9
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1905 pg. 1405
10
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Index Book 1880-1940
11
F. W. Dodge Company, "Data on Burned District at Salem, Mass." (1914). Pg. 4
12
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1915-1916
6
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
3
�Hormisdas Hade purchased from Ellen Thornton on May 31, 1916. 13 Five months later, the new
home was complete and on October 30, 1916, Hade sold the home to widow Winifred Burke. In
1929, Paul incorporated the Paul N. Chaput Insurance Agency, which now operates on Margin
Street under the name John J. Walsh Insurance Agency, Inc. 14
The Burke Family, 1916-1951
Winifred Dolan Burke (1860 - c. 1942) was born in Ireland in 1860. In 1875, at the age of
15, Winifred immigrated to the United States. In 1880, she married Thomas Burke, an edge
setter in the shoe industry, also from Ireland. Together, the couple had eleven children, eight of
which survived infancy. 15 The couple moved around Salem a bit, settling briefly on Vale Street,
May Street, and Lynn Street before purchasing a home at 14 Phelps Street in May 1887. 16 On
July 24, 1912, Thomas passed away, widowing Winifred at the age of 52. 17 Two years later,
Winifred and her children lost their family home at 14 Phelps Street to the Great Salem Fire of
1914. Following the fire, the family briefly relocated to Peabody, living on Main Street. 18
Winifred claimed $3,125 in insurance money due to the fire and in October 1916, the Burke
family returned to Phelps Street, purchasing the newly constructed 5 Phelps Street from
contractor Hormidas Hade. 19 In 1925, Winfred and Thomas’ oldest child, Mary A. Burke (1882-
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 2332-481 and 2338-458
www.walshinsurance.com
15
United States Federal Census, Year: 1900; Census Place: Salem Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts; Page: 5;
Enumeration District: 0449; FHL microfilm: 1240647
16
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 1198-21
17
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1914
18
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1915
19
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 2332-481 and 2338-458
13
14
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
4
�Unknown), inherited the family home. At the time, Mary worked as a salesperson at W.G.
Webber Co., a dry goods store at 240 Essex Street. 20 Mary shared the home with her brothers
Edward and Daniel and their families. 21 After 35 years in the Burke family, Mary sold 5 Phelps
Street to Santo Tollo, a machinist, and his wife Jennie for $12,000. 22
The Tollo Family, 1951-1998
Santo Tollo (1914-1972) was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts on May 12, 1914. 23 In
1939, he married Jennie Thresa Ficarra (1910-1998) of Salem. Jennie grew up in the city’s Italian
neighborhood, living with her family at 12 High Street. 24 At the time of their marriage, Santo
worked in Boston at the Golden Dome Bottling Company and Jennie was listed as a lamp worker
in Salem. 25 The couple settled at 75 Summer Street in Salem in 1940 but quickly returned to
Jennie’s family home at 12 High Street. 26 Over the next few years, Santo worked as a machinist
at General Electric in Lynn, at local bottling companies, and as a chauffeur. Together the couple
had three children, James (1940-2017), Nancy (1941-Living), and John (1944-Living). In July 1951,
Santo and Jennie purchased the home at 5 Phelps Street. The home would remain in their family
for the next 37 years. 27 In June 1963, Santo and Jennie’s daughter, Nancy married Richard
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1924
United States Federal Census, Year: 1940; Census Place: Salem, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: m-t0627-01589;
Page: 3B; Enumeration District: 5-343
22
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 3833-35
23
The National Archives in St. Louis, Missouri; St. Louis, Missouri; Draft Registration Cards for Massachusetts,
10/16/1940-03/31/1947; Record Group: Records of the Selective Service System, 147; Box: 970
24
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1930-1939
25
The National Archives in St. Louis, Missouri; St. Louis, Missouri; Draft Registration Cards for Massachusetts,
10/16/1940-03/31/1947; Record Group: Records of the Selective Service System, 147; Box: 970
26
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1940-1945
27
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 3833-35
20
21
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
5
�Beausoliel, a barber, also from Salem. The couple moved to 5 Prince Street. 28 Santo Tollo passed
away in 1972 and in 1986, Nancy purchased the family home at 5 Phelps Street from her mother,
Jennie. Nancy and her husband, Richard lived in the home until February 1998, when Nancy sold
the home to Dennis R. Harrison. 29 Less than a year later, Dennis sold the home to Maureen
Cavanaugh, who as of 2020 still owns the home through the Maureen Cavanaugh Family Realty
Trust. 30
Marriage announcement 21 -- no title. 1963. Boston Globe (1960-1988), Jun 02, 1963.
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 8730-15
30
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, 15695-124
28
29
JEN RATLIFF | JENRATLIFF.COM
6
�SOURCES
COMPILED BY JEN RATLIFF
�Notes
Additional Documents
or Deeds
“Dwelling house and other
buildings”
#26 in City Plans
Name
Years of
Ownership
Number of
Years
Purchase Price
Deed
Referenced
Ellen Thornton
Peter Thornton
1886-1916
30
$1,000
116-194
1916
<1
considerations paid
2332-481
No buildings mentioned
1916
<1
2338-458
“Buildings thereon”
1916-1925
1925-1951
9
26
$1 and other considerations
paid
$3,800 remaining mortgage
considerations paid
2345-548
2664-461
“Buildings thereon”
Daughter of Winifred Burke
1951-1986
35
$12,000
3833-35
5320-614
5700-461
1986-1998
1998-1999
12
<1
$140,000
$200,000
8730-15
14591-439
Paul N. Chaput
Josephine Chaput
Hormisdas Hade
Alice Hade
Winifred Burke
Mary A. Burke
Jennie T. Tollo
Santo Tollo
John F. Tollo
Nancy J. Beausoliel
Dennis R. Harrison
Maureen Cavanaugh
Cavanaugh Family Realty
Trust
1999-2020+
20+
$208,000
Daughter of Santo and Jennie
15695-124
22949-58
36390-150
36691-18
The current home replaced a single-family home owned by Ellen Thornton and her husband Peter Thornton
which was destroyed in the Great Salem Fire of 1914.
Residents
Mrs. Winifried Burke
Mary A. Burke
Daniel F. Burke
Santo Tollo and Jennie T. Tollo
Nancy J. Tollo
Bev Tollo
James S. Tollo
Richard and Nancy Beausoleil
Directory Year
1917-1952
Owned 1916-1951
Notes
1951-1958
Owned: 1951-1986
Santos: Machinist, United States Marine Corp
1993-1998
Owned: 1986-1998
Address not listed in 1929-1931
Appears in 1930 Census at this address
Bev: Clerk Net&T
James: United States Navy
Richard: Barber
�-- -- -==- -- -- -- -Co,n ,non
/ B~nj amin and 'w,'//iom
f'i<le tr ing
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o')
\
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~
Col,
Jc,hn
Hath orn1,>
John Pich u i 9
SClm ue/ Ru, 11
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Map of Salem in 1700 by Sydney Perley
�Detail from Salem Atlas, 1874 (Plate G)
�u
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Detail from Salem Atlas, 1890-1903 (Plate 24)
�Detail from Salem Atlas, 1897 (Plate 6)
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Detail from Salem Atlas, 1906-1938 (Plate 48)
�Detail from Salem Atlas, 1911 (Plate 16)
�Ellen Thornton
5 Phelps
Residence and stable (Wood)
Assessed Land Value: $1400
Assessed Building Value: $400
Insurance on Building $2500
Insurance on Contents: $500
F. W. Dodge Company, "Data on Burned District at Salem, Mass."
(1914) Salem State University Archives and Special Collections
1849 PETER THORNTO '
[849
ELLEN HIS WIFE
1876
MARY E
1
382
RICHARD J.
1892
p[TER J,
1887 At\N TH ORNTON BAKER
Grave of Ellen and Peter Thornton – St. Mary’s Cemetery – Salem, Massachusetts
(Findagrave.com Memorial ID: 157233323)
1915
1951
1065
1972'
�Man poses among the ruins of the Great Salem Fire of 1914.
Likely taken near Phelps Street. St. Joseph's Church at 135 Lafayette Street in the distance.
On back "General view of burned district"
SCPH 13-018
Salem State University Archives and Special Collections
�ha put
P ul
!7lea/ 6stale
LIIM !
Pl .t CLw ~nd
all olllN
I J2
o(
fnsur ance
p
r,
,■
Paul
hapur :: Real
tote
..
I
T
TlrLll'JIID,t
• •'"'
The Inland Printer. United States: Maclean-Hunter Publishing Corporation, 1910.
�-
1 ). 0
Prl ' l .
I EPAH"P fl~
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.
11
P A UI • ~ - O~ AP UT ,
E Ai. E H 1. · -
-I
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•
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1
0
.,
and
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1893 pg. 1090
A. E
II
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�1
Paul N. Chaput,,
D
H
D,
JIJ
: tton' Sun. Proof
P
..
·.
·.
d p, int ,
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1905 pg. 1405
�PAUL N. CHAPUT
.
.
g
A , ent for
s
Jack. on and Detroiter Automobiles
I'
Real Estate
Fire, Liabihty
and Pla1e Glass
INSU RAN CE.
MONEY TO LOAN O
I
132 Lafayet te St.,
MORTGAGE S
Telephone 965'
Salem, Mus.
J. Alderic Deschamps
Justice of the Peace
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1913 pg. 1562
I
�Paul N. Chaput
Real Estate
Fire
Plate Glass
Burglar
Liabilities
Compensation
Automobile
General
I Insurance
J
Money to Loan on Mortgages
J. ALDERIC DESCHAM iP'S
Justice of the Peace
Telephone 965
Hawthorne Bldg., 209 Waahington St.,
City Directory, Salem, MA., 1915 pg. 1530
Notary Public
Salem, Mau.
�Paul N. Chaput
1
SALE~f. Oct. l9 --P:ttll ., '. Chaput,
~
8.1. publi~hcr of a cha ·n nf F~, nch
Jan#?uag r,,c,~ ·~p ar.er::- ~ ~u:i f, lh ,dc-1· or
the Salc,n, S ,;-1 \ ·'u 1 ~~ r.;ink. ri 'i r.ri tod. ~-.
T~.e fu ner;,l , ·~U be t r.ld .,t.11 .d· :.
.
a
\\dt h , bi,:h mr :·, at St. Jo~cph"t
C'hurc-h a t
n.
Daily Boston Globe (1928-1960), Oct 20, 1945.
J
�I TROD
TI
1630 is a de .cription of th Pi n
iver Park in l 930 by the
e erected at
through the
alem Pia :tlcm'
Ternr c: J. B.a1
. Pew,
em, ere
erccnmitte • The putp< · o
c · co ho the types of
. heltl'r bu1l b • the first ttlers .and in u
t the time of the coming of
Winthrop. Th structure ar pl. ed in n tur
ttin urro nd,:J
by ,. . ample. of the activitit:5 c entfal to the p1nmc:r ettlement. The
il111 • w. originated and on tru ·t ·d und r tl1e dire tion of the fol-
n. who will furni h inform. tion
p
0 PL \ ,R.
10
l!
r qu ·t d:
0
OH
D LL PR Tr,
EO RG
R
R
• R ANC'J~
P. K
RL
L.
Y
BR lf,t,
O
S11prri11tn1dn1t
Do , Antiq11 rinn- rchitect
v L11,i ltrtJp,· Archit~ct
1 Cosllmirr
L
DH.
Paul N. Chaput as a Park Commissioner assisted in the creation of Pioneer Village.
A Reference Guide to Salem, 1630: Forest River Park, Salem, Massachusetts.
Salem (Mass.). Board of Park Commissioners., "A Reference Guide to Salem, 1630: Forest River Park, Salem, Massachusetts." (1935)
�Winifred Burke
14 Phelps Street
Apartments (Wood)
Assessed Land Value: $300
Assessed Building Value: $1,400
Insurance on Building: $2,125
Insurance on Contents: $1,000
F. W. Dodge Company, "Data on Burned District at Salem, Mass."
(1914) Salem State University Archives and Special Collections
Santo and Jennie Tollo – St. Mary’s Cemetery – Salem, Massachusetts
(Findagrave.com Memorial ID: 157420904)
�~
2. ADDRESS (Prin~)
__ J ?.,____ \··--l \~H --------·--------------------(Number and •trect or R. F. D. number)
3. TELEPHONE
4. AGE IN YEARS
tJi
s A b £ tv\._______E s ~ E_i _________lf' ~ s .-(Town)
(C<-unty)
(State)
6. COUNTRY OJ'
~ C E OJ' BIRTH
i;~,--------
------~~-------------- --------D~;~;~~;;-------- _________9-lo~;r~f
CITIZENSHIP
------------------------------ --~- - ___ ,_l. -- __ 1 ____ ------- t1Q ~- s ----------- ------- 0 . _ I\__
4
s .-----(Number)
(Mo.)
country)
(Excbana:A)
(Day)
(Yr.)
(State or
7. NU.CE OJ' PERSON WHO WILL ALW.A.YS KNOW Yoo.a ADDRES8
__ r,\ V S ·_________
;re\'\~ \_e _____T__ _~q____T _t
by-e
l
O
(Mr.• Mn., Miu)
8. RELATIONSHIP OJ' THAT
0
C --------- -------~~
(Middle)
(Finlt)
(Lut)
:
,!_ _t _______ _
--\
~
0. ADDRESS 01' TIIAT PER~
___J_ ___ _(_.\'1_ _\_. ___________________ o l e ~--_________R _ se1'__________ f"'(_ q _~ s _ _
2._
__
___
s
-___
(Nu
er a d etr~t or R. F. D . number)
(Town)
(County)
<State)
ll~~J~.~::!?.::.'-£!? .:H.' '~"' -.------------- s. - - - - - - - - - M--------------10. EMPLOYEE'S NAME
1 oj<=f
C~J\J_ ~ o ~~ _______ _____o~~ n
\
.-11
(Number and etreet or R . F. D. number)
I AJ'nRM:
THAT
I
(Town)
'" ________- __o\ ~ ______\ ~ __$ ~ _.__
HAVE VERD"Ili:D ABOV:B ANSWERS AND THAT A B . B Y TRUE.
AR
REGISTRATION CARD
D. S. S. Form. 1
c-
unty)
~
!over,
~
(State)
t.,
'---/
/
•- --------------------- -----~
~
<Rea:iatrant •
The National Archives in St. Louis, Missouri; St. Louis,
Missouri; Draft Registration Cards for Massachusetts,
10/16/1940-03/31/1947; Record Group: Records of the Selective
Service System, 147; Box: 970
■i&nature)
---------------
�REGISTRAR'S REPORT
DESCRIPTION OF REGISTRANT
HEIGHT
(Approx.)
RAOE
White
,✓
WEIGHT
(Approx.)
I
EYES
Negro
Oriental
I
I
-,
Hazel
- - - , Brown
Indian
Filipino
Sallow
---
Light
HAIR
Biondo
---
I
- --
Red
Ruddy
--,Dark
7
Brown
- - -, Freckled
Blue
I Gray
OOMPLEXION
Black
Black
Gray
Dald
✓I Light brown
,=1
I Dark brown
- ..,/
------ ----
Black
Other obvious physical characteristics that will aid in identiflelition_____________ _
--· ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - ----------------------------------------
-- ----- -------------------------------------------------------- --------------- ----- I certify that my answers are true; that the person registered· has read or has had
read to him his own answers; that I have witnessed his signature or mark and that
all of his answers of which I have knowledge are true, N'9pt es 'oUoms:
L(L .
sn:.
(lW ill n \
\31
1!'
~.lt.~
(Tho atamp of tho Local Board havine: juriadiot.ion of tho reiriatrant
eball be placed in the above apace.)
�Susan Pszenny, Salem,
James T ollo Engaged
.
Mr. and Mrs. R a y m o n d
Pszenny of Salem announce
the engag~ment of the i r
daughter, Susan E 11 en, to
James Tollo, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Santo Tollo of Salem.
Miss Pszenny is in her second year at the School of the .
Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
Her fiance is a graduate ot
East Coast Areo Te.ch. . He
served in the Navy.
•
Susan Pszenny, Salem, James Tollo Engaged." Boston Globe (1960-1988), Feb 03, 1963
�~~1 !~~ -
- -
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Marriage announcement 21 -- no title. 1963. Boston Globe (1960-1988), Jun 02, 1963.
�DEEDS
COMPILED BY JEN RATLIFF
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----~-~233_2
481
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. her- ~eirs~ and assigns all right or or to both dower and homestead in the
granted pre1nises and all rights by statute therein, and all other rights
and tnterests therein. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we the said Antime Barbeau and
Delphine Barbeau
1
I
I
hereunto set our hands and seals this fifteenth day of
I
April in the year one thousand nine hundred and sixteen,
Signed, sealed, and delivered in presence or
Harry D. Wheeler to A. B.
i Thomas
J. Cadorette
I
I PW1,ilipp Roy
Antime Barbeau
(seal)
her
Delphine X Barbeau
(seal)
mark
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, Es-
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
sex ss, April 16, 1916,
sonally appeared the above named
)
)
)
witness to mark
Then per-
I
I
·
Antime Barbeau and acknowledged thel
foregoing instrument to be his free act and deed, before me
Harry D. Wheeler
Essex ss. Received May 31,1916,
Justice or the Peace,
8 m past 2 P, M, Recorded and EXamined
y
----------------------------------------------------------------------,
1
I, Ellen Thornton, being a widow, of Salem, Essex county, Massachusetts,
Thornton.
for consideration paid, grant to Paul N. Chaput, of said Salem, with war-
I
to
'
ranty covenants the land in said Salem, bounded as follows: Beginning at
the northwesterly corner thereof by land now or late or Aaron Goldthwait
and thence running southerly by Phelps. street thirty sev8lfeet, thence
Chaput
one #1 R.Stamp
Documentary
i .Canceled
easterly by land now or late or Gilbert one hundred and twenty five feet,
thence northerly by land now or late or Tuttle and land now or late or
I
Babbidge and Russell forty feet five inches,
and thence westerly by land
I
: now or late of Dennett and Goldthwait one hundred and twenty one feet to
the corner begun at; excepting so much thereof as may have been taken for
the widening or Phelps Street.
Being the same premises conveyed to me by
deed of Asa F. Bunker dated January 29, 1886 and recorded with Essex so.
Dist. Deeds Book 1166 Page 194. Said premises are conveyed subject to the
!taxes for the current year.
I or
I
WITNESS my hand and seal this thirty first day
I
May 1916,
'
(seal) i
Ellen Thornton
ICOMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Essex,
BS,
May 31, 1916.
Then personally aP1
'peared the above named Ellen Thornton and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be her free act and deed, before me,
Ulysses G. Haskell
Essex ss. Received May 31, 1916.
Justice or the Peace.
20 m past 2 P. M. Recorded and Examined ,
------------------------------------------------------------------:we, Emil~ Aglietta and Fanny Aglietta, husband and wife or Lynn,
County, Massachusetts, for consideration paid,
Essex
Aglietta et ux
I
grant to Celestina Pesce or
to
I
',said Lynn with warranty covenants the land in said LYNN, bounded and
de-
scribed as follows: A certain parcel or land with the buildings thereon in
t-
Pesce
one $2 R,stamp
Documentary
Canceled
�458·
STATE OF MAINE
Kennebec ss. July 20 1916
Then personally appeared the
above named zulah M. Neal and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be
'
,her free act and deed
I
before me
( Notarial seal)
Notary Public
E. R. Jones
i
· COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Danvers-ss July 22 1916.
I
Then personally ap~
.peared the above Charles .s. Neal and acknowledged the foregoing instrument
to be his own free act and deed
before me.
Arthur E. Fuller
Justice of the Peace
I
Essex ss. Received July 25, 1916.• 55 m. past 3 P.M. Recorded and Examined.
1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------I
Chaput
to
1
·1
'
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS that L, Paul N. Chaput Of Salem in the County
of Essex and Commonwealth of Massachusetts. in consideration of one dollar
and other valuable considerations paid by Hormisdas Hade
Hade
1
'
also of said Salem
'
One $1 R.Stamp
Documentary
Canceled
i
I
, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby give, grant, bargain,1
I
'sell and convey unto the said Hormisdas Hade,
; said SALE!.1, bounded as follows:
,
a certain parcel of land in
Beginning at the .northwesterly corner there-
' of by land now or late of Aaron Goldthwait and thence running southerly by
Phelps Street thirty seven feet, thence easterly by land now or late of
, Gilb.ert one hundred and twenty five feet, thence northerly by land now or
late of Tuttle and land now or late of Babbidge and Russell forty feet five
I
I inches,
I one
and thence westerly by land now or late of Dennett and Goldthwait
hundred and twenty one feet to the corner begun at; excepting so much
I
I thereof
as may have been taken for the widening of Phelps street.
Being
; the same premises conveyed to me by deed of Ellen Thornton dated May 31st
1916 and recorded in Essex South District Registry of Deeds Book 2332 Page
;481.
1
!
TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the granted premises, with all the privileges and
appurtena.nces thereto belonging, to the said Hormisdas Hade and his heirs
land assigns, to their own use and behoof forever.
And I hereby for myself
'
and my heirs, executors, and administrators, covenant with the grantee and
his heirs and assigns, that I am lawfully seized in fee simple of the grant; ad premises; that they are free from all incumbrances; except the taxes for,
I
'the current year that I have good r;l:ght to sell and convey the same as afore~
· said; and that I will and my heirs, executors, and administrators shall warrant and defend the same to the
grantee and his heirs and assigns forever
,against the lawful claims and demands of all persons
1 tion
And for the considera-
aforesaid I, Josephine Chaput, wife of Paul N. Chaput do hereby release
unto the said grantee and his heirs and assigns all right of or to both
dower and homestead in the granted premises, and all other rights and interests therein.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF we the said Paul N. Chaput and Josephine
Chaput l1ereunto set our hands and seals this twenty seventh day of July in
1
I
+---
�459
2338~
the year one thousand nine hundred and sixteen
Signed and sealed
in presence of
-
Josephine Chaput
COMMON\1/EALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Essex
88
( seal)
Paul N. Chaput
)
)
)
( seal)
July 27th 1916
Then personally
appeared the above named Paul N, Chaput and acknowledged the foregoing in-
I
strument to be his free act and deed,
before me
Justice of the Peace
J. A. Deschamps
Essex ss. Recei•red July 27, 1916, 5 m. past 11 A,M. Recorded and Examined.
------------------------------------------------------------------.
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, That I, Horm1-das Hade, of Salem in the
Hade
county of Essex: and Commonwealth of Massachusetts, for consideration paid,.
to
grant to the Sal.em Five Cents savings Bank, a corporation duly established Salem F,C.S,Bk,
b!f. law and located in Salem in the County of Essex and Commonwealth of Mas, sachusetts, with mortgage covenants, to secure the payment of Thirty eight
Hundred Dollars in one year w1 th f1 ve per cent
interest per annum, payable
quarterly, as provided in a note of even date, the land in said SALEM, with
the buildings thereon, bounded as follows:
Beginning at the northwesterly
corner thereof by land formerly of Goldthwait now or late of Little and
thence running southerly by Phelps street thirty seven feet, thence easterly
by land now or late of Gil"oert one hundred and twenty five feet, thence
northerly by land now or late of Tuttle and of Babbidge and Russell forty
.
'
I
I
I
,feet five inches, and thence westerly by land now or late of Dennett and
I
Little one hundred and twenty one feet to the corner begun at; being the
1
same premises conveyed to me by deed of Paul N. Chaput to be recorded hereI
w1 th.
This mortgage is upon the Statutory Condition, and upon t):]:e furthe·r
condition that the grantor or his heirs, executors, administrators or as-
I
1
signs shall pay all taxes and assessments on said premises, whether in the
I
nature of taxes or assessments now in being or not, shall keep the buildings
now or hereafter standing thereon insured against fire in a sum satisfac-.
tory to said Bank or its successors or assigne, all insurance to be made ,
payable in case of loss to said Bank or its successors or assigns, and shall
pay to said Bank or its successors or assigns all such sums with interest
as it or they may pay or incur for such taxes, assessments or insurance,
or on account of.any foreclosure proceedings hereunder, whether completed
'or not; for any breach of which the mortgagee shall have the statutory
,Power of sale,
And said Bank and its successors and assigns shall have the
further right to cancel and surrender any insurance policies and collect
the proceeds therefrom in case of any sale made hereunder, and to retain
out of the proceeds of any such sale one per cent of the purchase money
for its or their services in making such sale; any purchaser at such sale
�l
460
• I
shall be held to claim hereunder in case of any defect in said sale; and any
I entry
I for
I said
made for the purpose of foreclosing
this mortgage shall enure to and
the behefi t of the purchaser at such sale.
And I' Alice Hade, Wife of
mortgagor, release to the mortgagee all rights of dower and homestead
·and other interests in the mortgaged premises,
I
'
1
I
WITNESS our hands and seals
this twenty seventh day of July in the year nineteen hundred and sixteen.
I
In presence of COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
. Essex, as.
'
i
)
Hormisdas Hade
( seal)
Alice Hade
( seal)
i
On this twenty seventh day of July 1916, before me personally
appeared Hormi-das Hade to me known to be the person described in and Who
executed the foregoing instrument, and acknowledged that he executed the
same as his free act and deed.
Ulysses G. Haskell
Justice of the Peace.
Essex ss. Received July 27, 1916. 5 m. past 11 A.M. Recorded and Examined.
I _________________________________________________________________________
Hade
IKNOW
J
ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS That I, Hormisdas Hade of Salem in the County
,of Essex and Commonwealth of Massachusetts. in consideration of Six Hundred
to
and seventy five dollars paid by Paul N. Chaput also of said Salem the re-
Chaput
· ceipt Whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby give, grant, bargain, sell
I
' J ' : : > ~ ~ and convey unto the said Paul N. Chaput, a certain parcel of land in said
Q. . ..::1::,4-~f'.
0
Lt-l I SALEM,
with the buildings thereon, bounded as follows:
Beginning at the
northwesterly corner thereof by land now or late of Aaron Goldthwait and
thence running southerly by Phelps street thirty seven feet, thence easterly
by land now or late of Gilbert one hundred and twenty five feet, thence
northerly by land now or late of Tuttle and land now or late of Babbidge
and Russell forty feet five inches, and thence westerly by land now or late
: of Dennett and Goldthwait one hundred and twenty on_e feet to the corner be-,
1gun at; excepting so much thereof as may have been taken for the widening
of Phelps Street.
Belng. the same premises conveyed to me by deed of Paul
N, Chaput to be recorded herewith,
TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the granted premi-,
ses, with all the privileges and appirtenances thereto belonging, to the
said Paul N. Chaput and his heirs and assigns, to their own use and behoof
Iforever.
1
And I hereby, for myself and my heirs, executors and adm1n1stra- :
tors covenant with the grantee and his heirs and assigns that I am lawru11y
I
:seized in fee simple of the granted premises, that they are fr~e from all
I 1ncumbrances.
except a mortgage upon Which $3800 of principal remains unpaid,
, which mortgage was given by me to Salem Five Cents Savings Bank and is re'
'
corded in Essex so. Dist. Registry of Deeds, book - page - that I have good
right to sell and convey the same as aforesaid; and that I will and
my
heirs,
executors, and administrators shall warrant and defend the same to the gran-
�461
2338 __ _
tee ancl his heirs and assigns forever against the lawful claims and demands
'or all persons.
Iadministrators,
I
PROVIDED NEVERTHELESS that if I, or
my
heirs, executors,
I
or assigns, shall pay unto the grantee, or his executors,
administrators, or assigns, the sum of Six Hundred and seventy five (675)
I
dollars as follows:
375.00 on the 15th day of August 1916,
, 1st day of October 1916,
$25.00 on the:
I
$25.00 on the 1st day of each and every month
I
· thereafter until the payments so made amount to $300 and the balance $375
I
in one year~ from this date, with interest quarterly at the rate of six per
; centum per annum, and until such payment shall pay all taxes and assessments,
: to whomsoever laid or assessed, whether on the granted premises or on any
interest therein, or on the debt secured hereby, shall keep the buildings ,
1
on said premises insured against fire in a sum not less than Six hundred
i
and seventy five dollars for the benefit of the grantee and his executors,!'
administrators, and assigns, in such form and at such insurance offices as
! they
shall approve, and, at least two days before the expiration of any
I policy on said premises, shall deliver to him or them, a new and sufficient
!
I
policy to take the place of the one so expiring; and shall not conmit or
! suffer any strip or waste of the granted premises , or any breach of any 1
! covenant herein contained, or any default in the performance or observance
I
of the cor.dition of said prior mortgage, then this deed, as al-so a note of1
even date herewith, signed by me whereby I promise to pay to the grantee or
I order
!
the said principal sum and instalments of interest a.t the times afore-
said, shall be void.
BUT UPON ANY DEFAULT in the performance or observance
of the foregoing condition, or the conditions or said prior mortgage, the
grantee, or his executors, aruninistrators, or assigns, may sell the granted
premises, or such portion thereof as may remain subject to this mortgage
I
in case or any partial release hereof, together with all improvements that.
Imay be thereon,
by public auction in said Salem first publishing a notice
I
of the time and place of sale, once aach week for three successive weeks, '
I
i in
some one newspaper published in said Salem the first publication of such
notice to be not less than twenty one days before the day of sale, and
convey the same by proper deed or deeds to the purchaser or purchasers
solutely and in fee simple; and such sale shall forever bar me and all
sons claiming under me from all right and interest in the granted premises',
I
1
whetl1er at law or in equity.
And out of money arising from such sale the
I
grantee or his representatives shall be entitled to retain all sums then
secured by this deed, Whether then or thereafter payable, including all
1
costs, charges and expenses incurred or sustained by them by reason of any
I default
in the performance or observance of the said condition, rendering '
I
the surplus, if any, to me or my heirs or assigns; and I hereby, for myself
�l
462
1and my heirs or assigns, covenant with the grantee and his heirs, executors,
administrators, and assigns, that, in case a sale shall be maLl.e under the
foregoing power, I or they will upon request, execute, acknowledge, and deliver to the purchaser or purchasers a deed or deeds of release confirming
such sale, and said grantee and his assigns are hereby appointed and constituted the attorney or attorneys, irrevocable of the said grantor to execute
ancl deliver to the said purchaser a fulll. transfer of all policies of insur, ance on the buildings upon the land covered by this mortgage at the time
· of euc11 sale.
AND IT IS AGREED that the grantee, or his executors, admin-
istrators or assigns, or any person or persons in their behalf, may purchase
' at any sale made as aforesaid, and that no other purchaser shall be answP.r. abl·e for the application of the purchase money; and that, until default in
the
performance or observance of the conclition of this cleecl, I and my heirs
.and assigns may hold ancl enjoy the granted premises and receive the rents
and profits thereof.
And for the consideration aforesaid I, Alice Hade,
wife of Hormisdas Hacle do hereby release unto the said grantee ancl his heirs
and assigns all right of or to both clawer ancl homestead in the granted premIN WITNESS WHEREOF we
ises, and all other rights and interests therein.
· the saicl Hormisdas Hacle ancl Alice Hade hereunto set our hands and seals this
twenty seventh day of July in the year one thousancl nine hundrecl sixteen
Signed and sealecl
the presence of
in
Hormisdas Hade
-
COM!1!0!11'/EAL'l'H OF MASSACHUSETTS Essex
BS
( seal)
Alice Hade
)
)
)
( seal)
July 27' 1916
Then personally ap-
peared the above named Hormisclas Hade and acknowledgecl the foregoing instru. ment to be his free act and cleed,
before me
Ulysses G, Haskell
Justice of the Peace
Essex as. Receivecl July 27, 1916, 5 m, past 11 A,M, Recordecl and Examined,.
------------·---------------------------------------------------Gannon
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, That I, Bessie M. H. Gannon, of Salem in
to
the county of Essex and commonwealth of 1iassachusetts, being unrnarriecl,
Salem F,C,S,Bk,
/4
for consideration paid, grant to the Salem Five Cents savings Bank, a corporatlon duly established by law and located in Salem in the County of Es-,
6. S.3 3 s /7.?&, · sex and commonwealth of Massachusetts, with mortgage covenants, to secure
: the payment of Twenty four Hundred Dollars in one year with five per cent
interest per annum, payable quarterly, as provided in a note of even date,
I
•the land in said SALE~, with the buildings thereon, bouncled northeasterly
by May street thirty six feet,
southeasterly by other land of mine eighty
five ancl twenty five hundredths ( 85,25) feet,
southwesterly by land of
.Frederic A. Gannon thirty feet, and northwesterly by land of Mary A, Fogarty
eighty four feet; being a part of the premises conveyed to me by
deed of
�548
to myself dated July 27, A. D. 1916, and recorded with the Essex so. Dist
Registry of Deeds, book 2338, page 460 do hereby acknowledge that I have
1
Ireceived full payment and
1
satisfaction of the debt thereby secured and of ,
the conditions therein contained, and in consideration thereof I do here-
. by cancel and discharge said mortgage.
1
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I hereunto set ,.
I
my hand and seal this 30th day of October A. D. 1916.
(seal)
Signed and sealed
)
Paul N. Chaput
in the presence of -
)
I
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. Es-
sex ss.
October 30th, 1916.
Then personally appeared the above named
Paul N. Chaput and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free
act and deed, before me,
Justice of the Peace
J. A. Deschamps
Essex ss. Rec•d. Oct. 30, 1916. 20 m. past 11
A.:M.
Recorded and Examined.
---- ~--------------------------------------------------------------------'
Hade
That I, Hormisdas Hade of Salem, Essex county, Massachusetts, for consider-
to
: at ion paid, grant to Winnifred Burke of said Salem, with warranty covenants
I
the land in said SALEM, with the buildings thereon, bounded and described
Burke
'as follows: Beginning at the northwesterly corner thereof by land now or
late of Aaron Goldthwait and thence running southerly by Phelps Street
•
i
I
thirty seven (37) feet, thence easterly by land now or late of Gilbert one
hundred and twenty five ( 125) feet, thence northerly by land now or late ·'
I
of Tuttle and land now or late of Babbidge and Russell forty feet five in-.
ches, and thence westeriy by land now or late of Dennett and Goldthwait one
hundred and twenty one feet to the corner begun at; excepting so much
thereof as may have been taken for the widening of Phelps street.
I
Meaning
hereby to convey the same premises conveyed to me by deed of Paul N. Cha-
I put
dated July 27th, 1916, and· recorded in Essex South District Registry
, of Deeds Book 2338 Page 458.
I mortgage
,
'
I
1
These premises are conveyed sub,Ject to a
I
of $3800 to the Salem Five cents savings Ban~ which the grantee
assumes and agrees to pay.
I, Alice Hade wife of said granter release to
, said grantee all rights of dower and homestead and other interests tJ1erei:n,.
I
•
• WITNESS our hands and seals this 30th day of October 1916.
I
COMMONWEALTH OF :MASSACHUSETTS.
)
Hormisdas Hade
(seal)
Essex ss.
)
Alice Hade
(seal)
Oct. 30th, 1916.
Then personally appeared the above named Horrnisdas Hade and acknowledged
the foregoing instrument to be his free act and deed, before me,
J. A. Deschamps
Justice of the Peace
Essex ss. Rec•d. Oct. 30, 1916. 20 m. past 11 A.M. Recorded and EXamined.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
I
�250
COMMONWEALTH OF llASSACHUSETTS
)
Desire .A!:,P Rioux
(seal)
Essex ss. June 25, 1923. Then :personally appeared the above named Desire
I
1
A. Rioux and aclmowledged the foregoing instrument to be her free act and
deed, before me
Kl.mer W. Liebsch
My
Justice of the Peace
commission eXl)ires Feb. 23, 1929
E.ssex ss. Received June 26, 1923. 30 m. :past 10 A,M. Pecorded anJ. Examined
-------------------------------------------------------------------------KNOW ALL MEN BY T ~ PRl!Sl~NTS that we, James J. G-ilgan and Mary E.Gilgan
Gilgan et ux
to
his wife in her own right both of Salem in the County of Essex and Commob- ·
Burke
I
wealth of Massachusetts, in consideration of one dollar and other valuable
One. 50 R. Stamp
Tocumentary
Canceled.
considerations :paid by Mary A. B.lrke of Salem in the County of' Essex and
Commonwealth of' Massachusetts, the receipt whereof' is hereby acknowledged, I
do hereby give, grant, bargain, sell and. convey unto the said Mary A.Burke,
and her heirs and assigns a certain :parcel of' land situated in said. SALEM,
bounded and described as follows: Westerly by PhelIJS Street formerly Phelps
'
Court f'orty two ( 42) f'eet more or less; Northerly by lani now or late of'
1
Little formerly of' Goldthwaite sixty seven (67) f'eet; more or less; Easter!!
,lY by land now. or late of' Murphy f'ormerly of D3nnett f'orty two (42) f'eet
!
' more or less; thence Southerly by land now or late of Thornton formerly of'
Newhall sixty seven (67) feet more or less.
Meaning to convey the same
:premises conveyed to me the said Mary E. Gilgan by deed of' James J. Callahan et ux by deed dated October 30, 1911 and recorded in Essex South Dist•/
I
rict· Begistry of' Ieetls Book 2113, Page 107. Said :premises are conveyed sub.l.
j
ect to the taxes assessed by the City of' sa1em April 1, 1923, which! the
grantee assumes and agrees to :pay.
TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the granted :premi-;
ses, with all the :privileges and appurtenances thereto b3longing, to the
said Mar/ A. Burke and her heirs ani assigns, to their own use and behoof'
forever. And we hereby f'or ourselves and our heirs, executors, and adminisj
trators, covenant with the grantee and her heirs and assigns, that we are
'
lawf'ully seized in f'ee simple of' tm granted :premises; that tbey are free
f'rom all incumbrances; that we have good right to sell and convey the same
as af'oresaid; and that we will and our heirs, executors, and administrators shall warrant and. defend. the same to the grantee and her heirs
an:l.
I
as!
'signs f'orever against the lawf'ul claims and. demands of' all :persons. And f'or
I
the consideration af'oresaid I, James J. Gilgan husband. of' the said Mary E.
I
1
Gilgan do hereby release unto the said grantee am her heirs and ass:igns
all right of' or to both uower and. homestead, in the granted l)remises, and
all other rights ant interests therein. IN WITNESS WllEREOF we the said
I
James J. Gilgan and. Mary E. Gilgan hereunto set our hantl- and seal- this
twenty sixth day of' June in the year one thousand nine hundred a.nd twentf!Y,
�--s
251
1-------------------~;) . L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - +
three.
James J; Gilgan
(seal)
Signed and sealed in pres-
Mrs. Mary E. Gilgan
( seal)
ence o:t' Edward H. Shea
COWONWEP..LTH OF MABSACHUSEITTS
Essex ss. Salem June 26, 1923.
Then personally appeared the above named
James J. Gilgan and Mary E. Gilgan and. acknowledged the :t'oregoing instrument to be their t'ree act and d.eed, oot'ore me
:&I.ward H. Shea
My
Justice of . the Peace
commission expires Oct. 13, 1927
Essex ss. Received June 26, 1923, 45 m; past 10 A.M. Bacorded and Ex:amine •
-----~-------·-----------------------------------------------------------1
I, Emma F. Blair o:f Cliftonda.le, Saugus, Ma.ssa.£husetts, Essex County,Massl
achusetts for consideration paid, grant -to .Ba.ymond C. Thom:pson and Audrey
s.
Thompson, husband. arul wife, as Joint tenants and not tenants in common
o:t' Cliftondale, Saugus, Essex Oo. Mass. with warranty covenants the land
Saugus, Essex County, Massachusetts, called Oliftondale, and being lots
,a
and 42 on a plan of land in Cliftondale, belonging to Maria
P. Whitney, dated 1892 arnl recorded with Essex South District .Dseds,Book
1366 Page 1, and thus bounded and described:
Southeasterly by said Mt.
Vernon Street extending one hundred (100) feet. Northerly. by lots numbered 43 and. 45 on said Plan extending one hundred twenty nine and 74/100
(129, 74) feet, Westerly by lots numbered 33 arul 34 on said plan extending
eighty six and 64/100 (86.64) feet and Soutberly by lot numbered 4 on
said Plan, extending eighty one and 40/100 (81.40) feet
Containing by
estimation, 10,222 squar~ feet of land . Said premises are conveyed subject to taxes assessed as f'or tle year 1923 by the town ot: Saugus. SubJ:ec
also to mortgage to South Weymouth Co-operative Bank which the granteeassurne2 and agree§. to pay and which was originally written for forty t\'D
hundred ($4200.00) dollars.
For my title see dee_d of Joseph G. Bryer dat
ad AJ;Iril 14, 1920 record.ad wiilh Essex South .District Deeds, Book 2447,andl
page 188.
I, John
w.
Blair, ~usband of' said grantor release to said gra
l
tee- all rights of tenancy by the C1.lrtesy and other interests therein.
WITNESS our hands a.nd. seals this twenty fifth day of June 1923.
CO:Ml.fONW&ALTH OF M.ASSACHUSl!."'TTS
Essex ss. June 26 1923.
?
Then per- )
John W. Blair
(seal)
lhma F. Blair
( seal)
sona.lly appeared the above named Emma F. Blair and acknowledged tbe :foregoing instrwnent to be her free act and dead, be:t'ore me
A. B. Tolman
to
Thompson et ux
one $2. &
One $1. R.
Stamps
Documentary
Canceled.
i!1 with buildings thereon,· situated on Mt. Vernon Street in that part of
NUmbered
Blair et ux
Justice of' the Peace
My commission expires - 19 Essex ss. Baceived June 26, 1923. 16 m. past 11 A.M. B:icorded and Examined
�__ 266.4 _ _ _ _ _- I
_
statutory :power of sale.
WITNESS our hands ancl seals this first day of'
. Leonilde 1'1arfongelli
December 1925
COMMONWEALTH OF 1".ASSACHUSET1'S
Essex, ss.
461
)
Salem, December 1, 1925
(seal)
Giuseppe Marf'ongelli
. (seal)
Then :personally appeared the above
named Leonilde Harfongelli and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to
be her free act and deed,
before me.
Walter L, Neeley
Justice of the Peace.
Essex ss. Received Dec. 1, 1925. 3 m. :past ll A.M. Recorded and. E:xamined.
------------------------------------------------------------------------I, YTinif'red Burke, widow of Salem, Essex county, Massachusetts, for con-
Burke
sideration :paid, grant to :tiary A. Bttcke of said. Salem with WAiillANTY COVE-
to
NANTS the land in said. SAIEI.1: with the buildings thereon, bounded. and. de-
Burke
scribed as follows:
Beginning at the Northv.resterly corner thereof by laru
now or late of Aaron Gold.thwait and thence running Southerly by Phelps
street thirty seven ( 37) feet; thence eas.terly by land now or late of Gil
bert one hundred twenty five (125) feet; thence Northerly by.land now or
late of Tuttle and land now or late of Ribbid.ge and Russell forty (40).
feet, five (5) inches, and thence ·westerly by land now·or late of Dennett
and Gold.thwait one hundred and t\,enty one (121) feet to the corner begun
at; excepting so much thereof' as may have been taken 1'or the widening of
Phelps street,
Being the same premises conveyed. to me by deed of HoroisdiS
Hade dated October 30, 1916 and recorded with Essex South JJistrict Regist~y
of Deeds, Book 2345, Page 548.
WITNESS my band and seal this twenty fif~h
Winnifred. Burke
day of November 1925
A. s. Bachorowski
Essex ss.
)
Salem, Mass.
(seal)
COMMONWEALTH OF MhSSACHUSETTS
November 25 1925
Then personally appeared the
above named Win1,.f'red Burke and acl<.nowledged. the foregoing instrument to
be her free act and. deed,
before me
Alphonse S, Iiachorowski
Justice of the Peace
My commission expires Oct. 8 1926.
Essex ss. Received Dec. 1, 1925, 4 m. past 11 A.M. Recorded and E:xamined.
-------------~-----------------------------------------------------------'
I, Karl Grossberg of Beverly, Essex County, Massachusetts, for consid.er-
·Grossberg
a tion :paid, grant to Fannie Latinik, wif•e of Joseph J. latinik, of said
to
Beverly with QUITCLhil'i COVENANTS the land in said. :BEVERLY with tl1e buildings thereon bounded. and. described. as follows:
Southeasterly by Pantoul
street, fifty ( 50) feet; Southwesterly by land i'onnerly of Chw'chill, no,
or late of Della Monica, ninety (90) feet; Northwesterly by land now or
late of Cram:psey, fifty ( 50) feet; and Northeasterly by land 1·ormerly of
Amos Place, now or late of Dnncan, ninety (90) feet; being the _:premises
r
Iatinik
One $1 R. Stamp
rocumentary
Canceled.
�38.33
KNOW... ALL .. MEN... BY... THESE ... PRESENTS. ... THAT ... l,. Mary ...A.•.... Bur.k.e................................................. .
.............................. ' ................................................................. ~--- ...................................................... •·· .. .
.
.
...... .
of ...... Ba lem., ................................................................. .... ,···············································Essex ........ county, Massachusetts
6d.,, •• ..,,,,,,,, for consideration paid. grant to .... San.to ... Tollo ... and ... Jennie ....T
.•....Tollo-, ... husband
.and ....wif'e.,....as ....t.enants ... by:....tbe ....entir.e.ty.., .... both ..................................................................................
of ... s.aid ... SaleJI! ................................................................................................................................. with 111arranty ninrnants
the land in ..... said ... S.alem .. .with ...tha ... .bu1.ld1nga ....thar.aon ...bounded ... and ... das.cr.1be.d ...
.a.s.... t'.o.llowa.l........... ..................
. ...
•· •· • •··· •· •·· •·······•• 7 ······· · ················· ·················································
~&tk!ijiilbh dlfu cncJffibfihlEI ii 669)
Westerly by Phelps.Street about seventy nine (79) t'eet, ·
northerly: by land now or formerly: of' Little about sixty seven (67)
re·et, easterly: by land now or formerly: of Murphy about forty two
(42) teat, ·northerly: by said land of' Murphy. aoout fifty four (~)
t'eet, easterly: b7 land now or f'ormerlf ot' 'l'uttle,.Baoridge and
Russell ~bout forty (40) t'eet, five (5) inches and southerly: bf land
now or ~ormerly: ot' Gilbert about one hundred twenty t'ive (125) t'eet.
Por 'tftle see Book 2558 Page 250 and Book 2664 Page 461. Subject
to taxes t'or 1951;, .
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•··········· ,••····•'·•···················································· .. ·········--...........:; ........................................................ ~ u:•r gzattlt>L,
- - -..···············---'----··················································-----·······································································
reoaDcv hr the C12"effll-.
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1i9)11 n H sal!I 1111111 SI■ all 1Iw11w Of dower and Aemest,;~ rel eUIH intuwbi tlrttdll.
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and• seal
this. ...............
M . . . . . . . . . day of ................~ 1 7
. . .. . . . .
1~
$1..
.. . . . ':w~ Q, 1...J"'"'_. .. ./!..•••••
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.. li11Jr Glot1111U1nmraltlJ. of. Slusadpwtta
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' • Then personellv·appeared the above named ...... llary,... A •....Bur.ke............................:: ..........:..............................
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anif, acknowledged che foregoing Instrument to be;····.her...... Jr~~~ ..
Naa..ry Pu~J
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Essex ss. Reoorded July 26, 1951. 59 m. past 11 A.M.
My commlalonuptru_..=.."--_,,,J-.,2 . _ _
a
,9'l12:,
3 5 3
�3833
3 54
KNOW ALL MEN BY THFSE PRESENTS THAT.. ... w.e, ... santo....Tollo....and .. J.ennie
.T ..... T.ollo., .
.husband. and ...wi.f.e , ... bo.th............................ ............................................ :... ................................................... ..
of ... S.al.em., .................................................................. ....................................................... Essex ...........County, Massachusetts,
hi•r, 1ea:::a: licit, for eonaideration paid, grant to the SALEM FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK, a corporation
duly established by law and located in Salem in the County of Essex, Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
with MORTGAGE CovENANTS, to secure the payment of... ............................................................................................................
............................................................. .......T.welv.e ... Thousand ........................................................................................... Dollars
in........................ 111J.t.!'-~ll......................... Yeara with .............. f.ive .......................... per cent interest, per annum, payable
1111 provided In a note of even date, the land in........ said ... Salem,
with the buildings thereon bounded as follows:
Westerly by Phelps Street about seventy nine (79) teet, northerly
by land now or tormerly. of Little· about. sixty seven (67) feet, easterly
.by land now or formerly of Murpey about torty two (42) teet, northerly
by said land ot 14urpey titty four (5'4) teet{ easterly. by. land now or formerly. ot Russell, Babbidge .and Tuttle forty ·40) feet five (5') inches and
auuther.ly by land now ..or. formerly of Gilbert one hundr.ed twenty five (125')
feet. Being the same premises conveyed to us by deed. of Mary A. Burke
recorded herewith.
Including as a part of d>e realty all portable or sectional buildings, heating apparatus, plumbing, mantel,, storm doors and
windowat oil borner1f, gu and oil and electric fixtures, screen~ ecr-een doors, awninp, air conditioning apparatus and 'other
fb:turee of whatever kind or nature. on a.aid premieea, insofar e.a tho same are, or can by agreement of the parties. be 'made
a port of the raalty.
.
The mortgagor agreea and covenants to pay to the mortgagee, on the payment. dates of the note secured by this mort-gage, in addition to the pt1yment.s of principal and interest therein required, a monthly app.>rtionment of the sum estimated
by the mortgagee to be sufficient to m&ke payment of all manicipal taxes. charge• and asseHment.s and lnsorance premiums,
upon the mortgaged property as they shall become due and any balance due for ony of said payments shall be paid by the
mortgapr. The mortgagee ia hereby specifically a.uthorii..ed to pay wben due, or at any time thereafter, all of said payments
ond to charge the aame to the account of tho mortgagor.
•
In the event of the ownership of the~ mortgaged premisea, or aoy part thereof, beeomes veat.ed in a person or persona
. other thao the mortgagor. the mortgagee may, without notice to the mortgagor, deal with tho successor or successors in
intereat with reference to the mortgage and the debt hereby secured, and in. the same manner as with the mortgagor without in·
any way vitiating or discharging the mortgagor's liabUity hereunder or upon the debt hereby aecured. No sale of the
preml ... beraby mortgaged and no forbearance on th• part of the mortg- and no exteneion, whether oral or In writing,
of the t.ime for the payment of the debt hereby aecu..,d, given by th• mortgagee shall operate t.o release, discharge, modify,
change or affect the original liability of the mortgagor herein, eith~r In whole or in part.
The mortgagor covenants and agrees to perform and observe all of the terms e.nd conditions of the mortgago note secured
by thtB mortgage, and further covenants and agrees to pay on demand to the mortgagee, or the mortgagee may at its op~
don add to the principal balance then due, ·ony euma advanced or paid by the mortgagee on account of any default, of what•
ever 11ature. by the mortgagor, or any soms advanced or psid. whether before or after default. for taxes. repairs, improvementl!I, inaurancts on the mortgaged property or any other insurance pledged as collateral to secure the mortgage loan, or
any auma paid to the mortgagee, including reasonabte attomey's feest in prosecuting, defending or intervening in ·any legal
or equitable proceeding wherein any ot the right.I created by this mortgage are, in the sole jodgement of the Bankt jeopar•
clhled or in luue.
Thia mortgage !a upon the STATUTORY CONDITION, for any bNnch of which the mortpgee shall have the STATUTORY
PoWEROP 8J.Ls.
·end I, .....:.................................... ,,.,., .................. ,, ................. ,., ................... ,, ................... ,, ..ltaabaud wi::io ef aei II mortne:or
mlao e te lite mutsga9n uU 1i91i1&11 of d wee ·eaM01P./ and hem aha8 •d dluir inht eete ht tfte msttgagcti ,,ii isre ·
-c.-.
WITNES!L ..... O.'Q:r .. ....hancB and sealllthis. ................/t..'1-c ...2 . d a y of .......~ ................ 19... ~$.J.
== _- =:= =:
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COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
EssEx, ss.
.. ...................................... .......July ... Jz ' ,.. 19 ...?~
Then personally appeared the above named.......... Santo....'?ollo .................. ............................................................. ..
(' and acknowledged the foregoing lnatrument to ::~:;~··:~·•·· ................ free act and d~d.
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Essex ss. Recorded July 26,1951. 59 m. past 11 A.M.
�I
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.
1, J ENNIE T . TOLLO
of
_
Essex
Salem,
...,_ it-4 for consid=tion paid, 11111Ut..&tY,a,SttW.fliltiooc11f
County, Massachusclt!,
$140,000.00
grant to NANCY J. 81!.AUSOLEIL
of Salem, Mas sachus etts
with quttdalm tlllltlllllWI
thel•ndia said Salem with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as fo llows:
ii 1111]
[Dacription &NI -
by Phelps Street about seventy-nine (79) feet:
WESTERLY
by land now or formerly or Little about sixty-,;even
reet:
NORTHERLY
(67)
'-"
ITT
by land now or formerly or Murphy about forty-two
EASTERLY
(42)
feet;
NORTHERLY
by said land or Murphy about tirty-tour (54) feet;
EASTERLY
by land now 01' formerly of Tuttle, Babridge and
Russell about forty (40) reet. fiv e (5) inches: and
-=-
V,
by land now or formerly or Gilbert about one
hundred twenty-five (125) feet .
SOUTHERLY
For tiUe $ee deed dated July 27, 1970 and recorded with Essex South
District Registry or Deeds Book 5700, Page 461.
mttma, ..~Y. ........hand
and snl
this..........~ ........... day of ....... 0..'!f.'!!'!-.°f!.!.L ...........•19.~!i..
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LLO
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U!~ aiammonumtltli of SIISJIIU!Juatts
Essex ,
.ss.
11,en ~rsonolly appeored the obove nomed
D
ecembe r
J ENNI E T. TOLLO
and acknowledged the foregoing instrument 10 be
(•!ndiv,dua.1 - Joilu Ta,aots-Tenam, in Ccmaron.)
30,
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uruon T,;.. Mortgage Co,pontion
h') S Essex Green Drive, 1st Floor
· y Peabody, Massachusetts 01960,
05/~V99 12:4·3 inst. 3o/5
BK 15695 PG 125
-----------------fS,-eAlloYeTw.LmeJi'orReconUllc0..1---------------
MORTGAGE
THIS MORTGAGE ("Security Instrument") is given on May 25 , 1999.
The mortgagor is .Maureen P. Cavanaugh ("Borrower''). This Security Instrument is given to Union Trust Mortgage Corporation,
which is organized and existing under the laws of Massachusetts, and whose address is 5 ~ x Green Drive, 1st Floor, Peabody,
Massachusetts O1960,
("Lender").
Borrower owes Lender the principal sum of TWO HUNDRED EIGHT THOUSAND AND 00/100 Dollars (U.S. $208,000.00). Tbis
debt is evidenced by Borrower's note dated the same date as this Security Instrument ("Note"), which provides for monthly
payments, with the full debt, if not paid earlier, due and payable on Friday, June 1 2029. This Security Instrument secures to
Lender: (a) the repayment of the debt evidenced by the Note, with interest, and all renewals, extensions and modifications of the
Note; (b) the payment of all other sums, with interest, advanced under paragraph 7 to protect the security of this Security lnstrumalt;
and (c) the performance of Borrower's covenants and agreements under this Security Instrument and the Note. For this purpose,
Borrower does hereby mortgage, grant and convey to Lender, with power of sale, the following described property located in Essex
County, Massachusetts:
For description, see Exhibit "A" attached hereto and made a part hereof.
which has the address of
5 Phelps Street,
Salem
[City]
[Street)
Massachusetts
01970
("Property Address");
[Zip Code)
TOGETHER WITH all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property, and all easements, appurtenances, and fixtures
now or hereafter a part of the property. All replacements and additions shall also be covered by this Security Instrument. All of the
foregoing is referred to in this Security Instrument as the "Property."
BORROWER COVENANTS that Borrower is lawfully seised of the estate hereby conveyed and bas the right to mortgage,
grant and convey the Property and that the Property is unencumbered, except for encumbrances of record. Borrower warrats
and will defend generally the title to the Property against all claims and demands, subject to any encumbrances of record.
THIS SECURITY INSTRUMENT combines uniform covenants for national use and non-uniform covenants with limited
variations by jurisdiction to constitute a uniform security instrument covering real property.
(Page I al6)
MASSACHUSETIS-Singic Family-Fame Mae/Fred& Mac UNIFORM INSTRUMENT
Fora30ll fl90
.....W!5193)
�BK 15695 PG 126
UNIFORM CONVENANTS. Borrower and Lender covenant and agree as follows:
1. Payment of Principal and Interest; Prepayment and Late Charges.
Borrower shall promptly pay when clue
the principal of and interest on the debt evidenced by the Note and any prepayment and late charges due under the Nate.
2. runds for Tues and Insurance.
Subject to applicable law or to a written waiver by Lender, Borrower sllllll
pay td Lender on the day monthly payments are due under the Note, until the Note is paid in full, a sum ("Funds") for:
(a) yearly taxes and assessments which may attain priority over this Security Instrument as a lien on the Property; (b) yearly
leasehold payments or ground rents on the Property, if any; (c) yearly haz.ard or property insurance premiums; (d) yearly
flood inSUrance premiums, if any; (e) yearly mortgage insurance premiums, if any; and (f) any sums payable by Borrower
to Lender, in accordance 'With the provisions of paragraph 8, in lieu of the payment of mortgage insurance premiums. These
items are called "Escrow Items." Lender may, at any time, collect and bold Funds in an amount not to exceed the maximmn
amount a lender for a federally related mortgage loan may require for Borrower's escrow account under the federal Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974 as amended from time to time, 12 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. ("RESPA"), unless
another law that applies to the Funds sets a lesser amount. If so, Lender may, at any time, collect and hold Funds in an
amount not to exceed the lesser amount. Lender may estimate the amount of Funds due on the basis of current data and
reasonable estimates of expenditures of future Escrow Items or otherwise in accordance 'With applicable law.
The Funds shall be held in an institution whose deposits are insured by a federal agency, instrumentality, or entity
(including Lender, if Lender is such an institution) or in any Federal Home Loan Banlc. Lender shall apply the Funds to
pay the Escrow Items. Lender may not charge Borrower for holding and applying the Funds, annually analyzing the escrow
account, or verifying the Escrow Items, unless Lender pays Borrower interest on the Funds and applicable law permits Lender
to make such a charge. However, Lender may require Borrower to pay a one-time charge for an independent real estate
tax reporting service used by Lender in connection 'With this loan, unless applicable law provides otherwise. Unless an agreement
is made or applicable law requires interest to be paid. Lender shall not be required to pay Borrower any interest or eamiags
on the Funds. Borrower and Lender may agree in writing, however, that interest shall be paid on the Funds. Lender sball
give to Borrower, without charge, an annual accounting of the Funds, showing credits and debits to the Funds and the purpose
for which each debit to the Funds was made. The Funds are pledged as additional security for all sums secured by this Secwity
Instrument.
If the Funds held by Lender exceed the amounts permitted to be held by applicable law, Lender shall account to Borrower
for the excess Funds in accordance 'With the requirements of applicable law. If the amount of the Funds held by Lender at
any time is not sufficient to pay the Escrow Items when due, Lender may so notify Borrower in writing, and, in such case
Borrower shall pay to Lender the amount necessaiy to make up the deficiency. Borrower shall make up the deficiency in
no more than twelve monthly payments, at Lender's sole discretion.
Upon payment in full of all sums secured by this Security Instrument, Lender shall promptly refund to Borrowier
any Funds held by Lender. If, under paragraph 21, Lender sball acquire or sell the Property, Lender, prior to the acquisition
or sale of the Property, shall apply any Funds held by Lender at the time of acquisition or sale as a credit against the sums
secured by this Security Instrument.
3.
Application of PaymentL
Unless applicable law provides otherwise, all payments received by Lender under
paragraphs l and 2 shall be applied: first, to any prepayment charges due under the Note; second, to amounts payable under
paragraph 2; third, to interest due; fourth, to principal due; and last, to any late charges due under the Note.
4.
Charges; Liens.
Borrower shall pay all taxes, assessrn'"'lts, charges, fines and impositions attributable to the
Property which may attain priority over this Security Instrument, and leasehold payments or ground rents, if any. Borrower
shall pay these obligations in the manner provided in paragraph 2, or if not paid in that manner, Borrower shall pay them
on time directly to the person owed payment. Borrower shall promptly furnish to Lender all notices of amounts to be paid
under this paragraph. If Borrower makes these payments directly, Borrower shall promptly furnish to Lender receipts evidencing
the payments.
Borrower shall promptly discharge any lien which bas priority over this Security Instrument unless Borrower: (a) agrees in
writing to the payment of the obligation secured by the lien in a manner acceptable to Lender, (b) contests in good
faith the lien by, or defends against enforcement of the lien in, legal proceedings which in the Lender's opinion operate to
prevent the enforcement of the lien; or (c) secures from the holder of the lien an agreement satisfactory to Lender subordinating the lien to this Security Instrument. If Lender determines that any part of the Property is subject to a lien which
may attain priority over this Security Instrument, Lender may give Borrower a notice identifying the lien. Borrower shill
satisfy the lien or take one or more of the actions set forth above 'Within IO days of the giving of notice.
5. Hazard or Property Insurance. Borrower shall keep the improvements now existing or hereafter erected on
the Property insured against loss by fire, haz.ards included 'Within the tenn "extended coverage" and any other ba7.alds,
including floods or flooding, for which Lender requires insurance. This insurance shall be maintained in the amounts ad
for the periods that Lender requires. The insurance carrier providing the insurance shall be chosen by Borrower subject to
Lender's approval which shall not be unreasonably 'Withheld. If Borrower fails to maintain coverage described above, Le•r
may, at Lender's option, obtain coverage to protect Lender's rights in the Property in accordance 'With paragraph 7.
(Page 2 ol6)
MASSACHUSETTS-single Family-Fllllllie Ma/Freddie Mac UNIFORM INSTRUMENT
Form 3022
9l90
........ HJ)
�~gl~~G 127
All insurance policies and renewals shall be acceptable to Lender and shall include a standard
shali°have the right to hold the policies and renewals. If Lender requires, Borrower shall promptly give to Lender all receipts
of paid premiums and renewal notices. In the event of loss, Borrower shall give prompt notice to the insurance carrier and
Lender. Lender may make proof of loss if not made promptly by Borrower.
Unless Lender and Borrower otherwise agree in writing, insurance proceeds shall be applied to restoration or repair
of the Property damaged, if the restoration or repair is economically feasible and Lender's security is not lessened. If lbe
restoration or repair is not economically feasible or Lender's security would be lessened, the insurance proceeds shall be
applied to the sums secured by this Security Instrument, whether or not then due, with any excess paid to Bonower. If Borrower
abandons the Property, or does not answer within 30 days a notice from Lender that the insurance carrier has offered to
settle a claim, then Lender may collect the insurance proceeds. Lender may use the proceeds to repair or restore the Property
or to pay sums secured by this Security Instrument, whether or not then due. The 30-day period will begin when the notice
is given.
Unless Lender and Borrower otherwise agree in writing, any application of proceeds to principal shall not extend
or postpone the due date of the monthly payments referred to in paragraphs l and 2 or change the amount of the paymeats.
If under paragraph 21 the Property is acquired by Lender, Borrower's right to any insurance policies and proceeds resulting
from damage to the Property prior to the acquisition sball pass to Lender to the extent of the sums secured by this Security
Instrument immediately prior to the acquisition.
6. Occupancy, Praervation, Maintenance and Protection of the Property; Borrower'• Loan Applicatiln;
LeueholdL
Borrower shall occupy, establish, and use the Property as Borrower's principal residence within sixty days
after the execution of this Security Instrument and shall continue to occupy the Property as Borrower's principal resideace
for at least one year after the date of occupancy, unless Lender otherwise agrees in writing. which consent shall not be
unreasonably withheld, or unless extenuating circumstances exist which are beyond Borrower's control. Borrower shall not
destroy, damage or impair the Property, allow the Property to deteriorate, or commit waste on the Property. Borrower -11
be in default if any forfeiture action or proceeding. whether civil or criminal, is begun that in Lender's good faith judgment
could result in the forfeiture of the Property or otherwise materially impair the lien created by this Security Instrument or Lender's
security interest. Borrower may cure such a default and reinstate, as provided in paragraph 18, by causing the action or
proceedings to be dismissed with a ruling that, in Lender's good faith determination. precludes forfeiture of the Borrower's
interest in the Property or other material impairment of the lien created by this Security Instrument or Lender's security
interest. Borrower shall also be in default if Borrower, during the loan application process, gave materially false or inaccurate
information or statements to Lender (or failed to provide Lender with any material information) in connection with the loan
evidenced by the Note, including, but not limited to, representations concerning Borrower's occupancy of the Property as
a principal residence. If this Security Instrument is on a leasehold. Borrower shall comply with all the provisions of the lease.
If Borrower acquires fee title to the Property, the leasehold and the fee title shall not merge unless Lender agrees to the
merger in writing.
7. Protection of Lender's Rights in the Property.
If Borrower fails to perform the covenants and agreements
contained in this Security Instrument, or there is a legal proceeding that may significantly affect Lender's rights in the Property
(such as a proceeding in bankruptcy, probate, for condemnation or forfeiture or to enforce laws or regulations), then Lender
may do and pay for whatever is necessary to protect the value of the Property and Lender's rights in the Property. Lender's
actions may include paying any sums secured by a lien which has priority over this Security Instrument, appearing in COllrt,
paying reasonable attorneys' fees and entering on the Property to make repairs. Although Lender may take action under
this paragraph 7, Lender does not have to do so.
Any amounts disbursed by Lender under this paragraph 7 shall become additiooal debt of Borrower secured by this
Security Instrument. Unless Borrower and Lender agree to other terms of payment, these amounts shall bear interest flOm
the date of disbursement at the Note rate and shall be payable, with interest, upon notice from Lender to Borrower requesting
payment.
8. Mortgage Insurance. If Lender required mortgage insurance as a condition of making the loan secured by this
Security Instrument, Borrower shall pay the premiums required to maintain the mortgage insurance in effect. If, for any
reason, the mortgage insurance coverage required by Lender lapses or ceases to be in effect, Borrower shall pay the premillms
required to obtain coverage substantially equivalent to the mortgage insurance previously in effect, at a cost substantially
equivalent to the cost to Borrower of the mortgage insurance previously in effect, from an alternate mortgage insurer approved
by Lender. If substantially equivalent mortgage insurance coverage is not available, Borrower shall pay to Lender each month
a sum equal to one-twelfth of the yearly mortgage insurance premium being paid by Borrower when the insurance covemge
lapsed or ceased to be in effect. Lender will accept, use and retain these payments as a loss reserve in lieu of mort,age
insurance. Loss reserve payments may no longer be required, at the option of Lender, if mortgage insurance coverage (in
the amount and for the period that Lender required) provided by an insurer approved by the Lender again becomes available
and is obtained. Borrower shall pay the premiums required to maintain mortgage insurance in effect, or to provide a loss
reserve, until the requirement for mortgage insurance ends in accordance with any written agreement between Borrower
and Lender or applicable law.
(h&e 3 af6)
6)A,
MASSACHUSETfS-single Family-Fannie Mae/Jlre4die Mac UNIFORM INSTRUMENT
Form JOU
9/90
---•1193)
�J,28
.
9. Inspection. Lender or its agent may make reasonable entries upon and inspectio.61'uie~5nctPriu
Borrower notice at the time of or prior to an inspection specifying reasonable cause for the inspection.
l 0. Condemnation. The proceeds of any award or claim for damages, direct or consequential, in connection with
any condemnation or other talcing of any part of the Property, or for conveyance in lieu of condemnation, are hereby assigaed
and shall be paid to Lender.
In the· event of a total taking of the Property, the proceeds shall be applied to the sums secured by this Security Instrument,
whether or not then due, with any excess paid to Borrower. In the event of a partial taking of the Property in which the
fair markC!l value of the Property immediately before the taking is equal to or greater than the amount of the sums sec1Sd
by this Security Instrument immediately before the taking, unless Borrower and Lender otherwise agree in writing, the sums
secured by this Security Instrument shall be reduced by the amount of the proceeds multiplied by the following fraction:
(a) the total amount of the sums secured immediately before the taking, divided by (b) the fair market value of the Property
immediately before the taking. Any balance shall be paid to the Borrower. In the event of a partial taking of the Property in
which the fair market value of the Property immediately before the taking is less than the amount of the sums secured immediately before the taking, unless Borrower and Lender otherwise agree in writing or unless applicable law otherwise provides, the proceeds shall be applied to the sums secured by this Security Instrument whether or not the sums are then due.
If the Property is abandoned by Borrower, or if, after notice by Lender to Borrower that the condemnor offers to
make an award or settle a claim for damages, Borrower fails to respond to Lender within 30 days after the date of the notice
is given, Lender is authorized to collect and apply the proceeds, at its option, either to restoration or repair of the Property
or to the sums secured by this Security Instrument, whether or not then due.
Unless the Lender and Borrower otherwise agree in writing, any application of proceeds to principal shall not extend
or postpone the due date of the monthly payments referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 or change the amount of such payments.
11. Borrower Not Releued; Forbearance By Lender Not a Waiver.
Extension of the time for payment or
modification of amortization of the sums secured by this Security Instrument granted by Lender to any successor in interest
of Borrower shall not operate to release the liability of the original Borrower or Borrower's successors in interest. Lender
shall not be required to commence proceedings against any successor in interest or refuse to extend time for payment or
otherwise modify amortization of the sums secured by this Security Instrument by reason of any demand made by the origiaal
Borrower or Borrower's successors in interest. Any folbearance by Lender in exercising any right or remedy shall not be
a waiver of or preclude the exercise of any right or remedy.
12. Succeuon and Auign1 Bound; Joint and Several Liability; Co-lignen.
The covenants and agreements of
this Security Instrument shall bind and benefit the successors and assigns of Lender and Borrower, subject to the provisiClllS
of paragraph 17. Borrower's covenants and agreements shall be joint and several. Any Borrower who co-signs this Security
Instrument but does not execute the Note: (a) is co-signing this Security Instrument only to mortgage, grant and convey tllat
Borrower's interest in the Property under the terms of this Security Instrument; (b) is not personally obligated to pay the
sums secured by this Security Instrument; and (c) agrees that Lender and any other Borrower may agree to extend, modify,
forbear or make any accommodations with regard to the terms of this Security Instrument or the Note without that Borrowar's
consent.
13. Loan CbargeL If the loan secured by this Security Instrument is subject to a law which sets maximum loan
charges, and that law is finally interpreted so that the interest or other loan charges collected or to be collected in connection
with the loan exceed the permitted limits, then: (a) any such loan charge shall be reduced by the amount necessary to redace
the charge to the permitted limit; and (b) any sums already collected from the Borrower which exceeded permitted limits will
be refunded to Borrower. Lender may choose to make this refund by reducing the principal owed under the Note or by making
a direct payment to Borrower. If a refund reduces principal, the reduction will be treated as a partial prepayment without
any prepayment charge under the Note.
14. Notices. Any notice to Borrower provided for in this Security Instrument shall be given by delivering it or
by mailing it by first class mail unless applicable law requires use of another method. 1be notice shall be directed to the
Property Address or any other address Borrower designates by notice to Lender. Any notice to Lender shall be given by
first class mail to Lender's address stated herein or any other address Lender designates by notice to the Borrower. Any notice
provided for in this Security Instrument shall be deemed to have been given to Borrower or Lender when given as provided
in this paragraph.
15. Governing Law; Severability. This Security Instrument shall be governed by federal law and the law of the
jurisdiction in which the Property is located. In the event that any provision or clause of this Security Instrument or the Note
conflicts with applicable law, such conflict shall not affect other provisions of this Security Instrument or the Note which
can be given effect without the conflicting provision. To this end the provisions of the Security Instrument and the Note
are declared to be severable.
16. Borrower's Copy. Borrower shall be given one conformed copy of the Note and of this Security Instrument.
17, Transfer of the Property or a Bendacial Interest in Borrower. If all or any part of the Property or any
interest in it is sold or transferred ( or if a beneficial interest in Borrower is sold or transferred and Borrower is not a natural
(Pap4af6)
MASSACHUSETl'S-single Family-Fllllllle Mae/Freddie Mac UNIFORM INSTRUMENT
Fona 3022
9J90
......... SlfJ)
�J.5'9i5,mf'G 129
pe~n) without Lender's prior written consent. Lender may, at its option, require immediate & t
secured by this Security Instrument. However, this option shall not be exercised by Lender if exercise is prohibited by federal
law as of the date of this Security Instrument.
If the Lender · exercises this option, Lender shall give Borrower notice of acceleration. The notice shall provide a period
of not ·1ess than 30 days from the date the notice is delivered or mailed within which Borrower must pay all sums secuffl1
by tbis Security Instrument. If Borrower fails to pay these sums prior to the expiration of this period, Lender may invoke
any remedies permitted by this Security Instrument without further notice or demand on Borrower.
18. Borrower's Right to Reinstate. If Borrower meets certain conditions, Borrower shall have the right to have
enforcement of this Security Instrument discontinued at any time prior to the earlier of: (a) S days (or such other period
as applicable law may specify for reinstatement) before sale of the Property pursuant to any power of sale contained in 6is
Security Instrument; or (b) entry of a judgment enforcing this Security Instrument. Those conditions are that Borrower:
(a) pays Lender all sums which then would be due under this Security Instrument and the Note as if no acceleration bad
occurred; (b) cures any default of any other covenants or agreements; (c) pays all expenses incurred in enforcing this Security
Instrument, including, but not limited to, reasonable attorneys' fees; and (d) takes such action as Lender may reasonably
require to assure that the lien of this Security Instrument, Lender's rights in the Property and Borrower's obligation to pay
the sums secured by this Security Instrument shall continue unchanged. Upon reinstatement by Borrower, this Security Instrument and the obligations secured hereby shall remain fully effective as if no acceleration had occurred. However, tlus
right to reinstate shall not apply in the case of acceleration under paragraph 17.
19. Sale of Note; Change of Loan Servicer. The Note or a partial interest in the Note (together with this Security
Instrument) may be sold one or more times without prior notice to Borrower. A sale may result in a change in the entity
(known as the "Loan Servicer'') that collects monthly payments due under the Note and this Security Instrument. There
also may be one or more changes of the Loan Servicer unrelated to a sale of the Note. If there is a change of the Loan
Servicer, Borrower will be given written notice of the change in accordance with paragraph 14 above and applicable law.
The notice will state the name and address of the new Loan Servicer and the address to which payments should be made.
The notice will also contain any other information required by applicable law.
20. Hazardous Substances.
Borrower shall not cause or permit the presence, use, disposal. storage, or relCIIC
of any Haz.ardous Substances on or in the Property. Borrower shall not do, nor allow anyone else to do, anything affecting
the Property that is in violation of any Environmental Law. The prcxning two sentences shall not apply to the presence,
use. or storage on the Property of small quantities of Hazardous Substances that are generally recognized to be appropriate
to normal residential uses and to maintenance of the Property.
Borrower shall promptly give Lender written notice of any investigation, claim, demand. lawsuit or other action by
any governmental or regulatory agency or private party involving the Property and any Hazardous Substance or
Environmental Law of which Borrower has actual knowledge. If Borrower learns, or is notified by any governmental or
regulatory authority, that any removal or other remediation of any Hazardous Substance affecting the Property is necessary,
Borrower shall promptly take all necessary remedial actions in accordance with Environmental Law.
As used in this paragraph 20, " Hazardous Substances" are those substances defined as toxic or hazardous substances
by Environmental Law and the following substances: gasoline, kerosene, other flammable or toxic petroleum products, toxic
pesticides and herbicides, volatile solvents, materials containing asbestos or formaldehyde, and radioactive materials. As
used in this paragraph 20, "Environmental Law" means federal laws and laws of the jurisdiction where the Property is located
that relate to health, safety or environmental protection.
NON-UNIFORM COVENANTS. Borrower and Lender further covenant and agree as follows:
21. Acceleration; Remedies. Lender shall gjve notice to Borrower prior to acceleration foUowing Borrower's
breach of any covenant or agreement in this Security Imtnunent (but not prior to acceleration under paragraph 17
unless applicable law provides othenrile). 1be notice shall apecify: (a) the default; (b) tile action required to care tk
default; (c) a date, not less than 30 days from tile date tile notice is given to Borrower, by which tile default mat
be cured; and (d) that failure to cure the default on or before tile date specified in the notice may result in accelentila
of the sums secured by this Security Instnment and sale of tile Property. 1be notice shall further inform Borrower
of the right to reinstate after acceleration and the right to bring a court action to auert tile non-aisteace of a defalt
or any other defen11e of Borrower to acceleration and sale. U the default is not cured on or before the date specified
in the notice, Lender at itl option may require immediate payment in full of all IIUIU secured by this Security Imtnmmt
without further demand and may invoke the STATUTORY POWER OF SALE and any other remedies permitted
by applicable law. Lender shall be entitled to collect all expen1e1 incurred in punuing the remedies provided In tin
paragraph 21, including, but not limited to, reuonable attorneys' fees and costs of title evidence.
If Lender invokes tile STATUTORY POWER OF SALE, Lender shall mail a copy of a notice or we to Borrower,
and to other penons prescribed by applicable law, in the manner prescribed by applicable law. Leader shall publish
the notice of sale, and the Property shall be 10ld in the manner prescribed by applicable law. Lender or itl daignee
may purchase the Property at any sale. 1be proceeds of the sale shall be applied in tile following order: (a) to all eipemeS
(Page 5 of6)
MASSACHUSEITS---single Family-Fllllllie MM/Freddie MK UNIFORM INSTRUMENT
Form3022 9"90
........ 5,93)
�.ecured~~-~~~fG 130
oftbe sale, including, but not limited to, reasonable attomey1' fea; (b) to all 1UJD1
meni; and (c) any excess to the person or penon1 legally entitled to it.
22. Release. Upon payment of all sums secured by this Security Instrument, Lender shall discharge this Security
Instrument without charge to Borrower. Borrower shall pay any recordation costs.
23. W aiven. Borrower waives all rights of homestead exemption in the Property and relinquishes all rights of
curtesy and dower in the Property.
24.
Riders to this Security lnltnunent. If one or more riders are executed by Borrower and recorded together
with this Security Instrument, the covenants and agreements of each such rider shall be incorporated into and shall amend
and supplement the covenants and agreements of this Security Instrument as if the rider(s) were a part of this Security Instrument.
[Check applicable box(es)J
I J
[ ]
[X]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
I ]
I ]
[ ]
[X]
Adjustable Rate Rider
Condominium Rider
1-4 Family Rider
Graduated Payment Rider
Planned Unit Development Rider
Bi-Weekly Payment Rider
Balloon Rider
Rate Improvement Rider
Second Home Rider
Other, Specify Exhibit A
BY SIGNING BELOW, Borrower accepts and agrees to the terms and covenants contained in this Security Instrument
and in any rider(s) executed by Borrower and recorded with it.
Witness:
~ Ct ~
·suz.anne A. Stark
i~;~
n P. Cavanaugh
- Seal
Borrower
[Spue Below This Linc For Acknowledplcnt)
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Suffolk, ss
May 25 , 1999.
Then personally appeared the above-named Maureen P. Cavanaugh and aclcnowledged the foregoing instrument to be his/her/their
free act and deed, before me,
P::-;r;::~Pt~
1
Sll7.3Me A. Stark Notary Public
My Commission Expires: 4n/2000
MASSACHUSETTS-single Family- F. . . . Mae/Freddie Mac UNIFORM INSTRUMENT
(Page 6 aC6)
�BK 15695 PG 131
1-4 FAMILY RIDER
Assignment of Rents
TI-IIS 1-4 FAMILY RIDER is made this 25th day of May, 1999 and is incorporated into and shall be deemed to amend aid
supplement the Mortgage, Deed of Trust or Security Deed (the "Security Instrument") of the same date given by the undersigned (the
"Borrower'') to secure Borrower's Note to Union Trust Mortgage Corporation, 5 Essex Green Drive, 1st Floor, Peabody,
MassachusettsO 1960 (the "Lender") of the same date and covering the Property described in the Security Instrument and located at:
5 Phelps Street, Salem, Massachusetts 0 1970
I Property Addraal
1-4 FAMILY COVENANTS. In addition to the covenants and agreements made in the Security Instrument, Borrower
and Lender further covenant and agree as follows:
A. ADDmONAL PROPERTY SUBJECT TO THE SECURITY INSTRUMl:NT.
In addition to the Property
described in the Security Instrument, the following items are added to the Property description, and shall also constitute the
Property covered by the Security Instrument: building materials, appliances and goods of every nature whatsoever now or
hereafter located in, on, or used, or intended to be used in connection with the Property, including, but not limited to, those
for the purposes of supplying or distributing heating, cooling, electricity, gas, water, air and light, fire prevention and
extinguishing apparatus, security and access control apparatus, plumbing, bath tubs, water beaten, water closets, sinks,
ranges, stoves, refrigerators, dishwashers, disposals, washers, myers. awnings, storm windows, storm doors, screens, blinds,
shades, curtains and curtain rods, attached mirrors, cabinets, panelling and attached floor coverings now or hereafter attached
to the Property, all of which, including replacements and additions thereto, shall be deemed to be and remain a part of the
Property covered by the Security Instrument. All of the foregoing together with the Property described in the Security
Instrument (or the leasehold estate if the Security Instrument is on a leasehold) are referred to in this 1-4 Family Rider and
the Security Instrument as the "Property."
B. USE OF PROPERTY; COMPLIANCE WITH LAW. Borrower shall not seek. agree to or make a chanse in the
use of the Property or its zoning classification, unless Lender has agreed in writing to the change. Borrower shall comply
with all laws, ordinances, regulations and requirements of any governmental body applicable to the Property.
C. SUBORDINATE LIENS. Except as permitted by federal law, Borrower shall not allow any lien inferior to the
Security Instrument to be perfected against the Property without Lender's prior written permission.
D. RENT LOSS INSURANCE. Borrower shall maintain insurance against rent loss in addition to the other hazards for
which insurance is required by Uniform Covenant 5.
E. "BORROWER'S RIGHT TO REINSTATE" DELETED. Uniform Covenant 18 is deleted.
F. BORROWER'S OCCUPANCY. Unless Lender and Borrower otherwise agree in writing, the first sentence in
Uniform Covenant 6 concerning Borrower's occupancy of the Property is deleted. All remaining covenants and agreements
set forth in Uniform Covenant 6 shall remain in effect.
G. ASSIGNMENT OF LEASES. Upon Lender's request, Borrower shall assign to Lender all leases of the Property
and all security deposits made in connection with leases of the Property. Upon the assignment, Lender shall have the right to
modify, extend or tenninate the existing leases and to execute new leases, in Lender's sole discretion. As used in this
paragraph G, the word "lease" shall mean "sublease" if the Security Instrument is on a leasehold.
H. ASSIGNMENT OF RENTS; APPOINTMENT OF RECEIVER; LENDER IN POSSESSION.
Bo1T01WCr
absolutely and unconditionally assigns and transfers to Lender all the rents and revenues ("Rents") of the Property, regardless
of to whom the Rents of the Property are payable. Borrower authorizes Lender or Lender's agents to collect the Rents, and
agrees that each tenant of the Property shall pay the Rents to Lender or Lender's agents. However, Borrower shall receive the
MULTISTATE 1-4 FAMILY RIDER - Fannie Mac/Fraldic M11e UNIFORM INSTRUMENT
Form 3179 9/90 (Pag• J o/2)
�BK 15695 PG 132
Rents until (i) Lender has given Borrower notice of default pursuant to paragraph 21 of the Security Instrument and (ii)
Lender has given notice to the tenant(s) that the Rents are to be paid to Lender or Lender's agent. This amgnment of Rents
constitutes an absolute amgnment and not an amgnment for additional security only.
· If Lender gives notice of breach to Borrower: (i) all Rents received by Borrower shall be held by Borrower as trustee mr
the benefit of Lender only, to be applied to the sums secured by the Security Instrument; (ii) Lender shall be entitled to
collect and receive all of the Rents of the Property; (iii) Borrower agiees that each tenant of the Property shall pay all Raats
due and. unpaid to Lender or Lender's agents upon Lender's written demand to the tenant; (iv) unless applicable law provides
otherwise, all Rents collected by the Lender or Lender's agents shall be applied first to the costs of taking control of and
managing the Property and collecting the Rents, including. but not limited to, attorney's fees, receiver's fees, premiums on
receiver's bonds, repair and maintenance costs, insurance premiums, taxes, assessments and other charges on the Propeny,
and then to the sums secured by the Security Instrument; (v) Lender, Lender's agents or any judicially appointed recener
shall be liable to account for only those Rents actually received; and (vi) Lender shall be entitled to have a receiver appoisd
to take possession of and manage the Property and collect the Rents and profits derived from the Property without any
showing as to the inadequacy of the Property as security.
If the Rents of the Property are not sufficient to cover the costs of taking control of and managing the Property and of
collecting the Rents any funds expended by Lender for such purposes shall become indebtedness of Borrower to Lender
secured by the Security Instrument pursuant to Uniform Covenant 7.
Borrower represents and warrants that Borrower has not executed any prior auignment of the Rents and has not and will
not perform any act that would prevent Lender from exercising its rights under this paragraph.
Lender, or Lender's agents or a judicially appointed receiver, shall not be required to enter upon, take control of or
maintain the Property before or after giving notice of default to Borrower. However, Lender, or Lender's agents or a
judicially appointed receiver, may do so at any time when a default occurs. Any application of Rents shall not cure or waive
any default or invalidate any other right or remedy of Lender. This auignment of Rents of the Property shall terminate wllen
all the sums secured by the Security Instrument are paid in full.
L CROSS-DEFAULT PROVISION. Borrower's default or breach under any note or agreement in which Lender has an
interest shall be a breach under the Security Instrument and Lender may invoke any of the remedies permitted by the Security
Instrument.
BY SIGNING BELOW, Borrower accepts and agrees to the terms and provisions contained in this 1-4 Family Rider.
MULTIS'fATE 1-4 FAMILY RIDER - Flllllde M-.!Fmlllie MK UNIFORM INS'fRUMENT
Form3179 9'90 (Pog•1of])
�BK 15695 PG 133
EXHIBIT A
•
The land in Salem, with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as follows:
WESTERLY:
by Phelps Street about seventy-nine (79) feet;
NORTHERLY:
by land now or formerly of Little about sixty-seven (67) feet;
EASTERLY:
by land now or formerly of Murphy about forty-two (42) feet;
NORTHERLY:
by land now or formerly of Murphy about (54) feet;
EASTERLY:
by land now or formerly of Tuttle, Babridge and Russell about
forty (40) feet, five (5) inches; and
SOUTHERLY:
by land now or formerly of Gilbert about one hundred twenty-five
(125) feet.
Meaning and intending to convey and hereby conveying the same premises as conveyed
to me by deed of Dennis R. Harrison. Said deed is recorded prior hereto.
�\I\\\ \\-1\11\1 \\11\\1\\ \\\\ \I \\\\1\1\\\ Ill\ ~\\
1
2004060400273 Bk:22949 Pg. 581
,
1
QUITCLAIM DEED
06/04/2004 10: 56 :_
00
DEED pg
I, the undersigned, Maureen Cavanaugh, of 5 Phelps Street, Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts for consideration of One Dollar ($1.00), grant to Maureen Cavanaugh, Trustee
of Cavanaugh Family Realty Trust to be recorded herewith of 5 Phelps Street, Salem, Essex
County, Massachusetts, with Quitclaim Covenants, the land in Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts, known as 5 Phelps Street, with the buildings and Improvements thereon,
bounded and described as follows:
WESTERLY:
by Phelps Street about seventy-nine (79) feet;
NORTHERLY:
by land now or formerly of Little about sixty-seven (67) feet;
EASTERLY:
by land now or formerly of Murphy about forty-two (42) feet;
NORTHERLY:
by land now or formerly of Murphy about fifty-four (54) feey;
EASTERLY:
by land now or formerly of Tuttle, Babridge and Russell about forty
(40) feet, five (5) inches; and
SOUTHERLY:
(125) feet.
by land now or formerly of Gilbert about one hundred twenty-five
Meaning and intending to convey the same premises conveyed to me by deed of Dennis R.
Harrison dated May 25, 1999 and recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book
15695, Page 12.
Executed under seal this
/l.... .......a...3__,
day of _........
.,
2001
//1~
/MAURE
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
~£2,:;,o,. . ___ __ , 2001
, ......._ .3
ESSEX, ss
'
Then personally appeared the above named MAUREEN CAVANAUGH, and
acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be her free act and deed before me.
HIU
, M RAN, QUIRE
Notarv Pt,.blic
Commonweaith·c.:t t.\i<;sachusetts
My Commiss1c t E:xpires
Octooer 2, ~y.,.3
l'k.v ,,it f.;,
Pt-t11...113 1)
?..t- ,-
"1.it> tllf-,J
£ Sv
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Notaryubfic
My commission expires:
1
�-SO.ESSEX #159 Bk:36390 Pg:150
1~~~111~mmr11~
12/08/2017 10 : 37 DEED Pg 1/2
2 pages
QUITCLAIM DEED
I, Maureen Cavanaugh, of Salem, Massachusetts, Trustee of Cavanaugh Family Realty
Trust, created under Declaration of Trust dated December 3, 2001, and recorded with the Essex
South Registry of Deeds on June 4, 2004, at Book 22949, Page 49, and as further referenced in
Trustee Certificate signed and dated the same day as this Deed and recorded contemporaneously
herewith, in consideration of Ten and 00/100 Dollars ($10.00), and other good consideration
paid, grant to Maureen Cavanaugh, of 5 Phelps Street, Salem, Massachusetts, individually,
with Quitclaim Covenants
the land in Salem, Essex County, known as 5 Phelps Street, with the buildings and improvements
thereon, bounded and described as follows:
WESTERLY:
NORTHERLY:
i
it
o
by land now or formerly of Murphy, about forty-two (42) feet;
NORTHERLY:
!
by land now or formerly of Little, about sixty-seven (67) feet;
EASTERLY:
Cll
Cll
by Phelps Street, about seventy-nine (79) feet; ·
by land now or formerly of Murphy, about fifty-four (54) feet;
EASTERLY:
by land now or formerly of Tuttle, Babridge and Russell, about
Forty (40) feet five (5) inches; and
SOUTHERLY:
by land now or formerly of Gilbert, about one hundred twenty-five
(125) feet.
Said premises are the same premises conveyed to me as Trustee of the Cavanaugh Family
Trust by deed dated December 4, 2001, and recorded on June 4, 2004, at the Essex South District
Registry of Deeds, at Book 22949, Page 58.
WITNESS my hand and seal this
r
day of December, 2017.
�COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Essex, ss.
~
0~ this
day of December, 2017, personally appeared before me Maureen
Cavanaugh, proved to me by satisfactory evidence of identification, which was
}It A--i>--f~ · , ~ t o be the person who signed the attached Quitclaim Deed, and
,
acknowledged to me that she signed it willingly and for its stated purpose,
--~~,Y~ ,1 (-/,
Notary Pub&: D ~Leydon Harvey
My commission expires: August 10, 2018
�- - - - - - - - - -- -- -- -·- ....... ·· · ·-·- - - - ----- --- · "•----·- · ·
RETURN TO:
John A. Gebauer, Esq.
76 Lafayette Street - Suite 202
Salem, MA 0 1970
f
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
SO.ESSEX #357 Bk:36691 Pg:18
05/02/2018 03 : 02 DEED Pg 1/2
QUITCLAIM DEED
I, MAUREEN CAVANAUGH, of Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, in consideration of One
Dollar and Zero Cents ($1.00) paid, grant with QUITCLAIM COVENANTS to MAUREEN
CAVANAUGH as Trustee of the CAVANAUGH FAMILY REALTY TRUST Under
Declaration of Trust dated June 4, 2004, with an address of 5 Phelps Street, Salem,
Massachusetts, the following property located in Salem, County of Essex, Commonwealth of
Massachusetts:
FOR DESCRIPTION SEE "EXHIBIT A" ATTACHED HERETO.
0
r---
0\
All right of homestead and other interest are also released.
....-<
0
~
Executed under seal this
2ru1
day of May,
20n~
~
MAUR:EEN'CAVANAUGH
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 5 Phelps Street, Salem, MA 01970
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS )
)
COUNTY OF ESSEX
)
On this 2nd day of May, 2018, before me, the undersigned notary public, personally appeared
.,-iy~~EEN CAVANAUGH, proved to me through personal knowledge or satisfactory evidence
f identifica ·
to be the person whose name is signed on the preceding or attached document
an acknowledge o me that she signed it voluntarily for its stated purpose.
J
My comm1ss1on expires: 10/07
---- ----
·--- -- -- ~-------------- ~------- - - - -- -- - -- ----------~--- -- - -
�EXHIBIT A
The land in Salem, Essex County, known as 5 Phelps Street, ~th the buildings and
improvements thereon, bounded and described as follows:
WESTERLY by Phelps Street, about seventy-nine (79) feet;
NORTHERLY by land now or formerly of Little, about sixty-seven (67) feet;
EASTERLY by land now or formerly of Murphy, about forty-two (42) feet;
NORTHERLY by land now or formerly of Murphy, about fifty-four (54) feet;
EASTERLY by land now or formerly of Turtle, Babridge and Russell, about forty (40) feet five
(5) inches; and
SOUTHERLY by land now or formerly of Gilbert, about one hundred twenty-five (125) feet.
Meaning and hereby intending to describe the same premises as conveyed to Maureen
Cavanaugh by deed dated and recorded on December 8, 2017 with the Essex South District
Registry of Deeds in Book 36390 at Page 150.
---
- -------------- ------- - --- - ---------------- -
- ----
--- -----------------
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Phelps Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
5 Phelps Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Winifred Burke
Widow
of Thomas Burke
Shoemaker
1916
Original home of Ellen & Thomas Thornton
destroyed in Great Salem Fire of 1914
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1916
House History Completed: March 2020
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Jen Ratliff
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/9809cab5ceeab1d2c2bd86709cbd59a4.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=oRYHv9Ucn7aq89GKXYdSXMyd8Ni8m-BY7rggwN%7EIgTmuTV3OaWkgdmh0H-AbmDzPldLVwogFrAySsfFipYS5CZXmKlEHfGTf7HoK3PY%7E821cll55TaoPzwgMGLeaX9psSGOMGZNAWhMbZAVW9r-QXF%7EoQ1xHD5eZJUHEue1SV-ORvoz6zVgBbU2ZsE6PxodLzZgoXV3f7YJfUEEZ-I-3ceTEogXR7le7rsl4BRDvA3RfM4umVX9xfgauqYlW5%7ESoTtSc2hNQzhQtfl1nug2-ycp%7ET422uo0CYPfyuxg0tZxCMyDHoL9cN1A-whZ%7EwmRV6Ol4zLFQO2OSG64gw4pNbw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
4d73be3cd25b4f1fcb9b07d990592303
PDF Text
Text
192 Federal Street
Built for
James B. Stimpson
Currier
and his wife
Mary E. Horton
in 1856
Researched and written by
Robert Booth
November 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�����������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Federal Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
192 Federal Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
James B. Stimpson
Currier
and his wife
Mary E. Horton
in 1856
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1856
House History Written: November 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/23f81644c5c5216df928b6dd51115c8a.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=EIZZnWcA73xoN3mOHoBLx0yiEJDAmfv-vfp43hSn7ay3rXUZawmwRLP8lAtbU1C%7EH0H5dIA3wwsNYM4h3BJWjP34YTU6qLDs9qYXTKmurPkb0AX5S2O%7EsW1ai5of9dqrykq-3kkIHmmJRQPdrilSd8dv0PkitPPfh1ogp%7E6QizklyJWF4TVQDyDLfuwNM-E1QrApCuJjin6UUecb9HfjqoCR0afu6jf6Jwod8ZsXargnegxntH9SQpqKmwK3BUZDnS5mGPB%7EFHp6501w-5T9lQGk0NOjYJHLz8xClkTQ8dCCa8cfr2npmkbzJlHyuI-vA-MOrORg236RYT4Em17Drg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
8f5fe83f0b7de5e8b534902833932e49
PDF Text
Text
Chain of Title, 12 Cliff Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Conveyance of
Source Document
1889 Sept 9
n/a
n/a
Plan
1907 July 8
1920 April 14
1922 March 1
James F. Almy & Charles S. Clark
Edward F. Dalton, Annie L. Dalton
Emma Newell
Frank F. Newell and Emma Newell
(Plan of land belonging to)
"a certain parcel of land situate
on Clifton Avenue in said
Salem, bounded and described
as follows northerly by land
formerly of Almy now of the
grantee 100 feet; Easterly by
Cliff St 100 feet; southerly by
said Clifton Avenue 100 feet
and westerly by land now or
formerly of Forness and Ives
100 feet. Being the same
premises conveyed to me by
deed of James Almy, dated
May 31, 1889 and recorded...
Book 1251, Leaf 64" (see notes) Deed
"a certain parcel of land, with
the buildings thereon situate
on Cliff Street in said SALEM,
bounded and described as
follows: Easterly by Cliff Street
(40) feet; southerly by other
land of Emma Newell, seventytwo (72) feet; westerly by
other land of Emma Newell
(40) feet and northerly by land
now or late of George W.
Pitman seventy two (72) feet"
Frank F. Newell, Emma Newell
Nina B. Leighton
$1 and other valuable
considerations
$1
Nina B. Leighton
"the land in said SALEM
bounded and described as
follows: Easterly by Cliff Street
two (2) feet; southerly by land
now or late of the grantor
seventy two (72) feet; westerly
by land now or late of the
grantor-two (2) feet and
northerly by land of the
"for consideration paid" grantee seventy two (72) feet Deed
1949 August 30
Selectia E. Foan (executor of the
will of Nina P. Leighton)
Angel R. Pelletier and
Theresa F. Pelletier,
husband and wife
1955 April 8
Angel R. Pelletier and Theresa F.
Pelletier, husband and wife
Rene J. LeClerc and Clara
Leclerc, husband and wife
1966 January 13
2019 July 26
Clara LeClerc (survivor of a tenanty
by the entirety with Rene J. LeClerc
who died on November 5, 1965)
Lorraine D. Sousa, unmarried
Manuel J. Sousa and
Lorraine D. Sousa,
husband and wife
Paul Haney and Peter J. PoonKwong
"A certain parcel of land, with
the buildings thereon, situated
on Cliff Street in said Salem,
bounded and described as
follows: EASTERLY by Cliff
Street (40) feet; SOUTHERLY by
land of Emma Newell, seventytwo (72) feet; WESTERLY by
other land of Emma Newell,
forty (40) feet; and NORTHERLY
by land now or formerly of
George W. Pitman, seventy$8,000
two (72) feet"
"the land in said Salem with
the buildings thereon situated
on Cliff Street, bounded and
described as follows: Easterly
by said Cliff Street, Forty-two
(42) feet; Southerly by land
now or late of Newell, Seventytwo (72) feet; Westerly by land
now or late of said Newell,
Forty-two (42) feet; and
Northerly by land now or late
of Pitman, Seventy-two (72)
"for consideration paid" feet"
"the land in said Salem with
the buildings thereon situated
on Cliff Street, bounded and
described as follows: Easterly
by said Cliff Street, Forty-two
(42) feet; Southerly by land
now or late of Newell, Seventytwo (72) feet; Westerly by land
now or late of said Newell,
Forty-two (42) feet; and
Northerly by land now or late
of Pitman, Seventy-two (72)
"for consideration paid" feet"
$375,000
"The land in Salem, with the
buildings thereon, situated on
Cliff Street, bounded and
described as follows"
Essex Registry of Deeds
Essex Registry of Deeds
Book : Page
Notes
Almy, Clark, and others
cumulatively owned what was
referred to as the "Derby
Estate," mostly farmland
before considerable residential
development in late 19th/early
20th centuries; 12 Cliff St is
approximately "lot 15" on this
Bk 1255 Pg 600 plan
References Book 1251 Pg 63
(Charles A Putnam et als Trustees
May 31 1889)
Book 1251 Pg 64 (James Almy
May 31 1889)
Book 1250 Pg 397 (Sarah
Bk 1881 Pg 323 Hodgdon, June 3 1889)
Bk 2448 Pg 5
See also Bk 2448 Pg 6; reference
to property as "greater portion
of lot numbered fifteen (15) on a
"Plan of House Lots in Salem
belonging to James F. Almy, and
Chas. S. Clark" recorded with
Essex South District - Deeds, at
the end of Book 1255, and
the same premises conveyed to
me by deed of Emma Newell to
be recorded herewith. Including
all furnaces, heaters, ranges,
mantels, gas and electric light
fixtures, screens, screen doors,
swings and all other fixtures of
whatever kind and nature at
present contained in said
buildings, and hereinafter placed
therein prior to the full payment
and discharge of this mortgage"
Essex Registry of Deeds
Bk 2536 Pg 78
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds
"Also a parcel adjoining the
above land, described as follows:
EASTERLY by Cliff Street, two (2)
feet; SOUTHERLY by land now or
late of Newell, seventy-two (72)
"feet; WESTERLY by land now or
late of Newell, two (2) feet; and
NORTHERLY by land described
Bk 3690 Pg 124 above, seventy-two (72) feet"
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds
Bk 4156 Pg 311
Deed
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds
Essex Registry of Deeds
Bk 5333 Pg 418
Bk 37699 Pg 86
������������David Frye
NELSON
Nelson
F
Jeanette
Io Howard
Real
Estate Specialist
Washington
clerk City Hall h
219 do
S h 197 Bridge
Ethel L b 197 Bridge
Enos
1516
Margaret E wid James rem to
Danvers
[Conant
Maude W teacher (Beverly) h II
Morris M rem to Boston
*Peter mach h 21 Green (31
Whitney ave Bev)
[Webb
Walter
theatrical mngr h 77
Walter T (J S Nelson & Son)
37 and 43 Bridge h
Con
ant
Nerses Nersesian h II Bow
Nesbitt Norman H teacher of French
h 12 Northey
*Nestor Sarah H shoe wkr 12 Ward
(8 North ct)
Thomas P teamster h 25 Becket
Wasyl S prov 122 Derby h 8
Hardy
[Ward (8 North ct)
*Catherine
wid James
b
12
*Catherine S laundress b 12 Ward
(8 North ct)
[North ct)
*James W clerk b 12 Ward (8
Nettles Henry D bookkeeper (Bev)
h 104 Bridge
Neumann Herman G upholsterer b
*Method Wet Wash Laundry N
Maron propr r 122 Boston
Minnie F vamper b 197 Bridge
William
rem to New York City
J
NEW YORK LIFE
J
CO C H
252 Essex
1464
II
ave
Building
3 to 7 Central
Charles B died Feb 9 1914
Charles W mngr 1053 Bridge h
7 Arbella
[ette
"David B h 229 Laf (273 Lafay
George F (Newcomb & Gauss)
1 City Hall ave h 38 Ocean
ave s r. Baker's Island
THenry R (N Y) s r. Baker's Is
Jane A Mrs nurse h 24 Pick
nnan
[Ocean ave
Martha E wid Charles B h 38A
Oyster House (L N McFadden)
24 and 26 Derby sq
Raymond
L clerk board of
health city hall h 21 Nor
In an
NEW COMB & GAUSS (George F
Newcomb
and John D
Gauss) publishers and props
Saturday Evening
Observer
and book and job printers I
City Hall ave
See page
II23 North
Pierre
Ward
G
(32
chauffeur
Water Bev)
h
423
Nevers Charlotte rem to Boston
*George
P lea worker h 52
Broad (12: Dearborn)
*Harry A mach b 52 Broad (123
Dearborn
[born
*Ralph P b 52 Broad (12: Dear
Neville Azela b 156 Boston [Brown
Benjamin compositor b 20 Brown
John mor wkr b. 16 Summit
emp h 81 Bridge
John
Margaret dressmaker b 12 Elm
Margaret A wid William P h
156 Boston
[ton
Mary F clerk (Pea) b 156 Bos
Mary R wid Thomas
h 15 Var
ney
Thomas shoe wkr b. 156 Boston
"Nevins James grocer and propr Laf
Creamery 104 Lafayette h 35
Oakland (35 Oakland)
Winfield S reporter 126 Wash b
83 Federal
J
ENGLAND
CO
England
DIRECTORY
300 Essex See page
J.
F. Cabeen
wid
aVe
h
47 Summit
Helen H b 47 Summit ave
Ida M wid Francis A I Willow
a Ve
Lewis
W
aVe
Newhall
(Raymond
&
Co B) b 1 Willow
emp
Whitcomb
Alfred
Trust Co
bkkpr
Naumkeag
h at Peabody
NEWHALL ALVAH T (D D S)
1553
and Hot
Water Heating
Telephone
Caroline
Frank F (Newell
Inc Peabody)
Live Stock Co Highland
[Daly) 2433 Essex
ave
England
Overall
Co
(E. A
Steam
[North
John b 156
& Knowlton
1498
Newell
J
NEW
INSURANCE
Fleming gen agt
rm 2
See page
*Newcomb
Alfred W teacher of
music II Hancock (209 Es
sex rm 6) h II Hancock (332
Laf) s r Baker's Island [ave
Bertha P sten (B) b 38 Ocean
J
"Neve
379
England Telephone and Tele
graph Co 22 Norman dist
plant dept and field engineer
210 Essex commercial traffic
and accounting
dist offices
New
J
page
Salem
-
NEWHALL
[Salem]
S & SON (Walter T
and Herbert Nelson) horses
and carriages and sales sta
bles 37 and 43 Bridge
See
NELSON
St.
126
dentist 221 Essex rm 53 h 36
Appleton
Office hours 8 a
m to 12 m and 1.30 to 5.30
p
m
J. F.
Cabeen
295 Essex Street,
Salem
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Cliff Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
12 Cliff Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Documents provided are of research conduction on house; formal house history unavailable.
Built for
Emma Newell
and her husband
Frank F. Newell
Leather Dealer
C. 1907
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: circa 1907
Title Search Conducted: Dec. 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Dan Graham
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/9d8baed91752add11b38e91cd883114a.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=IHfLH4TMvZktp%7EwrTG4rM5cSTTbqkQj1DGem%7E3BnxVwsDQTK72K2We-9lZ1ISDE%7EZMPmF2DtAjysmbS1y6s3r43l5-jN63AmKdnEbViw5tKXNnagKlm%7EYvT5qZgfsEAm3%7EVNLJqgfkMVCosnfqMrijnrbHXPJWZRyZ7nmpf9JF0bZrulpByJlytbwjR0FEbbrsJHRE1fArcBJ8NDFD7s0uILGDqCWUEFuFBYC3J0fDhMT1Yqd8CWMt7z8KT31fN-djcAp2Z0fgVtTx%7EWDWDNwXLBkPMThapgYc67l1bQnEiRER3fMeYFWg3eSWuakldA1vcyw6eJTh4MgingAtKR3w__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
5480e7d88d787015aa7f05e6fe93e871
PDF Text
Text
178 Federal Street
Likely built
in the 18th Century
Moved to this spot for
Mary Pitman
Widow
in the 1830s
Research provided by
Dan Graham
November 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Chain of Title, 178 Federal Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
1832 April 10
Rufus Marshall, Mary Marshall
Albert Wilkins, tanner
Consideration
$875
1832 July 12
Albert Wikins, a tanner
Mary Pitman, widow
$900
1866 May 14
Mary Pitman
Henry C. Pitman
$1,500
1877 Aug 6
Henry C. Pitman (of San Francisco, CA)
Arthur P. French (of Boston, MA) $1 and other considerations "a certain parcel of land in Salem Deed
in the County of Essex and said
Commonwealth with the dwelling
house and all other buildings
thereon, bounded and described
as follows: to wit Beginning at
the South east corner thereof by
land of Buffum, thence running by
Federal Street three (3) poles, to
land late of Michael Pitman;
thence running North by
land of said Pitman and others
nine (9) poles and eighteen (18)
links to the sea-wall at North
River: thence running South by
said Buffum's land nine (9) poles
and eighteen (18) links to Federal
Street, together with all my
right..."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 981 : Pg 52
1877 Aug 6
Arthur P. French
Anna Augusta Pitman (wife of
Henry Pitman)
$1
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 981 : Pg 52
Part of this sale also involved
messuage near the Second Cove
in Marblehead
1888 June 23
Anna A. Pitman
Sarah E. Parshley
$1
"a certain parcel of land in said
Deed
Salem … with the dwelling house
and all other buildings thereon
bounded and described as
follows…"
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 1227 : Pg 7
This document is incorrectly
referred to as Bk 1225 Pg 7 in
other records consulted. Also
includes messuage in
Marblehead
1894 Sept 8
David Parshley
Mary E. Chapman
$1
"a certain parcel of land in Salem Deed
with the buildings thereon,
bounded as follows: Beginning at
the Southeast corner thereof by
land of Buffum, thence running by
Federal Street three (3) poles to
land late of Michael Pitman,
thence running north by land
of said Pitman and others nine (9)
poles and eighteen (18) links to
the sea wall at North River;
thence running East by said wall
three (3) poles to land of said
Buffum; thence running South by
said Buffum's land nine poles and
eighteen links to Federal Street,
together with all my right title
and interest to the flats on North
River Northerly + Easterly of the
above lot."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 1422 : Pg 404
Part of this sale also involved
messuage near the Second Cove
in Marblehead
Conveyance of
"a certain lot of land in Federal
Street in said Salem bounded …
Beginning at the Southeasterly
corner thereof by land of Buffum
on Federal Street…"
"certain lot of Land in Federal
Street
in said Salem,
bounded…Beginning at the
Southeasterly corner thereof, by
land of Buffum on Federal Street,
and thence running by said Street,
three poles of land late of
Michael pitman, thence running
Northerly by land of said Pitman
and others, nine poles and
eighten links, to the Sea Wall at
North River..."
"a certain parcel of land in said
Salem with the dwelling house
and all other buildings thereon
bounded as follows, to wit
beginning at the S.E. corner
thereof by land of Buffum, tehnce
running by Federal Street, three
poles to land late of Michael
Pitman, thence running N.
by land of said Pitman and others,
nine poles and eighteen links to
the sea wall at North river, thence
running E. by said wall three poles
to land of said Buffum, thence
running S. by said Buffum's land
nine poles and eighteen links to
Federal Street..."
Source Document
Book : Page
Deed Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 263 : Pg 200
Notes
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 265 : Pg 240
No known house on plot at time
of purchase; by 1836 Pitman
moved an eighteenth-century
house from an unknown
location to 178 Federal Street,
see MACRIS record SAL.612
Deed
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 704 : Pg 168
�1913 Dec 16
Mary E. Chapman (widow, and only
surviving heir of morther, Sarah E.
Parshley, who died in 1891)
Edward N. Chase
$1
"a certain parcel of land, with the Deed
buildings thereon, situated in said
SALEM and bounded southerly by
Federal Street about three (3)
rods; westerly by land formerly of
Michael Pitman, now or late of
Lord and Vaughan; northerly by
Bridge Street about three (3)
rods, and easterly by land
formerly of Buckham, now or late
of Walden. I, the said Mary E.
Chapman, was the only surviving
heir of my mother, Sarah E.
Parshley, late of said Salem, who
died in the year 1891. Further for
title see deed to me from David T.
Parshley, my father, dated
September 8, 1894, and recorded
with Essex South District Deeds in
Book 1422, page 404."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 2267 : Pg 587
1914 July
Edward N. Chase, Lillian Hillman
Chase
Charlotte Reid Robson
$1
"a certain parcel of land, with the Deed
buildings thereon, situated in said
SALEM and bounded southerly by
Federal Street about three (3)
rods; westerly by land formerly of
Michael Pitman, now or late of
Lord and Vaughan; northerly by
Bridge Street about three (3)
rods, and easterly by land
formerly of Buckham, now of late
Walden..."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 2267 : Pg 588
1921 Dec 10
Charlotte Reid Robson, unmarried
Bessie D Vaughan
"for consideration paid"
"the land in said SALEM, bounded Deed
northerly by Bridge Street 50.30
feet, easterly by land of Little
230.50 feet, southerly by land of
Robson 49.70 feet, and westerly
by land of Sargent 230.50 feet;
containing 11,340 square feet, all
as shown on a plan of the same
made by T. A. Appleton, C. E.,
dated December, 1921, and to be
recorded herewith, to which
reference may be had..."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 2500 : Pg 375
1959 Dec 11
Charlotte Reid Robson, being unmarried Sylvania Electric Products Inc., a
Delaware corporation
"for consideration paid"
"a parcel of vacant land in Salem, Deed
Essex County, Massachusetts,
shown as Lot 1 on a "Plan of
Sylvania Electric Products Inc.,
Bridge and Federal Sts., Salem,
Massachusetts," dated November
1959, by Edwin T. Brudzynski,
registered surveyor…"
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 4628 : Pg 193
1959 Dec 14
Eleanor J Connolly, John J Connolly, John
J Connolly Jr
Marcella R. Estes (executor under the
will … of Charlotte R. Robson)
Sylvania Electric Products Inc., a
Delaware corporation
Willard H. Estes, Marcella R.
Estes,
husband and wife
N/A
See drawing
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 4628 : Pg 191
$7,400
"the land in said Salem, together Deed
with the buildings thereon,
situated at and known as 178
Federal Street, being shown on a
"Plan of Sylvania" Electric
Products Inc. Bridge and Federal
Sts. Salem, Mass." dated
November 1959, by Edwin T.
Brudzynski, Registered Surveyor,
designated "Charlotte Reid
Robson" on said plan, recorded
with Essex South District Deeds,
Book 4628, Page 191, and more
particularly bounded and
described as follows"
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 5275 : Pg 574
Willard H. Estes, of Beverly
Robert E. Warner, of 12 Salt Wall $15,500
Lane, Salem
"the land in said Salem, together Deed
with the buildings thereon,
situated at and known as 178
Federal Street, being shown on a
"Plan of Sylvania" Electric
Products Inc. Bridge and Federal
Sts. Salem, Mass." dated
November 1959, by Edwin T.
Brudzynski, Registered Surveyor,
designated "Charlotte Reid
Robson" on said plan, recorded
with Essex South District Deeds,
Book 4628, Page 191, and more
particularly bounded and
described as follows..."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 6034 : Pg 480
1965 June 8
1973 Dec 13
Plan
No longer includes messuage in
Marblehead
"Being a portion of the
premises conveyed" in previous
deed (Bk 2267 Pg 587)
"being the same premises
conveyed to said Charlotte R.
Robson, described in the deed
as Charlotte Reid Robson,
by Edward N. Chase by deed
dated July -- 1914, recording
with said Deeds Book 2267,
Page 587, excepting the
portions of said premises
conveyed by said decedent to
Bessie D. Vaughn and to
Sylvania Electric Products Inc.
by deeds recorded respectively
with said Deeds Book 2500,
Page 375, and Book 4628, Page
193." A notice on this deed says
"See B. 6023 P. 530" (an
inheritance tax release of lien).
"being the same premises
conveyed to Willard H. Estes
and Marcella R. Estes, husband
and wife, tenants by the
entirety, by deed of Marcella R.
Estes, Administratrix, dated
June 9, 1965, and recorded with
said Registry in Book 5275,
Page 574. Said Marcella R.
Estes died in Salem on January
10, 1973. See Essex County
Probate Court Docket #318964"
�1976 June 29
Robert E. Warner
Robert C. Simpsons, Emery
K. Warner, joint tenants, of 182
Federal Street
1985 May 1
Robert C. Simpsons, Emery K. Warner,
joint tenants
1999 May 28
Paul S. Konstadt, Marin F.
Konstadt (f/k/a Fine)
$27,000
"the land in said Salem, together Deed
with the buildings thereon,
situated at and known as 178
Federal Street, being shown on a
"Plan of Sylvania" Electric
Products Inc. Bridge and Federal
Sts. Salem, Mass." dated
November 1959, by Edwin T.
Brudzynski, Registered Surveyor,
designated "Charlotte Reid
Robson" on said plan, recorded
with Essex South District Deeds,
Book 4628, Page 191, and more
particularly bounded and
described as follows..."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 6254 : Pg 120
Paul S. Konstadt, Marin Fine, of $115,000
125 Webster Street, Newton, MA
and 205 Common Street,
Watertown, MA
"the land in said Salem, together Deed
with the buildings thereon,
situated at and known as 178
Federal Street, being shown on a
"Plan of Sylvania" Electric
Products Inc. Bridge and Federal
Sts. Salem, Mass." dated
November 1959, by Edwin T.
Brudzynski, Registered Surveyor,
designated "Charlotte Reid
Robson" on said plan, recorded
with Essex South District Deeds,
Book 4628, Page 191, and more
particularly bounded and
described as follows..."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 7738 : Pg 404
Paul S. Konstadt, Marin F.
Konstadt, husband and wife
"the land in Salem, together with Deed
the buildings thereon, situated at
and known as 178 Federal Street,
being shown on a "Plan of
Sylvania Electric Products Inc.
Bridge and Federal Sts. Salem,
Mass." dated November 1959, by
Edwin T. Brudzynski, Registered
Surveyor, designed 'Charlotte Reid
Robson' on said plan..."
Essex Registry of Deeds Bk 15717 : Pg 444
$1
�����������������������������1842
70
SALEM IDIRECTORY.
13
21
jr.
Pinnel, Philip P. mariner, 14 Marlboro'
Pitman, Benjamin, clerk Asiatic bank, h 11 Andover
Pitman, John, mariner, 23 Oliver
Pitman John C. currier, 5 Pope's court, h 12 Boston
Pitman, Joshua, bell ringer, E. R. R. h 18 River
Pitman, Mark, cabinet maker, 324 Essex, h 327 Essex
Pitman, Mary, Mrs. 94 Federal
Pitman, Nathaniel, currier, 24 Boston, h 418 Essex
Pitman, Samuel currier, Goodhue, h 4 Boston
Pitts, Darling, sempstress, 76 Lafayette
Pitts, Henry, laborer, Lafayette
Pitts, Simeon, laborer, Everett
Pitts, Thomas, laborer, Ward
Planders, John G. mariner, 10 Turner
Plummer, Caroline, Miss 372 Essex
Plummer, Hezekiah, carpenter, 66 Boston
Plummer, Moses, blacksmith, 21 Northey
Plummer, Moses,
Northey
cordwainer,
Plummer, Rhoda, governess, Children's Friend Society,
Charter
45
98
Boston
12
57
E.
98
25
355410
Pond, Joseph
grocer,
Front,
Pool, Elizabeth, Aborn
Pool, Nathan, grocer,
Lafayette
Poor, James, mariner,
Lafayette
Poor, William, tanner,
Boston
Pope, Eleazer, tanner,
Boston,
Pope, Hannah, rear 28 Marlboro
Pope, Henry,
tanner,
Boston
Pope, James, tanner,
Boston
Pope, Lot, tanner,
Pope's court
Pope, Mary,
Dean
Pope, William, tanner,
Boston
Porter, Benjamin, currier,
Boston
h
4
98
7
h 14
h
h
Federal
h
12
4
P. S.
17
16
21
H.
12
46
Plummer, William, carpenter,
Broad
Plummer, William, tanner,
Franklin, h97 North
Plummer, Zeba
Northey
cordwainer,
Poland, John, cordwainer, 407 Essex
Pollard, Ellen, dress maker,
St. Peter
Mill,
Pomroy, Arad, blacksmith,
South
Washington, Prince
Pond, James
grocer,
�1842
SALEM DIRECTORY.
QS
Wiggin Peirce L. 9 Daniels
Wiggin, Thomas D. block maker, 9 Ash
Wilder, Amasa,
trader, 8 Federal
Wildes, Ira, cordwainer, 189 Essex, h 269 Essex
Wildes, James, 16 Church
Wilkins, Albert, tanner, 4 Boston
Wilkins, Amos S. carpenter, 1 Federal
Wilkins,
Wilkins,
Wilkins,
Wilkins,
Wilkins,
Wilkins,
Charles, mariner, 15 Williams
Gideon, 119 Derby, h 74 Essex
Hezekiah, mariner, 20 Derby
Jason, carpenter, 30 Union
John G. teamster, 92 Boston
Rufus, painter, 92 Boston
Wilkinson, William, stone cutter, 383 Essex
13 Ash
Williams, Charles F. mariner, 81 Essex
Williams, Elizabeth, Mrs. 19 Chesnut
Willey, William, cordwainer,
h
B.
29
O.
Williams, Ruth, Mrs.
27
19 Chesnut . [Federal
Washington,
counsellor,
John
John, cooper,
Derby
Robert, laborer, 112
R.
55 19
27 167
Willis, Sarah,
10
Lynde
Williams, Samuel, mariner,
Chesnut
Williams, Thomas, mariner,
Derby
Williamson, Mary, Mrs. Elm
Willis, John, mariner,
Oliver
Willis, Joseph, cooper,
Williams
235 Essex
97
h
64
18
19
27
32
5
S.
56
Williston, Samuel
cabinet maker,
Broad
Wilson, Edward, mariner,
Elm
Wilson, Edward, tailor, Phelps
Wilson, Jacob, fisherman,
Bridge
Wilson, James, laborer,
St. Peter
Wilson, Jonathan,
Summer
Wilson, Nancy,
River
Wilson, Nathan, cordwainer, Phelps'
Wilson, Samuel, wagoner, Phelps' court
Winchester, Jacob, trader,
Boston,
Boston
3
John B. mariner,
S.
Williams,
Williams,
Williams,
Williams,
ct.
Williams, Henry L. mariner, 19 Chesnut
Williams, Israel P. mariner, 19 Chesnut
Williams, James, mariner, 11 Osgood
�2
Writeup by David Moffat for
Christmas in Salem 2019
guidebook.
Mary Pitman House
178 Federal Street
www.thefelinehospital.com
Built c. 1810
This mysterious house was likely built in the eighteenth century and moved to
the present site in the 1830s. In 1832, Mary Pitman, a widow, purchased a lot of
land from the tanner Albert Wilkins. Pitman soon moved an older house to the
site, though its actual age has yet to be determined. The house’s gambrel roof and
window placement suggest construction in the mid to late 1700s, but vernacular
architectural styles have dates which are more flexible than high style architecture.
The one-story addition at the back as well as the side entrance were added in the
early twentieth century. The house remained in Pitman’s family until 1888 when
it was sold to Sarah E. Parshley. Sarah’s husband, David, was a tanner. Sarah’s
widowed daughter, Mary E. Chapman, lived in the house until 1913. From 1914
until 1965, it was home to Charlotte Reid Robson, who never married.
Many thanks to House Captains Nina Cohen and Kathleen Keefe Ternes
Decorated by Flowers by Darlene
40
41
�Inventory No:
SAL.612
Historic Name:
Pitman, Mary - French, Arthur P. House
Common Name:
Address:
178 Federal St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Central Salem
Local No:
25-67
Year Constructed:
c 1810
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Federal
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House; Single Family Dwelling
House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HD: Federal Street
SAL.HU: McIntire Historic District
Designation(s):
Local Historic District (03/03/1981)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood; Wood Clapboard
Foundation: Granite
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projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
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DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Saturday, October 5, 2019 at 1:06: PM
�LHD 3/3/1981
FORM B - BUILDING
Assessor's
USGS Quad
Area(s)
Form Number
Number
Salem
25-67
Massachusetts H i s t o r i c a l Commission
Massachusetts A r c h i v e s B u i l d i n g
220 M o r r i s s e y B o u l e v a r d
Boston, M a s s a c h u s e t t s 02125
Salem
Town
Place
612
HU
(neighborhood
or v i l l a g e )
-
C e n t r a l Salem
178 F e d e r a l S t r e e t
c Name
Mary Pitman House
resent
Residential
riginal
"
Construction
18th
Century
See B i b l i o g r a p h y *
orm
ct/Builder
r Material:
ion
Granite
Wall/Trim
Clapboard/Wood
Roof
Asphalt Shingles
Outbuildings/Secondary S t r u c t u r e s
Major A l t e r a t i o n s ( w i t h d a t e s ) Rear a d d i t i o n s
(mid 19th o r e a r l y 20th C.)
Condition
Good
X
Moved
y e s Date
5,710
Recorded by: Susan C e c c a c c i , L i s a Hartmann
and Dianne L. S i e r g i e j
O r g a n i z a t i o n : Commonweal C o l l a b o r a t i v e „,
Date:
J u l y 1995
mm
Between 1832
and 1836
SF
S e t t i n g Set p e r p e n d i c u l a r t o t h e
street with the side elevation
d i r e c t l y on t h e s i d e w a l k , i n a densely: t l e d neighborhood o f p r i m a r i l y
Cth-century houses.
(
v
�(
178 F e d e r a l S t r e e t
BUILDING FORM
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe a r c h i t e c t u r a l features.
See c o n t i n u a t i o n s h e e t .
E v a l u a t e t h e c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s of t h i s b u i l d i n g i n term s o f o t h e r b u i l d i n g s
w i t h i n t h e community.
T h i s 2 1 / 2 - s t o r y , gambrel-roofed house i s p e r p e n d i c u l a r l y - o r i e n t e d t o t h e
s t r e e t w i t h i t s 4-bay facade f a c i n g west and w i t h i t s 2-bay, gambrel end t o
the s t r e e t .
The chimney i n t h i s s e c t i o n of t h e house i s somewhat c e n t r a l l y
l o c a t e d . The o f f - c e n t e r main e n t r a n c e i s t h r o u g h an e n c l o s e d 1 - s t o r y ,
h i p - r o o f e d p o r c h o f an apparent C o l o n i a l R e v i v a l p e r i o d t h a t i s trimmed w i t h
C l a s s i c a l d e n t i l s and c o r n i c e . A study of h i s t o r i c maps suggests t h a t t h e
2 1 / 2 - s t o r y , g a m b r e l - r o o f e d a d d i t i o n t o t h e n o r t h s i d e was i n p l a c e as e a r l y
as 1874.
A 1 - s t o r y a d d i t i o n t o i t s n o r t h end appears t o have been b u i l t
during the e a r l y twentieth-century.
Window frames are molded and window sash
are 6/6.
Dormer windows p r o v i d e l i g h t t o t h e h a l f s t o r y i n t h e gambrel.
A c c o r d i n g t o t h e p r e s e n t owner, t h e house was b u i l t about 1730 and moved t o
t h i s s i t e i n t h e mid n i n e t e e n t h c e n t u r y .
Further research i s necessary t o
v e r i f y t h i s s t a t e m e n t . A l t h o u g h a l a c k of ornamental d e t a i l make a q u i c k
v i s u a l assessment of t h e dat e o f c o n s t r u c t i o n o f t h i s d i f f i c u l t , t h e
heavy, p r o j e c t i n g window frames, t h e p o s i t i o n i n g of second f l o o r windows
i m m e d i a t e l y under t h e eaves, and t h e e x i s t e n c e on t h e e a s t and south
s i d e s of s k i v e d c l a p b o a r d s a t t a c h e d w i t h wrought n a i l s suggest e i g h t e e n t h century c o n s t r u c t i o n .
The v e r n a c u l a r c h a r a c t e r of t h e house i n c r e a s e s t h e d i f f i c u l t y o f i d e n t i f y i n g
changes t h a t have o c c u r r e d beyond t h e obvious a d d i t i o n s t o t h e n o r t h end.
F u r t h e r p h y s i c a l and documentary r e s e a r c h are n e c e s s a ry t o b e t t e r u n d e r s t a n d
t h e age, h i s t o r y , and t h e a l t e r a t i o n s of t h i s house.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
X
D i s c u s s t h e h i s t o r y of t h e b u i l d i n g .
of t h e b u i l d i n g and
See c o n t i n u a t i o n s h e e t .
Explain i t s a s s o c i a t i o n s with l o c a l (or s t a t e h i s t o r y .
Include uses
t h e r o l e ( s ) t h e owners/occupants p l a y e d w i t h i n the community.
The Mary P i t m a n House i s l o c a t e d on upper F e d e r a l S t r e e t whic h d e v e l o p e d as a
r e s i d e n t i a l neighborhood i n t h e e a r l y and m i d - n i n e t e e n t h c e n t u r y .
Many o f t h e
r e s i d e n t s were t a n n e r s and c u r r i e r s i n t h e nearby l e a t h e r d i s t r i c t on B o s t o n
S t r e e t . D u r i n g t h e e a r l y n i n e t e e n t h c e n t u r y , Salem's shoe and l e a t h e r
i n d u s t r y expanded r a p i d l y , t o dominate t h e m a n u f a c t u r i n g s e c t o r o f t h e l o c a l
economy by t h e l a t e i n d u s t r i a l p e r i o d .
I n 1832, widow Mary Pitman bought a p l o t o S - l a s d on F e d e r a l S t r e e t w h i c h , at
t h e t i m e , b o r d e r e d t h e N o r t h R i v e r . The l o t was purchased f o r $900 from
A l b e r t W i l k i n s , a tanner.
I t appears t h a t t h e s a l e d i d not i n c l u d e a house,
but by 1836, Pitman had moved t h i s e i g h t e e n t h - c e n t u r y house from an unknown
l o c a t i o n t o 178 F e d e r a l S t r e e t .
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
X
X
See c o n t i n u a t i o n s h e e t .
Recommended f o r l i s t i n g i n t h e N a t i o n a l R e g i s t e r o f H i s t o r i c P l a c e s ;
I f c h e c k e d , see a t t a c h e d N a t i o n a l R e g i s t e r C r i t e r i a Statement
form.
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
178 F e d e r a l
A r e a HU
Salem
Street
Form No. 612
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE ( c o n t i n u e d )
The house remained i n t h e Pitman f a m i l y u n t i l 1877 when i t was s o l d t o
A r t h u r P. French from Boston. David T. P a r s h l e y , a t a n n e r and c u r r i e r f o r
P a r s h l e y & Stone a t 14 F r a n k l i n S t r e e t , l i v e d i n t h e house from c. 1874 u n t i l
h i s d e a t h i n 1900.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
*Essex County Deeds. (265:240), (981:52).
M a s s a c h u s e t t s H i s t o r i c a l Commission Reconnaissance Survey Report
f o r Salem. 1985.
B a i l e y , P. and Walsh, K. Massachusetts H i s t o r i c a l Commission
Survey Form. 178 F e d e r a l S t r e e t , Salem. No. 612. March 30, 1978.
Salem D i r e c t o r i e s , 1851-1897/98.
B e e r s , D. G. & Company, A t l a s o f Essex County, M a s s a c h u s e t t s ,
1872.
Hopkins, G. M. & Co., A t l a s o f Salem, M a s s a c h u s e t t s , 1874.
* M c I n t y r e , Henry C. E., Map o f t h e C i t y o f Salem, Mass, 1851.
R i c h a r d s , L. J . , A t l a s o f t h e C i t v o f Salem, M a s s a c h u s e t t s . . . . ,
1897.
Walker L i t h o g r a p h and P u b l i s h i n g Company, A t l a s o f t h e C i t v o f
Salem, M a s s a c h u s e t t s , 1911.
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
SALEM
178 FEDERAL ST
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
SAL.612
SAL.HD, SAL.HU
Supplemental photograph by Patti Kelleher, Salem Department of Planning & Community Development, April 2017
RECEIVED
JUN 20 2017
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Continuation sheet 1
�FORM
B -
BUILDING
m
In Area no.
& L O C «d
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
Office of the Secretary, State House, Boston
F o r m no.
25"
ent use
S » d g yoH^i n \
ent owner
ription:
burce
4. Map. Draw sketch ol ouiiaing location
in relation to nearest cross streets and
other buildings. Indicate north.
Q X (-(
L
^ a u - ~ i
•
0
plo^Vtl
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hitect
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7. Original owner (if known)
_ .. .
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.
O
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Subsequent uses (if any) and dates
8. Themes (check as many as applicable)
Aboriginal
Agricultural
Architectural
The Arts
Commerce
Communication
Community development
Conservation
Education
Exploration/
settlement
Industry
Military
Political
Recreation
Religion
Science/
invention
Social/
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Transportation
9. Historical significance (include explanation of themes checked above)
W<x§> ^ u ^ d ^ ^ J i H u
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�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Federal Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
178 Federal Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House Histories
Description
An account of the resource
Document provided is of research conduction on house; formal house history unavailable.
Likely built
in the 18th Century
Moved to this spot for
Mary Pitman
Widow
in the 1830s
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Title Search Conducted: Nov. 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Dan Graham
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/0be4a31015308a7c3074366ffd30159c.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=sAfO%7EZ9FYFQcN0gLpp7QHuCr0UnxeU%7Eurb%7ECxH55aSVbz2aqCbzpaMbjWkfo7Ky-dr59sDzlerFzSH8E%7EFB-wqWZqNeyxFVmpU7tLtEr72zq1b%7ElaoYou01cidXWo4j3sypZ3YSrwqlDsBUnyM6Czu%7EyXKRGvvK6LVdsW5V4aAAdqorgZ5ZjxUa44wmEa2o%7EB%7E5g4ZKqVUPMm%7E288j2Lm6TvS3y48U6meGjVPW7dZcbJwcUeh5Ajz8fdac4bapNcdzklm5naGrmY1ugvZ3tOPwDg1lA48FfqBZ90SLdfm9xtUfUy6wvSPvbuWS-ChnLrRy5vK2jlMKfFRQYzvg-2Lg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
da1f147e2997a536365d61f7b30380db
PDF Text
Text
1
1 Daniels Street
Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Built for Stephen Daniels
Shipwright
c. 1667
Researched and written by David Moffat – October 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 ǁ HistoricSalem.org © 2018
�2
Table of Contents
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.
The Property Before 1667………………………………………... 3
The House………………………………………………………....6
Stephen Daniels I, 1667-1687……………………………………10
Stephen Daniels II-Stephen Daniels V, 1693-1805……………12
Mary Daniels Silsbee, 1749-1803……………………………..…17
Samuel Silsbee, Sr., 1756-1803……………………………….…19
Silsbee’s Heirs, 1803-1860…………………………………….28
The Hodges and the Russells, 1860-1886 ………………….…30
The Burgers and Sarah Dexter, 1886-1932………………..….31
Marietta B. Wilson and Vacancy, 1933-1945………………….37
The Hallers, 1945-1962…………………………………….…..40
Catherine “Kay” Gill, 1962-2018………………………………44
Castle of the Realm, L.L.C., 2019……………………………..46
Conclusion…………………………………………………........46
�3
I.
The Property Before 1667
The house at 1 Daniels Street almost certainly dates from the seventeenth century, so the
period of recorded history that predates its construction is not long. Daniels Street existed by
1661, when it was called a lane or highway, and in 1669 it was called the highway by the
waterside.1 The harbor was slightly closer, the waterline where the entrance to Daniel Street
Court is today.2
Joseph Grafton, Sr. was one of the earliest settlers in Salem, recorded as a freeman on May
17th, 1637, there only being 64 freemen of the town recorded before that date.3 Grafton possessed
the site of 1 Daniel Street as early as 1661. The land directly to the south of it was owned by
Matthew Dove in the same year.4 Grafton, Sr. a mariner, died in 1681. Joseph Grafton, Jr., also a
mariner, was baptized in 1636/7 and died in Barbados in 1670.5 According to Perley, Stephen
Daniels possessed the lot where his house stands today by at least 1682, but likely earlier.6
Of the ten houses in Salem proven to (or credibly believed to) date to the seventeenth
century, three were in the neighborhood of the Daniels House: The House of the Seven Gables,
built 1668, the Retire Beckett House, built circa 1655, and the William Murray House, built circa
1688. Of the remaining six houses, four were in the town center, and two in the west end.
The majority of houses on Daniels Street date to the nineteenth century. Today there are 15
houses on Daniels Street between Essex and Derby Street, seven on the eastern side of the street
Perley, Sidney. “Salem in 1700. No. 24.” Essex Antiquarian, Vol. 10, No. 3 (July 1906). pp. 114-130. Salem:
Sidney Perley, 1906. p. 114.
2
Smith, Philip Chadwick Foster Smith. Salem Harbor: A Window on the World, 1626-1990. Salem: The Salem
Partnership, 1990. Print.
3
Perley, Sidney. The History of Salem, Massachusetts, Vol. I: 1626-1637. Salem, Sidney Perley, 1924. Print, p. 197.
4
Perley (1924), pp. 313i-14.
5
Perley (1924), pp.
6
Perley (1906), p. 114.
1
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and eight on the western side. 12 Daniels Street is likely a First Period structure as well, dating
between 1715 and 1745 and built by either Thomas Beedle, Sr. or Thomas Beedle, Jr.7
Figure 1 illustrates the estimated ages of the houses of Daniels Street, with the dates
enumerated and first owners listed, if known, in Table 1.
Figure 1: Relative Ages of the Houses of Daniels Street
7
Whitworth, Kimberly. “12 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 2016.
�5
Table 1: The Construction Dates of Houses on Daniels Street
House #
Date
Builder or First Owner
2
1906
Elizabeth Stevenson, for her son-in-law, Charles F. Brown8
4
1803
Abigail Berry, singlewoman9
5
c. 1805
Capt. Edward Stanley, shipmaster, and wife Esther Waters Stanley10
6-8
c. 1784
11
7
c. 1809
Walter Palfray12
9
c. 1810
13
10
c. 1851
Alfred R. Brooks14
11
Before 1806
The Grafton family15
12
c. 1715-1745
Thomas Beedle, Sr. or Thomas Beedle, Jr.
13
c. 1860
John N. Frye, baker16
14
c. 1800
17
15
1906
Margaret White18
16
c. 1857
John Collins19
17
c. 1810
20
25
c. 1850
James Riley21
Booth, Robert. “2 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 2000.
King, Joyce. “4 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 1986.
10
Booth, Robert. “5 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 2008.
11
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2584, “6-8 Daniels Street.”
12
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2618, “7 Daniels Street- Palfray, Walter-Dean, Thomas House”
13
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2619, “9 Daniels Street-Salem Polish American Citizens Club”
14
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2583, “10 Daniels Street-Brooks, Alfred R. -Brown, Joseph B. House.”
15
Dunlap, Diana. “11 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 2018.
16
Wilczynski, Anya. “13 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 2017.
17
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2581, “14 Daniels Street.”
18
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2622, “15 Daniels Street-White, Margaret House”
19
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2580, “16 Daniels Street-Collins, John House”
20
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2623, “17 Daniels Street.”
21
MHC MACRIS, SAL.3448, “25 Daniels Street-Riley, James House”
8
9
�6
26
1909
Louis Collier, junk dealer, and his wife, Mamie22
27-29
1783
Nathaniel Silsbee23
34
1911
B. Grodski24
35
1807
Sarah Silsbee, widow of Capt. Nathaniel Silsbee25
37
c. 1800
26
39
1874
Patrick Coughlin27
40
c. 1885
28
45
c. 1800
29
II.
The Daniels House
To begin, a quick note on the spelling of the last name Daniels. The earliest Daniels often
spelled their name “Daniell” and numerous later records offer either “Daniel” or “Daniels.” As
there was no standardized spelling in America prior to the nineteenth century, I have used as an
overall name “Daniels,” due to its usage in the twentieth century and association with the house.
In many places where the registered name does not align with this spelling, I have included a
parenthetical with the name as spelled in the source.
In 1986, Debra Hilbert of the Salem Planning Department recorded the house as dating to
1667, and noted that it was “important as one of about 20 houses in Salem identified as having
First Period origins,” and that “[i]n 1756, the house was expanded to give it its current Georgian
Nydstedt, Mark. “26 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 1993.
MHC MACRIS, SAL.3449, “27-29 Daniels Street-Silsbee, Captain Nathaniel House.”
24
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2625, “34 Daniels Street-Grodski, B. Three Decker”
25
Booth, Robert. “35 Daniels Street” Historic Salem, Inc. 1977.
26
MHC MACRIS, SAL.3451, “37 Daniels Street.”
27
MHC MACRIS, SAL.3452, “39 Daniels Street.”
28
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2624, “40 Daniels Street.”
29
MHC MACRIS, SAL.3459, “45 Daniels Street.”
22
23
�7
configuration.”30 First Period houses, so named because they comprise the first period of
American architecture, date from 1637 to around 1725, when the majority of houses were built
with Georgian elements.
Sidney Perley’s description of the house’s history in 1928 is as follows: “The ancient
Daniels house on the easterly corner of Essex and Daniels streets was built by Stephen Daniel, a
shipwright, about 1693; and he conveyed it to his daughter widow Mary Silsbee March 16 1748.
She lived there for the remainder of her life and the estate then descended to her only surviving
child, Samuel Silsbee, a carpenter. He apparently built on the northern part of the house, as it
now exists, at the time of his marriage in 1756…”31
Several dates are suggested in later historical sources- either 1667 or 1690 in 1906
according to Sidney Perley, 1693 according to Perley in 1928, 1693 around 1934, 1682 in 1938,
1667 in 1950 (both in works by Samuel Chamberlain), 1667 in 1986 and
in 2004, both
according to Bryant K. Tolles. Barring dendrochronology, which could scientifically date the
house to within two years of construction based on the pattern of tree rings, it is impossible to
say for sure when the house was built, except that its architectural features are in line with a
house built in the late 17th century, and that it was likely constructed by the Daniels family
sometime between 1667 and 1693.
Dendrochronological studies of other houses in New England have shown that with the
exception of the earliest house (The Fairbanks House, Dedham, 1637-1641), no house has been
confirmed to predate 1661. The Thomas Riggs House was constructed in Gloucester in 1661 and
numerous houses date to the 1660s and the final three decades of the seventeenth century. The
30
31
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2616, “1 Daniels St.- The Stephen Daniels House.”
Perley (1928), p. 326.
�8
good news is that a date of 1667 is firmly within the realm of plausibility based on the study of
other houses.
The proportions of the original first floor, 36’8.5” deep and 17’5” wide, conform with
larger houses constructed in the period. Abbott Lowell Cummings examined textual evidence for
the “overall dimensions of dwelling houses” in building contracts, timber allowances, deeds, and
similar documents, recording his findings in an appendix of The Framed Houses of
Massachusetts Bay, 1625-1725. Cummings found houses of similar dimensions in Ipswich in
1637 (30-35’x16-18’), Beverly in 1657 (38’ x 17’), Marlborough in 1661 (37’x 18’), Acton in
1668 (40’ x 18’), Dedham in 1669 (40-50’x 18-20’), Dorchester in 1669 (38’ x 20’), Salem in
1678 (35’ x 20’), Cambridge in 1684 (35’ x 18’), and Groton in 1706 (38’ x 18’).
The hall (Room 101) measures 17’9” by 17’7.5”, similar to numerous houses with
proportions of 18’ by 18’ recorded by Cummings. Houses with nearly identical dimensions to the
hall of the Daniels House were built in Ipswich in 1671 and 1673, and as an addition to a
preexisting house in Ipswich in 1659. Houses with similar proportions (within two feet) are
recorded in Cambridge in 1665, Dorchester in 1667, Ipswich in 1670 and 1671, Cambridge in
1678, Dorchester in 1679, Cambridge in 1684, and three times in Charlestown in 1705.
The kitchen (Room 102), which measures 9’9” by 17’7.5”, is smaller than any recorded
in Cummings’ research. The Alexander Knight House, built in 2015 in Ipswich from plans from
1657, measures 16 feet long by 12 feet wide.32 It is unlikely that many houses were much smaller
than this. The kitchen likely never stood as an independent house and was either built
contemporaneously with the hall or was added later.
Fiske, John. “Construction of the 1657 Alexander Knight House” Historic Ipswich.
https://historicipswich.org/construction-of-the-1657-alexander-knight-house/ Electronic. Accessed 4 Jun 2019.
32
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The dimensions of the original construction were similar to those of the Turner Mansion
(The House of the Seven Gables) in 1668. The home that merchant John Turner built consisted
of a hall and kitchen on the first floor with overall dimensions of 37’10.5” by 18’10.75”.33 The
length of the hall was 18’11.5”, making it similar in size to the Daniels House, though slightly
larger, with 45 extra square feet. The kitchen, which was 10’11” long, is comparable. The Turner
Mansion’s kitchen is 34 square feet larger.
The Narbonne House, a more modest structure built in 1675 by the butcher Thomas Ives,
consisted of a single room on the first floor, measuring 18’10.5” by 17’9.5”, with the entrance
hall and chimney being approximately 8’ wide.34 One the other end of the spectrum, the Corwin
House (commonly called the Witch House), has dimensions (after extensive renovation) of 48’4”
by 19’10”. The hall, perhaps the most original part of that house, still measures an enormous
22’2” by 19’10”.
Like many First Period structures in New England, the house faced south. The original
entry was probably located in the southern wall (today room 102B).
The front hallway on the western façade is a charming early entranceway, likely dating to
the eighteenth-century expansion of the house in 1756. Arthur Haskell’s 1934 photographs for
the Historic American Buildings Survey, show the condition of the staircase in that year. The
current banister, stairs, and trim around the stairs can been seen, as well as the original paneling
and door in the wall below the stairs. The banister is painted a darker color, while the paneling is
painted with a cracking white paint.
Finch, Bill and Anne Grady. Historic Structure Report, 2008. Vol. 3.
Historic American Buildings Survey, Creator. Narbonne House, 71 Essex Street, Salem, Essex County, MA.
Documentation Compiled After. Photograph. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, www.loc.gov/item/ma0165/
33
34
�10
The kitchen is perhaps the most impressive for its antiquity and unique architectural
features. The curved cove molding above the fireplace is a rare survival of seventeenth-century
design, as is the grand fireplace in that room.
Original timbers still survive in the parts of the house dating to the seventeenth century,
making the house an important document of Salem construction techniques and styles in that era.
III.
Stephen Daniels, c. 1667-1687
Stephen Daniels I was born in 1632 or 1633 and came to Salem in 1666.35 Perley
identifies him as a master mariner “at the head of a family of shipmasters,” but he is called in
later sources a shipwright. He married Mary Prince on July 26th, 1666 in Salem.36 The couple had
at least four children: Stephen Daniels II, born October 6th, 1667, John, born April 12, 1669, who
died young, Mary, born July 18, 1670, and Sarah, born March 12, 1675/6. Mary died in October
1679, and Stephen married next Susanna (Baxter) Hide, the widow of Isaac Hide, on December
3rd, 1680.37 Stephen I and Susanna had a daughter, Susanna, August 28th, 1686.38
The following document from 1666 is found among the deeds of Essex County:
This bill findeth me Nicholas Daniell of Port Royall in Jamaica, mee, my heires or cause
to be paid unto Capt. George Corwin & company of Salem in New England theire heires
or assigns the full & just sume of six pounds fifteen shillings sterling money of England
to be pd at or before the tenth day of May next ensuing. witnessing hand this 31st of
December 1666.
A note appended to it reads:
Perley, Sidney. A History of Salem Massachusetts, Vol. 3, 1671-1716. Salem: Sidney Perley, 1928. Electronic. pp.
33-34.
36
Vital Records of Salem, Massachusetts to the End of the Year 1849. Salem: The Essex Institute, 1916. Marriages,
p. 276.
37
Vital Records of Salem, Massachusetts to the End of the Year 1849. Salem: The Essex Institute, 1916. Deaths, p.
194.
38
Vital Records of Salem, Massachusetts to the End of the Year 1849. Salem: The Essex Institute, 1916. Births, p.
232.
35
�11
Theodore Price marchant came before me 16: March 66/7. & made his Corporall oath
that he was pr’sent and saw Mary Daniell. signe and deliver this bill, as her act & deed
as attests Wm. Hathorne Assistant in the Massachusetts.39
In June of 1680, Stephen I was one of many members of the Salem community who
signed a petition to the General Court of Massachusetts requesting permission to build a second
meeting house. The effort was led by the Hathornes and the Corwins, with support from
prominent figures such as John Turner, Nathaniel Felton, Sr., Nathaniel Silsbee, Philip English,
and William Hirst.
A counter petition led by the Gedneys and signed by people including John Pickering, Eleazer
Gedney, Timothy Lindall, and Nathaniel Putnam, put an end to discussion of a new meeting
house.40
Stephen Daniels I died aged 54, February 14th, 1686/7.41 On September 29th, 1686,
Edmund Andros, soon-to-be Governor of New England, received a seal for official use featuring
a bishop’s mitre. According to Perley, only two impressions of Andros’ seal survive and the only
perfect impression is on the letter appointing the administrator of Daniels’ estate.42 An
administration of his estate (as “Stephen Daniell”) signed by his widow and son is recorded
March 25th, 1690, among the records of the Essex County Probate Court, but the actual
documents are now missing.43
When Stephen died, Susanna may have married Samuel Gardner in 1690.44 Perley
suggested that Capt. Samuel Gardner, a baker, first married Elizabeth (Browne) Grafton, the
widow of Joseph Grafton, in 1673, then Susanna Daniel in or before 1690. Gardner had six
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Bill 3:5. 16 Mar 1666.
Perley (1928), pp. 154-156.
41
Vital Records (Deaths), p. 194.
42
Perley (1928), pp. 215-216.
43
Essex County Probates, Probate #7157, 1690.
44
Torrey, Clarence Almon. New England Marriages, Prior to 1700. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1985.
Print, p. 203.
39
40
�12
children with his first wife, but none with Susanna.45 Gardner, born in 1648, was the son of Lt.
George Gardner and a grandson of Thomas Gardner, one of the most prominent of the Old
Planters of Salem in the 1620s.46
Mary Daniels was living in 1690 and Susannah Daniels is recorded living and unmarried
in 1719.47
IV.
Stephen Daniels II through Stephen Daniels V, 1693-1805
Stephen Daniels II is called a shipwright by Perley in 1928.48 In 1682, he (listed by
Sidney Perley as “Stephen Daniell”) commanded a fishing trip on the 30-ton ketch Endeavor,
owned by William Hirst. The voyage left Winter Island, which was an area for fish processing
and drying. The contents of their provisions for the journey are recorded by Perley: “They took
two barrels of bait mackerel, two barrels of pork, five bushels of peas, eighty-eight pounds of
butter, one gallon of vinegar, one pound of pepper, a cord of wood, etc.”49 In 1693, Stephen
Daniels II, shipwright, pays £10 for land from Joseph Grafton. The property is described as “a
certain parcel of land containing Twenty five Pole or thereabouts be it more or Less as it is now
bounded as followeth wth the highway north & west wth the land of the Widdowe Marsh relique of
John Marsh, decd. to the south & the land of Thomas Browne to the east and is near adioyning to
the house of the said Joseph Grafton Scituate Lying & being in the town of Salem.”50
Perley (1924), p. 69.
Ibid.
47
Perley (1928), p. 33.
48
Perley (1928), p. 33.
49
Perley, Sidney. A History of Salem, Massachusetts. Vol. 2: 1638-1670. Salem: Sidney Perley, 1926. Electronic. p.
363.
50
Essex County Registry of Deeds, 9:127. 5 Sep. 1693.
45
46
�13
In Salem in the Seventeenth Century, James Duncan Phillips recounts a lawsuit between
Stephen Daniels, master of the ketch Endeavor, and John Ingersoll, shoreman.51
In November 1718, Susanna, the daughter of Stephen Daniels I, being unmarried, sold a 2
½ acre piece of land in the South Fields to the shipwright Samuel Swasey for £30.525354
On January 1st, 1692/3, Stephen Daniels II married Mary Marston, daughter of Deacon
John Marston, a house carpenter.55 Mary Daniels was born January 14th, 1669/70.56 Mary’s
grandfather was John Marston, a carpenter from Ormsby, Norfolkshire who died in 1681.57 Their
children were Stephen Daniels III, born Dec. 9, 1693, Mary, born March 27th, 1696, Susanna,
born May 9, 1698 and died July 31st, a second Susanna, born July 21, 1699, and Sarah, born
October 26th, 1702.58
Stephen Daniels III married Margaret ----- and had six children: Stephen Daniels IV, born
1717, William, born 1719, Margaret, born April 24, 1722, John, born May 27, 1725, Mary, born
in January or February 1728/9, and Sargent, born January 5, 1734.59
On May 4th, 1725, Stephen Daniels III (“Stephen Daniel, Jr.”) purchased a house with
half acre lot of land from Deacon John Marston for £150. The lot was bordered on the south
“with a cove in the mill pond,” on the west with the land of James Ruck, on the north on “the
highway,” and on the east on land formerly of Matthew Woodwell. The property contained a
“dwelling House Barne out Houses fruite Trees & fences.”60 Daniels is identified as a shipwright
in the deed. The house located in Knocker’s Hole, which had the greatest concentration of
Phillips, James Duncan. Salem in the Seventeenth Century. Cambridge: Riverside Press, 1933. Print, p. 283.
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 35:46. 1 Nov 1718.
53
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 35:51. 5 Nov 1718.
54
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 35:52. 6 Nov 1718.
55
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 276.
56
Perley (1926), p. 78.
57
Ibid.
58
Vital Records (Births), p. 232.
59
Vital Records (Births), p. 232.
60
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 51:173. 24 May 1725.
51
52
�14
shipbuilding in Salem in the seventeenth century. The Marston house had been begun by
Obadiah Antrim, a mariner, around 1664. Antrim died at sea the same year. John Marston
purchased the unfinished house in 1667 and completed it.61 In 1728, Richard Palmer sold Daniels
a small adjoining strip of land for 5 shillings.62
Daniels III continued to acquire property. In 1726, he purchased the common rights of
Benjamin Bush from his widow, Mary Bush, for £20.63 In 1733, he purchased for £60 a parcel of
land with a shop or outhouse on the south river adjoining the highway to Marblehead.64 The same
year, Daniels III sold a parcel of land in the South Fields to Samuel Gardner for 30 shillings.65 In
1736, he purchased a common right from Elizabeth Jerman, “spinster,” for £15.66
In 1736, Stephen Daniels III was a member of the Episcopal Society of Salem.67
Daniels III was buried in March of 1741, aged 48.68 April 13th of that year, the magistrate
Thomas Berry granted “Margarett Daniels” administration of his estate.69 Deacon Timothy
Pickering, Samuel Field, and Daniel King served as the appraisers for the probate inventory in
August of that year70.
The probate inventory shows that Daniels III was wealthy with a total estate of
£1,299:17:11. It included some fine furniture including a maple desk worth £5, two looking
glasses worth £17:15:0, six pictures, a scale and weights, a firearm and bayonet, two old swords
and a dagger, a large bible valued at 45s and 25 other books valued at 65s, kitchen implements,
Perley, Sidney. “Salem in 1700, No. 4.” The Essex Antiquarian, Vol. IV. No. 7. July 1900. pp. 97-102. Salem:
Sidney Perley, 1900. Print. p. 100.
62
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 51:173. 4 Jan 1728.
63
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 51:209. 3 Apr 1726.
64
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 62:110. 17 Dec 1733.
65
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 65:185. 15 Jan 1733
66
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 70:175. 30 Apr 1736.
67
Felt, Joseph Barlow. Annals of Salem, from its First Settlement. Salem, W & S.B. Ives, 1827. Electronic. p. 560.
68
Vital Records (Deaths), p. 194.
69
Essex County Probates, Probate #7158, 1741.
70
Ibid.
61
�15
carpentry tools, two wigs, a two silver tankards, a young cow, and a good deal of glassware,
timber, and textiles.71 His personal property added up to £395:12:11.
Much of Daniels III’s estate seems to have been inherited from earlier generations. Of
items whose antiquity is mentioned, there are the “two old swords,” an “Old Fashion desk,” an
old brass kettle, an old skillet “& scimmer,” an old frying pan, an “old jack,” “six old chairs,”
“an old Portmantle,” and two old rugs.72 Stephen Daniels III’s real estate was listed in Table 2.
Table 2: The Real Estate of Stephen Daniels III
Item
Value
A Dwelling House Barn &c with about half an acre of Land
475:10:0
A Wharf & Building Yard with a small Warehouse thereon
67:00:0
About 10 Poles of Land Called the Hill Land with a Small Shop thereon
37:00:0
Three Common Rights at £22 p.
66:00:0
A Bond of £113:15. being what the Administrx received for ye Eighth 133:15:0
Part of ye Schooner Endeavour which she sold
The Half of a Small Scooner Called ye Sea Flower
110:00:0
One Third Part of a Pew in the Meeting House which ye Revd Mr. Fisk 12:00:0
Now Preaches in in Salem
A Pew in ye Church of England in Salem
23:00:0
TOTAL
£904:05:0
71
72
Ibid.
Ibid.
�16
In April of 1742, Stephen Daniels IV and James Ruck set the respective bounds of their
properties near the highway to Marblehead under the observation of Edward Britton and
Alexander Tarrants.73 Ruck was married to Martha Gedney and living in the Gedney House, a
First Period house from 1665 owned today by Historic New England.74
The former Marston house was inherited by William, who owned the lot in 1774, The
house on Daniels Street was apparently split equally between five of Daniels III’s children as
evidenced by the deed of 1765.
William Daniels became a shipwright, mariner, and yeoman, and lived until 1785.75 He
inherited the former Marston house and owned the lot in 1774, but by then the old house was
gone.76 Margaret married Thomas Brewer in 1740. Sergeant married Sarah Fowler, October 19,
1760 and died before 1765.77
Stephen Daniels IV (called Stephen Daniels III in Vital Records) worked as a shipwright
as well. He married Elizabeth Beadle, March 18, 1739/40.78 He worked as a ship carpenter.
Stephen IV next married Sarah Pain, July 21st or 31st, 1762.79 She was the daughter of John Pain
and Abigall Harney, born in 1716.80 They had six children: Elizabeth, Sarah, Ruth, John, Stephen
Daniels V, and Benjamin.81 In 1743, Daniels IV sold a parcel of about an acre in the South Fields
to Jonathan Very, a cordwainer, for £11:5s.82 In 1744, he sold another acre of land in the South
Fields to his brother, William (identified here as a mariner), for £11:2s.83 In 1765, Sarah Daniels,
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deposition 83:137. 3 Apr 1742.
“Architectural Changes,” The Gedney House,” Historic New England. Accessed 21 Jun 2019.
https://www.historicnewengland.org/property/gedney-house/
75
Vital Records (Deaths), p. 194.
76
Perley (1900), p. 100.
77
Perley (1928), p. 33.
78
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 278.
79
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 278.
80
Vital Records (Births), p. 135.
81
Perley (1928), p. 33.
82
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 82:269. 20 Apr 1743.
73
74
�17
the widow of Sargeant, sold his one-fifth share of Stephen Daniels III’s dwelling house for £30
to Stephen IV and William.84 In 1789, Richard Shatswell, a baker, was legally indebted to
Stephen Daniels, either IV or V, for £48:0:8p.85 Stephen IV died at age 88 in early 1805.86 His
widow, Sarah, died aged 92 in October of the same year.87 Stephen Daniels V served as the
executor of his father’s estate, with Judge Samuel Holten presiding.88 Daniels V sold the house
on High Street where the Marston house had been to William Fabens, a mariner, for $642.8990 The
house 17 High Street is a Federal-style house which may have been built by Daniels IV or
Fabens.91
Relatedly, the house currently standing at 22-24 High Street (opposite the parcel
purchased from the Daniels) is thought to have been constructed by Fabens in the Federal
period.92
The real estate of Stephen Daniels IV added up to $2,000, his personal estate to only
$83.75, with an additional $162.40 in house rent. His estate was executed by Capt. Addison
Richardson, Isaac Needham, and John Watson.
John Daniels was a shipwright who married Elizabeth Cook in 1780 and died before
1782.93 Elizabeth married a Pitman, Sarah married Zachariah Burchmore in 1770, and Ruth
married Daniel Bacon in 1775.94 Benjamin Daniels married Mary Stevens in 1781 and died in
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 84:207. 10 Jan 1744.
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 124:173. 29 Oct 1765.
85
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deposition 149:169. 8 Sep 1789.
86
Vital Records (Deaths), p. 194.
87
Ibid.
88
Essex County Probates, Probate #7159, 1806.
89
Ibid.
90
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 193:160. 7 Aug 1806.
91
MHC MACRIS, SAL.1154, “17 High Street”
92
MHC MACRIS, SAL.1145, “22-24 High St.-Fabens, William House.”
93
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 277.
94
Perley (1928), p. 34.
83
84
�18
1794. They had at least three children: John, born around 1786, Eunice, born around 1788, and
William, born around 1790. William moved to Middleton and married Martha Curtis in 1816.
Stephen Daniels V was born in 1757, worked as a shipwright, and married Lydia Palmer,
Dec. 12, 1779. She was born in 1759, the eighth child of Richard Palmer III (1712-1796), a
shoreman and yeoman.95 Their son John, was baptized February 5th, 1786. On October 17th, 1798,
four of their children were baptized on the same day: Sarah, aged 14, Mary, aged 10, Betsy, aged
4, and Stephen Daniels VI, aged 2.96 Lydia died of paralysis in June 1825, aged 65,97 and Stephen
Daniels V died 1832, aged 74.98 Stephen Daniels VI married Abigail Floyd, June 19, 1823.99 He
lived until August 1872.
V.
Mary Daniels Silsbee, 1749-1803
Mary Daniels (the daughter of Stephen Daniels II and Mary Marston) married Nathaniel
Silsbee III in 1730, their intention being published October 24th.100 Nathaniel’s father, Nathaniel
Silsbee II (1677-1769), was the son of Nathaniel Silsbee I (1651-1717/18). Henry Silsbee
(Silsby), the first Silsbee in Salem, died in 1700, and was Nathaniel Silsbee III’s great
grandfather.
Mary and Nathaniel had two children, Samuel, born November 15th, 1731, and Nathaniel,
born December 26th, 1733. Nathaniel died falling off a staging August 4th, 1734.101
Perley (1928), p. 61.
Vital Records (Births), pp. 232-233.
97
Vital Records (Deaths), p. 194.
98
Vital Records (Deaths), p. 194.
99
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 279.
100
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 279.
101
Perley (1926), p. 383.
95
96
�19
In 1736, Mary Silsbee purchased a parcel of land for £30 from Joseph Bradford, a
shopkeeper. The location of the parcel has yet to be determined, as the references to geographical
location are vague. The purchase is described as a:
Certain piece or parcell of Land situate in said Salem with all ye Back leanto of ye Dwelling
House Bounded on ye East on a Lane beginning with ye Bounds of ye Land in ye Possession of
ye said Mary & there measures twenty seven feet & thence more Westerly through between ye
House & leanto & there measures forty Eight feet & one half thence Northerly with Joseph
Searles Line & measures twenty seven feet thence Easterly by said Widow Silsbeys Land &
there measures forty eight feet & a half to ye Lane & Bound first mentioned which piece of
Land Contains about five poles with ye appurtenance & priviledges thereto belonging...102
In March 1748/9, Mary Silsbee paid £400 to Stephen Daniels for the house at 1 Daniels
Street, described as:
One Certain Messuage or Tenement consisting of a Dwelling House Barn & about a Quarter
of an acre of Land situate in Salem aforesaid where I now Dwell Bounded N:erly & Westerly
on Highways S:erly on Land of Thos. Down Easterly partly on Land of Benj.a Stone & partly
on Land of Warwick Palfray together with a Common Right in the Great Pasture in Salem
aforesaid.103
It was in 1742 that the street is first called “Daniels Lane,” being called “Daniels Street” in
1769.104
Mary continued to live in the Daniels House until her death in 1803, when it was inherited by
her only surviving child, Samuel Silsbee. The genealogist James Arthur Emmerton describes her
circumstances in his 1880 work, A Genealogical Account of Henry Silsbee, and Some of His
Descendants:
“Here the widow passed the rest of her life, helping out her narrow income by the profits
of a small shop, and here her descendants dwelt for more than a hundred years.”105
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 93:53. 13 May 1746.
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 93:54. 29 Mar 1748/9.
104
Perley (1906), p. 114.
105
Emmerton, James A. A Genealogical Account of Henry Silsbee and Some of his Descendants. Salem: Essex
Institute, 1880. p. 18.
102
103
�20
VI.
Samuel Silsbee, Sr. 1756-1803
Samuel Silsbee married Martha Prince, 22 January 1756, when he was 24.106 They had
seven children: Nathaniel; Mary; Hannah, born around 1761; Samuel, Jr., born around 1763;
Deborah, born April 19th, 1767; Sarah, who died young; and Sarah, born around 1774.107108
Both Nathaniel and Mary Silsbee died unmarried. Hannah Silsbee married John
MacGregor on November 1st, 1781.109 Deborah Silsbee married Daniel Sage on October 8th,
1786.110 Sage was a Scottish-born merchant and mariner. For a more in depth account of the lives
of Deborah and Daniel Sage and their home next-door at 52 Essex Street, please refer to my
history of that house.111
Silsbee undertook the enlargement and renovation the Daniels House around 1756.
Emmerton notes:
‘Samuel was a carpenter. The accounts of the East Church show his bill for “clabording”
in July, 1766. He probably built the northern part of the house, at the eastern corner of
Daniels and Essex Streets, where he passed his whole life. The wing, although ancient, is
evidently more modern than the rest, and was built, his daughter Sarah said, ‘long before
her time,’”112
Sarah Silsbee first married David Patten, August 14th, 1803. He died November 1st,
1805. Second, Sarah married Haffield White Reed on January 28th, 1808.113
Perley (1926), p. 384.
Ibid.
108
Vital Records (Births), p. 287.
109
Perley (1926), p. 384.
110
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 283.
111
Moffat, David. “52 Essex Street,” Historic Salem, Inc., 2019.
112
Emmerton (1880), p. 20.
113
Perley (1926), p. 384.
106
107
�21
Samuel Silsbee, Jr. also a carpenter, married Rebecca Read of Danvers, on October 1st,
1786.114 Rebecca Read Silsbee died July 9th, 1857, aged 94.115 Emmerton describes Samuel, Jr.
living a life more appropriate to an earlier time:
“Samuel Silsbee, carpenter and farmer, may be said to have brought down to our age
the life of the early settlers. He not only eked out the returns of his trade in town by the
cultivation of his outlying acres ‘in the fields,’ but, sometimes at least, resorted to watercommunication, and, with less reason than in the olden time when every household had
its ‘water-carriage,’ went from house to farm by boat.”116
Emmerton notes further that the lands of the Silsbees in the North Fields had been held
in common by the family from 1684 until 1803 with the death of Martha Silsbee, Samuel, Jr’s
mother.
Samuel and Rebecca had eight children: Martha, born March 22nd, 1787; Mary, born
May 10th, 1789, died aged 5, June 25, 1794; Rebecca, born March 13th, 1791; Nathaniel, born
December 29th, 1793; Mary, born May 22nd, died March 4th, 1797; Samuel III, born May 27th,
1798; John, born July 13th, 1800; Sarah, born December 2nd, 1802.
Martha Silsbee married first David Beadle, a mariner, on January 5th, 1806. Beadle was
the son of Josiah Beadle, a mariner who died in 1775, and the grandson of John Beadle, a
mariner who died before 1764. David Beadle died in the West Indies in July 1811. They had two
sons, David, born 1807, and Josiah, born 1809. David was lost overboard from the ship Two
Brothers in 1828. Josiah died in 1842.117
Perley (1926), p. 384.
Perley (1926), p. 384.
116
Emmerton (1880), p. 30.
117
Perley (1926), p. 387.
114
115
�22
Rebecca Silsbee married John Peck on July 14th, 1811. Nathaniel Silsbee drowned at
sea while sailing on the brig Mary and Eliza, September 14th, 1816. Samuel Silsbee III married
Mary Sullivan and they had a daughter. John Silsbee died age 15 on September 28th, 1815. Sarah
Silsbee married Thomas R. Peck of Boston on June 10th, 1821.118119
According to James Duncan Phillips in the 1930s, the property belonged to the heirs of
Samuel Silsbee in 1780, while the lot directly to the east was occupied by the heirs of Benjamin
Stone. To the east of that, past a short lane, was Bentley’s East Meeting House. To the south was
the land of the heirs of Warwick Palfrey.120
Samuel Silsbee is listed as a carpenter and a member of Rev. Bentley’s East Church in
1785.121 The same year, Silsbee served as “Proprietor of the Treasurer’s Books” for the
congregation.122 Samuel’s wife, Martha, was also a member of the church.123 The Silsbees appear
to have been devout. On May 10, 1789, Bentley records the first of many Sunday prayers
requested by the family, “Samuel Silsbee & Wife for her delivery & Brethren at Sea.”124
In the 1790 Census, Samuel Silsbee, Jr. is identified as a carpenter.125 In 1792, Samuel, Sr., a
carpenter and farmer, Samuel, Jr., a carpenter, and Daniel Sage, a mariner, are listed among
Bentley’s congregation.126 December 29th, 1793, Samuel and Martha prayed again for “her
delivery & Brethren at Sea.”127
Perley (1926), p. 384.
Vital Records (Marriages), p. 308.
120
Phillips (1937), supplemental map, “Map of Salem, About 1780.”
121
Bentley, William. The Diary of William Bentley, D.D. Vol. 1: April 1784-December 1792. Salem: The Essex
Institute, 1905. Print, p. 14.
122
Ibid., p. 50.
123
Ibid., p. 97.
124
Ibid., p. 122.
125
Bentley, William. The Diary of William Bentley, D.D. Vol. 1: April 1784-December 1792. Salem: The Essex
Institute, 1905. Print, p. 227.
126
Bentley, William. The Diary of William Bentley, D.D. Vol. 1: April 1784-December 1792. Salem: The Essex
Institute, 1905. Print, p. 337.
127
Bentley, William. The Diary of William Bentley, D.D. Vol. 2: December 1793-December 1802. Salem: The Essex
Institute, 1905. Print, p. 78.
118
119
�23
Samuel Silsbee, Sr. died aged 73 on December 4th, 1803 of pleuritic fever.128 The probate of
Silsbee (called Silsby) was executed by Capt. Benjamin Ward, Mr. John Watson, and Captain
Gamaliel Hodges, and presided over by Samuel Holten. The heirs of Silsbee were Samuel
Silsbee, Jr., housewright, Benjamin Ward, housewright, and Daniel Sage, mariner.129
The house at 1 Daniels Street is described as “A mansion house with the out houses & the
land under & adjoining situated on Essex & Daniels Street” and was worth an impressive $4,500.
Silsbee also owned “a lot of Land containing about eleven acres situated in the Northfields so
called,” worth $1,650. Lastly, among his real estate was 1/3 of a pew in the East Meeting Housenumber three- $35. Silsbee’s son-in-law Daniel Sage also owned part of pew number three.130 His
real estate came to $931.51.131
Table 3: Samuel Silsbee’s Personal Estate
Items
Total
One Desk $8 One Walnut do $2
$10
One Stone Table $1.50 Glass Ware $1.50
$3
Four ordinary Tables $2
$2
Two Candlestands $1.25 Eleven Chairs $6
$7.25
Two Looking glasses $4 Glass Ware $1.50
$4
Crockery Ware $1 Knives and Forks 30 cts.
$1.30
Three pr Andirons Shovels & Tongs
$3
Plate 12.10 at 110 cts. per ounce
$13.75
Iron Ware belonging to the Kitchen
$5
Vital Records of Salem, Massachusetts to the End of the Year 1849. Salem: The Essex Institute, 1916. Deaths, p
225
129
Essex County Probates, Probate #25318, 1803.
130
Essex County Probates, Probate #24516, 1836.
131
Essex County Probates, Probate #25318, 1804.
128
�24
Pewter 50 at 12.5
$6.25
Tin Ware 2 Three Brass Kettles weighing 49[7?] at 20 cts. $11.90
$11.90 [sic]
Two Bibles $3 Several other Books $1.50
$4.50
Four brass Candlesticks $1
$1
Two do Skillets & a Fish Knife $2.50
$2.50
Thirteen Chairs $1.50
$1.50
Carpenters Tools $15 Farmers Do $32.25
$47.25
Three Cows $45 One Horse $20
$65
Cart and Tackling $30 Grind Stone $2
$32
Subtotal $221.20
Seven Beds No 1 w”te 53 at 25 Cts. $13.25
$13.25
No2 w”te 52 at 20 Cts. $10.40 No3 w”te 52 at 30 Cts. $15.60
$26
No4 w”te 54 at 30 Cts. $16.20 N 5 w”te 39 at 25 Cts. $9.75
$25.95
No6 w”te 54 at 30 Cts. $16.20 No7 w”te 52 at 35 Cts. $18.20
$34.40
Seven common Bedsteds and under Beds
$7
Five Rugs & Ten Blankets $10
$10
Three Quilts $3 Forty pr of Sheets $40
$43
Three pieces of India Cotton
$6
Sixteen pr Pillow Cases & Four pr do $5
$5
Eight [ ] Table Cloth $3
$3
One [decr] Towel $1 Apparel $20
$21
Remnant of [Hoster] Cloth $6 Do of Reed $4
$10
Sundry articles in the Store Chamber
$20
�25
Five Chests with Drawers
$7.50
Two sets of Curtains & Valances
$6
Subtotal $238.10
-
$459.30
One Loan Office Certificate
$171.70
Do -- do -- do -- Do
$85.85
Do-- do -- do -- do
$80.33
Do -- do -- Do -- do
$40.16
278.04 @ 6 p. Cent $361.02
One do -- do -- do $60.25 $60.25 at 3 p. Cent
$34.64
State Note $37.49 $37.49 at 5 p. Cent
$36.55
$432.21
In Bank Bills
$90
Total $981.51
Firstly, the probate inventory of Samuel Silsbee, Sr. shows us that there were rooms
identified as the kitchen, store, and store chamber. Furthermore, there were seven beds of six
different values, all with bedsteads and underbeds, but only two with curtains and valances.
There may have been five bedrooms, as there are five rugs and five chests of drawers listed.
Indicating Silsbee’s means of subsistence, there are carpenter’s tools, farming implements,
three cows, a horse, and equipment for carting goods. Over half the value of the probate is in
financial instruments such as bank bills and loan office certificates.
�26
On April 17th, 1805, Martha Silsbee wrote a warrant allowing Silsbee’s heirs to divide the
estate. She wrote:
Be it known by these presents, That whereas the heirs of my late husband deceas’d, has
expressed their wish for a devision of the above deceas’d’s Real Estate, I do hereby give
my consent the said estate may be devided among them in such a manner as they may
agree on witness my hand
Martha Silsbee
The final total of Silsbee’s estate came to $1113.51, factoring in real estate ($6,185),
personal estate ($931.51), interest on state securities ($62), house rent ($61), and the sale of
some barley ($9). Expenses came to $685.43.5, enumerated below in Table 4.
Table 4: The Expenses of Samuel Silsbee’s Estate
Item
Total
A Bill from E.N. Holyoke
$59.40
A not from Ebenezer Puttman
$61.70
A bill from benjamin millet
$0.51
A bill from [ mess] Leffavor
$7.35
Probet [fees]
$3.35
The aprizers bill
$7.00
James Purkins bill
$00.45
John Punchard tax bill – 1804-
$14.28
Joseph Wards bill
$5.61
Cash paid to Timothy Diman for the hyer of a [pess] of [tand] in the $10.00
North field
[Jane] Kiney bill
$5.50
�27
Wm Carleton advertisement
$1.50
Agreabell to Samuel Silsbee bill
101.45
Joseph Page bill
$14.00
Phillip English bill
$8.12
Capt Benj. Ward’s bill
$4
Agreeabell to Cpt Daniel Sage bill
$23.14
John Watson bill
$17.33
James Parkins bills
$5.03
Dunklen & Parkins bill
$1.47
[Jere] Richardson Bill
$8.50
John Duntten bill
$5.87
George W. Felt bill
$1.25
Tax bill from Jonathan Archer
$9.37
To [Ahorn] & Shay to Boston
$2.50
To a hors to Ipswich
$1.50
To my expenses to Boston & Ipswich
$3.00
Total $383.68 ½
Additional money expended by the estate consisted of $100 paid to the administrator, $200 to
Martha “for Necessary furniture,” $1.25 for the probate, and $0.50 for a copy.
VII.
Silsbee’s Heirs, 1803-1860
�28
Samuel Silsbee’s widow, Martha Prince Silsbee, lived in the house until her death on
September 15th, 1817.
1820 map surveyed by Jonathan P. Saunders shows two wharves at the end of Daniels
Street and the East Church at the corner of Essex and Hardy Streets.132
When Samuel, Sr. died in 1803, the house was inherited by three of his children: Samuel,
Jr., Sarah Patten, and Deborah Sage. In 1818, the house was divided between Samuel, Jr. and his
sister Sarah, now Sarah Reed. Sarah got the northern side and Samuel got the southern side.
. Samuel Silsbee, Jr. died June 7th, 1822.133 September 9th, the subscribers of his estate
appeared before Judge Daniel A. White. They were, Samuel Silsbee III, and Silsbee’s three sonsin-law, Asa Hood, John M. Peck, and Thomas R. Peck.
In a will dated March 16th, 1821, Silsbee identifies himself in his will as a housewright.
He leaves to his wife and heirs the “western half of a house at the corner of Essex and Daniel
Streets,” that half “now occupied by Philip Manning and Mr. Savary.” Silsbee also leaves a
garden, some outbuildings, and four acres of land on Liberal Street in North Salem. The
remainder of his estate was bequeathed to his children, “Martha Hood, Becky Peck, Samuel
Silsbee, and Sarah Silsbee.” Martha and Asa Hood are to “bring into Hotch-pot with the other
children” $150 which they took as an advance while Silsbee was still alive.
On October 1st, 1822, Rebecca was the principal of a guarantee against the probate of six
thousand dollars, with Joseph Beadle, merchant, and Thomas Barker, shipwright, as sureties.134
The 1842 directory lists Mrs. Sarah Reed, Mrs. Elizabeth Ropes, John Sage, mariner as
residents of the house.135 Mrs. Rebecca Silsbee is listed at 3 Daniels Street in 1842 and 1846.136137
Saunders, Jonathan P. “Plan of the Town of Salem in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.” Boston: Annin &
Smith, 1820. Electronic. https://bostonraremaps.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/BRM2920-Saunders-Salem1820_lowres-3000x1999.jpg
133
Perley (1926), p. 384.
134
Essex County Probate Records, Probate 25319, 1822.
132
�29
The 1846 directory lists Stephen B. Dow, a mariner, Mrs. Sarah Read, and John Sage.138
Dow does not appear in the 1842 or 1850 directories. Mrs. Elizabeth Ropes is listed at 117 Essex
Street in 1846139 and 7 Becket Street in 1850.140 In 1850, 3 Daniels was occupied by Mrs. Frances
Peters and Mrs. Rebecca Silsbee,
141
while 1 Daniels was lived in by John Sage and Mrs. Sarah
Read.142
An 1851 map of Salem by Henry McIntyre shows the house as belonging to Mrs.
Silsbee.143 The directory of that year lists Mrs. Sarah Read and John Sage at 1 Daniels144 and only
Rebecca Silsbee at 3 Daniels145 The arrangement remains the same in 1853 and 1855.146147
Rebecca Silsbee died July 9th 1857 and on August 17th, her heirs conveyed the property
to John W. Russell.
Sarah Reed died September 2nd, 1860 and Elizabeth Hodges, the wife of Joseph Hodges,
was given her half on November 21st.
VIII. The Hodges and the Russells, 1860-1883
The antiquarian nature of the Daniels house went largely unremarked upon in the late
nineteenth century. The house and its builder are not mentioned in Charles Henry Webber and
1842 Salem Directory, pp. 74, 76, 78,
1842 Salem Directory, p. 81.
137
1846 Salem Directory, p. 104.
138
1846 Salem Directory, pp. 37, 96, 101
139
Ibid, pp. 98.
140
1850 Salem Directory, p. 121.
141
1850 Salem Directory, pp. 111, 127.
142
Ibid, pp. 118, 123.
143
McIntyre, Henry. “Map of the City of Salem, Mass. From an actual survey By H. Mc. Intyre. Cl. Engr.” Map,
1851. Henry McIntyre, Salem, MA. Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library.
https://collections.leventhalmap.org/search/commonwealth:9g54xk154
144
1851 Salem Directory, pp. 127, 132.
145
1851 Salem Directory, p. 135.
146
1853 Salem Directory, pp. 129, 134, 138.
147
1855 Salem Directory, pp. 136, 141, 146.
135
136
�30
Winfield S. Nevin’s Old Naumkeag in 1877, Charles S. Osgood and Henry Morrill Batchelder’s
Historical Sketch of Salem, 1626-1879, published by the Essex Institute in 1879, nor the Visitor’s
Guide to Salem, 1880.
In 1869, 1 Daniels Street was home to William P. Edwards, a mariner, and Martha P.
Edwards, while Jeremiah Lyons, a gardener, lived at 3 Daniels with Timothy Lyons, a paper
hanger, as a boarder.148 The same is true of 1872, though only Martha is still at 1 Daniels.149
The Atlas of the City of Salem in 1874 shows the property divided, with the northerly half
belonging to Hodges and the southerly half belonging to John W. Russell.150 John Russell died
May 10, 1875, conveying his part of the house to his daughters, Rebecca Burger and Sarah R.
Dexter.
When Elizabeth Hodges died May 2, 1883, the house was inherited by her children,
Margaret C. Hanson, Sarah E. Hodges, Gamaliel Hodges, and the grandchildren of her
predeceased daughter, Elizabeth M. Jelly: Clara H. Jelly, William M. Jelly, and Marion H.
Jelly.151
On October 8, 1883, Hodges’ heirs conveyed it to the widow Sarah S. Russell for a total
of $1,100. Russell died March 29, 1886. The southern part of house passed to her daughters,
Rebecca S. Burger and Sarah R. Dexter, who owned the entire house after 1886.
IX.
The Burgers and Sarah Dexter, 1886-1932
In the late 1870s and early 1880s, Maria N. Parker, the widow of Henry, operated a
children’s care facility in the southern side of the house, described alternately as a “children’s
1869 Salem Directory, pp. 70, 113.
1872 Salem Directory, pp. 80, 128.
150
Busch, Edward. Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts. From actual Survey & Official records. G.M. Hopkins
& Co. Philadelphia, 1874.
151
Perley (1928), p. 326.
148
149
�31
boarding house” and a “day nursery.”152153154155 From at least 1878 until 1881, George T. Francis, a
laborer and then fisherman, also lived on the southern side.156 Lucy Tucker, the widow of
Ebenezer, lived in the south side as well in 1882-3.157 The northern side appears vacant from
1878 until 1884.158
In 1886 directory lists as residents Mrs. Margaret Maloney, a housekeeper, Mrs. Alice
Stanwood, a dressmaker, and Stephen Burger, a dry goods merchant at William G. Webber &
Co. at 240 Essex Street and the future owner of 1 Daniels Street.159 In 1886, there were 16 dry
goods stores in Salem, 11 of them located on Essex Street.160 In the same year there were 96
dressmakers, all of them women and 45 of them unmarried.161
An alternative directory lists Stephen Burger (or Burgess), as clerk at Almy, Bigelow,
and Webber, a dry good stores at 188 Essex Street living on the northern side of the house in
1884 and 1886.162 Reuben S. Hoyt boards at 3 Daniels Street with Alvin Hoyt, both carpenters.163
Beginning around 1890, Ruth Wymond began a boarding house on the southern side of
the residence. 164 This lasted until around 1898.165 In 1890-91, Charles Wymond, a hairdresser,
and George Wymond, a morocco dresser, were boarding with Ruth.166 The same year Alina
Sanborn, widow of Washington T., and a nurse, and Margaret Tuepken, widow of Dirk, lived on
the northern side.167
Salem Directory, 1878. Print.
Salem Directory, 1881. Print, p. 172.
154
Salem Directory, 1882-83. Print, p. 190.
155
Salem Directory, 1884. Print, p. 268.
156
Salem Directory, 1881. Print, p. 84.
157
Salem Directory, 1882-3. Print, p. 223.
158
Salem Directory, 1882-3. Print, p. 52.
159
Salem Directory, 1886, pp. 113, 248, 334.
160
1886 Directory, p. 392.
161
1886 Directory, p. 392.
162
Salem Directory, 1886. Print, p. 36.
163
Salem Directory, 1886. Print, p. 213.
164
Salem Directory, 1890-1891. Print, p. 334.
165
Salem Directory, 1897-98. Print, p. 354.
166
Salem Directory, 1890-1. Print, p. 334.
152
153
�32
From 1890-91 to 1893-4, Dolly Watts, widow of Charles lived on the northern side.168 In
1893-4, Alice C. Hancock, widow of John E., lived in the northern side with Jesse E. Hancock, a
shoe cutter. 169
Mary Walsh, the widow of William, lived on the northern side from roughly 1893 to
1896 with her daughter, Anna T., a student.170 She may also be the Mary Welch listed in the
1890-1 directory in the same apartment.
The 1895-1896 Directory of Salem shows Melvin Kenney C. Kenney, a laster, living in
the northern side as well.171
In the 1897 Atlas of Salem, the property is still demarcated as if it were divided but the
entire house belongs to the J.W. Russell heirs.172
From 1897 to 1903, Sarah B. Brown, widow of Smith, lived on the northern side of the
house.173 In 1897, William T. Webb, lived on the southern side. He remained there until his
death, circa 1901,174 and his widow, Elizabeth E. Webb, continued to live in the house until
1903.175
James G. Beals, a laborer, lived on the northern side in 1901-2,176 and Mary E. Dominick, a
shoe worker, lived on the south side in the same year.177 In 1900, the south side was vacant and
Thomas H. McGrath, a printer who worked at 213 Essex Street, lived on the north side with
Brown and the Webbs.178
Salem Directory, 1890-1. Print, pp. 301, 317.
Salem Directory, 1893-4. Print, p. 102.
169
Salem Directory, 1893-4. Print, p. 102.
170
Salem Directory, 1893-4. Print, p. 102.
171
Salem Directory, 1895-6. Print, p. 252.
172
1897 Atlas of Salem.
173
Salem Directory, 1903-4. Print, p. 194.
174
Salem Directory, 1900-1901. Print, p. 114.
175
Salem Directory, 1903-4. Print, p. 381.
176
Salem Directory, 1901-2. Print, p. 174.
177
Salem Directory, 1901-2. Print, p. 215.
167
168
�33
The 1903 Atlas of Salem shows the property as having a three-story main section, a north ell
2 stories tall, and a south ell with 2 sections, each 2 stories tall.179 The directory of 1903-4 lists on
the northern side: Sarah B. Brown, Joseph L. Gage, a signal repairer for the B&M Railroad, and
Elizabeth E. Webb.180 The same year, Etta J. Hamilton lived on the southern side.181
In 1906, Sidney Perley recorded the history of the house through deeds as part of his series
on the houses of Salem in 1700 in his journal, the Essex Antiquarian.182
In spite of Perley’s recognition of the house’s age, it was as little remarked upon in the early
twentieth century as it had been in the nineteenth. It does not appear on a 1905 map of Salem
landmarks, in Mary Harrod Northend’s Historic Homes of New England in 1914, in Selected
Interiors of the Old Houses in Salem and the Vicinity, published by Rogers and Manson in 1916,
nor in the Essex Institute Guide to Salem in 1922. Warren H. Butler’s whimsical 1930 map of
Salem Harbor in another time elides Daniels Street altogether and highlights the Zechariah White
house, pre-1700, at the southeastern corner of Hardy and Essex Street.183
On December 4th, 1904, Stephen Burger, his wife Rebecca S. Burger, and Sarah R. Dexter
mortgaged the property for $900 with the Salem Five Cents Savings Bank.184 The Burgers rented
the property to boarders, with each half of the house apparently subdivided farther into two
apartments. In 1903, the north side of the house (numbered 1 Daniels Street) was vacant, while
the south side was home to Mrs. Mary Condon, widow of John, and Joseph F. Walker, a
laborer.185 Walker lived in the house until 1908.186
Salem Directory, 1900-1. Print, pp. 118, 279.
1903 Atlas.
180
Salem Directory, 1903-4. Print, p. 114.
181
Salem Directory, 1903-4. Print, p. 256.
182
Perley, Sidney. “Salem in 1700. No. 24.” Essex Antiquarian, Vol. 10, No. 3 (July 1906). pp. 114-130. Salem:
Sidney Perley, 1906
183
Butler, Warren H. “The Port of Salem” Salem: Tudor Press, 1930.
184
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1766:226. 21 Dec 1904.
185
Salem Directory, 1904. Print, pp. 110, 219.
178
179
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In addition to Walker, the south side of the house was home to Sarah H. Finn, the widow of
John, in 1905,187 John F. Finn, perhaps back from the dead, from 1906 until 1910.188189
From 1905 to 1910, Olive J. Riley, the widow of Edmund F., lived on the north side.190191
James Lavoie, a carpenter, is there as well in 1908,192 and Ellen M. Lewis, the widow of John, in
1910.193
The 1911 Atlas still shows the property as belonging to the heirs of “John S. Russell.”194 The
1911 directory lists as residents Mary E. Jennings, the widow of John, and Arthur W. Burnham,
a shoe worker, both on the north side, and Edward J. Finn, who worked in Beverly, on the south
side.195 In 1912, Jennings, Burnham, and Finn remained, while Eddie G. Rondeau, a machinist
moved into the south side as well.196
Alexander W. MacNeill, a last maker, and his wife, Etta M. lived at 1 Daniels Street from
1913 until 1916. In the same span, other tenants shared the north side of the house with the
MacNeills: Newell B. Ordway, a lineman, in 1913,197 and Albert Marcoux, no profession listed,
in 1915. 198 In 1916, the north side was occupied by the MacNeills along with Esther B. Upton, a
widow of John. 199
The south side was occupied by David M. Haines, a carpenter, in 1913 and 1914,200 and
Charles W. Marchand, a carpenter, from 1914 to 1916.201202 Marchand died July 15, 1916.203
Salem Directory, 1908. Print, p. 362.
Salem Directory, 1905. Print, p. 265.
188
Salem Directory, 1906. Print, p. 90.
189
Salem Directory, 1910. Print, p. 249.
190
Salem Directory, 1905. Print, p. 116.
191
Salem Directory, 1910. Print, p. 359.
192
Salem Directory, 1908. Print, p. 266.
193
Salem Directory, 1910. Print, p. 302.
194
1911 Atlas.
195
Salem Directory, 1911. Print, p. 102.
196
Salem Directory, 1912. Print, p. 380.
197
Salem Directory, 1913. Print, p. 371.
198
Salem Directory, 1915. Print, p. 322.
199
Salem Directory, 1916. Print, p. 334.
200
Salem Directory, 1914. Print, p. 298.
186
187
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Abner C. Leland and then, Harry J. Leland, both shoemakers, lived on the south side in 1915 and
1916 successively.204205
In 1917, 1 Daniels Street was lived in by Charles H. Whipple, a worker at Central Wharf
on Derby Street.206 3 Daniels Street was the home to Frederick A. Brewer, a chauffeur, and his
wife, Caroline W. The following year, 3 Daniels was occupied by James J. Castin, a leather
worker.207 In 1920, George L. Beals, a lather, boarded at 1 Daniels along with Whipple.208
John R. Beals, also a lather, replaces George in 1921.209 In 1922, Sarah A. Hood lives at
number 3.210 In 1924, the north side of the house was occupied by John R. Beals and his wife,
Annie, and C.H. Whipple. Whipple had become a clerk at Commerical House at 173 Washington
Street. The south side was lived in by Margaret Wilson and Julia F. Rust, a saleswoman.211
In 1926, 1 Daniels Street was lived in by Annie Beals, now a widow, Charles H. and
Florence J. Whipple, and 3 Daniels Street was lived in by Margaret E. Wilson.212 By this time,
Charles Whipple had become an employee of the B&M Railroad. 213
In 1929, 1 Daniels Street was occupied by William Symonds, a laborer, and his wife,
Catherine.214
In September of 1932, the bank foreclosed on the house.215 Perhaps this was related to the
Great Depression, as 273,000 mortgages were foreclosed nationwide in 1932.216
Salem Directory, 1914. Print, p. 114.
Salem Directory, 1915. Print, p. 322.
203
Salem Directory, 1916. Print, p. 346.
204
Salem Directory, 1915. Print, p. 322.
205
Salem Directory, 1916. Print, p. 98.
206
Salem Directory, 1917. Print, p. 200.
207
Salem Directory, 1918. Print, p. 224.
208
Salem Directory, 1920. Print, p. 176.
209
Salem Directory, 1921. Print, p. 214.
210
Salem Directory, 1922. Print, p. 315.
211
Salem Directory, 1924. Print, pp. 193, 213, 495.
212
Salem Directory, 1926. Print, pp. 62, 216, 524, 528.
213
Salem Directory, 1926. Print, p. 524.
214
Salem Directory, 1929. Print, p. 441.
215
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 2927:221. 10 Sep 1932.
201
202
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In the early twentieth century, Daniels Street became a center for the community of
Polish immigrants in Salem. 9 Daniels Street, today the home of the Polish League of American
Veterans, became the home of the St. Joseph’s Society in 1928.217 In the 1935 poll listing, almost
every single person living on Daniels Street has a Polish last name. Of the residents, 61 were
housekeepers, 52 were shoe or leather workers, and 11 were “mill operatives.”218 For example,
the house at 5 Daniels Street was lived in by two Polish families, the Bachtas (Joseph, who
worked in a bleachery, and Victoria, a housekeeper) and the Kotulaks (Bronislaw, a
housekeeper; Bruce, a clerk; Stasia, a shoe worker; Walter, a clerk, and Wojciech, a mill
operative).219 Bruce and Walter Kotulak lived there until the early 1980s.220
X.
Marietta B. Wilkins and Vacancy, 1933-1945
Marietta B. Wilkins purchased the property from Salem Five Cents Saving Bank in
February of 1933.221 Marietta had lived at 52 Essex Street in the home of Daniel Sage since 1902.
Her husband, S. Herbert Wilkins, was an owner of Briggs & Wilkins, “proprietors of dry and
fancy goods” at 221 Essex Street.222 Wilkins served as the president of the Women’s National
Missionary Association within the Universalist Church and as the editor of the Association’s
periodical, “The Women’s Missionary Bulletin.”223224 The Missionary Associated was founded in
“Housing 1929-1941,” Encyclopedia.com. https://www.encyclopedia.com/education/news-and-educationmagazines/housing-1929-1941
217
Stanton, Cathy and Jane Becker. In the Heart of Polish Salem: An Ethnohistorical Study of St. Joseph Hall and Its
Neighborhood. Boston: Northeast Regional Ethnography Program, National Park Service, 2009. Print. p. 146.
218
Annual Listing for the City of Salem, 1935. Print.
219
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1935. Print.
220
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1982.
221
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 2945:352. 8 Feb 1933.
222
Salem Directory, 1904. Print. pp. 116, 394.
223
Foreign Missions Year Book of North America 1920 (Covering the Year 1919). Ed. Roderick Beach. New York:
Foreign Missions Conference of North America, Inc., 1920. Electronic, p. 213.
224
Year Book of Churches Covering the Year 1921-22. Ed. E.O. Watson. Washington, D.C.: Hayworth Publishing,
1922. Electronic. p. 240.
216
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1886 to “enlist the women of the Universalist Church in Massachusetts, in missionary work, in
the distribution of religious literature, in aiding deserving persons to obtain an education; and to
assist in such religious charities as the Society may find to be useful and expedient.”225 Marietta
was the first woman to attend the Northfield Conference, an ecumenical gathering of bible study
and lectures organized by the Young Men’s Christian Association beginning in the 1880s.226
Starting in 1916, Marietta Wilkins hosted Tei San Yasamura, a Japanese student from the
Blackmer Universalist Home in Tokyo, in her home (presumably 52 Essex Street). Yasamura
graduated from the New England Conservatory in 1920.227228
Wilkins also made contributions to historical preservation. In 1921, as president of the
Women’s National Missionary Association, she acquired the birthplace of Clara Barton in
Oxford, Massachusetts. The property was transformed into a museum, described by a
contemporary account as “a memorial home to be used as a resort for visitors.” Wilkins worked
to collect “mementos” relating to Barton and her work for the museum’s collection.229 The
museum is still operated by the Universalist Church today.230
In January and February 1922, Marietta organized an exhibit at the Art Institute of
Chicago of “costumes, shawls, bonnets, and other heirlooms of the colonial period, borrowed
from the leading families of Salem.” The Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago noted “The
objects, selected for their aesthetic rather than their historical value, will no doubt stimulate
greater interest in American costume in Chicago.”231
The Universalist Register for 1907, No. LXXII. Ed. Anson Titus. Boston: Universalist Publishing House, 1907.
Electronic, p. 24.
226
A Brief History of the Work of Universalist Women. Electronic, p. 19. http://www.uuwf.org/wpcontent/uploads/A-Brief-History-of-the-Work-of-Universalist-Women-1993-ed-web.pdf
227
Ibid, p. 21.
228
Ibid, p. 35.
229
“Clara Barton Memorial,” Biddeford Daily Journal, Monday March 14, 1921. Page 6. Electronic.
230
“Museum History and Property Ownership,” Clara Barton Birthplace Museum. Electronic. Accessed 10 Jun 2019.
http://www.clarabartonbirthplace.org/about-the-museum/history/
225
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The 1938 Salem Atlas shows no fundamental changes to the house’s structure from how
it appeared in 1903.232 The Daniels House is listed as vacant in the polls listings from 1935 until
1946, and in the directories from 1930 until 1949.233234235236237 Longtime Salem resident Henry R.
Theriault (1918-2006), told stories about visiting the house when it was vacant, saying that the
door was unlocked and Salem children would just let themselves in to play.238
In the period it was vacant, the Daniels House started to accumulate more antiquarian
interest. Sidney Perley noted its history in the third volume of his History of Salem,
Massachusetts in 1928.239 The historian James Duncan Phillips mentions the house in his 1933
book Salem in the Seventeenth Century.240
In 1934, Arthur C. Haskell photographed the house for the Historic American Buildings
Survey (HABS). The HABS preserved 12 photographs by Haskell, three exterior and nine
interior, as well as measured drawings of the floorplan and some of the decorative elements.241
The first exterior view, taken of the façade from the southwest, shows the vacant house in
some distress. The clapboards are worn, many of the window panes appear to be dirty, a sign
reading “TRESPASSING FORBIDDEN” is attached to the southwest corner of the house, and a
low stake fence runs around the property with no opening, connecting directly to the end of
number 5 Daniels Street. Another view, from the northwest, reveals a plaque on the side of the
“February Exhibitions” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago, Vol. XVI, No. 1. Electronic, p. 27.
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101082992056&view=1up&seq=33
232
1938 Salem Atlas.
233
Salem Directory, 1930. Print, p. 73.
234
Salem Directory, 1931. Print, p. 354.
235
Salem Directory, 1933-34. Print, p. 436.
236
Salem Directory, 1935. Print, p. 442.
237
Salem Directory, 1949. Print, p. 321.
238
Personal Conversation with Everett Philbrook, 11 June 2019.
239
Perley (1928), p. 325.
240
Phillips, James Duncan. Salem in the Seventeenth Century. Cambridge: Riverside Press, 1933. Print, p. 32.
241
Historic American Buildings Survey, Creator. Stephen Daniel House, Daniels & Essex Streets, Salem, Essex
County, MA. Documentation Compiled After. Photograph. Retrieved from the Library of Congress,
www.loc.gov/item/ma0689/.
231
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house identifying it as the Stephen Daniel House, built 1693. The final exterior photograph
shows the back of the house from the northeast, revealing the shorter north ell before it was
expanded. The second floor of the north ell’s rear has two windows clustered against the north
side of the house, with a single window on the north side of the first floor.
In 1938, the northwestern-most corner of the Daniels House appears in a photograph by
Samuel Chamberlain in his book Historic Salem in Four Seasons: A Camera Impression. The
clapboarding and window framing appear in rough shape. Chamberlain calls the house “a veteran
of 1682.”242 In 1939, the parlor fireplace was featured in a White Pine Monograph by Frank
Chouteau Brown.243 Brown highlights the label molding and lack of mantel shelf.
XI.
The Hallers, 1945-1962
In August 1945, Theodore Perry Haller of Oregon City, Oregon, purchased the Daniels
House from Wilkins for “consideration paid.”244 The Hallers had previously lived in Astoria,
Oregon.245 Theodore was born in Blair, Nebraska to Theodore Haller (1842-1908) and Grace E.
Morgan Haller (1848-1932). Theodore’s grandfather, Jacob Haller (1809-1894) was born in
Switzerland and immigrated to East Troy, Wisconsin.246 Winifred Hannon was from Illinois.247
The Hallers married October 8th, 1912 in Lewistown, Montana.248
Chamberlain, Samuel. Historic Salem in Four Seasons: A Camera Impression. New York: Hastings House, 1938.
Print, p. 41.
243 Brown, Frank Chouteau. “Low Mantels and Fireplace Enframements from the Nineteenth Century” White Pine
Monograph Vol. XXV, No. 5.
244
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 3421:444. 8 Aug 1945.
245
“Corinne H. Flavin, Cellist Who Helped Found Brown Bag Opera, 73”
246
“Jacob Haller,” Find A Grave Memorial #110424889. Accessed 14 Jun 2019.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/110424889/jacob-haller
247
1940 Census, Oregon City Form 3-56. Electronic, Ancestry.com.
248
Montana State Historical Society; Helena, Montana; Montana, County Marriages, 1865-1950. Certificate #1820.
242
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The Hallers first appear in the Poll Listing of 1949, Theodore P. Haller, aged 66, was
retired, and his wife, Winifred, aged 58, was at home. Mary Brown Allen, aged 70, and George
Gavin, a 32-year-old working in radio, were also listed in that year.249 The following year, Allen
and Gavin are not listed and Theodore Haller is listed as a tea house operator.250
In the 1940 Census, the Hallers were living in Oregon City, a few blocks from the
Willamette River. They lived at 719 Center Street in the historic home of Dr. Forbes Barclay
(1812-1873), a Scottish immigrant who arrived in Oregon City in 1850 and served as a doctor,
mayor, councilor, coroner, and superintendent of the public school, as noted on a plaque erected
outside the house in 1948.251 Today the Barclay House is used as offices and a gift shop by the
McLoughlin Memorial Association and the National Park Service. Next door, the home of Dr.
John McLouglin (1784-1857) is operated as National Historic Site.252
In 1940, Theodore (age 58) was working as an antiques dealer and Winifred (age 49) was
the proprietor of a restaurant. Their daughter, Corinne, was 10. A 20-year-old lodger, Theodore
Finck, worked as a waiter in the restaurant.253
In 1946, as the house was being prepared for the Hallers, a woman discovered an iron
blind or shutter hook of unknown age, today owned by Historic New England. A tag attached to
the hook reads,“Blind hook picked up by Ida D. Frazier May 3rd 1946 in Stephen Daniel's house
built in 1682 at the corner of Essex- Daniel Sts, in Salem, Massachusetts"
A further tag identifies the circumstances in which the hook was found and tells us how the
Hallers utilized the house: “while the workmen were cleaning the house for its new owner, a
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1949. Print, p. 15.
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1950. Print, p. 15.
251
1940 Census, Oregon City Form 3-56. Electronic, Ancestry.com.
252
“The McLoughlin House” and “The Bray House,” McLoughlin Memorial Association. Electronic. Accessed 14
Jun 2019. https://www.mcloughlinhouse.org/index.html
253
1940 Census, Oregon City Form 3-56. Electronic, Ancestry.com.
249
250
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Gentleman from oregon Cal, The first floor will be a Tea Room, 2 upper floors will be living
quarters"254
The famed architectural photographer, Samuel Chamberlain, included six photos of the
house in his 1950 book, Salem Interiors. Chamberlain describes the house thus: “After many
vicissitudes this 17th-century dwelling has recently been restored and opened to the public as a
restaurant.” Concerning the age of the house, Chamberlain wrote, “It was originally built in 1667
by Stephen Daniel, mariner.”
The photos reveal the house as the Hallers decorated it with antiques.255 The dining room
contained an English oak dresser, c. 1700, with an exceptional collection of pewter, including
“plates, two sets of matched mugs, coffee urns, pitchers, candlesticks, and a rare hot-water
platter.” Another photograph of the dining room shows the curtains to be made of New England
drugget, c. 1825. There is an array of pewter in a corner cupboard, an old painted chest, and a
collection of nineteenth-century American chairs, including a child’s chair. The fireplace is
adorned with metalwork and some hanging Indian corn. There are at least three braided rugs with
floral and geometric patterns on the floor.
A detail of the left end of the kitchen lintel shows the initials carved into it, in the words
of Chamberlain, “a scarred oak lintel… liberally carved with initials…rich in the atmosphere of
pioneer days.” The kitchen fireplace is decorated with metalware, including pewter plates and
iron tools such as a shovel, toaster, roasting oven, and pots. The same rifle and powder horn and
sextant owned by Catherine Gill appear in the photograph as well.
“Shutter Hook” Historic New England. Item# 2006.2.3. https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collectionsaccess/gusn/223092/
255255
Chamberlain, Samuel. Salem Interiors: Two Centuries of New England Taste and Decoration. New York:
Hastings House, 1950. Print. pp. 9-12.
254
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The parlor is painted a dull green grey, with a painting of the “Sea Lark” and two
silhouettes by Peale and Brown. A similar painting of the Sea Lark (an 1852 clipper which
burned in 1863) by the British artist Duncan McFarlane (1818-1865), sold for $5,900 at
Northeast Auctions in 2010.256 The Brown referenced may be William Henry Brown (c. 18081883) was one of the major silhouette artists of nineteenth century America, though many of his
surviving silhouettes appear to be full length and the ones owned by the Hallers were only of
heads.257 The other items in the parlor are a sewing table, a bedwarmer, and a collection of
porcelain and Staffordshire.
In 1951 and 1952, Corinne Haller, a 20-year-old student is listed.258259 Corinne studied
cello at New England Conservatory. The Hallers were a musical family. Winifred was cellist as
well, and Theodore played the piano. Corinne Haller later married William Flavin and served as
the principal cellist of the New England Chamber Orchestra and as a freelance musician who
filled in for the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Boston Pops, and on one occasion the
Metropolitan Opera Company. In 1982, Corinne Flavin was a founding member of the Brown
Bag Opera Company.260 Flavin performed under the direction of Igor Stravinsky and Aaron
Copland.
In 1958, Flavin played cello in the Harvard Musical Association’s premier of William
Overton Smith’s “Quartet for clarinet, violin, cello, & piano.”261 In 1970, the Harvard Crimson
“The American Ship “Sea Lark.” Attributed to Duncan McFarlane (British 1818-1865)” Lot 1026.
https://northeastauctions.com/product/the-american-ship-sea-lark-attributed-to-duncan-mcfarlane-british-1818-1865/
257
Knipe, Penley. “Paper Profiles: American Paper Silhouettes” Journal of the American Institute for Conservation,
Vol. 41, No. 3. pp. 203-223. Electronic. http://cool.conservation-us.org/jaic/articles/jaic41-03-001.html
258
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1951. Print, p. 15.
259
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1952. Print, p. 15.
260
“Corinne H. Flavin, Cellist Who Helped Found Brown Bag Opera, 73” Boston.com. 22 Jan 2004. Electronic.
Accessed 5 Jun 2019.
http://archive.boston.com/ae/music/articles/2004/01/22/corinne_flavin_cellist_helped_found_brown_bag_opera_73/
261
“Commissioned Works,” The Harvard Musical Association. Electronic. Accessed 5 June 2019.
http://www.hmaboston.org/files/commissioned.pdf
256
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noted her “especially good work” on The Concerto Grosso, Op. 6 No. 1 of Corelli performed by
Boston Philharmonia. Flavin was also profiled in a 1980 article in the Christian Science Monitor
about female musicians balancing work and family: “Corinne Flavin, a cellist from Milton,
Mass., uses her own ingenuity and combines it with a hobby – antiquing – to bring in extra
income.”262 Flavin passed away in 2004. A scrapbook of musical ephemera such as concert
programs was found in the Daniels House in 2019.
In 1956, Edgar F. Curtis, aged 73, is listed.263 The previous year he had been living at 31
Columbus Avenue with Florence E. Steves, aged 73 and retired, and Barry and Rosmond
Hancock, him a Canadian molder.264
In the poll listings of 1960, 1961, and 1962, Theodore Haller is identified as an
innkeeper.265 Haller sold his inn to Thomas and Catherine Gill in 1962. Haller died at age 83 on
April 27th, 1965 and is buried with his family in Blair, Nebraska.266
XII.
Catherine “Kay” Gill, 1962-2018
Thomas E. and Catherine B. Gill purchased 1 Daniels Street for $17,000 on June 11th,
1961.267 In October, Mary Bertino, Catherine’s mother, was added as a joint tenant.268 The 1963
Annual Listing for Salem includes Thomas Gill, 40, and Catherine Gill, 31, both artists relocated
from Chicago, and Mary Bertino, 62, who relocated from Joliet, Illinois.269 Mary Bertino is no
Kiefer, Francine. “Women free-lance musicians harmonize work, family.” The Christian Science Monitor, 30 Jul
1980. Electronic. Accessed 5 Jun 2019. https://www.csmonitor.com/1980/0730/073016.html
263
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1956. Print, p. 12.
264
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1955. Print, p. 2.
265
Annual Listing of the City of Salem, 1960. Print, p. 12.
266
“Perry Theodore Haller,” Find A Grave Memorial #114996351. Accessed 14 Jun 2019.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/114996351
267
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 4929:256. 11 Jun 1962.
268
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 4999:85. 15 Oct 1962.
269
Annual Listing for the City of Salem, 1963. Print. p. 11.
262
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longer listed in 1968,270 and Thomas Gill in 1970.271 Catherine Gill was born on March 27, 1931
and attended the American Academy of Art in Chicago.
In 1970, the Salem directory identifies the Gills as proprietors of “The Stephen Daniels
House,” a restaurant and guest house.272 In 1972, Catherine Gill is listed as an “innkeeper” for the
first time in the poll listings.273 She was to remain in that capacity for 55 years. Catherine Gill
was often referred to by her nickname, Kay. In her self-description on Facebook in 2011, she
wrote: “I am the owner and Inn keeper of Salem’s most historic Inn. [It] was built in 1667 and
[has] been a bed and breakfast since 1945. I purchased the inn in 1962 and ran it as a B&B for 22
years.”274
As of its closure, The Daniels House maintained a 4.5 rating on Tripadvisor and a 4 on
Yelp. One review on Yelp, by Daisy M. in April 2013, describes her experience:
Built in the 17th century, it's three stories high and has nice, roomy guest bedrooms.
There's a lot of cool historical facts that our colorful hostess, Kay, pointed out. One of
its most notable features, the humongous fireplaces that were taller than me, made me
feel like I was on the set of The Crucible. We got the largest bedroom, the green room.
It was decorated as it would have been 300 years ago with cool/creepy little touches
everywhere--like the portraits of men and women whose stern stares seemed to follow us
around the room...and the eerie baby's cradle in the extremely large, attached bathroom. I
was expecting it to start rocking by itself...but, again, this all added to the fun. It was like
Halloween in April.
Kay is a tad on the elderly side and all the way on the deaf side...but she's a dear lady and
so sweet. She helpfully gave us a sightseeing map and even told me where I could find
some antique shops (we talked enough for her to find out about my antique addiction, but
she wasn't the overbearing type that traps you into long conversations either).
A user on Tripadvisor, Marciafl2, wrote of her experience in July 2017:
My daughter and I spent three nights in this living museum. The first two nights were
spent in the Great Room. This spacious and beautiful room offers everything you need
for a cozy night of rest. I wanted to take the soft bed sheets home with me! Before bed, I
Annual Listing for the City of Salem, 1968. Print. p. 10.
Annual Listing for the City of Salem, 1970. Print. p. 10.
272
Salem Directory, 1970. Print, p. 249.
273
Annual Listing for the City of Salem, 1972. Print. p. 10.
274
“Kay Gill Daniels House,” Facebook. Electronic. Accessed 12 Jun 2019.
270
271
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curled up in an antique chair and browsed through one of the many books found
throughout the home. There is a small T.V. provided, but I never found it necessary to
turn it on- there was too much to look at in the room. The Great Room is actually
comprised of a large bedroom, a small bedroom, and a private bath. My daughter slept in
the small bedroom and found it very comfortable. I didn’t want to get out of my bed in
the large bedroom!
The last night was spent in the upper-most room in the house. The Acorn room, which is
actually like a suite of rooms, is very private. There is a medium-sized bedroom, a small
bedroom, a private bathroom connected by a hallway with a small sitting area. The room
was gorgeous and serene with plenty of large antique chairs that I snuggled right into for
reading. My daughter and I slept soundly through the night.
After operating the Daniels House as an inn for over 55 years, Catherine “Kay” Gill
passed away at age 86 on March 19th, 2018.
XIII. Castle of the Realm, LLC., 2019In January of 2019, Castle of the Realm, L.L.C. purchased 1 Daniels Street for $570,000
from William F. Quinn, Catherine Gill’s executor, and her heirs.275 Castle of the Realm, L.L.C. is
a real estate investment company founded by Patrick Bentivegna. In 2019, the companies offered
properties for sale in Lynnfield, Massachusetts, and Clearwater, Florida.
Over the course of 2019, a restoration has been undertaken with the work of Charles
Knight Restoration.
XIV. Conclusion
Undoubtedly one of the oldest houses in Salem, The Daniels House was constructed by
Stephen Daniels I or Stephen Daniels II between 1667 and 1693. It is a largely original First
Period structure of great historic importance. For the first century and a half of its history, the
house was occupied by shipbuilders and carpenters, as is reflected in the fine paneling and
275
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 37293:198. 22 Jan 2019.
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interior detail of various generations. Daniels and his son were both shipbuilders and mariners. In
the mid-1700s, Stephen Daniels II’s daughter Mary married into the Silsbee family and lived in
the house until 1803. Her son, Samuel Silsbee, was a carpenter who remodeled and enlarged the
house around the time of his marriage to Martha Prince in 1756.
Silsbee’s heirs divided the house into two properties, listed as numbers 1 and 3 Daniels Street
in the mid-1800s. When his daughters died in 1860s, the properties were sold to other families.
For about a century, the house endured what Samuel Chamberlain called in 1950 “many
vicissitudes.” It was subdivided into a double house of at least four apartments, served as a “day
nursery” and a boarding house, and had an ever rotating group of widows, laborers, railroad and
shoe workers living in it for the better part of fifty years. The house was vacant after a
foreclosure in the Great Depression for almost 20 years.
Afterwards it was loving cared for and filled with antiques by Theodore Perry and Winifred
Haller, who operated the first floor as a historic tea room. In 1962, the Hallers sold the house to
Thomas and Catherine Gill. Catherine “Kay” Gill collected a new treasury of antiques and
operated the house first as a bed and breakfast and then as an inn for 55 years until her death in
2018. In 2019, new owners hope to reopen the house as a bed and breakfast.
The long history (at least three centuries, likely three and a half) of the Daniels House has
made it home to various elements of the Salem story: the seventeenth and eighteenth century
maritime trades, the proliferation of organizations and societies in the nineteenth, the working
class and immigrant nature of the city in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the
growing pace of antiquarianism and preservation in the early twentieth century, and the growth
of tourism in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
�47
The rotating private ownership and occupancy, coupled with the late appreciation of its
antiquarian character allowed the house to experience the twentieth century changes of Salem
more richly than other seventeenth-century buildings in the city, such as the John Ward House,
the House of the Seven Gables, or the Pickering House. In turn, that makes the survival of its
original elements all the more astonishing.
In addition to its exceptional architectural character and irreplaceable ancient details, this
house’s history makes it a true American gem. The Daniels House tells us what Salem has been,
almost back to the city’s beginning.
TABLE 1- Ownership History of 1 Daniels Street
Date
22 Jan
2019
Conveyed to
Castle of the
Realm, LLC
15 Oct
1962
Thomas E. Gill,
Catherine B. Gill,
Mary Bertino
Thomas E. Gill,
Catherine B. Gill,
Theodore Perry
Haller
Marietta B.
Wilkins
The Salem Five
Cents Savings
Bank
Stephen Burger,
Rebecca S.
Burger, and Sarah
R. Dexter
Sarah S. Russell
11 Jun
1962
8 Aug
1945
8 Feb.
1933
10 Sep
1932
21 Dec
1904
8 Oct
1883
Conveyed by
William F. Quinn,
Margaret Gamble,
Joseph McGraw,
Mary Waser, Grace
Stockman, and Tara
Gill Alfonso
Thomas E. Gill,
Catherine B. Gill
Amount
$570,000
Book
3729
3
Page
198
4999
85
Theodore Perry
Haller
Marietta B. Wilkins,
widow
The Salem Five
Cents Savings Bank
Stephen Burger,
Rebecca S. Burger,
and Sarah R. Dexter
The Salem Five
Cents Savings Bank
$17,000
4929
256
Consideration
Paid
Consideration
Paid
Foreclosure
3421
444
2945
352
2927
221
$900
1766
226
William H. Jelly,
guardian of Marion
H. Jelly
$91.67
1117
224
�48
8 Oct
1883
Sarah S. Russell
22 Nov
1860
Elizabeth Hodges,
wife of Joseph
Hodges
John W. Russell
18 Aug
1857
18 Aug
1818
Sarah Reed, wife
of Haffield White
Reed
29 Mar
1748/9
1693
Mary Silsbee,
widow
Stephen Daniell
Margaret C. Hanson,
Sarah E. Hodges,
Gamaliel Hodges,
Clara H. Jelly,
William M. Jelly
Estate of Sarah Reed
$1008.33
1117
225
$885
615
273
Nathaniel S. Hood,
Stephen Whipple,
Martha P. Whipple,
Mary E. Peck, Lucy
A. Peck, Margaret S.
Peck, Samuel S.
Thompson, Harriet R.
Thompson, Asa
Hood, Samuel Leach,
Julia A. Leach, David
Ranney, Sarah R.
Ranney, Thomas P.R.
Hood, John S. Hood,
Job Curtis, Mary
Curtis, John Peck,
Rebecca Peck,
Daniel Sage,
Deborah Sage,
Samuel Silsbee, and
Rebeckah Silsbee
Stephen Daniell,
shipwright
Joseph Grafton
$720
558
40
$1
219
57
£400
93
54
£10
9
127
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Daniels Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
1 Daniels Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for Stephen Daniels
Shipwright
c. 1667
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: circa 1667
House History Completed: Oct., 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
David Moffat
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/2daf6d0118ea45b79ef667692af15bdd.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=CTJQkmkXio-RelczSvhdAFdzi0WCRT07Rn-kCApeuGvzOzZiiVLdz8UVp3nvdp2sAxvx1Kr9uuZ0Ofqc23vWPu3tdtvLv6K4xd5l1Mcgx7qtUNHcjDVxs1MbJ1al-05dflaSCBAWJ4wBHlLxxEMHFlI-6id5XMY0gzN5w0q-3xttuw9TRkKmEWrPc-6XWz5vH7KeWgleDMRorquDLjow9tFlDbHPVosFRzpP9Fm4tEWwZSQ9sD33YDuh-Xxhj38lRlIlQF9OSEymuL16HLB1CtOYmRxxI7JGSXz5sAapcbFB%7EQxIOTruIkGVSjVIzTdCNENeB3H7TarkAEnBsORWOw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
227f5a9a2c3e78573bd98a6587ed5021
PDF Text
Text
101-103 Federal Street
Built for
Ichabod Glover
Chairmaker & Mariner
by 1799
Research Provided by
Isabella Connor & Alyssa G. A. Conary
October 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Chain of Title, 101-103 Federal Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
December 17, 1771 Samuel Punchard of Salem, fisherman
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Ichabod Glover of Salem,
chairmaker
"A piece of Land in said Salem containing about Eleven
Poles and three quarters bounded Easterly on Land of
Stephen Cook and there measures four Poles nine Links and
a half [Southerly] on Land of [Benjamin] Punchard and there
Twenty-seven
measures three Poles fourteen Links & a half Westerly on
Pounds, Six
said [Benjamin] Punchard and there measures two Poles
Shillings, and Eight twelve Links and a half [Northerly] on the new Lane so called Essex County
Pence
and there measures three poles eighteen Links and a half..." Registry of Deeds Deed
129 : 151
"a certain parcel of land with the dwelling house thereon
situate in Salem aforesaid and bounded as follows, Northerly
on Federal Street so called measuring there forty nine feet,
Easterly on a line running southerly on a twelve feet way,
thro' the center thereof sixty one feet four inches, till it
comes to the garden fence, where said way ends & thence
on said line continued till it comes to land of Morgan thirty
six feet Southerly on said land of Morgan, there measuring
thirty six feet and Westerly on land of Johnson, there
measuring on a strait line sixty two feet, eight inches, and
then on a strait line in a different direction thirty three feet
nine inches till it comes to the boundary first above
Essex County
$3,000.00 mentioned..."
Registry of Deeds Deed
176 : 103
Nathan Peirce Jr., merchant, & Betsy, his
wife; Ichabod Glover, mariner; and Priscilla Archelaus Fuller, coach painter, of
May 17, 1805 Glover, singlewoman, all of Salem
Salem
March 29, 1826 Joseph Peabody, Esq. of Salem
September 28, 1833 Samuel Cook of Salem, merchant.
October 4, 1836 John Jewett of Salem, cabinet maker
Phebe P. Chapman, George R. Chapman,
August 12, 1873 and John O. Chapman of Salem
Conveyance of
Source
Document Book : Page Notes
"a parcel of Land with the Dwelling house thereon, situate in
said Salem, bounding northerly on Federal Street forty nine
feet, easterly on a line running southerly through the centre
of a twelve feet way sixty one feet and four inches where
said way ends and thence on said line continued till it comes
to land of Morgan thirty six feet southerly on said land of
Morgan Thirty six feet and westerly on land late of Edmund Essex County
$600.00 Johnson..."
Registry of Deeds Deed
241 : 149
John Jewett of Salem, cabinet
maker
"a parcel of Land with the dwelling house thereon, situate in
said Salem, bounding Northerly on Federal Street forty nine
feet, Easterly on a line running Southerly through the centre
of a twelve feet way, sixty one feet four inches, where said
way Ends, and thence on the line as the...now stands, till it
comes to land of Morgan thirty six feet, Southerly on said
Morgan forty six feet, and Westerly on land late of...Johnson, Essex County
$2,150.00 about ninety six feet five inches..."
Registry of Deeds Deed
272 : 198
John Chapman of Salem, printer, &
Rebecca Thayer of Salem, widow
"the Dwelling House with the land...bounded Northerly on
$3,000.00 Federal Street forty nine feet..."
293 : 135
Benjamin Shreve of Salem
"The messuage in said Salem which is bounded
Commencing at the Northeast corner on Federal Street by
other land of said George R. Chapman this day conveyed by
him to the grantee, thence running Southwesterly by said
Street 49 feet to land of said grantee, thence Southwesterly
by said grantee's land 36 feet 8 inches, thence Southerly by
the grantee's land 62 feet by the Morgan estate thence
Easterly by the Morgan estate 46 feet 3 inches, to other land
of said George sold to the grantee as aforesaid and thence Essex County
$6,150.00 Northerly 119 feet to Federal Street and the point began at." Registry of Deeds Deed
"being the same
premises conveyed by
Priscilla Glover and
others to Archelaus Fuller
by deed dated May...
1805 and by him
reconveyed to them in
mortgage, under an
assignment of which I
hold the same..."
Samuel Cook of Salem, merchant
Essex County
Registry of Deeds Deed
887 : 6
"Part of the estate was
purchased by said Geo.
R. Chapman and part was
owned by John Chapman
late of said Salem
deceased the grantors
being the widow and all
the heirs at law of said
John."
�Chain of Title, 101-103 Federal Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Conveyance of
Source
Document Book : Page Notes
Charles L. Curtis and Josephine
Curtis, both of said Salem,
husband and wife
"One undivided half part of the messuage in said Salem
which is bounded as follows: Commencing at the Northeast
corner of Federal Street by other land of the Benjamin
Shreve Estate, thense running southwesterly by said Federal
Street, 71.95 feet to land of Hannah Moulton et al; thense
running southerly by land of said Hannah Moulton et al 73.10
feet; thence Easterly 85/100 of a foot; thence continuing
southerly by land of saif Hannah Moulton et al and of
Elizabeth F. Daland 24.85 feet to land of C. O. Emmerton;
thence easterly by land of Emmerton 66.70 feet to land of
said Benjamin Shreve Estat; and thence northerly by said
land of Shreve Estate 131.70 feet to Federal Street and the
Essex County
$4,500.00 point of beginning."
Registry of Deeds Deed
2570 : 286
Octavious B. Shreve of Salem, Essex
County, in the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, Trustee under the last will
of Benjamin Shreve late of Salem in the
County of Essex and the commonwealth Charles L. Curtis and Josephine
aforesaid, deceased, for the benefit of
Curtis, both of said Salem,
September 27, 1923 Henry M. Shreve and for other purposes
husband and wife
"One undivided half part of the messuage in said SALEM
which is bounded as follows: Commencing at the Northeast
corner of Federal Street by other land of the Benjamin
Shreve Estate, thense running southwesterly by said Federal
Street, 71.95 feet to land of Hannah Moulton et al; thense
running southerly by land of said Hannah Moulton et al 73.10
feet; thence Easterly 85/100 of a foot; thence continuing
southerly by land of saif Hannah Moulton et al and of
Elizabeth F. Daland 24.85 feet to land of C. O. Emmerton;
thence easterly by land of Emmerton 66.70 feet to land of
said Benjamin Shreve Estat; and thence northerly by said
land of Shreve Estate 131.70 feet to Federal Street and the
Essex County
$4,500.00 point of beginning."
Registry of Deeds Deed
2570 : 288
"The land in said Salem, together with the buildings thereon,
bounded NORTHWESTERLY: by Federal Street 71.95 feet;
SOUTHWESTERLY: by land now or late of Hannah Moulton,
et al, 73.10 feet; SOUTHEASTERLY: 85/100ths of a foot;
SOUTHWESTERLY: again by land now or late of said
Hannah Moulton, et. al, and now or late of Elizabeth F.
Daland 24.85 feet; SOUTHEASTERLY: by land now or late of
C. O. Emmerton, 66.70 feet; and NORTHEASTERLY: by land Essex County
$11,000.00 now or late of the Shreve Estate, 131.70 feet."
Registry of Deeds Deed
3616 : 467
"The land in said Salem, together with the buildings thereon,
bounded NORTHWESTERLY: by Federal Street 71.95 feet;
SOUTHWESTERLY: by land now or late of Hannah Moulton,
et. al, 73.10 feet; SOUTHEASTERLY: 85/100ths of a foot;
SOUTHWESTERLY: again by land now or late of said
Hannah Moulton, et. al, and now or late of Elizabeth F.
Daland 24.85 feet; SOUTHEASTERLY: by land now or late of
C. O. Emmerton, 66.70 feet; and NORTHEASTERLY: by land Essex County
now or late of the Shreve Estate, 131.70 feet."
Registry of Deeds Deed
8740 : 245
Octavious B. Shreve of Salem, Essex
County, and the First National Bank of
Boston, Boston, Suffolk County, both in
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Trustees under the last will of Benjamin
Shreve late of Salem in the County of
Essex and the commonwealth aforesaid,
deceased, for the benefit of Henry M.
September 27, 1923 Shreve and for other purposes
Robert W. Hill of Marblehead, Essex
County, Massachusetts, Executor of the
will of Charles L. Curtis, late of Salem in
August 4, 1948 said County
Guinevere F. Pitman, Executrix under the
will of Lester E. Pitman, late of said Salem
July 23, 1986 in said County
Lester E. Pitman and Ila D. Pitman,
as tenants in common, both of said
Salem
Guinevere F. Pitman
Melissa Machernis, a/k/a Melissa Foster
Machernis, individually and as Executrix of
the Estate of Guinevere F. Pitman, a/k/a
Guinevere Foster Pitman, and Executrix of ProProcess It, LLC., a Delaware
the Estate of Jennifer Walker Pitman of
Limited Liability Company, of One
August 30, 2012 Warren, New Jersey
Washington Square, Marblehead
ProProcess It, Inc., a/k/a ProProcess It,
July 15, 2013 LLC
Stacey E. Soper & Myrna F. Soper,
husband and wife of Salem
one dollar
"The land in said Salem, together with the buildings thereon,
bounded and described as follows: NORTHWESTERLY: by
Federal Street 71.95 feet; SOUTHWESTERLY: by land now or
late of Hannah Moulton, et. al, 73.10 feet; SOUTHEASTERLY:
85/100ths of a foot; SOUTHWESTERLY: again by land now
or late of said Hannah Moulton, et. al, and now or late of
Elizabeth F. Daland 24.85 feet; SOUTHEASTERLY: by land
now or late of C. O. Emmerton, 66.70 feet; and
NORTHEASTERLY: by land now or late of the Shreve Estate, Essex County
$355,000.00 131.70 feet."
Registry of Deeds Deed
31674 : 464
Entire house; Master
Deed for new
condominium association
can be found in Book
32508, Page 381
"Unit Number 101...in The 101-103 Federal Street
Condominium...established by Master Deed dated May 17,
$499,900.00 2013..."
32654 : 186
Only Unit 101
Essex County
Registry of Deeds Deed
�Chain of Title, 101-103 Federal Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
August 2, 2013 ProProcess It, Inc.
Stacey E. Soper & Myrna F. Soper,
September 16, 2016 married, of Salem
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Conveyance of
Source
Document Book : Page Notes
James Gwin & Jennifer Lucht of
Salem
"Unit Number 103...in The 101-103 Federal Street
Condominium...established by Master Deed dated May 17,
$499,900.00 2013..."
Essex County
Registry of Deeds Deed
32714 : 332
Only Unit 103
Tina A. Ward & Jonathan A. Hill,
married, of Salem
"Unit Number 101...in The 101-103 Federal Street
Condominium...established by Master Deed dated May 17,
$565,000.00 2013..."
Essex County
Registry of Deeds Deed
35269 : 464
Only Unit 101
���������������������������������Excerpt from the Historic Salem,
Inc. House History for 105 Federal
Street (Research by Joyce King,
1978) relevant to the history of
101-103 Federal Street.
105 Federal Street
House and Shop of
ED::.UND JuHNStJN, cabinetmaker
before 1801
ReseBrch by:
Joyce King
1978
�0n March 13, 1797 John mortgaged his property once more, this time
to his son .John Chamberlain Jr. , a baker, for $166.67. The same
property described in book 144 page 141. The first mortgage was
still unpaid. (book 162 page 104)
John Chamberlain Jr. died in 17g8 leaving most of his estate to
his father, John, until his brothers Garland and Jcseph turned 21
years old. This same year Elizabeth gave birth to a son. The
couple named this child John.
On June 28, 1799, John Chamberlain, hired Gideon
to set
the line between Chamberlain's and Glover's land. On Nov. 11,
an agreement between Chamberlain and Glover was written:
For Sl John Chamberlain granted to Ichabod Glover all the
estate
to the east of the following line;
at
a notch cut in stone set in the ground by the south side of Federal
St., which notch is 10 inches west of the waterboard of said
Glover's house measuring so as to make a right angle with the
house then run south 33 feet g inches to another stone set in the
ground with a notch cut in the top. This notch is 11 inches from
the waterboard of said Glover's house, then from the stone till it
shall intersect the line which divides my garden from said Glovers.
It is to bP understood that if upon raising a perpendicular line
(from the aforesaid) it should be intersect of cut the e8ves or
covjng of said 3lover's house, in that case the said Jlnver is to
continue the jmprovement of the Paves or coving as it now is. The
intersection of the perpendiculat line aforesaid notwithstanding
to with the reversion and reversions. (105 Federal St. is not
mentioned in this document and probably was not here at this time.)
Soon after this agreement, John Chamberlain died. In hls
taken May 5, 1800,· his real estate was listed as: house 8nd land on
corner of Beckford St. $2, 000 and shop st;:inding on saj d 18.nd, formerly S. Lampson's. The widow, Elizabe·th, was told if she would sign
over her rights to the mansion house and land and
a
that
stood on one part of the land, the committee would fix the shop into
8 house for her, that t.here would be cons id ern l.Jl e money 1 eft to
divide among the heirs and that her child would
allowed part to
maintqin him until he was 7 years old. She at last agreed to it
and was given a dower described as a small two story house about 20
fPet wide on the front and 21 feet wide in depth,
on land
Adjoining east on Federal St. next to the mansion house of the late
John Chamberlain, with the land under house and with land. (see
sheets #16 - 18)
Excerpt from the Historic Salem, Inc. House History for 105 Federal Street
(Research by Joyce King, 1978) relevant to the history of 101-103 Federal Street.
�I ,:j
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Excerpt from the Historic Salem,
Inc. House History for 105 Federal
Street (Research by Joyce King,
1978) relevant to the history of
101-103 Federal Street.
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�Excerpt from the Historic Salem,
Inc. House History for 105 Federal
Street (Research by Joyce King,
1978) relevant to the history of
101-103 Federal Street.
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Excerpt from the Historic Salem,
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Street (Research by Joyce King,
1978) relevant to the history of
101-103 Federal Street.
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�Inventory No:
SAL.1526
Historic Name:
Glover, Ichabod - Cook, Samuel House
Common Name:
Thayer, Rebecca - Chapman, John C. House
Address:
101-103 Federal St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Central Salem
Local No:
26-508
Year Constructed:
c 1799
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Federal
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House; Single Family Dwelling
House; Doctor Or Dentist Office
Significance:
Architecture; Commerce; Health Medicine
Area(s):
SAL.HD: Federal Street
SAL.HJ: Chestnut Street Historic District
SAL.HU: McIntire Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (08/28/1973); Local Historic District
(03/03/1981)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Asphalt Shingle; Wood; Wood Clapboard
Foundation: Granite; Stone, Cut
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Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
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This file was accessed on: Thursday, September 5, 2019 at 4:44: PM
�F O R M B - BUILDING
NRDIS 8/28/73; LHD 3/3/81
Assessor's Number
26-508
Town
TJSGS Quad
Salem
Area(s)
HU
Form Number
1526
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village) Central Salem
Address
101 -103 Federal St.
Historic Name Ichabod Glover House
Uses: Present Single-Family Dwelling
Original Single-Family Dwelling
Date of Construction
before 1799
Source Tolles
Style/Form
Federal
Architect/Builder
Exterior Material:
Foundation Granite Block
Wall/Trim Wood Clapboard S & E; Asphalt Shingle W
Roof
Asphalt Shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
Garage
Major Alterations (with dates)
Condition Good
Moved
Acreage
Recorded by Leslie Donovan
Organization Salem Planning Department
Date (month/year) 2/96
x no
yes
Date
Less than 1 Acre
Setting Set directly at the sidewalk in 18th & 19th century
residential area
JUL 0
8 1996
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
�BUILDING F O R M
101-103 Federal Street, S a l e m
A R C H I T E C T U R A L DESCRIPTION
see continuation sheet
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the
community.
101-103 Federal Street is a classic three-story Federal style house, one of several examples in the Mclntire district,
including many similar examples nearby on Federal Street. Set on a relatively wide lot, it has no front (north) or
west setback, as it was built within two feet of its neighbor to the west. Clad in clapboards (except for its west
elevation, which is sided with asphalt shingles and has no windows), it has a rectangular plan with a two-story
wing extending two bays to the east. Surmounted by a projecting cornice, the main block of the house is five bays
wide by three bays deep. It has a low hip roof clad in asphalt and pierced by four symmetrically positioned interior
chimneys. The center entry has a paneled door surrounded by partial sidelights, fluted pilasters, and an entablature
with a modillion cornice. Windows have 6/6 sash, except for the 3/6 third story sash. Simple molded frames case
the windows, and those at the third story are incorporated into the wide tripartite fascia boards. The wing contains
a recessed and paneled secondary entrance. A two-car, cast stone, garage with an asphalt shingle hip roof sits in
the southeast comer of the lot.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
see continuation sheet
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the
building and the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
Known as the Glover-Cook-Chapman House, 101-103 Federal Street was constructed prior to 1799, and was
originally 33 Federal Street. In the 1770s Ichabod Glover, a mariner, acquired the land from Samuel Punchard
and presumably built this house. The District Study Committee Report named this the John Archer/Ichabod
Glover House, suggesting it had been built as a two-family house. However, the HSI research did not indicate
there were two owners or what Archer's association might have been with this building. In 1822, Samuel Cook
purchased the house and owned it until 1833, when he sold to cabinetmaker John Jewett. It is not known whether
the house was built as a two-family, but presumably it bad become such by 1836, when Jewett sold to Rebecca
Thayer and John C. Chapman. Mrs. Thayer, a widowed schoolteacher, lived here with Sarah, Rebecca and Nancy
Thayer. Chapman, a printer and the publisher of the Salem Register, also lived at this address. The 1851 Salem
map shows Chapman as the owner, but by 1874 the building was owned by Benjamin Shreve, a member of one of
Salem's most prominent merchant trade families. Shreve lived at 27 Chestnut Street (see form for the
Pickman-Shreve-Little House, 27 Chestnut, Form 752). By 1897 his estate owned houses at 17, 27 and 29
Chestnut Street, 92, 94, 95-97, 122, 124-126 Federal Street, 9 Lynn Street, and a large lot bounded by Broad.
Pickering, and Warren streets. The Shreve family never resided at 101-103 Federal Street. By 1911, the title had
passed to Mary L. Shreve. During the forty-plus years of Shreve ownership, the building footprint remained
essentially the same, and the house was an investment property. Residents in 1884 included William H. Simonds
at 101. and Mrs. Sarah F. Jenks at 103. In 1897 and 1910, C. W. Richardson, a lawyer, resided at 101 Federal
Street. He bought 100 Federal in 1901 and owned it until he died in 1924. John J. K. Coker, a painter, lived at
103 in 1897; he later lived across the street at 92 Federal, also owned by the Shreves. In 1910, 103 Federal was the
residence of Frank L. Smith, principal of Bowditch Grammar School. By 1930, 101 Federal Street was the home
and office of Charles L. Curtis, a physician. He was followed in 1950 by another physician. Maurice J. Keller.
From at least 1950-1970. 103 Federal Street was occupied by Lester E. Pittman. a salesman at Jordan Marsh.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
x
see continuation sheet
Reardon. Elizabeth K. Salem Historic District Study Committee Investigation. Typescript, 1968.
Salem Citv Directories. 1836- 1970V
t
Tolles. Bryant J. Architecture in Salem. Salem: Essex Institute. 1983.
�INVENTORY F O R M CONTINUATION SHEET
Community
Salem
Property Address
101-103 Federal St.
Massachusetts Historical Commission
Massachusetts Archives Building
220 Morrissey Boulevard
Boston, MA 02125
Area(s)
HU
Form No.
1526
Maps
Hopkins. G. M. Atlas of Salem. Philadelphia. 1874.
Mclntyre. H. Map of the City of Salem Philadelphia. 1851
Phillips. James Duncan. Map of Salem about 1780 Based on Research by Sidney Perley and the accounts of
Colonel Benjamin J. Pickman and Benjamin F. Browne with additional information assembled by Jones Duncan
and Henry Noyes Otis. Salem: James Duncan Phillips. 1937.
. Part of Salem in 1700. From the research of Sidney Perley. Assembled by William W. K. Freeman.
Salem: James Duncan Phillips, 1933.
Richards. L. F. Atlas of Salem. 1897.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company. Atlas of Salem. Boston. MA: 1911
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attach a
completed National Register Criteria Statement form.
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
SALEM
101-103 FEDERAL ST
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
SAL.1526
SAL.HD, SAL.HJ, SAL.HU
Supplemental photograph by Patti Kelleher, Salem Department of Planning & Community Development, March 2017
RECEIVED
JUN 20 2017
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Continuation sheet 1
�F O R M
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-
B U I L D I N G
In A r e a no.
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�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Federal Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
101-103 Federal Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Ichabod Glover
Chairmaker & Mariner
by 1799
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: 1799
Research Conducted: October 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Isabella Connor & Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/e7badc06a6522939300ad876829f6b10.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=AH0FBkrmAbUTBdj1O%7EXxUsUdJtFuEqRuyY48AjD%7ELVnthYtbScI-bK9kljciyNOrlAsz06TAOPUGq8l06ZBz1I4LWnX5Sdm9iYOmHXGJmhfKg2sU0uYybsBmJZk5Mc34GKUPvrtfGbF-KZ%7EvosWAM4a0jRK6O%7EX9tFri0onq3PJCks5ovTMDym9CtgCxIF46VUODDPgR6TyehOEyJALS5VjW60w95HvRRIZErS%7Ey-W-Q%7EdHJuuR8RMJ177DvF-phbzNnyNWXZal14%7EGuJuxrpp-MyTw23elQBZmCCx2vTnGEnO8IRfLJVWwCE0Py8GtiNg4ny1d9pCLeIUjgAtxETg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
16f1e2b29963fc56cb7c91d8a6f99a7d
PDF Text
Text
13 Glendale Street
Built for
Jacob N. Conacher
Teamster
c. 1894
Research Provided by
Alyssa G. A. Conary & Robert Booth
October 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�13 Glendale St, Salem
According to available evidence, this house was built in 1893 or 1894 for Jacob N. Conacher,
teamster, a bachelor. His relative James E. McCaul soon lived in it.
I was unable to find evidence of it being a converted barn. It was being used as a house by
1894, in situ.
In January, 1883, Jacob N. Conacher of Salem bought for $400 from Henry Conacher a lot on
Glendale Street, bounded s. 30’ on the street etc. (ED 1099:7). In February, 1892, JNC bought
for $300 from D.F. Meady estate a lot adjoining, bounded s. 30’ on the street, w. on JNC’s land,
etc. (ED 1333:297).
JNC (1839-1900) was a teamster and furniture-mover with his place of business at 9.5 Front
Street. He was born in New Brunswick and came to Salem by 1880.
The 1894 valuations (p. 140) assess JNC, house 9 Glendale, for 4 horses ($500), 5 wagons
($400), a barn ($200) and land Willow Ave. (6000 s.f. worth $500), a house #13 (in pencil; #9
crossed out) Glendale $500 and house land on Glendale $300 (3000 sq. ft.) and another lot on
Glendale $300 (3000 s.f.).
So the house was here in 1894, and maybe in 1893. It seems Mr. Conacher did not live here, but
at 9 Glendale, where he had evidently lived for some time (JNC and the extended Conacher
family were on Glendale by 1880 and likely before). It is likely that the residents here in 1894
were the James E. McCauls. JEM is listed in 1894 valuations at 9 Glendale (same as JNC)and in
1895 valuation (p. 176) at 13 Glendale, assessed only for a horse $100 and carriage $100 and no
real estate.
In 1896 valuation, JNC resides at 11 Willow Ave., and is assessed for a barn Willow Ave $300
(sold to Rebecca Paul noted in pencil) and a house 13 Glendale $400 (noted in pencil “Mary E.
McCall in 1897”) and land, Glendale, noted “Mary E. McCall”. So he was in the process of selling
out his real estate.
In the same 1896 valuation, (p. 178, entry for her all in pencil, meaning added later than
original entries) “Mary E. McCall” is assessed for house 13 Glendale $400 and 6000 s.f. of land
$600.
So the assessors were tracking the owner of 13 Glendale across the year 1896. On Nov. 4, 1896,
JNC sells to Mary E. McCaul, ux James E., the double lot without mention of a house thereon
but clearly there was (ED 1494:309). The lot is 60’ on the street, being the combined lots
bought by JNC in 1883 and 1892.
Much to say about Jacob N. Conacher and James E. McCaul from various sources. It appears
that JEM took over JNC’s teaming business, and JNC died in 1900, etc.
�Mr. McCaul (b. 1864 in Annapolis, Nova Scotia) married 1887 Mary A. Tayte, 22, b. NB, and she
appears to be a niece of JNC (dtr. of his sister Margaret Conacher and George Tayte). All of
these Canadian Maritimes immigrant families lived on Glendale.
– Robert Booth, October 2019
�Chain of Title, 13 Glendale Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded Grantor(s)
Henry Conacher of
January 2, 1883 Newburyport
Charles W. Meady of
Salem, as Administrator of
the estate of Daniel F.
February 12, 1892 Meady, late of Salem
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Conveyance of
Source
Document Book : Page Notes
Jacob N. Conacher of Salem
"the following described parcel of land
in said Salem bounded southerly by
Glendale street thirty feet, easterly by
land of William G. Tayte one hundred
feet, northerly by land of James F. Almy
and others thirty feet and westerly by
land now or late of David Conacher and
others one hundred feet. Being the
westerly half of lot numbered thirty
seven on a plan of part of the Derby
$400.00 estate..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Jacob N. Conacher of Salem
"a certain parcel of land situated on
Glendale street in said Salem, and
bounded as follows...Southerly by
Glendale street, thirty (30) feet, Easterly
by land now or late of Fogg one
hundred (100) feet, Northerly by land
now or late of Almy...thirty (30) feet and
westerly by land now or late of
$300.00 Conacher one hundred (100) feet."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1099 : 7
1333 : 297
The easterly half of lot 37
on the plan referenced
above.
Mary A. McCaul, wife of
James E. McCaul, of Salem
"a certain parcel of land, situate in said
Salem, and bouned and described as
follows...Southerly by Glendale Street,
sixty feet, easterly by land now or late
of Fogg, one hundred feet, northerly by
land now or late of Almy, et al. sixty
feet, and westerly by land now or late of
"one dollar and
Conacher, one hundred feet, being lot
other valuable
numbered thirty-seven (37) on a plan of
considerations paid" part of the Derby estate..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1494 : 309
The entirety of lot 37 on
the plan referenced
above.
James E. McCaul & Mary A. Abbie M. Southard, wife of
December 2, 1902 McCaul of Salem
Fred E. Southard, of Salem
"a certain parcel of land situate in said
Salem together with all the buildings
thereon and bounded and described as
follows...Southerly by Glendale street
sixty feet; easterly by land now or late
of Fogg one hundred feet; Northerly by
"one dollar and
land now or late of Almy et al. sixty feet;
other valuable
and Westerly by land now or late of
considerations paid" Conacher one hundred feet."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1692 : 419
Buildings mentioned.
"a certain parcel of land situate in said
Salem, together with all the buildings
thereon, and bounded and described
as follows...Southerly by Glendale
Street, sixty feet; Easterly by land now
or late of Fogg, one hundred feet;
Northerly by land now or late of Almy et
"one dollar and
al, sixty feet, and Westerly by land now
other valuable
or late of Connacher, one hundred
considerations paid" feet."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1749 : 172
Jacob N. Conacher of
November 4, 1896 Salem
Fred E. Southard & Abbie
M. Southard, husband and
August 11, 1904 wife of Salem
Mary A. Terrell of Salem
�Chain of Title, 13 Glendale Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
February 3, 1945 Ellen E. Neary of Salem
Conveyance of
Source
Document Book : Page Notes
"a certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon, situate in said Salem
and bounded and described as
follows...Southerly by Glendale Street,
sixty (60) feet; Easterly by land formerly
of Fogg, now or late of Grantee one
hundred (100) feet; Northerly by land
formerly of Almy now or late of
"one dollar and
Woodman sixty (60) feet; Westerly by
other valuable
land formerly of Connacher now or late
considerations paid" of Barber, one hundred (100) feet."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2144 : 156
"a certain lot of land, together with the
buildings thereon, situated in said
SALEM, and bounded southerly by
Glendale Street one hundred and
twenty (120) feet, westerly by land now
or formerly of Barker one hundred (100)
feet, northerly by land now or formerly
of Woodman and Connacher one
hundred and twenty (120) feet and
easterly by land now or formerly of
"consideration paid" Rodigrass one hundred (100) feet..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2591 : 588
"the land in said SALEM, with the
buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows: Southerly by
Glendale Street forty (40) feet; Easterly
by other land of mine one hundred (100)
feet; Northerly by land now or late of
John A. Eastman & Marie C.
Woodman forty (40) feet; Westerly by
Eastman, husband and wife
land now or late of Barker one hundred
of Salem
"consideration paid" (100) feet."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3396 : 102
Michael F. Terrell & Mary A.
Terrell, husband and wife
Odille Roy, wife of Joseph
May 6, 1912 of Salem
Roy, of Salem
Odille Roy, wife of Joseph
April 9, 1924 Roy, of Salem
Consideration
Ellen E. Neary of Salem
Kevin T. Daly, as Personal Robert C. Amodeo & Carol
Representative of the
A. Amodeo, husband and
January 25, 2018 Estate of Marie C. Eastman wife of Salem
"All of the land with the buildings and
improvements thereon in the City of
Salem...said premises being bounded
and described as follows: Southerly by
$233,000.00 Glendale Street forty (40) feet..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
36491 : 198
�������������������������1895-96 Salem Directory
�1895-96 Salem Directory
�Inventory No:
SAL.GN
Historic Name:
Derby and Messervy Estates
Common Name:
Address:
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
South Salem
Local No:
Year Constructed:
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Use(s):
Residential District
Significance:
Architecture; Community Planning
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
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This file was accessed on: Friday, September 6, 2019 at 11:33 AM
�F R A - AREA
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Area L e t t e r
Font numbers In t h i s Area
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Genera] D e or Per i od 1 8 6 7 - 1 9 1 5
at
G
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Acr eage
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Northfields Preservation
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�N T O A R G S E C I E I S A E E T (if applicable)
AINL EITR RTR A TTMN
Portions of t h i s area meet C r i t e r i a A and C for l i s t i n g on the National
Register as the Derby Estate h i s t o r i c d i s t r i c t . The area represents a broad
range of l a t e 19th and early 20th century a r c h i t e c t u r a l s t y l e s . It also
possesses h i s t o r i c a l associations with the rapid subdivision between the 1860s
and 1920s of farmlands and summer estates into a r e s i d e n t i a l area.
ACIETRLSGIIAC
R H T C U A I N F C N E Describe important architectural features and evaluate 1n t r s o f
em
ot her areas within the c m u i y
omnt.
The area of South Salem bounded by Holly and Leach Streets to the north,
the harbor to the east, Canal Street to the west, and Broadway and Loring
Avenues to the south (excepting Lafayette Street, which has already been
surveyed) contains examples of v i r t u a l l y every a r c h i t e c t u r a l style of the
mid-19th to early 20th centuries. The main side streets, Ocean, Linden and
Summit Avenues, contain high-style examples. A remarkably high concentration of
fine and well-preserved Second Empire and Italianate houses prevails on Linden
Avenue; other impressive Italianate examples exist at 24 and 50 Ocean Avenue. An
unusual stone Second Empire cottage exists at 12 C l i f t o n Street (the John S.
Ives House). Ocean and Summit Avenues contain the majority of the area's
high-style Queen Anne and Shingle Style houses. Noteworthy Queen Anne houses
include 47 Summit Avenue (the Frank F. Newell House), and 36 Ocean Avenue (the
Albert C. P e t t i n g i l l House). The Shingle Style i s (continued)
HSOIA SGIIAC
I T R C L I N F C N E Explain historical I p r a c of area and h w the area relates to t he
motne
o
I d v l p e t of other areas of the c m u i y
eeomn
omnt.
I
The houses i n t h i s area are representative of the massive growth of Salem
in the mid- to l a t e 19th century that spurred the subdivision and development of
former farmlands and large estates; t h i s development process occured
concurrently i n North Salem. Like the Northfields i n North Salem, the
Southfields at South Salem were o r i g i n a l l y used as common lands f o r farming. 10
acre parcels were i n d i v i d u a l l y a l l o t e d , possibly beginning e a r l i e r than 1639.
This use continued u n t i l the mid-18th century, when the Southfields were
converted into p r i v a t e l y owned farms or summer homes. One of the largest of
these estates belonged to Ezekial Hersey Derby, who owned the land now bounded
by Holly and Leach Streets to the north, Broadway, Loring and C l i f t o n Avenues to the south, and Canal Street to the west. Ezekial Derby inherited the estate,
which included a house, barn and gardens, upon the death of h i s father E l i a s i n
1799E l i a s Derby had been one of Salem's wealthiest merchants and shipowners.
The land between Lafayette Street, Eden Street, Willow Avenue and Salem Harbor
l a t e r became the estate (continued)
Johnson, C l a i r e . "Domestic Architecture i n V i c t o r i a n Salem: A
Lafayette Street Sampling." Essex Institute H i s t o r i c a l
Collections, v o l . 115, number 3, July 1979.
H i s t o r i c Salem, I n c . House R e p o r t s
B B I G A H and/or R F R N E
ILORPY
EEECS
L i t t l e , Nina Fletcher. "Come, Mclntire, and the Hersey Derby
Farm." Antiques.
""Maps and Atlases, 1851, 1874,-180*, 1897,
1911.
Salem Building Permits, 1871-1889, on f i l e at the Essex I n s t i t u t e .
Salem City Directories
Essex County Registry of Deeds
Essex I n s t i t u t e Photo C o l l e c t i o n
.
/
Q/Q$
�IN
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DERBY AND MESSERVY ESTATES AREA ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE •
best represented by 40 Wisteria Street and 42 and 49 Ocean Avenue. As the area
was l a r g e l y developed before t h e i r advent, the Colonial Revival, Tudor Revival
and Craftsman styles were less frequently u t i l i z e d . An unusual Colonial Revival
design exists at 18 Ocean Terrace, and the area's only notable Tudor Revival
house can be found at 20 Summit Avenue (the Edwin F. Woodman House). The
Craftsman influence i s seen i n both 56 Summit Avenue (the George E. Symonds
House), and 45 Summit Avenue (the George W Pitman House). The Derby and
.
Messervy Estates area also possesses an exemplary Neoclassical design, the
Salem Public Library's South Branch a t 47 Ocean Avenue. The l e s s - a f f l u e n t
streets, such as Hazel, Meadow, Eden and Messervy, primarily contain modest and
t y p i c a l examples of the I t a l i a n a t e , Second Empire and Queen Anne s t y l e s .
DERBY AND MESSERVY ESTATES AREA HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE
of William Messervy, mayor of Salem i n 1856 and 1857> whose house was located a t
what i s now 255 Lafayette Street. The eastern section of h i s estate, including
Messervy Street, was subdivided c i r c a 1883-4; the western section, between
Summit Avenue and Lafayette Street, was subdivided i n 1893 by Lucy Messervy.
William Messervy died i n February of 1886.
The Derby Estate was purchased by the development group of James Almy,
Nathaniel Wiggin and Charles Clark; l o t s and streets i n the northern section of
the area were l a i d out by July of 1867 f o r public auction. Some of the streets
were p a r t i a l l y planned by 1864. A Putnam map o f a portion of the Derby Estate
shows Willow Street f u l l y l a i d out, Laurel Street l a i d out to Hazel Street, and
Linden Street l a i d out between Holly and Laurel Streets. The t r i a n g l e between
Forest, Loring and Broadway Avenues was l a t e r replanned by James F. Almy i n 1895
and by 1911 had been altered into i t s f i n a l form. Most of the houses i n t h i s
triangle were not b u i l t u n t i l a f t e r 1911.
The subdivision of the historically-importan t Derby and Messervy Estates
demonstrates South Salem's change from a summer resort and a g r i c u l t u r a l area to
a year-round r e s i d e n t i a l neighborhood. As Salem's economy s h i f t e d from
agriculture to industry i n the mid-19th century, the leather, cotton and lead
industries based i n North and South Salem spurred the development of these
formerly-agricultural areas. The magnitude of the development of these areas
and t h e i r rapid growth mirror the r e s i d e n t i a l and i n d u s t r i a l growth of the c i t y
of Salem as a whole.
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10:34:19 26 Aug 2010
S t r e e t . No
Ar
GN
SAL .GN
SAL .1904
4 C h a r l e s St
32-114
GN
SAL .2074
3 C l i f t o n Ave
33-418
GN
SAL .2114
3-5 Eden St
33-588
GN
SAL .1930
5-7 F o r e s t Ave
32-220
GN
SAL .2060
E -8A F o r e s t Ave
33-386
GN
SAL . 1920
15 F o r e s t Ave
32-200
GN
SAL .2124
6-8 G l e n d a l e St
33-650
GN
SAL .2123
14 G l e n d a l e St
33-648
GN
SAL .2121
15 G l e n d a l e St
33-644
GN
SAL .2122
25 G l e n d a l e St
33-646
GN
SAL .2111
SAL .2112
6 G l o v e r St
25 Green St
33-561
GN
33-572
GN
SAL .1929 312-312 1/2 L a f a y e t t e St
32-218
GN
SAL .1928
314- 316 L a f a y e t t e St
32-217
GN
SAL .1927
326- 328 L a f a y e t t e St
32-214
GN
SAL .1926
330 L a f a y e t t e St
32-213
GN
SAL .1925
332 L a f a y e t t e St
32-212
GN
SAL .1924
336 L a f a y e t t e St
32-209
GN
1 L a u r e l St
33-375
GN
SAL .2057
3 L a u r e l St
33-376
GN
SAL..2058
5 L a u r e l St
33-377
GN
SAL 2022
9 L a u r e l St
33-335
GN
SAL .
.2011
12 L a u r e l St
33-303
GN
SAL .1971
18 L a u r e l St
33-106
GN
SAL .1970
19 L a u r e l St
33-98
GN
SAL .2056
GR
SAL .2109
105 Leach St
33-540
GN
SAL .2110
116 L e a c h St
33-547
GN
GN
SAL. 2034
1 L i n d e n St
33-349
SAL .2015
4 L i n d e n St
33-309
GN
• GR
SAL .2035
5- L i n d e n St
33-351
GN
SAL .2014
6 L i n d e n St
33-308
GN
SAL .2036
7 L i n d e n St
33-352
GN
SAL .2013
8 L i n d e n St
33-307
GN
SAL .2037
9 L i n d e n St
33-353
GN
SAL. 2038
11 L i n d e n St
33-354
GN
SAL .2012
12 L i n d e n St
33-305
GN
SAL. 2039
13 L i n d e n St
33-338
GN
SAL .2041
15 L i n d e n St
33-355
GN
SAL. 2042
17 L i n d e n St
33-356
GN
SAL .2021
18 L i n d e n St
33-333
GN
SAL .2043
19 -21 L i n d e n St
33-357
GN
SAL .2020
20 L i n d e n St
33-332
GN
SAL .2019
22 L i n d e n St
33-331
GN
SAL. 2044
23 L i n d e n St
33-359
GN
SAL .2045
25 L i n d e n St
SAL .2046
27 L i n d e n St
33-361
• GN
SAL .2018
28 L i n d e n St
33-329
GN
SAL .2017
32 L i n d e n St
33-328
GN
GR
GR
GR
GN
�Page
2
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10:34:19 26 Aug 2 010
S t r e e t No S t r e e t Name
Loc Nbr
A r Code NF
SAL .2016
34 L i n d e n St
33-327
GN
SAL .2059
41-43 L i n d e n St
33-380
GN
68-70 L i n d e n St
SAL .1917
72-74 L i n d e n St
33-47
GN
GO
GN
32-180
GO
GO
44 L i n d e n St
SAL . 1918
32-181
OO
SAL . 1966
73-75 L i n d e n St
GN
32-202
GO
GO
SAL . 1921
GN
SAL .1922
76-78 L i n d e n St
77-79 L i n d e n St
32-179
GO
GO
SAL .1916
GN
32-203
GO
GO
SAL .1915
80-82 L i n d e n St
SAL .1914
84-86 L i n d e n St
SAL .1913
88-90 L i n d e n St
GN
32-178
GO
GO
GN
32-177
GO
GO
GN
32-176
GO
GO
104 L i n d e n St
SAL .1905
GN
32-116
GN
SAL . 1923
4 L o r i n g Ave
32-208
GN
SAL .
.1903
10 L o r i n g Ave
32-90
GN
.
SAL . 1902
16-18 L o r i n g Ave
32-88
GN
SAL . 1901
.
20 L o r i n g Ave
32-87
GN
SAL .
.1900
22 L o r i n g Ave
32-86
GN
SAL .1899
24 L o r i n g Ave
32-85
GN
SAL. 1898
26 L o r i n g Ave
32-84
GN
SAL .1897
40 L o r i n g Ave
32-76
GN
33-78
GN
GN
SAL .1969
9-9
1/2 Meadow St
SAL. 2116
9 M e s s e r v y St
33-610
SAL .2117
15 Messervy St
33-612
GN
SAL. 2132
4 Ocean Ave
33-663
GN
SAL .2135
5 Ocean Ave
33-684
GN
SAL .2136
9 Ocean Ave
33-685
GN
SAL .2131
10 Ocean Ave
33-661
GN
SAL .2137
15 Ocean Ave
33-688
GN
SAL .2130
16 Ocean Ave
33-659
GN
SAL .2129
18 Ocean Ave
33-658
GN
SAL .2138
21 Ocean Ave
33-689
GN
SAL. 2128
22 Ocean Ave
33-657
GN
SAL .2127
24 Ocean Ave
33-744
GN
SAL. 2126
30 Ocean Ave
33-655
GN
SAL. 2082
36 Ocean Ave
33-434
GN
SAL .2081
42 Ocean Ave
33-431
GN
SAL .2067
49 Ocean Ave
33-407
GN
SAL .2049
50 Ocean Ave
33-367
GN
SAL .2048
56 Ocean Ave
33-365
GN
SAL .2047
58 Ocean Ave
33-364
GN
SAL .1967
63 Ocean Ave
33-49
GN
SAL .1968
83 Ocean Ave
33-56
GN
SAL .2139
18 Ocean T e r r
33-695
GN
SAL .2134
17 Shore Ave
33-673
GN
SAL .2133
22 Shore Ave
33-670
GN
33-459
GN
SAL .2094
2 Summi t Ave
�S/tL
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S t r e e t No S t r e e t Name
Loc Nbr....
Ar Code NF
SAL .2113
5 Summit Ave
33-587
GN
SAL .2115
7 Summit Ave
33-602
GN
SAL .
.2093
10 Summit Ave
33-455
GN
SAL .2092
12 Summit Ave
33-454
GN
SAL .2084
20 Summit Ave
33-440
GN
SAL 2083
22 Summi t Ave
33-439
GN
SAL .
.2125
29 Summi t Ave
33-651
GN
SAL .
.2142
37 Summit Ave
33-717
GN
SAL..2143
39 Summi t Ave
33-718
GN
SAL .
.2075
42 Summi t Ave
33-421
GN
SAL .
.2144
45 Summi t Ave
33-712
GN
SAL. 2145
47 Summit Ave
33-720
GN
.2146
SAL .
51 Summit Ave
33-721
GN
SAL .2147
53 Summit Ave
33-722
GN
SAL .2090
3 W i l l o w Ave
33-448
GN
SAL .2091
7 W i l l o w Ave
33-451
GN
SAL .2120
16 W i l l o w Ave
33-633
GN
SAL. 2118
17 W i l l o w Ave
33-619
GN
22 W i l l o w Ave
33-630
GN
SAL. 2061
10 -12 w i s t e r i a S t
33-388
GN
SAL. 1919
40 W i s t e r i a S t
32-192
GN
SAL .2119
[405]
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�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Glendale Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
13 Glendale Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Jacob N. Conacher
Teamster
c. 1894
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built: c. 1894
House History Completed: October, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary & Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/56201fe387996102c93466b8679b1c9d.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=v9H5ZnAQAM%7E3yvLBJ-U39%7EyXbU5-O2dEkOqWPfKZ0DEJ4Rwe9S2gQ8KWEof-2Ntd4zwvfM%7Ea%7ElVMdbWGizvW5zEQ%7EOnm1MIDBLJaCRiRfzQQZaJh12e-aNYDyb%7Ea-vBSh%7EhkIBK1XyyHGsz8Eb5XrM0tH8cqIS8uD5OKMiGwRDACqgNFfEbjtSXgj4qWNXHafrFg-ZIcSjwgKGvitvZyLfqTxS%7EvancdXfkpuIULzhHQHcA8vBP70KL3y5piYVt0UBKod5N1XGdGvfSkU1Jzyl6hEIL3QLpQbk75BjC2OLX-cZirwS1NlaWQi7G6q9e1t8a%7EINxSh3Lyv2f5eqc38A__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
89277186957582070671650361c55a2a
PDF Text
Text
������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
94 Essex Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built circa 1870 for Thomas Covell
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
House built circa 1870, house history research conducted 1995
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
HSI
Language
A language of the resource
English
1870
1995
94
Essex Street
HSI
Salem Massachusetts
Thomas Covell
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/210d32fdc615f69d8e9c67e794d99bb3.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=EtaS6CP8zF6h%7Eb9idPZUycK25Hw3MysiXB%7ET-pg6q25rtZjtBdtnrR-soWuxs-SgddNtbfSeDk1umdUGYwVN7cw8dioc4rJ59L9QjoEcN7WVDXgppyTYd56LTn00SBON98lg2sNmMme7iLrOWPDXq34KcM6g44hk3SWbn48cTJVdBGx26NLCsslwOnRvMPjnwtraJV0JAmp0uw6W3B4AddNkgpgEu%7EakMHGCOJoT6VHuJBOqU1KSwQ-LWdqUQ2QlmKH2wo9Zini9zS7yfKnbiKa8gVkwcUAvgb5MARtqSxk5HXkult8PCKYkmDdc-WZXIJFqVsjD9W-19Nurx1jFvQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
71d06b5f42ba9d8e6cace6c2663d6131
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Text
76 & 78 Essex Street
This house was built by Joseph Danforth, Salem housewright, in 1832.
In 1700 this land w as in the Cheever family of Salem; on 7 Mar 1727 /8
widow Mary Che ~ver sold a part of it with "a small old house" thereon
for 85 li to her son James Cheever, Salem turner (46:167). Towards the
end of the 18th century it ·w as owned by Capt Timothy Wellman; in the
partition of his estate in 1818, his son George received the $800
"Wyatt lot, 11 so-called, bounded southerly 54 1 on Essex St, westerly
on Frye & Mansfield 155 1 , northerly 45' on "Washington Square or
Bath Street, 11 and easterly on Sarah Johnson 160 1 ; the southerly
half of this piece is the present house lot (217:230). Five years later
30 June 1823 George Wellman, Salem mariner, for $600 sold the
whole piece to William Silsbee, Salem merchant, who lived across
the street (232: 176). On 26 Ap 1831 Mr Silsbee for $582. 50 granted
the tract to Joseph Danforth, Salem housewright (267:60).
Joseph Danforth (1782-1840) was born in Newbury, but moved to Salem
by 16 Oct 1810, when he married, here, Phebe Kimball of Bradford.
They had seven children, all sons, between 1811-33, and all but one
of these boys survived to adulthood. Mrs Phebe D died 11 Oct 1835,
whereupon Mr Danforth married, secondly, 12 Jan 1836 Mrs Mary
Russell, with whom he apparently did not reside. He died 26 Jan 1840,
in his 58th year.
He probably built the house by late 1832, for on 22 Jan 1833 Mr Danforth
for $300 mortgaged to widow Mercy Upton of Salem the land "with a
dwelling house and outbuildings standing thereon" (273:156). The 1833
Salem tax valuation shows the value of his property next to Joseph's
name in ward 2; the notation "lot land, $500" is crossed out, with
"house, $3000" substituted in its place, although he was not taxed on
the value of the new house until the 1834 valuation. On 4 Ap 1834 Mr
Danforth was given a $950 second mortgage loan from Mrs Upton; it
was discharged ten years later (271:225).
Joseph Danforth died 26 Jan 1840, at which time his estate (including
"a two story dwelling house 76 & 78 Essex St, $3200) descended to his
six sons (#7143). Four years later., 2 May 1844, two of the brothers,
George F and Joseph A, released their rights in the premises for $1066
to brother John K Danforth, Salem tailor (344: 147,147). John K thus
came to own an undivided half of the premises. He successfully
petitioned to have the property partitioned, and on 28 Mar 1845 the
court set off to him the western half of the house and grounds, being
#78 Essex Street (354:261). John K Danforth owned this property at
his death on 11 June 1863, at which time it (worth $2000) descended
to his three minor children, with widow Cornelia's dower right therein
(#36924). On 29 Ap 1865 Mrs Danforth and her three sons sold #78
to Sarah Baxter Endicott, wife of Charles Endicott, of Salem, for a
total of $1935. 95 (682:252, 252,253).
�Meanwhile, back at the eastern half of the house, #76 Essex Street:
on 21 Mar 1848 Samuel G Danforth sold his one-third interest therein
to his brother William H (395:49). William then mortgaged his 2/3
right on 7 June 1855 to brother John K (514:35). On 15 Mar 1858 John K
foreclosed the mortgage and took possession of the premises (567:49).
He sold this 2/3 share on 1 July 1859 to the owner of the remaining f /3,
youngest brother Edward F Danforth (589:292). On 16 Dec 1858
William H had lost his right in equity to redeem the mortgage to his
brother Samuel G (584:52), and on 2 July 1859 Samuel G sold the equity
to Edward F (589:291). Thus Edw ard F Danforth came to possess the
eas t ern h a lf, which he mortgaged 5 Feb 1863 to brother S a muel G
(647:211) . This mortgage was not redeemed, and on 4 Ap 1866 Samuel
sold #76 out of the family to Benjamin S Newhall of Salem (702:68) .
Nine years later, 22 June 1875, Mr Newhall bought the western half,
#78, from Mrs Endicott (930:267). And so Mr Newhall came to own
both halves of the double house.
Benjamin S Newhall died on 3 Ap 1886, willing the premises to his wife
Caroline M for life (#63363). Mrs Newhall was deceased by 16 Ap 1901,
when the Newhall heirs granted 76 &t 78 Essex St to John H Holt of Salem
(1640:3). Fourteen years later, 31 Aug 1915, Mr Holt conveyed to Mrs
Katherine M Rushford of Salem (2505:589) . On 20 Oct 1916 she conv eyed
to Harry E Jackson of Danvers (2344:499). On 22 Dec 1916 Mr Jackson
conveyed to Mrs E Isabel R ·shford of Danvers (2354:51) .
Mrs Rushford sold the premises on 26 July 1921 to Charles Aronson of
Salem (2489:384). Two years later, 25 July 1923, Mr Aronson conveyed
to Mr &t Mrs Delbert R Jones as joint tenants (2562: 100). Nearly twenty
years later, 25 July 1942, Mrs Margaret A Jones (Mr Jones having died)
conveyed to Mary f Evans of Salem (3308: 177) and she immediately reconveyed to Mrs Jones, catherine M Tracey, and Mary D Buckley a s
joint tenants (3308:178). On 30 Jan 1957, Mrs Jones being deceased,
C. M. Tracey and M. D. Buckley conveyed to Mr &t Mrs Richard C
Copeland of Salem (4779: 189).
On 12 June 1961 Mr &t Mrs Copeland granted the double house to the
present owners, Mr &t Mrs Richard D Anderson of Salem (4779: 189).
Robert Booth
Z7 July 1977
�Notes:
In the first Salem Directory, printed in 1837 but bas ed on facts as of 1836,
Joseph Danforth was listed as a "ship-joiner" with a place of business at
15 Neptune Street and a house at 15 Carlton Street, The Carlton Street
house was the family residence, and after Mr Danforth's death his eldest
son_ (and probably other sons) lived here; by 1846 his two eldest sons
Joseph and John lived at 15 Carlton Street. John continued to live
there until 1854, when he moved into 78 Essex Street, where he and
his family lived until his death. None of the other Danforth brothers
ever lived at 76-78 Essex Street, according to the records.
This house bears a striking resemblance to the double house at
55-57 Federal Street, which was built in 1836. It seems likely that
Joseph Danforth was the builder of the Federal Street house as well.
A figure such as (12:34) refers to Southern Essex County deed book 12,
page or leaf 34. A figure such as (#1234) refers to Southern Essex County
Probate docket # 1234.
DANFORTH
Joseph (1782-1840) m. (1) 1810 Phebe Kimball of Bradford (1788-1835),
m. (2) 1836 Mrs Mary Russell of Salem. Children:
1) Jos,eph Augustus, 1811, m . 1838 Sarah Nichols (1819-94), d . 1877.
2) John Klmball, 1813, m. 1842 Cornelia Dunlap ; d . 1863.
3) William Henry, 1817, d. Boston 1870. Carpenter & inventor.
4) Samuel Gray, 1819, m. 1845 Elizabeth Abbot; d. 1867.
5) George Frederick, 1822, m. 1847 Martha J Gwinn; d. 1855.
6) James Albert, 1830, d. 2 Mar 1832 "from the effects of vaccination."
7) Edward Francis, 1833, m.1856 Louisa M Wood, lived Beverly .
Genealogical information from the Danforth Genealogy by John J May,
Chas H Pope, Boston, 1902; pages 394 and 406-7.
'I
�Rough Plan of House Lots, #74 and #76-78 Essex Street
46' 2"
21 ' 4"
78 I 9 11
79'
74 1 4"
73'4'
54'
#78
#76
Essex
'
Street
24'
#74
'
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
76-78 Essex Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1832 for Joseph Danforth, Housewright
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
House built in 1832, house history conducted in 1977
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1977
76-78
Booth
Essex Street
Housewright
Joseph Danforth
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f78e37cc369a9d95855b2d0a3ab8b102.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=TwgsVcPlL5oRWCBEW%7EZgpK6Uth8nW-9yU4jAl3-LpddwF9lW1xr1iefuYFc7MGz7B2OOMD1aqvzmLRhtgQFw5ePrLfDlCCB%7E%7EpV1uWxxiWW1ZebZleS9IIxYadY23wldczjXvKyPuv5l89yvYGJvue9oGSQZPqwn7tzxPB2vIbZZFKvOQrKs%7EmrhSLgou0j4sPgDY4TI5I8eaqejJGqcaA4uCDb1kzWwtSJJaqy5VRKnTqie%7EHW85VW1MJWPYEIIlZjXoxRsl1XTYvTas0MQrH7ESis-zNEU3NnmuQgD--JpBUKUvM295j6iNr%7Eo-5uOAqPI-DU0XR1cxSgn0G-vnA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
b690ce6eb26ac60bc1ffb26d6ac8f0c2
PDF Text
Text
74 Essex Street
This house was built for Samuel Very 3d, Salem block-maker, in 1810.
In 17 57 this land, with a dwelling house thereon, was sold to Salem
spinsters Elizabeth & Anna Philpott, sisters { 114: 155, 156). They
owned it for more than 50 years, Elizabeth surviving Anna until
sometime before 16 Mar 1810, when the administrator of her estate
for $840 solo. to Samuel Very 3d, Salem block-maker, "a lot of land
in Salem with a dwelling house thereon ... being the same messuage
whereof (Elizabeth Philpott) died seized" ( 190: 299).
Samuel Very 3d (1785-181!3), the son of Capt Samuel and Abigail
(Crowninshield) Very, had married Alice Palmer on 4 Dec 1804.
He was a trader and block-maker, in which trade he made the
blocks through which the lines of sailing vessels were led; he
maintained a shop on Derby Street for this purpose. In addition,
he made use of his deceased uncle Clifford Crowninshield's land
·& wharf off Derby Street. In 1810 he paid taxes on the Crowninshield
property (worth $1800) .and on part of a house & a shop (worth $700);
these taxes reflected his estate as of early 1810. Soon after buying
this land in March 1810, he caused this house to be built thereon;
in the tax valuation of 1811 he was assessed for "a house in Essex
St and a shop in Derby St" worth a total of $1700, as well as for the
$1800 Crowninshield property, The jump in assessment ($700 in 1810
to $1700 in 1811) reflects the presence of this new house.
On 19 Ap 1811 Mr Very, then styled a Salem trader, for $500 mortgaged
to Salem widow Susanna Ingersoll "a certain lot of land situated on the
northerly side of Essex Street ... together with a new three story
dwelling house and all other buildings thereon•• ( 193:64). Mrs. Ingersoll
died that winter, and Mr Very failed to redeem the mortgage. On 30
May 1812 Mr Very, having fallen into debt, was obliged to sell his
right in equity to redeem the mortgage at public auction, at which for
a high bid of $835 Mrs Sarah Johnson of Marblehead bought the same
(197:25); on 1 June 1812 Mrs Johnson bought of the administrator of
Mrs Hathorne 1 s estate, for $533. 33, all her right to the premises
(197:24). The house & land thus came into the ownership of Sarah,
wife of Capt Benoice Johnson, Marblehead mariner & merchant,
M.l's Johnson owned it for more than 30 years, evidently renting it out
or most of that time; she died on 8 Sept 1846, at which time the
house & land (valued at $1725) descended to her two heirs, the children
of h;r daughter, Mrs Harriet S Cabot and John C Dodge (#43775). On
30 Sept 1847 Mr Dodge for $862. 50 granted his right in the place to the
trustee of Mrs Cabot (388: lZ 1). Then on 15 July 1850, for a total of
$1500 the estate was bought by George A Nichols of Salem from Mrs
Cabot and from her trustee ( 431: 199,208).
i"ii
�George Andrew Nichols died on 17 Aug 1851; a Salem cooper, he owne,d
the houses at 72 & 74 Essex St at the time of his decease (#48190). It t
is not clear as to how the property was disposed of, but it soon came
into the possession of Sarah (Nichols). the wife of Joseph Augustus
Danforth. Mrs Danforth may have been a sister to the deceased.
She owned the premi~es for nearly twenty years, selling for $2900
on 20 Oct 1870 to widow Rebecca Whiley of Salem (808:285). Mrs
Whiley (or Wiley) died on 8 Jan 1879, at which time the homestead (worth
$2400) descended to her two daughters, Mrs Sabra C Morse and Mrs
Abigail W Moulton (#57187). T~ey owned it until the death of Mrs Morse
on 18 July 1905, at which time her right to the premises descended to
her daughter Mrs Rebecca F Davis of Salem (#97083). On 11 June 1906
Mrs Davis and her aunt Mrs Moulton granted the estate to Simon Naczor
of Salem (1827:4_ 1). Mr Naczor owned it a very short time, selling on
6
7 July 1906 to Mrs Sarah A Fay (1829:376). Mrs Fay owned it until
12 Sept 1914 when she sold to Sarah F Dore of Salem (2274:361). Sarah
Dore was deceased by 7 July 1921 when her heir & administratrix sold
the estate to Mrs Lena M Abernathy of Salem (2486:375, 376).
Mrs Abernathy owned the premises for more than 25 years, selling
on 12 Nov 194·6 to Mr &· Mrs Louis J Pelletier (3515:195). On 15 Ap
1954 Mr &: Mrs Pelletier granted the place to Mary L Higgins of
Peabody (4060: 194), and she immediately re conveyed to Mrs Pelletier
(4060:195). On 28 Oct 1955 Mrs .Rose A Pelletier granted the estate
to Mr &: Mrs John D 0 1 Connel\ of Salem (4221 :490).
Thirteen years later, on 11 Sept 1968, Mr &: Mrs O'Connell sold the
house and land to the present owners, Mr &: Mrs Richard D Anderson
of Salem ( 5 5 5 7: 101).
Robert Booth
26 July 1977
Note : The death of Samuel Very 3d, for whom this house was built in
1810, was reported in th~ Salem Gazette, issue of 27 April 1813;
he was only 28 years· old. He and his wife Alice evidently had no
children. Mr Very was called a block-maker in 1810 and a trader
in 1811 and 1812.
A figure such as ( 12:34) refers to deed book 1_2, page or leaf 34 at the
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds; a figure such as (#1234) refers
to probate docket 1234 at Southern Essex County Probate.
�Mortgage Deed of Samuel Ve ry 3d to Mrs Susanna Ingersoll,
19 April 1811, 193:64
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�Rough Plan of House Lots, #74 and #76-78 Essex Street
r
46 1 2 11
21' 4 11
78' 911
79'
741
411
73'4 1
24'
54 1
I
•
#78
#76
Essex
#74
Street
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
74 Essex Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1810 for Samuel Very the 3rd, Blockmaker
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
House built in 1810, house history research conducted in 1977
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1810
1977
74
blockmaker
Booth
Essex Street
Salem Massachusetts
Samuel Very
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/a05c58d4adb3fb625cac490dfc31efd1.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=cN66ynVbEtq0U8GemuAScsAyjI9MqCtZUgbKXaybN5qee9XxvS7tGXU4g7gvdtalM%7EldH6edF2MnL%7ERR5Yz4EGQhpcryVPyfWrTOj%7E-PuOk%7E-k9myhs5%7EYztom9BGIJVbi-zayc7ksG9zyoMjaRdiVHYz99arn56m6YjprB9eQ8%7EY-qgPmm6dJZRfOdy-HKjHxGioCl1JvQYHvfopEStfGSJMES1SWvJ-98MtlyhgIDdUT9pcZowlIuCKI3C-GNgMXjwXcGEH7%7Ej3hiVReav7MkMJN1w-eyn-7S-xFSXrvJaP7G-KFtbME01MOhVL1x%7EQVCmjbikzoTH7fO6j%7EkD4Q__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
1fba1ab0ee6871514f33b299af77827c
PDF Text
Text
Christopher Babbidgo House, 46½ Essex Street
Although almost half of this house was cut away & removed,
and although its exterior r e sembles nothing so much as a
mid-eighteenth century Georg ian mansion house, yet there
is a possibility that this is one of Salem 1 s few remaining
seventeenth-century houses.
A brief history of the house was written by the historian
Sidney Perley, in his History of Salem (vol. II, pps. 309-10),
as follows (with my own notes interspersed):
"This lot was probably granted to Christopher Babbidge before
1683, when he owned it, having erected a house, in which he
lived. This house was one of the best in the neighborhood,
and the staircase is still in use in that section of the house
which remains upon the original site. 11 Perley provide s an
illustration of the newel post & balustrades of the staircase;
unfortunately, they are no longer in the house. "Mr Babbidge
died about 1711, and his son Christopher succeeded him on the
place." Son Christopher was a cordwainer (shoe-maker). 11 In
1717, the building committee of the East or Second Church
met here & considered the plans of its· first meeting house,
which was built on the opposite side of the street 11 on the
western corner of Essex & Ha rdy Streets. "Mr Babbidge died
in 1755, and the adminstratrix of his estate conveyed the
land and buildings to Richard Derby, the merchant, Nov. 8,
1757" by deed 105:16. Mr Babbidg e's daughter M
ehitable administered his estate, which was worth about 268 li; his
homeste ad, 11 House & Barn & about 60 poles of Land", was appraised at 153.6.8 (probate docket #1155).
~
Richard Derby, one of the great merchants of his day, evi- .
dently presente d this house to his daughter Mary when she
married Capt Ceor ge Crowninshield about 1764; either Mr Derby
or Capt & M Crowninshield completely remodelled the house
rs
to its pres ent Georg ian appearance. 11 Mr Derby died in 1783,
having devised to his daughter Mary Crowninshield this 'House
in which she lately dwelt now occupied by Joseph Noses' 11 who
was a sa.ilmaker. "Mrs Crowninshield conveyed the estate to
James Cheever, a merchant, Aug. 24, 1799 11 by de,ed 165:180,
for $3500.
"Mr Che ever died Sept 23 1839; and his children conveyed the
buildings and land to Phineas R Weston on June 1, 1840 11 for
$2,075, with a store thereon, by deed 320:14. "In 1859, Mr
Weston cut off the e astern end of the house and moved it to
Grant Street, where it still stands." Grant Street is now
Kosciusko Street, n e ar Derby W
harf; evidently this other half
�of the house was demolished within the past ten years. "Mr
Weston's family conveyed the remainder of the house and the
land to Charles Bowker on July 21 , 1885, and Mr Bowker lived
there until his decease. 11
Mr Bowkers heirs conveyed the property for $7500 to Ezma Abdo
of Salem (along with another piece of real estate) on 1 Sept
1914, soon after the Salem fire ( 2276:322 ). with hundreds
of people homeless in Salem, Mr Abdo moved the old Babbidge
house to the back yard, and built the present brick tenement
at the stree t-front. He sold the property 29 Nov 1918 to
Nicolai S Jensen of W
orcester (2402:174); on 1 May 1922 Mr
Jensen sold the premises to Esther Tarlow of Salem (2512:153).
Mrs Tarlow owned the property for 23 years, selling it to
Margaret Solovicos of ~alem on 19 July 1945 (3417: 597); on
28 Oct 1946 she gr anted it to The Solovicos Trust of Salem
(3519:573). The Solovicos family sold it to the M
aguires
in 1975 (61 88:766), and t he Messrs Maguire sold it 6 Jan 1976
to the trustees of Hibbard Realty Trust of M
arblehead, the
present owners (6212:346).
This is just a preliminary history of this property, and
draws no definite conclusions about the age of the h ouse.
Certainly, the remaining orig inal oak chamfered beams tend
to indicate a building date or 1715 or before--and it seems
that Christopher Babbidge built a house here by 1664. In a
case such as this, where there is· very little documentary
evidence relating to the house before the 1750s, the construction methods & evidence are c rucial to assigning a
date to the building. I would suggest calling in an expert
on 17th-century construction from the Society for the Preservation of New England Ant iquities.
Robert Booth
,
•
Note : Dr Abbot L Cummings, executive director of the Society for the
Preservation of N ew England Antiquities, has inspected this house, and
believes that a dating of ca. 1715 is appropriate.
Robert Booth, 13 Aug 1977
�CHRISTOPHER BABBIDGE
Christopher Babbidge (1640?-1711?), a tailor, was the son
of Roger and Hester Babbidge of Totness, Devonshire , England,
where he was apprenticed to George Marks, tailor ; about 1660
he married Agnes Triggs of Totness, and in 1661 they came to
America in the ship Nathaniel ; they settled in Salem that
same year , when their first child, Ruth, was born .
Mr Babbidge was listed as one who owned a Salem cottage or
dwelling plac e in or before 1661; the location of this house
is not k.novm. On 24 Feb 1662 the town of Salem recorded the
sale of house-lots along the northern side of what is now
lower Essex Street; one of the purchasers was "M Babbidge"-r
Christopher Babbidge . On 24 July 1664 Joseph Porter was
granted a house-lot "next adjoining Lt George Gardner's
spot of land in the common near Xtopher Babbidge his house ••• "
and on the same date it was "voted to Anthony Ashby also a
lot of the same quantity with the range (of lots ) where
Goodman Bavedg (sic) lives, paying for it as others did . 11
From these two items , it is clear that by 1664 Christopher
Babbidge was living in a house on the lot he ' d been granted
in 1662--the sar.ie lot that this house stands on today .
By 3 May 1665 :Mr Babbidge had been made a freeman, and in
the next year he served as a grandjuryman--a position
generally held by the t o\<m ' s leading citizens . He would
go on to serve in the same capacity in 1670, 1675- 6, 1678-9,
and 1681-4. he served as a Salem constable in 1673 and many
times after , and held many other tmm offices . By the time
of the witch trials, he owned a shop ; it was in Mr Babbidge's
shop that John Proctor was accused of practicing witchcraft .
Robert Booth
23 Mar 1977
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,,
:
As the house appeared before being cut
in half in 1859 (Perley, vol II, p 309)
From Perley 1 s
History of Salem
vol II, p 310
STAIRCASE IN BABBIDGE HOC.~-.:.
. •• '
~...~,;.~
�BK 6 2 I 2 PG 3 4 6
I
·1
WE, R0!3Effi' M. MAGUIR:. AND GEORGE E, MAGUIRE, rui tenants 1n comncn, both
of Salem, Essex County, Comnonwealth of MM:Jachusetts
County, Massachusetts,
I
I
I
being xxmarried, for consideration paid, and in full ronsiderarion of Cne Hundred .Three Thousan<!
Ten Doll~rs· ($103,010.00)---------------------------------------gr:ints to Willia'll M. Rice and Ann M. Rice and Peter W. :lice, Trustees of Hibbard
•
Realty Trust of i'.arblehead, Essex County, l-:.u:1achusdts, a Declaration of ':'rust · dated
'
ef.December 30, ·1975, and recorded herewith all of 2 Hibbard 'll'.ki1x)l'.f.li:t~
P.oad, l'.a.rblehead, Essex County, Massachuscttg '111th Quitclaim Covena'1ts
the land in Salem, with buildinf;s thereon bounded a'1d described as follO'.~S:
[0.-Scription :,.nd encumbrancrs, if any]
The land wlth the buildings thereon known as nu:Tbers 44, 46,
46 1/2, 48 and 50 Essex Street, in said Saler., bounded and described as foll<Ms:
SOUIBEASTERLY:
by Essex Street, about n1nety-<ne (91) feet, nine (9) inches;
NORI'HEASTEP.LY:
by land nc,11 or fo~rly of Hayman, about one hundred forty-nine
(149) feet;
NORrn't-TESTERLY:
by land now or forrrerly of Davis about seventy (70) fett;
SOUI"r!WESTERLY:
by land now or forrrerly of the City of Salem, about one hundred
forty-seven (147) feet, exceptinP.; so much thereof. as may have
been t?.ken by the City of Salem for the p:r-JpOse of w1den:1ng said
Essex Street.
For title, see deed of Ha'!'es ;,i, Solov1cos and Raymond T. White, Trustees under the
will o~ f1arf,aret Solov1cos, dated October 14, 1975, and recorded with the Essex South
Regist:rj• of Deeds, Book 6188, Pa.,":e 766.
This Parcel is subject to a rYPrtr:a~ held by the George Peabody Co-Operative Bank, 1n
the amount of approxirrately $65,000.00, and 1n a second r.ortgage held by Ja'!'es M.
Solov:1.cos and Raymond T. White, Trustees under tre will of Mar~t Solov1cos, 1n the
arrotmt of $30,000.00, which the buyers agree to pay,
The documentary stamps necessary are based on the difference between
$103,010.00 and mortgages assumed of $95,000.00.
~
~ 1 "'
,'
r:-,_
~n. r:-:~!r;c f.·~·
~o( , ft) ~ff'iyc-tl
and cancelled on b:ick of t!lis instrunont
.... -·
IDlttte1rn ...our.. hands
and seals
ROB!:'.R'r M. MAGUI~
... .
this ............., .........:... day of .....January.................... 19.76 ..
~k/4.d}?~b!J/.............................
GEOR E ~ !• A~,....--.-v·
Gi:
1
...... .
c~··-Jj. · · ·. .·.·=····:................:
21~
...................
..: f.~1.1.Aal
aJqt <1!0111mnnwtultq of !!luaanrh,lmrtts
Essex
ss.
' January
C
19 76
R0!3Em' M. MAGUIRE end GEORGE E, MAGUIR::
Then personally appeared the above named
and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be
their
free act and d~d
fore me
~~a. Gz6<;..:. . . . .. . .
Walter A. Costello,Jr.
My wnm11S1ion e.pin:s
oiur
ublic-.>.lx~oor
J1.me
5,
1s8l
(•Jndividuil-Joint Tcnnnt1-Tcn1nts in Common -Ten1nts by the Entirety.)
CHAPT!!P. 183 SEC. ti AS AMENDED BY 0-IAPTEP. 497 OF 1969
l!•OIJ'. deed pmtnted for ttcord shill ~t■in _ hawe •~d?r"'d upon it the full n:m,; rnidence and post ofli~ address of the ,tnnt~
or
and • ttet!AI of the amount of the full con!•~«•!1on thereof 1n dollars or the tuture of the other con,iJention tltettfor, if not ddiv«ed
for • sp«16c monetary sum. The ~ull consi<1•:"!•on shall me>n the tol•I price for the convepnce .,,lhout dcJuction f~r any Jim, "'
•~mhrance, as,um~ by. the gnn ce or rem,in,ng thrreo_ ._All such <ndursrntent, and rc:ciuls sh>II be tteor<lcJ u put of the dttJ.
n
f•~lure to co~1 "(th dus sect,?n •h•II not ~ffect ~• nlul,ry uf any dce<l. No re,sistcr or dent, stull .cccrt a d«J for recording unlr:u
ply
tt ,. In romph,nce w,th tl1e rcqutrements or 1h11 ,!<),on.
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��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
46.5 Essex Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built circa 1715 for Christopher Babbidge, Cordwainer
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
House built circa 1715, house history research conducted in 1977
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1715
1977
46.5
Booth
Christopher Babbidge
Essex Street
Salem Massachusetts
-
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8de0803f8c6b594198dd23182999ad27
PDF Text
Text
~CHIistoric
e, · em
~ Incorporated
POST OFFICE BOX 865
SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970 / PHONE (617) 745-0799
35 Essex Street
11
0LD FRYE BUIT,DING11
moved here in
OFFICE AT OLD TOWN HALL
1854
Resear ch by,
Joyce King
May 1983
·'to preserve Historic Sites, Buildings 1111d objects ,
anti to w ork fo r the education of the c-ommunity
in th e tr11e value of th e same."
�I •
35 Essex Street
This h ouse is described in the Salem Historic Distr i ct Study a s:
"A two- s tor y wood (siding) house with a so-called " Dutch" garnbrel
roo f that is not comm in Salem.
on
The lower slope of a Dutch
gambrel roof curves out at the bottom, inst ead of slanting in a
straight line.
The doorway is in the s i de yard and is trimmed
wi th pil asters and a den tiled corni ce.
Th ere ' is an ell attached
to t he r e ar of t he house and a cinder block garage in the yard.
Three dormer windows provi de light on the top f loor ; all the
wi ndow openings in this house are small."
Essex street was the original m in thoroughfare in this section.
a
I t was called a street or highway in 1667 ; ye street, 1670 ; a
highway or the street that goes from ye meeting house down to the
neck so called, 1683; ye high street, 1687; ye main street, 1706 ;
M
ain street, 1788; and Essex street, 1795.
(Essex Antiquarian, vol.
10 pg . 60)
The land on whi ch this house stands was a portion of t he Isaac Foot
I
Iv
lot in 1700:
"t .
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a
�1851+ - J oseph Gardner 3rd, the owner of t he land now occupied by
35 Essex and 1 'J'urner Streets, obtained a per mi t to move a portion
of w
hat was called the "Frye Bujldings" on Washjne;ton .St .
buildings were purch a sed by Joseph Gardner 3rd and
hj_s
These
brother
Danj el B. Gardn er in Oct. 1847 and transformed into a hot el.
(appendix A)
185~ April- 27 - The bui lding was m
oved .
(appendi x B )
~r . Gardner
was taxed for a " shop" and l a nd at 35 Es sex St. val ued at ~\500 .
( Prior to 185Li- t here is no building listed a t 35 Essex St .
1851 m do e s s how a building on th i s site at t ha t time .
ap
The
Wh a t the
fate of t ha t buildi ng was is not known. )
Joseph Gardner 3rd , the son of Joseph and Eunice (Tucker ) Gardn er,
was born in Salem on ~a y 25 , 1822; lived first at 13 M
argin street,
and later purchased the house at 76 Lafayette street.
married, on June 30, 1850, Eliza
c.
Joseph Gardner
Gove.
Along with being a proprietor of the " Rai lroad House" M Gardn er
r.
chartered a vessel to carry live stock i n to Texas for breeding
purposes i ncludi ng horses, cows, s h eep, hens, turkeys, fancy breeds
of dogs, etc.
The vessel was lured in the Bahamas by false beacon s ,
but was repaired and reached Texas in 1860, returning to Salem just
prior to the Civil War.
on M 4 , 1873.
ay
Mr. Gardner died, suddenly, at Boston, ~ass.
('T'he Gove Book)
�1857 May 8 - Joseph Gardner 3rd sold t he l and and ,buildings to
his fathe r-in- l aw, Squire Gove , f or $2 ,000:
(book 552 page 63)
Squire Gove was born on Oct. 23, 1803.
He settled in Lin coln , Vt .
and removed to Lynn , M
ass, where he worked on a farm a year on
shares.
He then removed to Salem, M ., where he engaged in
ass
the grocery business.
1826.
He married Lydia Bassett Gove on Sept . 14,
Mr. Gove died at Salem on Jan. 12, 1863 .
(The Gove Book)
�1859 tax records:
35 Essex St .
Occupants
tToseph H. Green, cigarmaker age 27
M
oses Stearn s , mariner age 39
Owner
,Io seph:
- :J....r.:it
~
Squire Gove
val. $1 , 000
1860 - This ad appeared in the Salem Gaze tte:
'' For sale, th e wooden dwelling house #35 Essex stree t wi t h land
under and adjoining.
The house is in good condition, a nd is very
convenient for two families.
The land measures 40 fee t on Essex
street, by about 70 feet deep and contains about 3,000 sq. ft.
Terms¾ part of purchase money down, in delivery of the de ed,
the balance in one , two, three and four years."
1860 M 7 - Squire Gove, of Salem, sold for the sum of $1,170, to
ay
Thomas Collins the land and dwelling house and all other buildings
at 35 Essex street .
Being a portion of the estate conveyed by
Joseph Gardner on M 8,
ay
�1864 - tax records
Occupants
Thomas Collins age 55
Th omas Collins Jr . aee 19 (navy)
Cornelius Coll ins age 17
Joseph Green age 30
Owner
Thomas Collins
3'/' X '15 1
house $400
land
400
1869 - tax records
Oc cupants
Thomas Collins age 72 (his a ge changes)
( frequentl y
)
Cornelius Collins
Thomas Jr. died Nov. 27, 1864
Owner
'11ho m
as Collins
house $700
land
300
1 870 census:
age 61
Thomas Collins
~ary
"
II
Ellen
Cornelius"
II
M
argaret
2n d family
M
aria Lasamby
11
56
II
28
II
23
II
18
no occupation
keeps house
works in cigar shop
works lathing
saleswoman
II
45
no occupation
born Ire.
II
II
"
M
ass.
"
II
II
II
II
Ire.
1872 tax records
Occupants
Thomas Coll ins
Cornelius 11
Owner
Thomas Col lins
age 65
II
23
house $700
land
200
1874 tax records
Occupants
Thomas Collins
Cornelius
Albert Ham
"
a ge 77
laborer
"
25
11
35 shoemaker
Owner
Thomas Collins
house $800
land
400
�1879 tax records
Occupants
Charles E. Hart
age 29
1880 census
M
ary Collins
M
argaret "
II
Nellie
2nd fami l y
Charle s E. Hart
M
ary
"
ti
Bessie
Nellie
"
plumber
Ovmer
Heirs of Thomas Collins
house 1~600
l and
400
age 60 keeps house
" 25 clerk in store
II
4 grand daughter
born I re.
II
Vass .
II
,,
11
30 plumber
"
II
I!
2L~ keeps house
"
11
11
3
11
11
II
1
It
II
1882 tax records
Occupants
John A. Demings, stonecutter
Owner
Heirs of Thomas Collins
house $600
land
400
1887 tax records
Occupants
J ohn A. Demings
age 38
stone cutter
Owner
Heirs of Thomas Collins
taxed at½
house $300
land
200
1895 tax records
Occupants
James Naugle, age 25
stay cutter
Owner
M
argaret Collins
val. ½
house $500
land
200
�1895 Sept. 4 - Patrick Dean , of Salem, as guar dian of Ell en Coll i ns
minor and ch i ld of Cornelius F . Coll ins and Cat he r i ne Coll i ns his
widow , h eirs of M
argaret J . Colljns (she died J une 30 , 1 895) , sold
for
t l1e
house .
SUT!'
of it2 , '.)50 , t o Pat rj cl<: J . Dugan the land an d dwelling
The s ame conveyed to Thomas Coll ins by Squire Gove in 1860 .
(book 1455 page 324)
1900 tax records
Oc cunants
Owne r
Patrick J . Dugan
Patr jck J . Dugan ~rocer
r aur ice A. ~cDonald
1900 census
Patrick Dugan
:t-!argaret "
Naurison M
cDonald
II
August a
a r,e 54
house $1 , 000
barn
300
l and
500
bor n M .
ass
provis i ons store
"
"
II
"
32 cutter in shoe shop
32
ESSEX STREET.
1910 t ax
. :Hein John W. Russell.. .
·: · ~9nias F. Cronin . . . . . . •
··htrirk J . Eelley . . . ... ..
..
- .Re1rs :\lbert 'i\nipplt•. . . .
•
ft., $1100.
Honse, $2800; land. 3648 ft .. $1200.
~:~ucis T. Berry . . . . . . . .
43. Store. $600: land, 2358 ft.• $700.
41 . Honse-. $1600 : land. 2000 ft., $500.
. •. ~hn_ ?II. Berry . . . . . . . . . .
39-371/2. House, $1200; lan d. 3000 ft., $700.
· ··ratnek J . Duggii n . . . .. . . ,._ ¾...J{onse, $1200 ; barn, $300; land,
45.
.,..
~ :;~ ~ah ~lcGinley_. . . . . . . . . .
: _.·,.
~ John M. Berry. . . . . . . . . . •
2775 ft., $600.
33. H ouse, $1700; land, 3200 ft., $700.
27. House, $1300 ; land, 2625 ft., $ 500.
25. House, $1300 ; land, 2780 ft., $500. .
J ~aicob M. Rubinovi~ et al.
21. House, $4000;
-t''8alem Charitable Build• ·
ing Association,
Thomas F . Cronin . . . . . . . •
;-.Ellen F. Edward~. . . . . . . .
17.
15.
13.
11.
stable,
II
II
.
I
53. House, $1000; land, 1680 ft., $500. · .
51-49. House, $3300 ; la.nd, 3750 ft., $1100.
47. House. $2700 ; shop, SlO0; land, 3456
•.
II
It
" 55
i•oo; land :
9300 ft.. $2000.
House, $800; land, 15,019 ft., $2000.
Rouse, $1000.
House, S2000; land. 2658 ft., $800.
Rouse, $2000; land, 2990 ft., $700.
1600
4400
8900
i'1 '15
81 ,40
,~ 15
1900
'14
24
38
85
2100
88 85
2400
44
-4000
1800
2100
1800
1800 ·
efOO
2800
.1000
'i800
2'700
00
Oo
Sa
15
40
as so
8S 80
118 40
51 80
18 50
'1>180
49 00
1919 Feb . 6 - Patrick Dugan , th e s on of t h e l at e Dennis and Margaret
( Dalton) Duga n , died at his hom ,
e
35 Essex St . , yest erday .
He worked
�\) .
at currying m
any _
years, after which he carried on .t he grocery and
provi s i on business on Ward St . for a quarter of a c entury·, and up
t o t he t ime of th e Salem conf l agrat ion (191~) .
been engaged i n the real est ate business .
Sinc e t h en h e had
He was well known and
highl y respected, and he bore his long and painful illness w t h
i
great patience and fortitude.
Father M
atthews Soc .
He was for 40 years director of
He leaves a widow; a s i ster, M
rs. J ame s J .
G
reen and three br others He nry J ., Dennis F. a nd John F. Dugan .
(Salem Evening News)
rr . Dugan 's estate (probate #132463) listed his real estate holdings
as:
house and land 35 Essex st. $2,000
house and land 4 - 6 Hathorne Crescent $4 , 000
house and land 42 Ells worth Rd., Peabody, M ss.
a
$2,000
1924 M 15 - Nora Dugan widow sold to Thomas M
ay
organ the land and
buildings at 35 Essex st.
The same I inherited from my husband.
(book 2596 page 455)
1926 May 29 - Thomas Morgan, unmarried, sold t he land and buildings
at 35 Essex St. to Ignacy and Rozalia Kowalski.
The same premis es
conveyed by deed of Nora Dugan on M 15, 1924.
ay
(book 2680 page 538)
1959 Aug. 14 - Ignatus K
owalski husband of Rosalia (Wojciechowska)
of 35 Essex Street, died suddenly at his home yesterday morning .
He was the son of t he late Frank and Katherine ( Lennen) Kowalski.
He was a resident of Salem f or more than 55 years and was retireq
from the leather industry.
(Salem Evening News)
�1959 De c. 2 - Deeds were drawn in wh i ch the proper.ty was placed in
the names of Rozalia Kowal ski and her dauehter Jane .
page s
(book
4625
276- 277)
1964 Varch 20 - M
rs. Rosalia (Wojciechowska) Kowalski of 35 Essex
street, died last evening at Sal em hospital , followi ng a short
illness .
Sh e was the wife of the late Ignacy Kowalski and daughter of the
late Anthony and J ulianna (Cieslinska ) W ci echowski .
oj
She had been a resident of W
ard One for more than 50 years and
was a parishioner of St. John the Baptist church.
She is survived by two sons, John Kowalski of Teaneck, N. J . and
Bernard Kowalski of Salem; four daughters , M s . Mi chael (Pearl)
r
W
aler of Peabody , Mrs. J ohn (Nancy ) Smith of Lynn , M
iss Jane Kowalski
of Salem and Mrs. Ri ch ard (Stacia) Bishop of M
iddletown, Conn .
Also
17 grandchildren~
1964 Oct . 1 - Jane Kowalski sold the property to Robert L. and
Antoinette M
asse,
(book 5211 page 703)
1967 Aug . 2 - Robert L. M
asse, widower s old the premises to Hjalmer
and Barbara
o.
wife in 1964.
Landean.
The same premises sold to me and my late
(book 5463 page 460)
1981 M 2 - Hjalmer Landean of Souix City, Iowa transferred title
ay
to Barbara
o.
Landean of Salem.
(book 6815 page 321)
�u·
1982 Dec . 1 6 - Barbara
o.
Landean sold the land and buil ding a t
35 Es sex st. t o Edward D. and Cani c e c. I<cGlynn of
t✓. ar ble·h e ad .
(book 70 18 pa ge 97)
Referen ce to book and page are deed books at t he Registry of Deeds .
Probate numbers are cases at Probate Court . Both offic es are located
in the same building on Federal St . All m
aps in th i s report are
not meant to be axact, just f or illustration purposes.
�Note:
An exact date of construction can not be assigned to this house,
at this ti~e. The Frye buildines were comprised of m
any additions
made to an original 1650 ' s house . The exact location of this
buildinG wh:ilG on t he Frye lot is never stated . A recent inspe ction,
made by Sally Dee and t his research er, confirme d t he presence of
some 18th century architectural details .
If I were to venture a guess, it would be t h at the house at 35
Essex street was the "two tene ment" buil ding added to the old house
b y lV'.r . Vansfjeld in t he 1760 ' s .
Joyce Kine;
�.f.,
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' -~
THE ESSEX ANTIQUARIAN.
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VoL. III.
SALEM, MASS., MAv, 1899.
No. 5•
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NO. 2.
BY SIDNEY PERLEY.
THE frontispiece is a map of that section was first called Street, highway or road
t . · of Salem which is bounded byWashingto~, leading to Mar~lehead in 1711; Street to
..
Essex, Summer and Norman streets. It 1s ye almshouse m 1746; Highway to the
, :~~·>based on actual surveys and title deeds, mills in 1755; Street from Main street to
f ~~'.:.'i and is dra~n on a scale o_f two hu?dred workhouse in 1762;. Street from town
J<i ~
,,-'-:·feet to an mch. It shows the location of pump to Marblehead m 1791; and Sum·l:5:: .all the houses that were standing in 1700. mer street in 1800.
-f:'..-' The braces marked "a" show where
Norman street was opened in 165- as a
. \;.~-~·• Barton square now runs, and those marked lane obstructed by bus. It w;ts known in
·::r::.t' ... b '' where C1ombie street runs. Barton 1711 as the Highway that goes by John
-°?:J/ square was laid out by Samuel Barton in Norman's, and was first called Norman's
: -:-J: -1797, and Crombie street, as a court from lane that year. In 1768 it was called
Essex street about three-fourths of its Street leading from town house to Marblepresent length, by Benjamin Crombie in head; and Road· from court house to
~:-: -. 1805, beingcut through to Norman street Marblehead in 1792. It was first called
.= a score of years later.
·
Norman street in 1792.
" ·:. ·· Washington street in 1659 ran down to
In the sketches which follow, after
1
the Corwin land, about where the post-of- 1 700, titles and deeds referred to pertain
l.
• fice stands, the Corwin land then being to the houses and the land under and im1 ~- . ·bounded easterly on the river. . It was mediately adjacent thereto, and not always
< called a street in 1659, 1691 and 1714, · to the whole lot, the design being, after
l ,; ..and a country road in 1681. It was first 17_00,_ to give the history of the houses
t' ._.'._ . -£ailed Street from town house to south- p~c1pally.
....._
t' .. fields in 17~9; Street from court.house to
Elizabeth Tawfey House. The ho~se" "
t -,t:.·:110uthfields 10 1762; Street leadmg from and lot of Mrs. Elizabeth Tawley was ongtown house to Marblehead in 17 68 ; Hig}V inally the estate of Dr. George Emery, an
:way from court house to Marblehead in early chirurgeon of Salem. He was living
1773; Street leading to Marblehead in in Salem in 1637, owned this land in 1652,
:-i-• 1782; and Washington street in 1792.
and lived in this house as early as 1657.
~ .;•:.'
Essex street was called a lane in 1659,
May 1, 1677, in consideration of good
··and a country road in 1681. It was first will, he conveyed the house and lot to his
l :;',. · wled Main, or the main street in 1699 ; kinswoman Elizabeth Tawley and her hus), _ .. Queen's highway in 1711; Paved street in band John Tawley,a mariner, the convey;/
fl . ~-~ · 1790 ; and Essex street in 1802. In 1711 ance being made upon the condition that
_ . ··, •• the western end was widened twelve· feet
!
they maintain him during the remainder
~ ·:: •. ·on the southern side.•
of his life.•
Summer street was called a highway in
John Tawley died in 1690, and his
t .:.:.>:-oI6s9,and Street to southfields in 1699. It widow Elizabeth and only child Elizabeth
J".\:,-:_.
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e
B
J700.
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PART OF SALEM IN
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•_Essex Registry of Deeds, book 4, leaf 156.
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·!"HE ESSEX ANTIQUARIAN.
PART OF SALEH IN
,ntinued to live there. The daughter used in common, etc., " as long as said
arried Samuel Ruck before 1 700, and house shall be habitable."• This expresey lived in this house, the widow Taw- sion indicates that the house was then old.
y boarding with them after 1703. A bed- In this deed, the leanto on the back side
om and pantry were added in the rearof of the house was reserved, with liberty to
e house when this change in the family remove it within six months. Mr. Ruck
called it " my mansion house."
The
:curred.
April 21, 1708, Samuel Ruck conveyed part of the house conveyed was the origi~
s wife's half interest in the premises to nal house of Dr. Emery.
The northern part of this "double house"
rs. Tawley* ; and, Oct. 3 1, 1709, Mrs.
1wley conveyed the same interest to remained the property of Mr. Ruck until
.mes Ruck, for £200.t This interest of . his death, in the spring of 1769. His
,mes Ruck probably ultimately came into administrator conveyed it to Henry Rust,
e ownership of Samuel Ruck, Mrs. Taw- cabinet-maker, Jan. 22, 1771; an·d the
{'s son-in-law, who, June 6, 1728, con- next day he conveyed it to Joseph Blaney,
yed it to his children,Samuel Ruck, jr., of esq., of Salem, who, in turn, sold it to
.!em, shipwright, John Daniels of Boston, widow Sarah Collins of Salem April 2 2,
pemaker, and his wife Elizabeth, and 1777. Toward the end of the century it
:ligail RuckofSalem, spinster, the mother belonged to the estate of Hannah Taylor,
· the children being dead, and, also, deceased. Polly Collins, probably an heir
obably, the daughter Ruth, who is not of Sarah Collins, or Hannah Taylor, or
both, married Nathaniel Cummings of
entioned in this deed.§
Jan. 26,1711, Mrs. Tawley conveyed her Salem, blacksmith, Oct. 18, 1792. She
her half interest in the land and build- and her husband conveyed their onegs to her daughter's four children, fourth interest in this part of the house and
1
izabeth, Ruth, Samuel, and Abigail land to Joel Bowker of Salem, blacksmith,
uck. U Mrs. Tawley died in the winter Sept. 12, 1797, the tenement being then
1713•4, having, in her will, confirmed occupied by the widow Williamson. Mr.
e conveyance to her grandchildren.
Bowker sold this interest to George Smith
The granddaughters, Elizabeth Daniels of Salem, trader, Feb. 14, 1816; and-Mr~
1 Abigail Ruck, released the house and Smith conveyed it to his son-in-law
d
nd under and adjoining the same to their Thomas Frye Nov. 1, 1826. Mr. Frye
other Samuel, who was a carpenter, sold it to Daniel B. Gardner, trader, and
arch 30, 1 730.t On the same day Joseph Gardner, 3d, innholder, both of
:muel and Elizal:>eth released to Abigail Salem, Oct. 2, 1847.
e barn and land under and ad joining it.1
After his purchase of the ancient house,
Thus the whole title to the house and as already mentioned, to the westward of
.stern end of the lot came into the own• this house, and upon the higher ground,
ship of Samuel Ruck.
Mr. Mansfield erected a residence for
On Christmas day, 1 760, Mr. Ruck himself. This is the house in the old
mveyed the southern half of the house colonial style, that is now standing. It
1d that portion of the lot to Jonathan was built between 1760 and 1768.
_
:ansfield of Salem, blacksmith, the divis•
To the west side of the original house, Mr• )
n line running through the front door Mansfield erected a building in which were
id chimney, and the front door to be constructed two tenements ; and after that
time this end of the old house, with the·
addition, was called " the long house." .,,...,,
• Essex Registry of Deeds, book 21, leaf 131.
t Essex Registry of Deeds, book 2 r, leaf 133.
Mr. Mansfield died in the spring of
§Essex Registry of Deeds, book 51, leaf 54.
1791, having devised the long house to bis.
ii Essex Registry of Deeds, book 24 leaf 128.
1
:):Essex Registry of Deeds, book 56, leaf 222.
'V Essex Registry of Deeds, book 56, leaf 238.
•Essex Registry of Deeds, book-109, leaf 8o.
I
.I
• four sons, Benjamin Bream, Ellis, Henry
and Benjamin Mansfield.
Benjamin Bream Mansfield, cabinetmaker, conveyed his interest in the premises to his brother Ellis Mansfield Dec. 18,
1792 ;• and, on the next day, Ellis conveyed the interest he had bought and also
his own to Samuel Putnam,t who was
administrator of their father's estate.
The western end, or tenement, of the
long house was conveyed by Ellis and
Benjamin Mansfield to Henry Mansfield
April 13, 1793; and Henry Mansfield
conveyed it to _George Smith Feb. 3, 1800.
1700.
67
his daughter Mary, wife of Thomas Frye
Dec. 13, 1830, and they sold it to the
Gardners, alreadymentioned,Oct. :i,1847.
In 1769, Mr. Mansfield's end of the
original house was occupied by his sons
Jonathan and Amos Mansfield and Josiah
Howard; in 1793 and 1796 by Joseph
Ayers and Ezekiel Goldthwait; and in
1797 by the widow Ayers and Ezekiel
Goldthwait.
Aug. 8, 1 793, the administrator of the
estate of Mr. Mansfield conveyed this part
of the house to John Norris.• Mr. Norris,
who was a merchant of Salem, conveyed·
./
HOUSE OF ELIZABETH TAWLEV.
Mr.'Smith died in 184-, having devised the
tenement to his wife Dorcas, who survived
him and conveyed it to the Gardners,
already mentioned, Oct. 1 r, 1847.
The middle tenement of the long house
was occupied in J 793 and 1796 by Joseph
Mansfield, and conveyed by the administrator of the estate of Jonathan Mansfield
to Thomas Bancroft, esq., of Salem, Aug.
25, 1796. On the same day Mr. Bancroft conveyed the tenement to Samuel
Putnam, who sold it to George Smith
Jan. 12, 1801. Mr. Smith conveyed it to
•Essex Registry of Deeds, book JSS, leaf l<f6.
!Essex Registry of Deeds, book 15s, leaf 147.
it to James Fuller and Joel Bowker, both
of Salem, blacksmiths, Dec. 2 z, 1 796. t
Oct. 12, 1797, Mr. Fuller released hi~ interest in the premises to Mr. Bowker.§
For five hundred dollars the latter sold the
tenementtoGeorge Smith Feb. 14, 1816.ff
Nov. 1, 1826, Mr. Smith conveyed it to
his son-in-law Thomas Frye,t who sold it
•Essex Registry of Deeds, book I S7, leaf 19.
tEssex Registry of Deeds,· book 161, leaf 1o6.
§Essex Registry of Deeds, book 162, leaf 249.
IIEssex Registry of Deeds, book 209, leaf 19.
:tEssex Registry of Deeds, book 243, lea f 274.
William Lawrence Sluman, a minor, had a one.
half interest in the double house, which was con.
veyed to Thomas I•rye Oct. IS, 1830.-.Esu~
R,gistry if.D,tdl, 6ool .1.sB, ka/.1"1.
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68
THE ESSEX ANTIQUARIAN.
four acres, and were a pasture belonging
to Rev. Hugh Peter, the pastor of the
First church in Salem, and subsequently a
regicide, early in the settlement, probably
having been granted to him by the town.
After his return to England, he conveyed
this pasture, by his attorney, Charles Gott
of Wenham, to Capt. George Corwin of
Salem, merchant, July 1, 1659.*
Captain Corwin died Jan. 3, 1684-5,
aged seventy-four.
This pasture was
divided between his son Jonathan and the
heirs of his son John, who had died July
25, 1683, the former taking the western
end of the pasture to th~ division line
shown on the map, which he owneq, until
his decease June 9, r 718. Jonathan was
the judge who lived in the "witch hvuse,"
having succeeded his father there, and
who sat upon the bench during the witchcraft trials. The heirs of John had the
portion east of the division line. He was
the older son, and probably at the time of
his marriage, about 1660, his father erected for him the ancient house that stood
where the Washington House is now located on Washington street. Apparently the
title to the house and land remained in
the father until his decease.
By agreement of the heirs of George
Corwin, March 31, 1685, the northern
portion of the premises was assigned to
John's widow Margaret, and the southern
half with the house to her elder son
George, who spent the remainder of his
life in it. t Margaret probably died in
1691-2, and the northern part was in the
possession of her son Samuel Corwin for
several years, and in the occupation of
Capt. Walter Price Sept. 13, 1709, when
it was conveyed by Elizabeth Corwin, gentlewoman, Lucy Elliston, widow, both of
Boston, Peter Thacher of Weymouth,
clerk, and wife Hannah, Thomas Smith of
Boston, brazier, and his wife Mary, and
Margaret Corwin of Boston, gentlewoman,
Estate of George Corwin House, and to Joseph Flint of Salem.§
to the Gardners, already mentioned, Oct.
z, 1847.•
When the railroad was extended in
184 7, it was found necessary to cut off a
part of the ancient house; and at that
time the Gardners purchased the entire
estate, raising the corner portion of the
building, probably at that time, and constructing the first story of brick
In the accompanying engraving the
ancient house is that part of the structure
which is on the comer, comprising the
present second and third stories, and extending on either street as far as the projections in the building. ThP- upper part
has been burned away, and is now different from what it was years ago.
Upon the purchase of the premises,
which was then known as " The Frye
estate," the Gardners immediately transformed it into a hotel, which the proprietors called the" Railroad House," and put
it in charge of Edward Stearns, who had
come from Lowell. It was opened to 'the
public on Monday, Jan. 31, 1848. It
contained a considerable number of rooms
for guests ; though the principal object of
the proprietors was to accommodate railroad travellers with meals. In speaking
of the new place the week before it .was
opened, a local paper said, "Their saloon
aRd sitting room, on the lower floor, are
very spacious and elegant, with marbletopped tables and counters, French landscape paper hangings, splendid mirrors,
&c." Liquors were dispensed freely, and
the room devoted to gambling, being the
comer room in the third story, was in
constant use. The place became notorious throughout the region. The estate is
still owned by the heirs of the Gardners,
few of the rooms being occupied. Here
P. S. Gilmore, as the leader of the Salem
brass band, began his famous career,
the band room remaining as it was when
he occupied it some thirty years ago.
Estate of George Corwin and Jonathan
Corwin Lots. These three lots contained
•Essex Registry of Deeds, book 388, leaf 201.
*Essex Registry of Deeds, book r, leaf 6o.
tEssex Registry of Deeds, book 9, leaf 28.
§Essex Registry of Deeds, book 65, leaf 25.f:
l ·~=·
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·
PART OF SALEM IN [70 0.
6(
Captain George Corwin was the sheriff
Mrs. Blaney died Dec. 24, 1776, an<
of the county, and but twenty-six years her husband conveyed the premises, in
f, , old when he hung the witches, being but eluding the house, warehouse and lane
t --~ thirty when he died in 1696. Even then to Joshua Ward of Salem Aug. 1 r , q Sr.•
t~e f~eling against him was ~o stron~ that
Mr. Ward removed the old house, an(
·.-,:~•· his friends were for a long time afraid to built a large and fine brick residence up
·;_~t:: deposit his remains in the family tomb, a on the same site before I 789. Wher
·•t :·few rods in the rear of the house, and Washington visited Salem in his tour east
i :.c~ they were buried in the house cellar until in 1789, this was the house in which h,
.. ~- the excitement had subsided.
spent the night he stopped in Salem
Capt. Corwin married two daughters of October 29.
Hon. Bartholomew Gedney, and by a
Jeremiah R ogers House. This lot wa
declaration made March I 7, 1691-2, a few probably granted to Rev. Hugh Peter whe1
'.:~:z.--. months ~ter he h~d acquired the title to he was settled as pastor of the churci
· lf: the prem1ses he conveyed the house and here in 1635 . He probably lived in th,
r
J ~~: Jot, after his decease; to his children.• house that was early erected on this lot
His widow died Dec. 23, 1700 ; and the After the close of his ministry here he re
i: · estate came into the hands of his son turned to England ; and, 8 : 1 2mo : 1659
.:/:_ :Bartholomew Corwin.
by his attorney Charles Gott of '\Venham
}:j._' Ba.-tholomew removed to Westerly, R- for twelve pounds, he conveyed the hous
•· :~.,... I., and, as soon as he became of age, con- and lot to Benjamin Felton of Salem ;·
i ift veyed the estate, for one hundred and and about a year later was executed as .
i .i.-.:: .sixty pounds, to Col. Samuel Browne of regicide upon the accession to the thron
{ ~~-:~( 'Salem July 5, 1714.t
of Charles IL Mr. Felton conveyed th,
'{ .. ;•;::_ ' Colonel Browne was wealthy, and resid- house and lot to Jeremiah Rogers of Sa
; ,· f':,,_ ·ed in what is now Derby square, dying !em, for sixty pounds, Nov. 29, 168 r.
possessed of this house and lot June 21, Mr. Rogers was a wheelwright, and live<
_
!731, a~d ~aving devise? the sam~ ~o ~is in this house for many years. Here wa
·,, ·:;-,.5..; -eon BenJamm, a boy of sixteen. BenJamm probably born his son, Rev. John Roger!
~ ·. r_•~ died, unmarried, Aug. 12, 1737, at the age who became the second minister of Box
1_.•·~ p-~-twenty-two. His heirs were his broth- ford, and to whom his father conveye,
_f ~-'j:[; 'el's, Cols_- Samuel and William Browne. the premises, for one hundred and lift
~ .:);tt,Samuel died Nov. 26, 174z, leaving two pounds, May 1, 1717. ff Rev. Mr. Roger
0
,
i-'--~.: .. ~ildren, Hon. William Browne, a judge, never lived here after he acquired th
it. . ..:-., d
~ :~:r,:- :-:l!J subsequently governor of Bermuda, title, but let the house until March 26
:,,,:-jf?i.'lDd Abigail, who was afterward the wife of 1750, when, for eighteen hundred pound~
, ·:.~~i,_)oseph Blaney.
· he conveyed the estafe to David Britto1
f ~''f .. -April 9, 1759, Benjamin's brother Wil- of Salem, gentleman, who then · Jived ii
of Beverly, esq. (fath_er of ~illiam the house.t T ile house was burned in th
;. /iti:-;~ e t Brown~), released his half m_terest great fire, Oct. 6, 1774 ; and Captai:
· ) ~[,:·:m the lot to his brother Samuel's children Britton sold the lot, for four hundred an,
. :-·',tf?\Yi11!am and Abigail;§ and the last named eighty pounds, to Henry Rust of Salel1'
. ;:=;, ~
'Y-Uliam, of Salem, for two hundred and merchan t.1 Mr. R ust came from Ipswic
.·\>:._"~Y•six pounds, conveyed his interest in to Salem when a boy, and learned th
·.XI--?:'~ land, which he called two-thirds, to his carpenter's trade of Jonathan Ga vet. · H
Abigail's husband, Joseph Blaney, of
- ,,,~,-- • . em, gentleman, Oct. 5, 1762.11
"Essex Registry of Deeds, book I 38, leaf 26:
tEssex Registry of Deeds, book I, leaf ; 3.
· .•:-:;::-',~_·,_·.-Essex Registry of Deeds, book 9, leaf 6o.
§Essex Registry of Deeds, book 6 , leaf 33.
• t'~ : 0 _ . tEsscx Registry of Deeds, book 27, leaf 26.
.
l!Essex Registry of Deed,, book 32, leaf 8.
Reg!stry of Deeds, book 105, leaf 235 .
:t:Essex Registry of Deeds, book 96, leaf 165.
· f: .. ,. · l i ~ x Registry of Deeds, book 114, leaf 152.
'ITEssex Registry of Deeds, book r37, leaf 95
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
35 Essex Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Old Frye Building, moved here in 1854
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
House moved to this site in 1854, research conducted in 1983
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1854
1983
35
Essex Street
Joyce King
Old Frye Building
Salem Massachusetts
-
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OFFICE AT OLD TOWN HALL
POST OFFICE BOX 865
SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970 / PHONE (617) 745-0799
8 Essex Street
"9uilt by
in 1800
l~ esearch oy ,
J o y ce Kin;,;
J\pril l <JHj
" to 1• rrscnie 1/istoric Sites, 811ildi11g; 11 11d objects,
1111.I tn work for tire ed11cnlicm of tli e ro1111111111it,v
;,, tire
lntt!
,•aluc of tir e ; ,nne."
�/,
8 Fssex Street
This bu:tl d inc; stands on land once called the Samuel T
.,m1ber r, l ot :
PART OF SALEM
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a
Sam·uel Lambert H;use. This lot was
granted by the town of Salem to Matthew
Wood in 1667, and he immediately built
on it a dwelling 'house, which was not fully
finished Jan. 23, 1667-8. The house
having been mortgaged to Capt. Georg;
I Corwin of Salem, merchant, and default
in payment made, Captain Corwin, by
order. of Jeremiah Bootman, attorney
of Mr. Wood, and Mr. Bootman sold ·
and conveyed the estate to William Cash
of Salem Jan. 23, 1667-8.'{ Mr. Cash
was a mariner, and conveyed the house
and lll!ld to'.:..Philip Cromwell of Salem
'."()ct. 12, 1677.• Mr. Cromwell was a
~,1aughterer, and, for thirty-five pound,,
conveyed the estate to Jonathan Prince
of Salem, cordwinder, Aug. 15, 1683.t
t.Jifr. Prince died about 1685; his widow
\Mary, having married John Warner of
..Ipswich, was appointed administratrix of
.th• estate ; and she, for thirty-five pounds ·
,,aad ten shillings, conveyed the house,
lhop and lot to Samuel Lambert of
$a)em, mariner, Jan. 23, 1694.t Mr.
Lambert lived here, and died before May
19, 1729, when administration upon his
fe,tate was granted. He wu tucceeded
tli:, Jonathan Lambert and the latter died
\ poese!lled of the estate, administration
-being granted on his C!tate Aug. 1, 1774.
'Jhe house, barn and lot were then valued
,t_
:eigh ty pounds. The house was taken
•down March 18, 1789. Doctor Bentley
records the fact in his journal, as follows :
" March x 8 [ 17 89J. A building, the
property of the family of Lambert, having
c:,ne room upon a floor, and the entrance
-in a range with the chimney at the eastern
.
end, the whole building facing the westem end of English's Lane nearly, taken
I
. ...
\
down."
• Essex Registry of Deeds, book 6, leaf 90.
tEssex R egistry of Deeds, book 6, leaf.111.
tEssex Registry of Deeds, book 10, leaf 68.
§Essex Registry of Deeds, book 6, leaf 31.
IIE&scx Reb>istry of D eeds, book I 3, leaf 283.
_ t:ssex Registry of Ueeds, book 93, leaf 134.
•
t Essex Registry of D eeds, book 100, leaf I J 1.
t Essex Registry of Deeds, book 100, leaf 13:z.
�)
" Essex street was called a street or highway in 1667; ye street,
1675; ye country road, 1690; ye h i ghway or main street, 1695; the
main street, 1725; and Essex street in 1796 . " (Th e Essex Antiquarian,
vol . 9 pg. 72)
As shown on the map , this land was once abutted by what was the n
called a creek. "This creek was an outlet for the ponds and swamp
which now constitute W
ashington squar e . The cr eek was called the
cove that goeth to the neck in 1662; Tuck' s cove or creek, 1663;
a cove, 1667; a kind of a cr eek , 1675; a small creek next the
common land , 1683; ye creek or town common, 1700 ; t he creek, 1732;
a sm
all cre ek next ye common , 1765 ; flats of Coll ins ' cove, 1791;
the cove, 1794; Gerrish's gutter, 1804; the gutter, 1826; flats ,
1850 ; creek, 1858 ; and the brook in 1862. So it was open to some
extent until the latter date . It must have been filled ve r y soon
afterward . " ('rh e Essex Antiquarian, vol . 9 pg. 72)
112.6.
M r ch 19 - Jonathan Lambert , merchant , of Salem; Samuel
a
W
oodkind , shipwright and Lydi a his wife in her right; Adam Wellman,
mariner; and Rebecca W
ellman , spinster of Boston, sold a par cel of
land (which included what is now 8 and 10 Essex street) to David
tturphy , ropema..l{.er , for the sum of $135:
South by M
ain St. (now Essex)
W
est
by land o f Ti m
othy Wellman, for m
erly Gerrish
North by a s mall creek next the common so called
East
by land o f John Pasury, formerly George Hodges
(book 160 page 200)
122.2. David :V:urphy built h i s dwelling house ( now 10 F.ssex)
1800 J an. 13 - David M
urphy, ro pemaker, sold a s trip of 1.slli!
24 feet wide to James Whj ttemor e , r o pcmaker, for the sum of $100
11 Bein~ par t o f the land I pur chased of the heir s of Jonat han
T.ambert in their dee d to me t.::arch 1796 ." (book 167 page 74)
(This is now 8 Essex )
�1801 Jan. 27 - Arthur Campbell, carpenter , of Salem , sold f or $625
to James Dalrymple, watchmaker , "a dwelling house which st ands on
land of James Whittemore, Essex street, between land of David
M
urphy and heirs of John M
asury - which said dwelling house t ogether with all my right and title, claim and demand what ever
which I the said Arthur have now or at anytime heretofore had to
hold - release premises." (book 170 page 119)
This document, coupled with the notation in The Diary of W
illiam
Bentlev , D. D, (vol. 2 pg. 469) describing new buildings and other
construction in 1800: "A House in Essex Street opposite Engli sh
Street", would fix the date of 1 800 to this building. The highly
unusual deed of a carpenter selling a dw~lling house to a third
part y gives one the notion that James W
hittemore hired M Cam
r.
pbell
to build a h ouse and after i ts construction could not pay t he bill .
Arthur Campbell's connection with Salem must have- been brief, fo r
he does not appear in any other documents found to date .
1802 June 14 - James Whitt emore , ropemaker, sold this lot of land
to James Dalrymple. (book 169 page 296)
James Dalr ymple was of Scotch parentage, and came to this country
in 1795 from Belfast, Ireland on t h e brig " Eliza" . He wa s a watchmaker by trade and conducted a s tore on \'fash ington St . In 1806
James Dalrym
ple m
arried Sarah the daugher of J oseph Vi ncent, ropemaker.
1808 A . 9 - James Dalrymple purchased the adjoining pr oper t y
ug
(10 Essex) from W
illiam G
ray who had foreclosed on a m
ortga ~e from
David ~-"ur phy (book 185 page lL~0). I t is worth rem
ember ing that
these were very hard tim for anyone connected with the s hipping
es
industry because of t h e embargo impos s ed against Great Br i t bi n.
Th e m
anufacture of ro pe was vit all y dependent on f itting t he vessel s
comine and goi ng f r om l ocal ports . W
ith shippin~ cur t ail ed t he
rope business , along with oth er s eaport i ndustries , wer e i n t he
state of de pression.
�Some notice regarding the tenants of James Dalrymple can be found
in Rev . W
illiam Bentley ' s writings :
"1816 M 31 . Ann , of Jeremiah and Elizabeth 0 1 Conner. Atroph .
ay
inf., 18 days . He from I r eland . She a Longeway and her m
other a
dau. of madam Rhue . rrhey are Catholics. The grandmother lives in
the Engl ish house next the gate . Her two daugh ters with h er, both
Longeway. Three children l eft, two males . Dalrymple 1 s Building
near old Neck Gate, Essex street ." ( Parish List of Deaths )
"1817 Oct . 23 Francis, of Jeremiah and Elizabeth O'Connor.
Fever , 4 years. Catholics living among us . A fem
ale child of
s ame par e nts burned in f ay, 1816 . Ee fr om Ireland . Two children
left , one m
ale. Dalrymple 's B(uilding) near old Neck Gat e . Essex
opp. English street . 11 (Parish List of Deat hs)
"1817 Nov . 1 M
ale child of Benjamin and ~'. ar y Blanchard . Atrophy,
1 year. He from W
oburn, formerly a butcher . Has been tro ubled with
rheumatism and lost the best use of one hand . Sh e from Beverly, an
Adams , se cond wife . They have eight children l eft , f ive sons .
Dalrymple ' s Buildi ne , Essex street , opp. English . " (Parish List of
Deaths)
11 1818 J une 24 .
Child of J eremy and Elizabeth O' Connor . Atrophy ,
3 weeks . She a granddaughter of the aged M
rs. Rhue , neutral Fr ench ,
ret . 90 . Buried a child 23 Oc tober last . Essex street near old
Neck Gate, Dalrymple' s Buildings . " (Parish List of Deaths)
11 1818 June 25 Benjamin Bl a nchar d f ro m Wobur n .
Apoplexy , 59 years .
He had been in better circumstances . Had been at hard labor on th e
day be for e . Twice m
arried ; s econd wife dau . of Capt. Adams of
Beverly . Le ft seven children . Essex s tree t near old Neck Gate ,
Dalrymple ' s Buildings . 11 ( Parish List of Dea ths)
11 1818 June 26 . B. Blanchard buried this day . He was in extreme
indigence . I wrote to his brother Jesse in :i1arbleh ead . His two
sons from Boston came a t t he tine of th e funeral . His father in
Law Adams & M er at the funer.'.llo Blanchard was of a good fami l y
oth
in i':iddlesex , but had s unk , b ci r1g infirm . !le had but a ohort time
in his last illness . li e ho.s l eft 8 if not 10 c1 ildr cn f< has had
a c;reater numbe r ." ( D
iary of \.h ll iam Bentl ey D. D, )
1
�"1819 M 1 .
ay
M
ale child of Benjamin and M
ary Blanchard. Atr ophy
inf., 2 years . She from Beverly, an Adams. Th e f ather di ed June 25 ,
1817, from W
oburn . After death of husband, she removed f rom
Dalrymple's Building , Neck Gate , to W
indmill Point . Thr ee chi l dren,
one m
ale." (Parish List of Deaths )
The Dalrymple · family also lost a child in 1819:
"July 21. M
artha, of James and Sara Dalrym
ple. W s, 5 years.
orm
N long sick a pleasant child. He f rom I r eland, watchmake r. Holds
ot
tenements opposite English street, near old Neck Gate. She a dau.
of Joseph Vincent , ropem
aker . Have two chi l dr en , f emal es . Ess ex
street." ( Parish List of Deaths )
l[il. (up to this time the tax records yield l ittle i nfor m tion )
a
James D ymple is taxed for "3 houses and 1 small house"•
alr
The tenants were listed as John W
illiams Jr. and Hen,ry Perki ns.
total value being $2,000.
The
James Dalrymple truced for 3 houses . Tenant s wer e Thomas and
John Laskey , ropemakers at 13 Pleasant St.; D
alling Hunt r ess , r opemaker.
~
M
arch 24 Jam Dalrymple died . This sim
es
ple obituary was w i tt en :
r
"In this city on Sunday evening last James Dalrymple Esq. i n t he
74th year of his ag e. He w s a native of Ireland."
a
~
M . Dalrympl e ' s es t ate was not probated (#7036) until 1843 . Sarah
r
Dalrymple, widow, was appoint ed administrator . > garet , their only
'.ur
s urviving daughter, approved the account . The invento r y s ave a list
of real estat e :
1~2 , 000
Hous e and l and on Essex St. (#10)
Two dwelling houses and land on Dalrymple Ct. ·1 , 500
50
Field near W
illiam Fay 's estate
25
House on Der by St . on St oddard' s l and
�1850
A federal census gives a clos er look at t he families:
10 Essex Street
Sarah Dalrymple
11
M
argaret
age 72
II
born M
ass.
36
"
"
8 Essex Street
J ames M
urphy
Julia
t1
11
M
ary
11
J ulia
M
ichael 11
second family:
Hugh Flaherty
Elizabeth "
11
John
!v:ichael
"
thir d famil y :
Thomas Hayse
r,:ary c. "
11
M
ary
fourth family:
Patrick Flinn
11
M
ary
R8
Essex Street
John Fitzgerald
M
argaret
"
11
Caty
11
W
illie
second family:
Bart Conner s
Catharine 11
Cath erine 11
age 33 laborer
11
33
"
ti
11
II
II
9
born Ire.
11
"
7
4
II
II
45 laborer
33
II
II
II
M
ass.
II
II
Ire.
11
M
ass.
"
II
2
2 months
II
"
II
24 l aborer
24
Ire.
II
20
"
"
II
II
30 laborer
30
"
"
Ire.
II
I re.
"
30
" 30
11
laborer
"
II
II
2
II
II
8 m
onths
II
II
34 laborer
II
II
34
"
II
2
m
onths
II
II
IL
II
II
II
M
ass.
"
Ire.
II
M
ass.
ill.6. Th e tax records list 8 Essex Street a s vacant f or r epairs .
R 8 Essex St. vacant
owner Sarah Dalrymple
value $1 , 000 .
ill2, The front building #8 is s till listed as vacant, while
Daniel Croley age 23 , Soloman Cragen age 25 and Char l es Cragen age
28 are the occupants of t he rear building .
�1
1860 f ederal census:
#10 Sarah D
alrymple
I•fargaret
"
#8 & BR
James Paine
11
Hannah
James E. 11
Robert
"
Fanny E. "
age 83
"
48
age 33 peddler
II
27
II
fl
3
1
II
1 month
born M
ass.
II
fl
born Eng .
II
"
"
II
II
M .
ass
II
"
unoccupied
unoccupied
~
t ax records :
Occupants
#10 Sarah Dalrymple
age 87
8 vacant
R Phillip Brown
Joanna Collins
M
ary Fitzgerald
age 25
Owner
Sarah Dalrymple house $500
85 X 177ft. land
700
II
II
house 200
II
II
ho.use 200
1863 Apr i l 29 - Sarah Dalrymple , daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth
(Hart) Vincent , widow of James D
alrymple, died a t the age of 86 years,
1 month and 15 days. She was buried in t he Howard Street cemetery
in the tomb of N. Appleton . (Ci t y Hall death records)
1866 tenants :
Nathaniel Powell
l•1r s . Love dell
Phillip Rrown
j\l;r s . Neagle
1868 -
After the death of her mot her M
argaret Dalrymple must have
deci ded to sell the proper t y . Th is ad appeared in the Sa lem Gazette :
August 25 - For Sale - Valuable Estate in Essex Street
11
0:n Tuesday , Se pt ~ 8 at L L o I clo ck Ari! . will be so ld on t h e premises .
The estate #10 ~ssex stre et consisting of a t w s t or y dwelling house
o
wi th the land under and adjoining . The house is in good order, is
I
�convenient for two families) and contains 13 rooms. The land
measures 43 feet on Essex street by 100 feet deep, fronting on a
court.
Also the three story dwelling house next east of th e above.
The house has two brick ends, contains 9 rooms, and is very convenient for two families. The land measures 39 feet on Essex
street, by 47 feet on a Court leading from Essex street, with half
of the land in the rear.
Also the two story double house in rear of the above, with the
land adjoining. The house is convenient for two fami'l ies and
contains 8 rooms. The land measures 90 feet on the Court.
This offers a very desirable opportunity to obtain an eligible
location for manufacturing purposes, or for an investment, as
tenements are very much needed in that vicinity, and with good
management it must pay a large interest on the investment.
Terms easy and made known at the sale."
J,M For some reason the property was not sold at this time and
~argaret Dalrymple was still the owner as shown in the tax records:
Essex street
owner
house $ 600
10 - M
argaret Dalrym
ple
land
1,200
house
300
8 - Nathaniel Powell
age 48
Daniel Scanlan
house
R8 - Phillip Brown
age 32
200
II
36
M
annus Fol ey
1.a2Q. census :
10
M
argaret
-2nd famil yDalrymple
age 58
Elizabeth W
ebster
II
Caroline
Caroline Perley
W
illiam H. II
8
II
Thomas Sargent
M
ary E. "
Charlotte T.' I I
. II
Thomas
Ho race F.
George w
. "
"
II
'.
keeps ho use
45 keeps house
born M .
ass
II
"
"
at school
no occupation
printing office
II
II
"
11
labor er
keeps house
at school
II
II
II
II
II
It
II
II
II
" 10 at ho me
11-
II
"
II
II
Ir
II
II
II
11
50
54
44
L1-l
15
13
II
II
II
II
II
It
II
�q
2nd family
Ant hony Forrest
II
M
argaret
age 25 s t one mason
" 25 keeps house
8R
Phillip Brown
Ann
11
Catherine "
2nd family
M
annus Foley
Eunice
"
M
argaret"
Delia
"
II
J a me s
II
J ohn
II
W l liam
i
ti
11
11
II
ti
"
ti
11
II
"
32 tanner
curri er
? k eeps house
73 keeps house
"
32 shoemaker
,,
I re.
II
Hass .
&
30 keeps house
19 at s chool
7 a t s chool
6 at s chool
5 at home
3 at home
1 8?2 t ax r e cords:
10 - M
argaret Dalrymple
8 - empt y
annus Foley
~8 - M
¾ e mpty
~
tax r-eCDrds:
10 - M
argaret Dalrym e
pl
W
illiam H. Dalrymple
8 - J ames M
cCarty
Edward Thompson
R8 - Clem
ent Nichols
Hiram Parshly
1876 t ax records :
10 - t1targaret Dalrymple
Ch ar les Nealey
8 - empt y
RB - M chael Roach
i
Hi ram Parshly
.1fil.6. tax r ecor ds :
10 - \l/illiam Doc!-:.ham
Joh n
"
8 - J ohn Burnes
R8 - Hiram Parshley
born l"'aine
II
Pr ince Ed . I S.
age 30
" 37
II
23
"
?
II
"
II
II
It
I re .
II
It
11
II
II
"
"
"
II
"
"
�1880 census:
10 - Lizzie D
orance
It
Lizzie
Elizabeth Dockham
Wil liam
"
II
John
8 - Ellen Printy
Ann E. II
2nd family
John Pr ynne
It
Jane
George w II
. II
Edwin
II
Eva
?
R8
Sanborn
Hiram Parshley
Pary
"
II
Lizzie
W
illiam
"
II
Lila
age 57 keeps house
37
" 78 mother
It
55 brother
" 41 laborer
It
It
It
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
born M
ass.
II
"
II
It
II
28 keeps house
"
II
"
43 teamster
"
33 keeps house
11 at school
4 at home
1
N. H.
M
ass.
II
36 keeps store*
II
It
II
II
II
"
"
88 keeps house
49 shoe factory
45 keeps house
12 at school
10 at school
II
8 II
It
Maine
t-~ass.
II
II
II
"
" N. H.
"
M
ass.
II
"
II
M
ass.
II
"
1.8..82 tax records:
10
8
8½
1889
10
Occupants
George E. Day
Joseph Gilman, nurse
James Cotter, laborer
M
ichael 11
, jute m
ill
Horace Sargent , mo rroco worker
tax records :
Occupants
John D
ockham
8
James Gili:1an
varie t y s tore - E. Printy
8-½ James M
arston
Horace Sargent
Owner
M
argaret Dalrymple house $ 600
land
1,000
II
II
house
300
II
house
300
"
Owner
M
argaret Dalrymple house
land
house
"
"
"
11l2J, city dir e ctory:
8 M
iss Rosanna J . D
uignan , variety s tore
q5
,James Gil man , nurse
W
illiam Leonar d
,J ohn II . Nelson
* Firs t m
ention of a sto r e
II
house
(:
"
600
1 , 000
300
300
�"
~
M
iss M
e.rgueri te Dalrymple gave a address, on the life of
Rev. W
illiam Bentley, from memory, without notes , on Nov. 26.
before the W
oman's Alliance of the Second Church, Salem, M
ass.
This was while she was in her 87th year. (An account of her
lif,e was printed in the Salem News on Nov. 9, 1897 see also Vol.
1 of the Diary of William Bentley)
1900 census
10
M
argaret Dalrymple
Isabelle Tate
Francis Lindsay
r:!ary
"
M
ary
"
-
8
R8
Joseph Gilman
II
M
ary
Rosanna Duignan
Rosanna M
ah.oney
John M
aroney
M
argaret II
Bridget Lyons
II
Annie
John A. M
aroney
Joseph
"
Agnes
"
Helen
"
age 88
II
II
II
11
II
11
11
56 servant
59
57
35
born M
ass.
75
"
"
fl
11
II
81 sister
"
43
II
Ire.
M
ass.
16 niece
11
II
42 morocco dresser
42 Wife
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
II
II
II
II
"
Eng .
Ire .
M
ass.
22 daughter,laundress
20 stepdaughter
8 son
6 "
5 daughter
II
2
II
r-;ass
Canada
11
II
II
II
"
M .
ass
II
II
II
II
II
II
l2Ql
city directory
8 Frank Connor, variety
J oseph Gilm
an, watcher of the sick
8R J . J . ;,:aro ney
Albert Harrington
4 - Miss M
arguerite Dalrymple died at the age of 93.
She was born in Salem on Nov. 4, 1810. " For some 60 years she kept
l9Q1;i; April
a private school wher e she fitted some of Sal em's best known citizens
for the e rammar s chools, t hus, while ea r nin~ her own liveliho9d ,
laying th e foundation of good citizenship in the hear ts and minds
of future cit izens of this city. " (Sal em Evening News - 1\.pril 6 , 1901+)
�12.illi The will of Varguerite Dalrymple was probated (1-~94128).
Gilm Andrews and M Agnes Bishop were named executors. The
an
.
will, written in 1898, directed that her property be sold and
the money be used to fill many bequests to a multitude of cousins
and 2nd cousins. The inventory of real estate listed:
#10 Essex St.,; #8 & 8½ rear Essex st.; 9295 sq. ft. of land;
value 1S3 , 800.
tax r ecords:
19.Q.2
10
Goerge M
oak
------
8
R8
William c
·!ondez
owner - h eirs of M Dalrymple, house $ 800
.
II
II
II
house
400
II
II
II
house
600
land
1,000
.l9.Q£. Nov. 10 -Sarah E. Dalrymple, Gilman A. Andrews of Salem; M
.
Agnes Dalrymple Bish op, sometimes called M Agnes Bishop of Quincy
.
sold the property for $4,700 to Louis Dembofsky. (book 1851 pa g e 329 )
l2Q.6. Nov. 23 - Louis and Sarah Dembozsky sold t he same property to
Gregoz and Eva Paszkocki. "Being the same premises conveyed by
deed of Gilman Andrews exc. under the will of M
argaret Dalrymple."
(boo k 1851 pa g e 333 )
l2Q.2. c ity dire c tor y
8 M A. Concannon , var iey s t ore
.
G. Paszko wski
R8 1r s. H. B. Li vingstone
John Rossie
l9l2, city director y
8 Frederick and Fanny Berkowitz, variety
R8 F. Norton
1921
ci t y dir e ct o ry
8 ,] .. 1'-'ar[~olis , shoe repai r
Peroo nski
M Lebick
.
H. (Jablo nski
178 I\. .
�~ June 9 Gregoz and Eva Paszkowski sold t h e land and buildi ngs
i/.8 and 8-½ Essex St . to W adyslaw D
l
obrosi els ki . " Being a portion of
the prem ses conveyed by deed of Louis Dembofsky on N
i
ov. 23 , 1906. "
Lot B Ip
13••~!1 ,~-,,
~~Si'.
1
J"n
e
I
N .
s.:,2.
'1
I
7.a-3
I
,i:>1~.., •~
1-.P\.(
o~
G-.-t- E , P-.-J~~w-.k':j
- - -_'3t:1 "'i :s
.
..,_6. SS'
·~-
I
,I
ii
i
I
11
Q}
~
I
I
il:I
11
I
r,t
-
"
I')
I!
i:
11
Ii '
�/y
~
Sept. 11 - W
ladyslaw Dobrosielski, unm
arried, . sold the land
and buildings, described as lot B, to W
ladyslaw Brzozowski. " Being
the same conveyed by deed of G
regor and Eva Paszkowski." ( book 2611
page 314)
121±2 Feb. 13 - W
ladyslaw Brzozowski, unmarried, sold the land and
buildings, described as lot B., to Chester J. and Stacia Dzierz~.
The same conveyed by deed Sept. 11, 1924. (book 3521 page 583)
12liZ. June 3
- Chester J. and Stacia B. Dzierzak , husband and wife,
sold the property to Anthony and l'v1ary Sieczkowski. Th e same prem
ises
conveyed by deed Feb . 13 , 1947. (book 3528 page 44)
~
Oct. 26 - Anthony Sieczkowski and his wife M
ary, sold the
property to John and Pary Olszewski. The same premises conveyed
by deed June 3, 1947. (book 3780 page 148)
July 27 - John Olszewski sold the property to LTohn and Beatrice
Olszewski. The same conveyed by deed Oct. 26, 1950 . M
ary Ol szewski
having since deceased . (book 5191 page 736)
~
1.91.2 M
arch 19 - John Olszewski and his wife Beatrice E. sold the
propert y , lot B, to Frederick J , Cardella. (book 6134 page 157)
Note: Refer ence to book
Deeds. Probate ~umbers
are locat ed in t he s ame
r eport ar e not mean t to
and page . are deed books at th e H
egistry of
arc cases a t Pro bate Court . Both office s
building on Federal St . All m
aps in this
be exact, just for illustrati on purposes.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
8 Essex Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1800 by Arthur Campbell, Carpenter
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
House built in 1800, house history conducted in 1983
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1800
1983
8
Arthur Campbell
Carpenter
Essex Street
King
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/fe84b49da9ddaadfde5cbe576107b13b.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=kF6VteAkP%7EbphTVw0o5CUaDQg9iDq%7EkzWS-nCyVu68c3NVHeH96BmHDKS--EjiWyeLY7s9OP9WZXmhpCj4-AuH5eHYqZRDjw9Ra--2PAveseXnuKf%7E7NvlGtmDhSVvLKVnH5Z8PHJKM0yjDRGQ6t4lA59XfIkffFNMBFm9wpVOlRaCVXVmM8g54tk8GgYfWPJqC0GIai7TSJhIjSNf5fH%7EXAyH8ryX79cxGdvgXMo5uy1o2-pOUHSxn%7EnBvSlnX7x2TArv9WBsaOIqX8OmjgLIk0Qae7mw9bPUsm4jIswcptvU5IUF6XjylCCT8GfI4l9pfzUlcf4d09xgHVy68y%7EQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
7140dc43d7dbccce29c4d8fb30b3b2a1
PDF Text
Text
OFFICE AT OLD TOWN HALL
POST OFFICE BOX 865
SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970 / PHONE (617) 745-0799
127 Derby Street
Store of CAPrAIN EDWARD ALLEN
by 1786
remodeled in 1831 by RI CHARD STICKN~Y
for JOSEPH W
ATERS
"to preserve Historic Sites, Buildings and objects,
and to w ork for tlte education of the community
in the tme value of tl1e sume."
�I
) , .....
127 Derby Street
Derby street was laid out before 1768.
It was called a new town
way in 1768; a way leading from the Long Wharf to the ropewalk,
1770; the new lane, 1781; Fore street, 1787; and Derby street, 1799.
(Essex Antiquarian, vol. 10 pg. 22)
"This lot was a portion of the original homestead of Joseph Grafton,
a mariner, who conveyed it to his son John Grafton of Salem, mariner,
Sept. 15, 1667.
John Grafton built a house upon the lot (Hardy st.)
and lived in it until his removal to Boston, before April 14, 1711,
when he conveyed the house and land for two hundred pounds, to his
_srandson Joseph Hardy of Salem, shipwr ight . M Hardy al so removed
r.
to Boston before June 17 , 1713, when he conveyed the house and lot
to Joseph Andrew of Salem, house-carpenter, for three hundred pounds.
For a similar consideration,
workhouse and barn to
1714- 5.
~,r .
Andrew conveyed the land, house,
.
John Pickering
of Salem, yeoman , Feb. 21,
M Pickering died, possessed of the estate , in 1722,
r.
having de vis ed it to his daughter Sarah Hardy for her life and then
to her children by her husband Joseph Hardy.
the children of M Hardy and herself:
r.
Mrs . Hardy died, and
Benjamin Goodhue of Sal em,
blacksmith, and wife M
artha, Nathaniel Phippen, jr. , of Salem, cooper,
and wife Seeth, Edmund Hen field of Salem, cooper, and v1ife Lydia ,
I saac Pierce of Bost on , baker , and wife Mary , a.nd widow Sarah
Mansfield, conveyed fiv ~- sixths of the house and land to Warwick
""
�Palfry of Salem , gentleman, Nov . 11, 1745; and Ben jamin Ropes of
Salem, cooper, and wife Ruth (another daughter of M and M
r.
rs.
Hardy) conveyed one-sixth of the house and lot to I•1r . Palfrey , t·'. ay
31 , 1746.
~
:r.
Palfrey died in 1756, possessed of the house and
lot, having devised the estate to his son W
alter Palfrey v1ho the::
lived in t h e house ."
(Essex Antiquarian, vol. 10 page 72)
On June 24, 1766 Walter Palfrey , fisherman , for 60 pounds, s old ~o
Jose ph Hodges , merchant in behalf of and on account of Edward .Allen ,
land i n the East Parish containing 30 poles:
~
-po le. s.
(f.t. 5'
-:11 /.2.7
+~~T)
-:t:111{5
vi
.......
"
VJ
~
....
J,..
'9
~
~
~
::i::
I
I
(book 119 page 166)
�3.
Edward Allen, born in 1735, crune to America from Berwick on Tweed, Eng.
in 1757 and married on Jan . 18, 1759 Ruth . Hodges daugh ter of
Gamaliel and Sarah (Williams) Hodges.
After the death of his wife
Ruth, which occurred in 1774, Capt. Allen married M
argaret Lockart
of North Carolina in 1778.
Captain Allen built his house on the
corner of Derby and Hardy streets in 1768.
The first mention of Captain Allen's store (now 127 Derby St.)
appears in the tax records of 1786; previous to that time the
captain was truced for a house, warehouse, wharf and land.
(The
type of store is never given)
Captain Allen died on July 27, 1803 at the age of 68.
In his will,
i'lritten July 12, 1803, Capt o A en bequeathed to his wife M
ll
argaret
as her dower "all plate , household furniture and all provisions
and stores for the family which shall be in the house and the wood
which I shall have at the time of my death.
term of her natural life.
the real es tate.
All to wife for the
Also the income and improvement of all
The house where I now l.ive and land under and
adjoining with the stor e and other buildings thereon shall be held
and enjoyed by said wife during h er natural life and the rest shall
be h eld .and possessed by my nine children:
Edward, Ruth , Alice ,
Alexander, John, Nancy, Betsy, Henry and Sally and their heirs."
(Probate #394)
-- ---- - --
.
--
.. -
·--- - .
�·-
-- - - - - - ---- ----
--
Xargare t All en died on A . 13 , 1 808.
ug
Her death was recorded in
the East Parish list of deaths :
" Nargaret, widow of Capt . Edward Allen .
years .
Inter mittent fever, 5~
She was a Lockhart of I:orth Carolina.
years a go.
She was v er y yo_ ng to her husband.
u
in marriage t went y- f ive years.
Came to Salem t l:i!'t:
0
M
arried at 23, ::..::.. ving
Four children survive her, two sons.
Capt . Allen's first wife was a Hodges by whom he had three children,
one son.
W
ebb.
A grandchild also, M
ary Swett, by deceased daughter , a
Lived partly on her farm on Salem Neck.
of Hardy • 11
Derby street, co:- .
�S. .
The property was not sold until March 10, 1810 when Edward Allen
executor of the last will •~of my father Edward Allen" sold the
land and buildings to Joseph W
aters, merchant.
(book 188 page 205)
Along w"ith patriotic service :in ·the Revoluti.onary W
ar, Captain Waters'
most known accomplishment was when he superintended the construction
of the frigate "Essex" in 1798.
This famous vessel was built by
Salem ship-builders on W
inter Island, rigged and turned over to the
government
fast sailer
to serve in the War of 1812.
The "Essex" proved a very
and had a noted career.
Captain ~aters lived in the house at 114 Derby st . and apparently
purchased this property as an investment .
I n April of 1831 Joseph
'.'/ aters contracted -:1i th Richard Stickney to have Stickney " alt er
and co::npl etl y finish f or a dwelling- house , a certain store owned
by said ·.'Jaters, and situated o,: Derby Street" by J uly 31.
J os eph W
aters died on Feb. 11, 1833.
( appendix A)
In his will, written Jan. 31,
1833 (probate #29000 ) , M '.'Jaters bequea~hed to his daughter, M
r.
ary
G
ilbert, "th e new house lately erected by me , on part of the Allen
house l ot, together with the land and all the privileges and appurtenances belonging to the same ."
( appendix B)
Mary (W
aters) Gilbert was married to Daniel Gilbert, a lawyer, i n
1806.
The couple made their home in Brookfield , M
ass.
A few bills
regarding this property were found in the Waters manuscripts now
preserved at the Essex Institute:
�.
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. Or: At~ tf/dtk..L- h..-_ci- ~r ~ r . ( f Ulll-ft.;
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6. :7,
11.£
t,,._a,,,(..,
~f
,.,._ ~ r. It;
da,G;._ a,/-
lfi4
,
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/ tZM. ..r. J;
Ji~~
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fer- w~ -t,/k:,,
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�The tax records for 1837 substantiate the ownership and gives notice
of the occupant: 81 Derby (sometimes 83, renumbered 127 in 1894)
Mary Gilbert of North Brooksfield owner
Michael Wheeler,mariner
1840 census -
Owner Mrs. Gilbert, 14 people in residence
Occupants
1844 - M
ichael Wheeler, Samuel Kehew, Francis Dutrey
1848 - M
ichael Wheeler, W
illiam Wheeler, George M
organ
1850 census:
~ ichael Wheeler
~
Susan
"
:'.ichael
"
Joseph
"
II
Susan
II
Sa.1.:mel
II
::ary Ann
Abby
"
2nd family
George ;forgan
ti
:-!ary
II
:~ary
Lydia Ann "
':Jilliam H. t1
M
ary Peele
By
age 54 mariner
" 49
II
20 mariner
ti
17 clerk
born Mass o
"
"
"
II
II
ti
II
17
II
II
ti
14
9
6
II
II
II
ti
"
"
48 mariner
"
Holland
"
34
II
Mass .
II
8
"
II
II
6
3
"
ti
"
II
?7
II
11
II
ti
II
ti
II
1853 the title had been transferred to Mary 's brother W
illiam D.
Waters.
On Oct. 25 ~of that year William D. Waters sold the land
and 3 dwelling houses (125 Derby, 127 Derby and 18 Hardy street)
to Isreal Shepard, William Archer Jr. and John B. Edwards.
487
page
(book
29)
_...:,.._;,_::.-~--~--~::;.;....di_....,.._ . . . -,.;..:---·---
�/0
1855 _tax records:
Occupants
George Morgan
Willi am Berry
s.
Owner
Archer et al val. $1,000
1855 Jan. 6 - Israel D. Shepard, William Archer Jr. and John B.
Edwards, traders, sold the land and building to Enoch Goodwin, grocer
for the sum of $1,175:
?el(.by
r·
I
I
Jo
Sr
7
I
.
I ')}
I "~
I
<
~
\,)
~
1
I
(book 506 page 40)
�/I ·
Enoch Goodwin was originally from Newburyport and prior to moving
into 127 Derby St. he operated a grocery store at 100 Derby
st.
1858 tax record
Enoch Goodwin
Henry Hunt
age 46
" 22
storekeeper
machinist
1858 Oct. 1 - Enoch Goodwin died.
owner val. $1 ,000
In his probate (#40539) M
r.
Goodwin 's property was listed as:
grocery store
$275
horse
50
buggy
15
;•1agon
6
pung
6
harness, blanket , fork
curryco mb & card
8
grocery stock
712 . 72
boot & shoe s t ock
560 .46
outstanding bills
403 .12
f~rniture & books
85 . 75
Salem ba.-rik
503.69
12
?ew Universalist
115
notes
Tax records:
Occu:eant
Augustus Ande r son
1859
1861
Jacob Anderson
Augustus
"
Jacob Anderson Jr.
Isaac Goodwin
1864
Isaac Goodwin
57
Owner
Est. Enoch Goodwin val. $1,000
II
II
II
II
II
ti
II
"
II
"
"
II
II
house $600
L~OO
land
27
ti
20
11
19
Isaac B. Goodwin
1869
age 25
II
28
�...,.
1870 census:
Elizabeth Goodwin
Isaac B.
"
II
Esther E.
2nd family
David c. Nichols
II
Sarah A
.
II
Grace c.
age
II
-
59 keeps house
29 mariner
Johanna
Hary Ann
John
:<at:.e
2nd family
11
II
II
11
II
29 grocer
23 keeps house
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
1 at home
II
Owner
Elizabeth Goodwin
untaxed
age .50
11
49
11
23
II
21
laborer
keeps house
currier
works in shoe shop
11
11
II
11
19
II
II
11· at school
11
II
7
II
II
67
"
II
II
11
II
house $600
land
200
born Ire .
II
Eliza=,e th Goodwin
11
20 in stitchery shop
1
••
:..ewis
"
II
1876 tax record
Cc cupant
:saac Goodwin
age 36
II
/illiam Selly
75
1880 ce!lSUS
''icr::ael Harrigan
11
: :ar:;
born Mass.
11
11
11
: ng.
Eng .
: ng .
Eng.
?
Aass .
II
1887 ~;ov. 1 - Isaac B. Goodwin of Everett; JoseJ:h VI. and Esther
.Sau:'; p~vid and M
ary T. Lowd, heirs of El izabeth D. Goodwin sold
,
the l and and buildings at 127 Derby St. to Bridget Hyde .
1210 page 465)
(book
~•
�13
Tax records:
Occupant
Qwne..r.
1888 l·~ichael Duggan, barber
William Hyde
Bridget Hyde
house $700
land
300
illiam Hyde , moulder
1890 W
John H. Devine
Dennis Devine
Bridget Hyde
house $800
land
300
1895 Dominick Curtain
Bridget Hyde
house $800
land
300
1900 census
Jarr.es Noude
age
II
II
Angela
II
Ed~und
"
II
II
~obert
II
1l
:::ucene
2nd fa.:!lily
·:a::-!'iet Fitzgerald
II
::ate
~.rd fa:::ily
~ridge :Iyde
25 day laborer
23
born Canada
came us in 1885
II
II
II
Ire .
Eass
II
II
II
1870
Ire.
"
II
II
18?5
II
11
2
II
M
ass.
3
new born
II
:,
45
28
"
ti
weav er
42
"
II
II
II
l904 Feo . 12 - Bridget Hyde, single, srcld the property to Genya
=.insky of Pe abody.
:, 1887 .
The same conveyed by Isaac Good :1in et al on Hov.
1
(book 1733 page 226)
1905 tax record
Occupant
~ouis Linsky , blacksm
ith
age 30
Owner
Genva Linsky
house $800
land
600
�If
1906 July 24 - Genya Linsky sold the land and buildi ng to Antoni
and Aniela Kalapienski.
1904.
The same conveyed by Bridget Hyde on Feb. 12,
(book 1835 page 40)
1907 ~arch 27 - Antoni and Aniela Kalapienski sold the land and
building to Woyjiech Filip.
Linsky on July 24, 1906.
1910 census
Woyjiech Filip
age
II
II
.Sophia
II
II
Joseph
II
Frank
"
Pzeslawa
"
"
2nd fa":lily
" ichael Stanovitch II
II
;,:ary
"
:Or onish
"
II
3rd fa::1ily
Victoria !'i:orzienski
John Szulez
Belvina Kozek
Joseph Scerzina
The same property conveyed by Genya
(book 1867 page 4)
32 cotton mill born Austria came us in 1896
28
II
II
6
II
M
ass.
4
II
II
10 months
II
"
27 bar r.ian
30
II
"
11
3
20 cotton mill
20 gardner
19 boarder
18 skinner
II
"
"
II
Austria
Russia
Mass
Austria
Russia
Austria
Russia
II
II
II
II
II
II
1 907
"
II
II
1907
II
II
"
II
1908
11
11
II
1907
"
II
II
1907
II
II
II
1 901
1914 Rav. 2 - Woyjiech Filip sold the property to Jozfina Uszinski,
wife of W
ladyslaw.
Kalapienski.
The same premises conveyed by Antoni and Aniela
(book 2277 page 351)
1915 Feb. 4 - Wladyslaw and Jozfina Uszinski sold the land and buildings
to Tekla Kulaszewski, wife of John.
rhe same conveyed by Woyjiech
1
�/5
Filip on Nov. 2, 1914.
(book 2286 page 592)
1945 Oct. 11 - Tekla Kulaszewski sold the land and buildings to
Anthony and Eva Hawryluk.
(book 3427 page 184)
1963 July 9 - The heirs of Anthony and Eva Hawryluk sold the land
and buildings to Charles and Frances M Bona.
.
The same premises
conveyed by Tekla Kulaszewski on Oct. 11, 1945.
Anthony Hawryluk
died on De c. 24, 1950 and Eva Hawryluk died on M 29, 1961.
ay
( bo ok
5081 page 286)
1975 :•!ay
16 - Th e titl e was transferred from Frances M. Bona, wi dow
of C:t ar:'..es , to Ar t h ur
c.
] awryl uk and Franc es
i'-1 .
3ona.
Th e s ame
conveyed to Charles J . and Fr anc es Bona by deed of J oseph Hawryluk.
( oook 6149 page 257 )
Re f erence to book and page are deed books at t he Regi~try of Deeds.
-Probate num
bers are ca s e s at Probate Court. ·B<:t h o~f i ces are lo cate d
in t he same building on Federal St. All 1!1-aps 1.n ~his report are
not meant to be exact, just for illustration pm _.)oses.
�\
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r
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l.i!i? of
11!,til I to
1,;~
by iito ~¼1'tf:;~ig
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Derby Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
127 Derby Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by 1786, the store of Captain Edward Allen. Remodeled in 1831 by Richard Stickney for Joseph Waters
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1786, 1983
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
127
1786
1831
1983
Captain Edward Allen
Derby Street
Joseph Waters
Richard Stickney
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/0b0471ffd8b06604c1d3b9dfc641c102.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=aFSd75rfoInfN1jY0no0hjdEL2NAwHqDr9DxxAX5P0utn7Y5dY%7EE7zsYAo8DwDwBSck-2aSpQyhHa1l-BYkxM6E6KWiKoGMaPsox4y4jcYawXtU%7EiE1MkC2Cen3MRkPHBvptdlu8IFbjbfD0oSOiEnF3jPIUhpwZuA7F7qxbZBhan4ncTpIJ6DZwyaq%7EMV5oitXUfGjzq6we6MUGF7MbnQt49Q64TKXhpwx6LoJeX74Bmy4N3TiCIn6vhu1YABe6T6W6HOynJ2sff1hI51O2eVnhjJ%7EdHnm4-umCV0fpHStTERPe1SJBu67a9q6I4Wj9sbNTyAzg1eTx0vs5Tl9qPw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
af943493f7cb29e5094ff04ab5fffb00
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Derby Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
111 Derby Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1771 for David Ropes, Cooper
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
House built in 1771, research conducted in 1974
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Jordan
Language
A language of the resource
English
111
1771
1974
Cooper
David Ropes
Derby Street
Jordan
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/80e1eac3113654fe7d930c2da7f24de4.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=D6AobOXnlps2itkbNjR3bQCMjPRA5Ol7Wtyrky0ciL8CNugX2XvdMq4tnufIsulQ63VI2cXD9ijgqiLnF6G3HduCobFmoc-u-VgX0W4N6mi8HsfU4xT788HCKE%7E8PfaveIjo4AdpGo1oKkN9rOlUSaB2Sv9aVT2313UDHi-6Q9iM%7EbXK9tQIpz1icTacdKtshJu3IOjYmgvC%7Er0zN-KKHsjaCPcA5ujERvU0oJekKpVZRScIqbeki27hR73l6-nFeQxAZn6d0-8pKOXuSPx4%7Ewhcx7mpOPq5efDRDvrZz-oSGzBdepL9A-ut3A%7EZYMkc8LrS3e-fLPB64h9pYtVOiQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Derby Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
78 Derby Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House histories
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1804 for Jesse Kenney, Trader
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1804, 1973
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Burnaby
Language
A language of the resource
English
1804
1973
78
Burnaby
Derby Street
Jesse Kenney
Salem Massachusetts
trader
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/bc8724ab78d3346afb9b219090724a2e.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=pGpkJgo2FRCGp1WIL03OzJMof0ODOi30Pu3qDlJsvHNh0rw2xcass3ms%7EfNMZNzNmkaMrV-Mwm%7E1YIRyuYgVKfGqZ8fBlhZgRosoc9KxTFH--B6cFGhZErBAiTvtiVDS1G2z7TIz1nL4kiYy60Mxk1sN1yCRtnxXJsAIQiu4CyuYGspznXyHXU9D07-pIvrKLtMxDGK6VmVq2%7EzaMRq-yL4lqjdW0OfqgyHAta0ZCDg61FuwVTHmTPT1TU9YU2PH9HgfkgPv04wN0dALrDubgIrrQHmzeF8RyYiNZex8SyXENNfGv1ANxS-TXm6sMkO1bw80jOwVoxL3drKgCEVneg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Derby Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
82 Derby Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1808 for Nathan Blood
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1808, 1974
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Burnaby
Language
A language of the resource
English
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/1e2106c65246b9210f2130a3c8058f24.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=A9VVtlg22LUdiH-fmTh94U6ig87GTQDC9Md0OQsaXZoQM6iUgUmDgCIZWlaYsfgg-Koi8YAMDaMmr1pLt1QBGuuQVTfGdObsKbnH6OMCxJ0674wZzX9zVzyYQbHXbkFKlkJx4KSwEGMbfbqmF5HBpXgUM%7EGzfTFICOnXbUclaKm0fgejUJr9Hfxm%7EYznCAotZ489iKffeMl0jOxFXmrlaleTHqFjZ0KKg2v3TjM1hbsptCYJPKruNTgFhu8AUZ1QMZmy372qJyGP0gzTO8OBItN4oK--qtCeaiqphWs9gaAc05%7EozfJtYN9%7EFLCxeHq0udAVyrHiDlZ8q-fjzkRIrQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Derby Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
65 Derby Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1858 for Michael McDonald, Laborer
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc., house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1858, 1995
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Larry Davis
Language
A language of the resource
English
1858
1995
65
Davis
Derby Street
Laborer
Michael McDonald
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/b12580eca37b94bb63531e6720fad897.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=NfivOjKfa0Qq7-21lq9sJ1zUlrBIisQvrOy2cbZhnTEHy2GsqstGExjhYVXBNBOqqEzegzLtXqKmgYqzKODSEyCvrW9lQbWaUr%7E%7EoWUXLqyHbAfnkgNCQpliJJMnWFjMzF8CEQl-DDbXOiD6vSUQa2fJSXdgxCqoT76-XtnlkjxmmP8w3uAoBPhXx-7v0Xj2S7zTRdiBDCEj5zQ9XRXqAJhOQyOM8n-yGQdm0XEXfmnncS856nRRVxdZdNLwby4jlflev3If4sDVJtd2sXUNgD9J04g3ZFTxXeZfjjfZagbSj1BSWm1mVaVUWYtXH6RX1EhM6ZqWReFNUTfPA6fF3Q__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e2459464ae51b7179e8ea692dd95636d
PDF Text
Text
~IilW.touc
OFFICE AT OLD TOWN HALL
eJ~mcorporated
POST OFFICE BOX
865
SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970 / PHONE (617) 745-0799
g Ca~bridge Street
3 uil t for
'"'.'\'!-...,; '"'O"'"'I"" ,
_ v , I.I .,
Physician
in 1890
_;,.
Researcn by
J oyce King
J une 1983
�f•
9 Cambridge Street
...
Th e house at 9 Cambridge street is described in the Salem Hist oric
District Study Commit tee as:
Colonial Revival - "This house appears to be more recent t han
any on t he street; however , it is on the 1897 Atlas.
I t is a two-
story, shi ngled, gambrel r oof house with entrance through a side
porch . "
The lot on which t hi s house stands was a small portion of a
parcel belonging to J onathan Neale in 1666.
Er . Neale owne d t he
land and a house (on Broad St . ) until.his de cease in 1732 .
"It
then descended to his two children, Jonat ban and David , who divided
the estate, the house and barn and southern portion of the lot De:..!",.
assigned to Jonathan , ~ay 26 , 1753.
Jonatnan died in 1795 , ~c --
the division of the estate, Sept. 20, 1799, the old house
assigned to ::idow Hannah Smith of Salem.
Wa!c'
Sh e died Sep" . 10 , 183r . "
(Essex Antiquarian , vol . 4 page 166)
"Cambridge Stree t was fir st called a lane or highway , 1 679 ; lane
from ye high or main street towards Samuel W
oodwell 1 s brick kil!: ,
1695 ; M
eeting- h ouse lane, 1795; and Ca mbridge s treet , 1799 ; havi~,:
probably been l aid out to Br oad street by t h e Neales in t he latter
year."
( Essex Antiquarian, vol • .4 page 166)
�Rol,t.',-l
K-,c I,eJL
,c
Jonaiha.n
Lawes' Hill.
PA1· 7 01" SALI-.M
Jr. t 7C,r,.
NO. 5 .
Nult.
~--, ... h
Th e house now at 9 Camoridge street is no t the firs~ to occupy ~his
site .
,'/h en the division was made of the Neal estate in l799, as
previously mentioned , this lot was assigned to Benjamin and David
~:eal to be used in common.
Th e brothers erected a house which
re~ained in the family until 1881 wten i t was described in t he tax
records as :
9 Cambridge
st.
Owned by the Heirs of t-~ary ( Neal) W
aters
house valued at $700; land valued at $800
" empty to be taken down"
�The lot remained empty until it was sold by Sarah J. W
aters and
tJary E. W
aters to a neighbor, David Coggin on Nov. 7, 1889:
1
· (book 1263 page 465)
1889 Dec . 16 - David Coggin a pplied for a building per mit:
David Coggin resident of 7 Chestnut st . - location of buildir.~ .
Cambridge St . - wooden dwelling house for one family 26 ' X 38 1
2½ stories
-
- gambrel r oof
David Coggin was born i n W
esthampton , M
ass. on August 4 , 1 8~3 , t he
son of Rev . David and El len (Kidder) Coggin .
He graduat ed fro ~ tne
Harvard M
edical school in t he class of 1868 , with the de gree of :,. D.
and he also received t h e degree of A. M. fr om Dartm
outh in 1 873.
He
also studied abroad.
He made a specialty of the eye ·and after practicing a f ew years in
Hingham and St . Louis, M
o., where he was assistant surgeon of t he Eye
Infirmary, he settled in ·Salem in 1 874.
Here he built up a large
practice, being a most . skillful practitioner.
�i.
He had among his patients a great many poor people, frequently
giving his services without money and without price.
All had a
deep and abiding love for him •
...
• ~--
":"c
·•·."
• ••
DR. DAVID COGGIN.
~r. ;oggi~ was a CTember of the ori ginal staff of the Sale m Hospital.
·ie ·,vas oprr-c.nalr.Jic sur geon and superintendent in 1879 and 1880 , and
until 1912 was, ph t halmic sur geon, when he bec ame consulting surgeon
in "tnat capacity .
Dr . Coggin was also surgeon, for a time of the
.Se c one1 Cor "9s Cadets.
·:e m
arried in 1880, Elizabeth Eames Williams
of ;;oxoury.
Dr. Coggin was described as being of medium height with a very full
bl a ck bea:>d .
He had a rather brusque manner of tal king .
Dr . Coggin did not occupy the house at 9 Cambridge st .
The firs t
tenant on record was Nathan Osgood a leather dealer in 1890.
�5.
1890 Dec . 1 - David Coggins-old the land and building to Eliza
Os good , wife of Nathan.
s.
The tax records substantiate this change:
9 Cambridge Street
Qc cupant
Owner
Eliza s. Osgood
house val. $3 , 000
land val.
1,000
·;a than _ good, leather dealer
Os
:~athan Cook Os good, son of the artist Ch arles Osgood, was born in
~alem on Aug. 24, 1857.
He was educated in the public school s of
:alem , and for m
any years was in the sole leather business in
3oston , as a member of the firm of Os~ood- Hungerford company on
ongress street .
:_ci
Yr . Os good m
arri ed Eliza Stevens of Dover , N. H.
1886 .
-~e _OQIJ census gives a closer look at this famil y :
_
:rathan c. Osgood
II
r1i za s.
II
Catherine
age 40
II
38
11•
12
leather dealer
born ?-·'ass .
II
at school
II
N . H.
II
:'he Os goods r.1oved to 15 Chestnut st . shortly after the census was
taken .
~he next tenant at 9 Cambr idge St . was George B. I ves.
':eorge 2urnham I ves, the son of Stephen Bradshaw Ives Jr. and Nary
::anley Creamer .
She was born on Nov. 8 , 1856 , the daughter of
:?rederick and l''artha (Chase) Crear:1er.
Th e couple had two children ,
Frederick '-1 . (b . Jan . 10 , 1 880) and Oscar J r. (b. r!:ay 28 , 1881 ) .
The Ives family m
oved f rom this house to 4 Broad Street about 1905.
�...
Over t he next few years many tenants came and went:
1906 - Charles H. Parker (in Europe in 1907)
1907 - M
rs. Annie Sweet, widow of George E.
Ethel Sweet , telephone operator
M
innie Sweet , dressmaker
1908 - Dr . Francis B. Carleton, physician
1910 census:
Francis B. Carleton
age 45 physician general practice
AdeL:dde J .
II
II
i::oyd
II
II
Eleanor
II
II
)c- . ,..ar leton
~ 111
I'.'!O Ved
.~·il:v 18 -
:ailor, died
at
t0
42
16
14
Bos"Lon in 1911 .
born !~ass .
II
Calif .
R. I .
R. I .
It
II
'T'he next tenant was William
V
illiam A. Pur beck, for over 60 years a Salem merchant
h is home 9 Cambridge street, last evening .
·:Jeen in poor health for a· long time .
TTe had
Vr . Purbeck was born in Salem
.:::ept. 16 , 182h , and was the son of the late W iam and ~aria
ill
( ·:'or nstead) Purbeck.
He was educated in the Salem public schools,
and was a !'!lember of the 10 th class of t he old Salem English High
school .
After leavin~ school , Yr . Purbeck learned the tailor's
trade from Charles F. Bates, t hen located in the Bowker block.
'fov.
~~
On
15 , 1845 , he began business as a member of t he firm of Gardner
Furbeck.
Er. Gardner lived only a year after the f i rm was or gan-
ized , and at fuis deat h r-~r. Pur be ck conducted the business until the
beginning of the winter of 1 90 8- 09 , when he retired, after a period
of 63 consecut ive years.
tance o f one another.
His stores were within a very short dis-
He made the very best of clothes , and he had
�7.
a large trade.
He was twice married , and he left two sons and a
daughter .
1912 - t he house was occupi ed by Edwin A. M
cKinnon a tailor at 205
hasningt on St. and his wife Elizabeth M
.
or-e of which, Charles
c.
The c ouple took in boarders
Buffum, died on Nov.
15, 1915.
fA OUS OlD fOX-HUNltRD[AO
Charles C Buffum Passes Away at His Home
This Morning in His 86th Yedr; Killed
First Fox When 15 Years of Age; Had
Conducted Hostelries m the Past and Was
St-alPr of Weights and Measures.
�Charles C. Buffum, one of the most famous fox hunters in the wl:ole
country , died at his home , 9 Camoridge street , this m
orning , in
hi s 86th year.
r r . Buffum was born i n Sale r.J, J a n . 29 , 1829, h is parents -being
l ate David and Dollie (Hanson) Buffum.
°t!:e
His fath er owned the ol d
planine mill of David Buffu~ beir~ ~-~o~m f or mile s around at t ha:
time .
Up to hi s 15th year the son , Cnarles
c.
attended the public schools ,
finisnine; his s chool l i fe i n the old Phi llips s chool .
r. e +hen e!'ltered
the employ of his father , remaining until the mill closed about l~79 .
He next oeca.r.ie manager of the Lowell Island nouse .
mainland,
he was for two or three
.
years
Retur~in6 to
~~e
c~ployed by Aaron F.
the Peabody l'ill'llberdealer , with whom he stayed tvm rr three yee..rr:..
:n 1898, he was a ppointed official sealer of wei""h t-s and ?r.easu.:-E;r- ,
but faileo of reappointrr.ent u!lder !"ayor Tur!ler the follo-.": n,.. ye--.
µe next conducted a hotel on the corner of Roston anc ~e de~~l st.:-s~ts,
the buildinc; being ovmed by the late >•ark Sr.ii th, but gave it up a.:~er·
a few years .
Since t hen he had lived a sort of a retired life•
being quit e handy with tools , he had done cabinetmakin~
times .
:::,·c1~
at dif~eren~
Several piec es of furni t ure i n hi s house a t test his skill
in that dir ection .
From his boyhood he ha d be en an ard ent l over o f out - of- door SfJ~ts .
Probably he killed more foxes than any other m in ¥assach us ett s ,
an
having , when only 15 years of age kil led his first fox in t h e gr eat
pastur es of Salem.
He traveled all over Essex county, Yaine , New
Ham
pshir e , Vermont, New York and Flor ida , in pursuit of t his game .
�q_
fl. few years ago one of .the eng i ne ers of t h e Bo ston & Vaine
R. E;
spoke to M
r. Buffum from h is engine, sayi .n g , " Charle y , wty don ' t
you c ome down to Portsmout h , and h elp us ge t ri d of the f oxes
dO\m there t h at a.re pro ving- a nuisance , destr oying ch ickens , e-:c .
The l ocal s po rt s men can ' t s e em t o g et t h em.''
the cue , a nd we nt t o Portsmouth .
r r . Buffum ac c e :p~e d
In two da y s h e secured seven l a!'f e
f oxes , and there was no more trouble after that .
i 'r . Buffum a ttributed his lorn~ life and good health to his ci.tof- door l ife , although ,in follo wi ng hunt ing h e had oft en b e e n :.:'...rec.
and wet and col d .
He was always moderate in the use of to b acc o
a..~c
liquor, and never while on a hunting exnedition h a d he "touch ed ::..:.q_u c:wh ile afiel d , a s he oelieved t h at it tended to d e crease a r::ar. 1 ~ e r: e:- ··
and to l essen his power of endur ance .
r r . 3uf furr. h ad qu i"t e a r e putation a s a che f, and of~iciated
&=
c ook at many b arbecue , "the attendants at wh ich h ave n e v e:."' c e a se~
sound his praises .
Dur in~ t h e Rebelli on
he
was a member of t:r:c ~a::.. e~
Ca det s , a.rid cooked for t h a t comr.iand f or t h e f i v e months t!'!at i :.
·1:as
sta tio n ed at Fort W
arren .
On M y l? ,
a
1849 , M . Buf fum marrie d tv:iss l''.ary Abbie -~i ch ardsc, __ o f
r
M
arblehea d wh o was j ust t h ree mon t hs older than he , t he ceremo:::~·
bei n g pe rformed i n Sal em by Rev . George . Patch of t h e Ba ptist c:-. 1r c!: .
t xs. Bu f f u m di ed on Aug. 14, 1899.
Three ch ildren ~ere born o ~ t~e
union only one of whom is living , Prof. Charles A. Buffurr. of tt e
Ea st Ha mpton seminary.
(Salem Evening News)
�/o
1925 Nov . 16 - Nathan and Eliza
M
adeline Abbot.
Dec. 1, 1890.
s.
Osgood sold the property to
"The ·same ·premises conveyed by David Coggin on
(book 2663 page 301)
1929 March 2 - Walter L. Abbot administrator of the estate of
r-~adeline Abbot sold the land and buildint: at 9 Ca mbridge st . to
s.
Harriet
Creamer for t he sum of f3 , 000 .
(book 2799 nage 5~)
1939 Oct. 6 - George antl Harriet Fitz of Hamilton, solo the property
to the Salem Savings Bank.
" The same conveyed to Harriet r . Crea: e:r
by the ad~iriistrator of the estate of . l1adeline Abbot and devisec. :o
me by the will of Harriet.
( book 3197 page 366)
1942 Dec . 31 - Salem Savinr,s Banl-: sold tnc pro:_oer~y "to
Sullivan .
Fitz.
ere·, /i.llF:;_
The same estate conveyed to the granter by dee~ o: Ge~rfE
(book 3323 page 2h)
1961 June 20 - Katharine D. Connors conservator of t h e property o:
~ercy A. Sullivan sold the land and building to Francis J . and
Katherine Carr for the sum of $12,000.
(book 4783 page 213)
19?3 Aug. 17 - Katherine Carr,survivor of tenancy by entirety, sold
the land and buildings to Gerald
$38,000 .
c.
(book 6005 page 168)
•
and Karla Hinds for the sum of
�1977 June 20 - Gerald
c.
and Karla J. Hinds sold the property to
W
illiam and Kathleen Sullivan for the sum of $49 ,900.
(book 6361
page 215)
1983 M
arch 23 - W
illiam and Kathleen Sullivan sold the l and and
buildings at 9 Cambridge St . to James R. and Susan Gauthier .
(book 7073 page 81)
Reference to book and page are deed books at the Registry of Deeds.
Probate numbers are cases at Probate Court. Both offices are l ocated
in the same building of Federal St. All maps in this report ~e no t
meant to be exact, just for illustration purposes.
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Cambridge Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
9 Cambridge Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1890 for David Coggin, Physician
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1890, 1983
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1890
1983
9
Cambridge Street
David Coggin
Physician
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/d182db48a2147715cb393ccb3712b0f9.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=K4K6quuvRKdYchyZHIeywev0zGtZKkYUHIDkFs27kKCl91yaOxYrKxh9Zu8YqbuOPRTLbyy0foGPIpZPhkQhWHhewnLfENwr8FQGKuZW3HzkIofw%7EQXV7HjNXMYRNd4aT8PCIJrVjE29uHnMIYZrKcibecQkKjLb3GywgcNjPELvMFbV4dy4AN1jZbeYj78i91FNN-7O-H5mfqqXJRGdXm9zJXNkOAWNgrL7IFLAlA-3Xx%7ERwj3lKuEZR25PC-l7vdZ3a6gGvREND2%7EMPwBP7mhR3TeQM3Uo0EIsoH-9QHFpmmWzcFUdCyECTCzR36y8hepl591jAGFfJ61%7E5hgIWw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
fe2a0e8b2410831c519f7619eb4ddfb4
PDF Text
Text
OFFICE AT OLD TOWN HALL
POST OFFICE BOX 865
SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS 01970 / PHONE (617) 745-0799
1 Buffum Street
Built by ~<essrs Gifford
for Captain JOHN B. FISK and wife SARAH
in 1854
Research ··::;y ,
James M
cCu:::-dy
Verification and date documentation by,
Joyce King
August 1933
" to preserve Historic Sites, Bu::di11gs a11d objects,
a11d to work for the ed11catior. o' tlie com11111nity
in the true v alue of tl,e same."
�1 Buffum Street
Book 479 page 65
June 7, 1853
$700
Thomas J. Gifford and J ames B. Gifford
housewrights sold a parcel of land to
John B.· Fisk, master mariner.
Book 485 page 205
October 3, 1853
$800
Jonathan Buffum, Edward Buffum, W
illiam
Frye and Anna his wife in her right
sold a parcel of land to John B. Fisk.
�Book 788 page 70
December 9 , 1869
$4 , 800
John .B. and Sara Fisk sold the land
and dwelling house to Nathaniel A.
Horton . The same estate bought of
Thomas and James Gifford , book 479
page 65 and of Jona Buffum et al ,
book 485 page 205 .
Book 1951 page 487
January 16 , ~909
William A. and Annie P. Horton sold
the land and buildings " M
ason St . "
to M
artha 0. Batchelder . The same
premises conveyed to Nathaniel Horton
by John B. Fisk on Dec . 9 , 1869 , book
788 page 70 .
Book 2002 page 91
January 1 , 1910
Henry M and Martha o. Batchelder sol d
.
a parcel of land and the dwelling house
to Bessie Dawson. Part of the premises
described in deed of W
illiam A. Horton
bookl951 page 487 .
s .,.,,.. o·,.. b
80-S
,~
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�Book 2596 page 117
May 5 , 1924
Charles .and Bessie Dawson sol d the
land and dwelling house to Angus v.
MacKay . The same conveyed by deed of
Mar tha O. Batchelder on Jan . 1, 1910 ,
book 2202 page· 91.
Book 2826 page 139
November 2 , 1929
Angus v. and Emily M
acKay sol d the
l and and dwelling house to M
argaret A.
Kidney . The same convey~d by deed of
Bessi e s. Dawson on May 5, 1924, book
2596 page 117 .
Book 3294 page 21
M 12, 1942
ay
James B. and M
argaret Kidney conveyed
' interest in the propert y to John
half
and Barbara Wadja. " For title see
book 2826 page 139 . 11
Book 4364 page 261
M 1, 1957
ay
Konstanty and Anna Gesek sold their
hal f interest i n the property to
John and Barbara Wadja. 11 The same
conveyed by M
argaret Kidney ."
Book ~
-832 page 7 8
Oct . 23 , 1961
John and Barbara Wadja sold the land
and dwelling house to Leon and Rose
Shachnow. The same conveyed by deeds
book 3294 page 21 and book 4364 page
261 .
Book 5630 page 385
August 15, 1969
Leon and Rose _
Shachnow sold the land
and buildings to Ronald R. and Frances
W
alsh . The same premises conveyed by
deed of John Wadja book 4832 page 78.
�Book 5937 page 723
December 29, 1972
$34 ,000
Ronald R. and Frances A. ·walsh sold
the land an~ buildings to Francis J .
and Anne Kimberly. The same conveyed
by Leon Shachnow on August 15, 1969,
book 5630 page 385 .
Book 6419 page 633
November 25, 1977
$47,500
Francis J. and Anne Kimberly sold the
land and buildings to Eileen Italien.
The same conveyed by deed of Ronald R.
Walsh on Dec . 29, 1972,book 5937 page
723.
Book 6725 page 266
August 12, 1980
$48 ,000
EileEtn N. L' Italien sold the land and
buildings to James A. M
ccurdy and Carole
D. Keller . T~e same conveyed by deed
of Francis J. Kimberly on Nov. 25, 1977,
book 6419 page 633.
�DOCUMENTATION
by Joyce King
The~ tax records indicate that the house and land of John B.
Fisk at 16 Mason (since changed to 1 Buffum St.) is taxed for
the first time at the value of $2,500.
The 1854-5 Salem Street Books (stored at the Essex Institute):
August 30 -k'Jrhis day Mr. Aaron Hayward and his man began to lay
edge stones for a sidewalk in front of the estate of Capt. John
B. Fisk on the corner of Mason and Buffum streets. These edge
stones were made and furnished by Clark and Blethen and straight
ones measure in length on Mason street 93 ft. and on Buffum --and the circular one round the corner measures 4 ft. 6 in. round
on the outside of the circle."
(This work was usually done
after the construction of a building. It seems safe to state
that this house was completed by mid 1854~)
~
Salem Gazette - April 13, 1869
"Valuable Estate on Mason Street _at Auction - On Tuesday, May 18,
at 11 o'clock AM will be sold onthe premises if not previously
disposed of at private sale. That valuable modern house with the
land under and adjoining, situated No. 16 Mason corner of Mason
and Buffum streets.
The house was thoroughly built a few years since by Messrs Gifford
for the present proprietor, is in perfect order throughout; contains
8 finished rooms, is high stud, and in every respect a first class
house. The land fronts on Mason street 100 feet and also on Buffum
street 100 ft. making 10,000 sp. feet of lan~. This offers uncommon
induce~ents for a person wanting a first class genteel residence in
a pleasant and quiet location, free from the bustle of business,
and yet convenient to the business portion of the city.
The premises can be viewed any day between 2 - 4 P. M.
Terms easy and made known at sale."
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Buffum Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
1 Buffum Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1854 for Captain John B. Fisk and his wife Sarah, by Messrs Gifford
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc., house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1854, 1983
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1
1854
1983
Buffum Street
Captain
Fisk
Gifford
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/bb3c98d9e2feea06cb8ee327f50f5c06.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=OXMtD7EM55E0ZK8LdZMKPvPXfOh8lCjxGT8Z%7EZYo-0VjAHhcB6vt9FO-GACO1CwiLz5pCKEmOKiFi7BQhhFTD9TY0nh7lTwHiPgrjtHr%7EdpNqA%7EB3GDZyC1WYApyygLqxJaIft-voe6O4m0Tb31qxkOqtb2hORCfbSwzszXPpYhFywCaQJvSN4fh4z08-F80zHzs8aPIEh90QR%7E92o4sFxLgT8I-EjqAMkMexIRWSt21vzA-8B9%7EQpWjjezFUhOQSldvd3PSuLWVsk1ziZXsLuivDC2f44CbZba-vrvX8Qzao1TM3zD%7E3%7ElNUkT754HwAJLBTiYjGXGOf1r9UzBrRg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
93469bdbc669460ec65ba995e60d7c6a
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
4 Blaney Street
Built for
Samuel Ropes 1782, Cooper
Researched by Robert Booth, 1976
Historic Salem Inc,
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978} 745-07991 HistoricSalem.org
©2020
�. SAMUEL ROPES
cooper
1782
.4
Blaney St
Salem, Mass.
�House & Land at
4 Blaney
Street, Salem,
~r
1•..
acs.
This house was built by Samuel nopes, Salem "cooper," in 1782
on the southern half of land that he & Nicholas Lane had bought
from Joseph Blaney in May of t hat year. The 1782 date seems
certain, for in 1781 Sqmuel Ropes (1757-1841) oimed a house &
warehouse in ward 3, and by 1783 he was living in ward one (see
Bentley's Diary, vol.· I, p 14). 'l 'he 1782 property assessment was
made ir.{spring, before Ropes had bought the land, and the 1783
.
as s essment reco1.. ds are incor!!plete , so the records of 1784/5, in
which Samuel Ropes owns a house&· shop worth 400 li in ward one,
are the first actual reference to this house. By the 1786/7
-assessment, Ropes h ad added a warGhouse to the shop & house on
, the land, so perhaps as early as this Samuel was involved as a
merchant in Salem• s ma:.ritime commerce. At any rate, business was
good, and on 30 Jan 1792 Bentley observes "Samuel Ropes forming
a kitchen back: of his house "--perhaps referring to the back lean-to
which gives the house its salt-box appearance (see Bentley's Diary,
vol. I, p 365).
Very early this land was part of the holdings of Henry Harwood,
who died in 1664; his widow & the selectmen of Salem sold Henry's
land in 1669 to Jeremiah Butman (deeds, 3:15), who sold the upper
end to John Becket before 1673, & t he rest to Philip Cromwell on
11 July 1673 (deeds, 4:18), who in 1680 sold it to Edmund Bridges
Sr, a blacksmith, who built a house, shop & wharf thereon, and,
for 160 li sold it in 1682 to widow Elizabeth Turner (deeds, 6:49).
On 28 Oct 1699, John Turner sold the estate to W iam i3eckett,
ill
.
who immedi ately conveyed it to Abraham Purchase, also a blacksmith,
who settled there, dying ca. 1724. {The :preceding information
was found in Sidney Perley 1 s Salem in 1700, part #22}. The old
house & shop were gone by 1767, when Joseph J
Yiascoll (who had
married Ruth Purchase, daughter of Abraham) sold part of the ·land
to Joseph Blaney & Benjamin Pickman Jr, who in 1769 sold his halr
to Blaney, who in 1782 sold a piece of' the l and to Nicholas Lane
& Samuel Rcpes, who soon after built this house t hereon.
Sarnuel Ropes, borp. 8 i".iar 1757, was the 6th .of the 12 children
of Benja.r.iin Ropes, a Salem cooper, & his wife Ruth Hardy. Like
his father, Samuel became a cooper, & on 27 r~ 1780 married Sarah
iay
Cheever (died 1842); their first son, Samuel Jr, was born in 1781,
& this house was built the next year. The coupl_ went on to raise
e
a family of 8 children here--5 boys & 3· r irls--although 3 of the
· boys died at age 20, two of t h em at sea ( see Bentley's Diary, volII,
p 381 ). For more information about the Ropes f amily, see the genealogy in Sidney Perley 1 s History of Salem, Nass., vol I, p 345.
B 1792, Sarnael Ropes seems to have secured a Custom House
y
position, for then Bentley calls him a 11 cooper, cutter, weigher &
gauger." (See Bentley's Diary, . vol I, p 336). Eventually, Ro:pes.
lost his position at the Custom House, but succeded in establishing
�hL~self as a trader & merchant--a man of standing , & probably
the Samuel Ropes who in Salem's election of 1806 was the sole
Federalist chosen Selectman (see Bentley, vol II, p 219).
So by 29 Nov 1814, when, after more than JO years• residence,
he sold his "lot of land with the house, barn, & al]father buildings
standing thereon," Samuel Ropes Esq. was a very successful manno longer the cooper of 1782, but a substantial political & commercial fi gure • .
Sar:iuel Derby Jr (1785-1828) now moved in with his wife
Abig8.il (Buffum), whom he had married 9 Nov 1808, and tlheir
children. Samuel's father, Sainuel (1769?-1826) was a Salem
shoemaker, and h is father, Richard (1736-77), was a brother to
the merchant prince Elias Hasket Derby (1739-99). A few months
after settling at Blaney Street, Derby bought the house & land
11with a store & other buildings thereon 11 that lay immediately
north of h is own land--meaning the Nicholas Lan~ lot . at the
corner of Derby & Blaney Sts (see deeds, 206:140 & 214:124);
thus unifying the 2 original lots of 1782, a situation that
would last until 1881.
Samuel Derby, "trader," dj,ed 16 Jan 1828 at the age of only
42, leaving to his widow Abigail and children Samuel, Charles,
Abigail & Hary "the homestead in Bl.aney St 11 ( this house & its land),
11 a house & land in Derby St, & a store & land at the corner of
Blaney & Derby Sts. 11 --the inventory of his estate reveals that
Hr Derby ran a sort of general store, cor:iplete with great
quantities of rum! (See his probate, #7595).
The property, occupied by widow Abigail & her unmarried
daughter M
ary, remained undivided among the heirs until 1863, when
by 2 deeds (637:40, 646:227) '.Hrs Derby & Mary acquired full rights.
Then, on 2 Sept 1877, al most 50 years after her husband, widow
Abigail (Buffum) Derby died, leaving her share of the property
(a "lot of land at the corner of Derby & Blaney Sts, occuoied
with 2 dwt;lling houses, a store & a b arn 11 ; probate 1¥37369) · to
her son Ch arles of Hawaii ( Samu el Jr had died in Hawaii), her
daughter Mary Derby of Salem, & to the 2 dau ghters of her de~eased
daught er Abigail (Derby) Gould. By three deeds, Hary Derby
acquired the property (deeds 1009:31, 1022 : 204 & 205).
Mary Derby did not hold it long , and on 11 Oct 1881--when
the h ouse was 99 years old--at last sold t he Samuel Ropes house
(and its original lot) out of the Derby family.
Robert Booth
3 June 1976
�Deeds relat ing to House
&
Land at 4 Blaney St., Salem, Hass.
1 Ap 1767: Joseph & Ruth ( Purchase) HASCOLL, he being a Salem
shipwright, for 11 3.6 . 8 li sell to Joseph BLA1-GY & 3enj runin PIC:U1AN Jr,
.
Salem gentlemen, as tenants in comr.1on (ea ch paying half the price)
a piece of Salem land bounded
nw 170 1 4" on a t own way bet·ween the Has colls I mansion house
& the pren ises;
neon l and of i"lilliam Becket & on l and belonging to the i1ascolls,
or to one of the Nascolls, & o thers,yet U..l'ldivided;
se on t h e channel of the South River or Harbour;
sw on Abraham ifat s on 1 s l~d.
(S o. .~ssex co. Deeds , 117:262)
. ,.
8 May 1769: Benja. in PICKH.AN Jr Esq., Salem, for 62.13.4 li sells
m
·,.;o Joseph BLANEY his half of the premises described a bove.
(Deeds, 1-31 :1.57)
20 May 1782: Joseph BLANZY', Esq, of Sal em, for 273 li in silver
sells to Nicholas LANE, Salem sail-maker, & Saiuuel ROPES., Salem coop_er,
a p iece of land 45.5 p oles square in the east parish of Salem, bounded
w. 176' 9 11 on George Dodge,
n. 75 1 6 11 on a town way,
e. 165 1 4" on sd Jo seph Blaney,
s. 73 1 7" on sd Jo seph Blaney;
with the liberty of passing & repassing with carts & other carriages
in the way on the eastward of the prer.1ises, leading from the town way
aforesaid to Blaney 1 s Wharf, said ·v:ay being 23. 5 ' wide (west to east)
& 165' 4" lomg {north to south) being the whole l ength of the premises.
(Deeds , 139:128)
June 1782: Nichol a s LANZ, Sal em sail-m2ker, and Samuel ROPES,
Salem c ooper, h ave a greed to make divinior. & p artition of the land
t hey lately purchase d of Joseph Blaney Bs q {see above, 139:128) in
t he following manner: that the sd parcel of land be divided exactly
into 2 equal parts for quantity of land, the di vision line to be
dravm east-to-west; & t hat the l and north of sd di vision line is set
off to Nich olas , & the land sou th of sd line is set off t o sd Samuel.
(Deeds, 141:185)
7 June 1791 : It i s m.utu a.lly agreed betwe en one pp_rty ( Capt Edward
ALLEN & Capt Samuel Ii:m:3:ZS0i.L, both o:f Sc.l em ) and ·the other party
{Samuel ROPES of Salem) that t he division f ence between t h e land of
s d All en & Ingersoll & t he l and of sd Ropes (being t h e southern bounds
of sd rtopes 1 land), which fence runs in a straight line with the
division fence running between All en & Ingersoll 1 s land & the land
of rtichard Pal1'rey, shall be alt ered in such a manne1• as to run at
ri ght angles, square ,..ri th t he l ane l eading to the .- h~f of sd Allen &
J
Ing ersoll. And it is altered a ccordingly.
~Deeds , 154:109)
�/
29 Nov 1814 : Sar:m el ( & w.
S£>.rah) RO?::IB 3sq, Sal e:n, for
$1300 sells
tc, .:.a111ui:,l DZ... l3Y Jr, Sal em t1•ader, a lot of l and with t he d1 elling
1
•
1
house, barn. & all other buildings standing thereon, conta ining
,
about 23 poles, on 3laney Street, bounded starting on sd Blaney St
ac these corner of Nicholas Lane 1 s l and, & then
runs sw 73' 6" by sd Nicholas Lane;
runs se 87 1 by. heirs of Joshu a Dodge dec 1 d; ·
runs n e 73 1 6 1 by land l at e of Sru~uel Ingersoll dec 1 d; as the
f ences now stand;
rLlils nw 87 1 on sd Blaney Street.
(Deeds, 205:36)
11 Oct 1881: Mary DERBY, Salem sinr;leworean, fo~ $1135 sells to
George WHEATLAND -a s trustee for Mary DURGIN, wife of John Durgin, a
Salem messuage, bounded
east 86 1 on Blaney St
south 73 ' on Rowell
west 86 1 on formerly Brookhouse
north 73' on sd Nary Derby & on Sullivan;
with the unders tanding tha t sd Wheatland shall pay over the property_'s
n e t rent &. income to sd Nary Durgin during her lifetime, & at her_
decease sd ¼'heatland shall convey & pay over the estate to whomever
·
l'iar y Durgin as signs in her will or, in default of a will, t o her heirs•
And t h en sd Wheatland mortgaged the prer,1is e s for ;p.535 to H.ary
Derby, who discharged the mortgage on 19 Nov 1883.
(Deeds, 1069:160)
6 Aug 1883 : John DURGIN of Salem, for $1 r ele ase s to Thomas DURGIN
of Salem all his right to the above r eal estate.
( Deeds , 1124:99)
1 Feb 1884: George WHEA'fJLAND, Salem, for $1, according to the will
of Ifar y Durgin deceased, gr ants to her s on Thomas DURGIN a Salem
me~s~age, bounded t h e sa..~e as above (11 Oct 1881 ); it being the
·
es"Ga-i:;e t hat Wheatl and, as trustee for I-I2.ry Durgin, bought froni Hary
Derby 11 Oct 1881, 1069 :1 60, above.
( Deeds , 1124:99)
14 Oct 1889: Thomas DURGIN, Salem, for $1600 grants to John H
CASH11AN., Salem, a Salem rr..essuage bounded
ne 86 1 on Blaney St,
se 73' on Rowell,
sw 86 1 on formerl y Brookhouse,
nw 73' on Sullivan & on now or l ate (n/1) lfary Derby;
b e i ng the sar.ie pr emises conveyed to sci Thomas D
UI1GI N by George Wheatland
in deed 1124:99, and devised to Th omas in ~he will of h is mother, I-iary
Durgin. See al so the deed f r om. John t o Thomas Durgin, 6 A 1883; t124:99;
ug
& the deed from Mar y Derby t o George .-{neatland 11 Oct 1881, 1069 :160 (incorrec t ly r e f erred t o a s 1124:99 in the deed book). (Deeds, 1 261:77)
�24 Oct 1 9 10: John J ~ i-lilJ i ain F CASIDIAn, h eir s of their decea s ed
moth er, Anastasia CASHM N of Salem, for $1 r elea se to t heir f a t her,
A
John H CASH
KAN, all their right to a Sal em me ssu age on Bl aney Street,
bounded as on 14 Oct 1889, 1261 :77.
(Deeds, 2047:148 )
24 Oct 1910: John H CASffi1AN, wi dm·.rer of Sal <::m, for $1 releases
to hi s sons J <?hn J _& Wm F CASiI:i:IA Sal em, the above r eal est ate,
.N,
subjec t t o a $1, 000 mor t gage to Sal em Co-oper a tive Bank; and sd granter
r eserve s t o h i mself al l i1i s r i.ghts t o the above r eal e s tat e a s
hu sband of t he l a te A astasi a Cashman.
n
(Deeds, 2047:149}
10 Jul y 1922 : John H CASHMAN, widower, and John J & vim F CASHMAN,
all of Sal em, gr ant to Henry L RUSSELL & Chester B SIM both of Salem,
,
a Salem n essu age on Blaney Street, bounded
ne 86 1 on Blaney St,
se · 73! on n/1 Rowell,
sw 86 • on n/1 Brookhouse,
nw 73 ' on· n/1 of Sulliv~ & n/1 of Mary Derby.
(Deeds, 2522 :89}
15 Mar 1941: In 2 de eds, Che s ter B SI H, lfar bl eh e ad, and Henry
L RUSSELL, Sal em, gr ant t o the RUSSEtLwSIM TANNING COM
PANY, t he above
r eal est a t e, r efe r r ing t o deed 2522:89.
(Deeds, 3250:465}
1 Nar 1944: RUSSELL- SIM TANNI NG CO PAJ.~, Sal em, gr ants to
M
1-In.ry A ARChlJHG of Sal em, trustee of . rlebb W ar f Associat e s, 5 p arcels
h
in Sal em wi th t he buildings t her eon , par cel #4 b ei ng t he · s ame r eferred
t o i n de ed 3250: 465.
( Deeds , 3393:482 }
15 Nov 1960: Hary
ARC
HUNG, t rus t ee of W
ebb \·n-1arf Associates,
grant s t o Jo s eph T , Her bert L., & J..fary R NACK3Y, t h e same .5 J?ai'cels
as de s cnibe d i n deed 3393:482.
( Deeds., 4722 :4)
A
18 Nov 1964 : Joseph T, Herber t L,
to THO
MAS HAC
KSY & SO
NS, U!C., the s ame
deed 4722: 4 above.
&
M
ary R M
ACKEY, Sal em, grant
5 p arcel s as des cribed i n
(Deeds, 5225 :335}
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H-elrsof
JoshM Oodge
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Samuel Ropes EStf
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Samuel !mi,y Jv:
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o
�History ofHouse and Occupants, Four Blaney Street, Salem
By Robert A. Booth, Jr., for Historic Salem Inc., May 25, 2006.
According to available evidence, this house was built in 1782 for
Samuel Ropes, cooper.
On May 20, 1782, Joseph Blaney Esq. for 273 1i sold to Samuel
Ropes, cooper, and Nicholas Lane, sailmaker, a parcel of land at the
comer of Derby Street and the road that ran down to Blaney' s Wharf.
The parcel was bounded northerly 75' 6" on a town way (now Derby
Street), easterly 165' 4" on land of Blaney (now Blaney Street),
southerly 73' 7" on Blaney land, and westerly 176' 9" on land of
Dodge (ED 139: 128). In June, 1782, the new owners subdivided the
property, and Mr. Ropes took the parcel closest to the water (ED
141: 185). On it, he built this house, in 1782, facing across the harbor
toward the west shore ofMarblehead. By 1791, the wharf was owned
by Edward Allen and Samuel Ingersoll; and in June Mr. Ropes made
an agreement with them as to fencing the boundary line between their
property and his. The main house was given a rear addition ("leanto")
in the fall of 1791, per Rev. William Bentley, who noted in October
that "Samuel Ropes is forming a kitchen back of his house." (per
Bentley's diary, volume 1). On his northerly parcel, Mr. Lane built a
store at the comer and a house to the west of the store, on Derby
Street. The land here had been purchased jointly in 1767 by Joseph
Blaney and Benjamin Pickman; and in 1769 Mr. Blaney had bought
out Mr. Pickman.
Samuel Ropes (1757-1841) was born in Salem, the son of Benjamin
Ropes ( 1722-1790), and Ruth (Hardy) Ropes ( c.1724-1795). He was
the sixth of twelve children- Benjamin, Joseph, Samuel (died young),
Sarah, Lydia, Samuel, Hardy, Ruth, Hardy, George, Joseph, and
Timothy. He grew up on upper Essex Street, near what is now Monroe
Street (site of public library). His father worked as a cooper, and was
part of a very large extended family. On both sides, his family roots
went back to the 1600s in Salem.
Samuel Ropes' boyhood was in the 1760s, a decade in which Salem's
foreign commerce-primarily with Spain and with British Caribbean
islands- began to falter, as the British enforced their new trade
regulations. Salem' s main export was salt cod, which was caught far
offshore by Salem and Marblehead fishermen and brought back to the
1
�local fishyards, where it was "cured" until it was hard and dry and
could be shipped long distances. This was a staple food in Catholic
Europe (Spain and Portugal especially) and also in the Caribbean,
where it fed the slaves. To Europe went the fish that was
"merchantable" (high-grade), and to the Caribbean went the "refuse"
(low quality). Either sort, put into a pot of boiling water, would tum
into nutritious food. Many of the barrels that Samuel Ropes' father
made were used as containers for salt cod. Lumber, horses, cattle, and
foodstuffs were also sent to the Caribbean, whence came molasses,
sugar, cotton, and mahogany. From Europe came back finished goods
(made in India and England), iron, wine, fruit, feathers, and leather.
There was also some trade between Salem and the Chesapeake Bay
area, which provided com, wheat, and tobacco, while South Carolina
provided rice. Most Salem merchant vessels were small, under 60
tons.
The tidal South River ran along Derby Street and all the way to the
present Post Office; and in this secure deep-water inner harbor were
most of the wharves and warehouses, although some wharves were
built along the North River too. The Browne family, whose houses
stood on Essex Street between Liberty and Washington, dominated
Salem's society, and the Brownes were leading merchants, followed
by Benjamin Pickman (1708-1773), Samuel Gardner, Timothy Orne,
and, by the 1750s, Richard Derby (1712-1783). Salem's colonial
commerce was active but the imperial authorities limited the Salem
merchants to trade with designated British possessions. By smuggling
and trading with un-approved partners, the Salem merchants made
good profits.
In 1760, after Canada and the Ohio Valley were taken from the
French, the English decided to pay for the costs of war and of
sustaining a bureaucracy in America by squeezing tax revenues out of
the colonials' trade. Although they had been under royal governors for
two generations, the New Englanders had been self-governing by town
meetings at the local level and, at the provincial level, through an
elected legislature. They regarded themselves as a free people, and not
as dependents of a far-away mother country. Merchants and mariners
had always traded with the Spanish and Dutch in Europe and the
various islands of the Caribbean, regardless of their national
affiliations; and they deeply resented the British crack-down on this
trade, accompanied by privateering against American vessels by both
the French and the British.
2
�In 1761, a group of Salem and Boston merchants sued to prevent the
use of search warrants ("writs of assistance") by the Customs officials
who were trying to inspect their vessels and warehouses. Later in the
decade, Salemites were roused against the Stamp Act, and applied tar
and feathers to a couple of men who disagreed. In Boston, mobs
attacked the royal officials' houses and beat up their flunkies. The
British authorities were surprised at this resistance to their policies,
and feared an insurrection. In 1768, they sent over a small army to
occupy Boston. Now the Americans were forced to see themselves as
misbehaving colonials, and to realize that they were not free. They did
not like this picture, and the result was bitter public opposition and
more street violence in Boston. The Boston Massacre took place in
March, 1770; in short order, all of Massachusetts turned openly
against the British, and the clouds of war gathered on the horizon.
Samuel Ropes was a boy of thirteen at this time, just entering into his
indenture as an apprentice cooper, probably working for his father,
Deacon Benjamin Ropes, a leader of Rev. Dudley Leavitt's "New
Light" Church. Before the Revolution, Samuel's older sisters were all
well-married: Sarah (1752-1796) to Jerathmeel Peirce, who would
become a privateer-owner and a great merchant; and Lydia (17541835) to 1774 Capt. Ichabod Nichols (1749-1839) a shipmaster and
later a merchant of Salem and Portsmouth. His older brother,
Benjamin Ropes Jr., married Margaret Symonds and would serve as a
lieutenant in the rebel army, in which he died as a young man.
Pre-revolutionary Salem had more than its share of Tories; but the
Sons of Liberty were in the majority. Wealthy scions of families like
the Curwens, Pickmans, and Brownes, stayed loyal to the King, as did
many others who had married into the merchant families. In 1774,
military rule was imposed from England as Gen. Thomas Gage
became governor of Massachusetts and the port of Boston was shut
down in punishment for the Tea Party of December, 1773. On June 2,
1774, Salem became the new capital of Massachusetts, as a reward for
its supposed loyalty. Governor Gage and his officials relocated to the
North Shore, and the Customs operation was conducted from
Marblehead, while Salem became the major seaport ofNew England,
handling virtually all of the commercial business that Boston had
done. Hundreds of new people moved to Salem, and the legislature
met in Salem's Court House. In short order that legislature, led by
John Hancock, voted its independence from the authority of
Parliament, and set itself up as the governing body of a free state.
Gage tried to shut it down, but it was too late: he had lost control of
Massachusetts to the rebel assembly gathered in Salem. The town still
3
�had a powerful and outspoken group of loyalists, led by Peter Frye, a
prominent merchant and magistrate whose wife was a Pickman. One
night in October, Judge Frye learned just how far the rebels were
willing to go: his fine house on Essex Street was burned down and his
family barely escaped with their lives as half a block of houses and
stores and a church all went up in smoke. Next day, the rebel assembly
met again and voted to move their proceedings to Concord. Gage and
his officials moved to Boston, and many of the loyalists followed.
Outside of Boston, all of Massachusetts was under the control of the
rebels.
By January, 1775, loyalists had been purged from the Salem militia
regiment, and Col. William Browne was replaced by Col. Timothy
Pickering, who was writing a book on military drill. Samuel Ropes
was then seventeen; Pickering was a first cousin of Ropes' mother,
Ruth Hardy Ropes. One Sunday in February, 1775, the Revolutionary
War almost began in Salem. When everyone was in church, Col.
Leslie's redcoats marched overland from Marblehead and arrived in
downtown Salem, hoping to seize cannon and munitions in North
Salem. They came to a sudden halt at the North Bridge-the Salem
men, alerted by a Marblehead rider, had pulled up the draw of the
bridge. Rev. Thomas Barnard Jr., of the North Church, engaged Col.
Leslie in discussion; and Capt. John Felt, warned Leslie that blood
would flow ifhe did not tum back. Negotiations followed, and
agreement was reached: the draw went down, Leslie's men advanced a
short distance into North Salem, faced about, and marched back
through Salem's South Fields and Marblehead, whose own regiment,
led by Col. Jeremiah Lee, could have slaughtered them. Instead, the
Marbleheaders fell in behind them, marching in mockery of Leslie's
Retreat as the British made their way back to the beach and boarded
their whaleboats to return to the transport vessel.
With the battle at Lexington & Concord, April 19th, 1775, the die was
cast. Of course no one knew how the war would end, and there was
little to indicate that the colonials could actually defeat the King's
army and navy, but virtually every able-bodied Salem man and boy
gave himself over to the cause. Salem's regiment participated in the
siege of Boston, as George Washington took command of the army in
Cambridge. The British left Boston in March, 1776, never to return.
Washington's army was pushed southward from Long Island in a
series of defeats, during which Salem's Col. Timothy Pickering
became one of the General's most trusted officers, and Quartermaster
General of the army. Washington's first victory was the Battle of
4
�Trenton, on Christmas Day, 1776, made possible by the Marblehead
regiment of Gen. John Glover. Eventually most of the Salem men
came home and sailed in privateers for the duration of the war. There
is no record of military service by Samuel Ropes, so it is likely that he
sailed as a privateer, and perhaps was successful. It should be noted
that there was another Samuel Ropes in town at that time, the son of a
Loyalist judge.
In 1780, Samuel Ropes (1757-1841) married Sarah Cheever, and in
1782 he built this house, facing down the wharf, then known as
Blaney' s Wharf. Eventually the wharf was extended well out into the
harbor, probably by Ingersoll & Allen, and was known by 1820 as
Ome's Wharf, one of the largest in Salem, running out about 900'. By
1850, somewhat reduced in size, it was known as Webb's Wharf.
Samuel Ropes (1757-1841), born 8 March 1757, s/o Benjamin
Ropes & Ruth Hardy, died 5 Dec. 1841. Hem. 27 May 1780 Sarah
Cheever (1758-1842), d/o Ezekiel Cheever, died 11 Oct. 1842.
Known issue, surname Ropes:
1. Samuel, 1781, died at sea 1800, supercargo of Henry.
2. Benjamin, 1783, died 1801 by accident on board Belisarius.
3. William, 1784, m. 1811 Martha Reed, of Boston and Russia,
merchant.
4. Sally,1786
5. Hardy, 1788, m. 1824 Mary Ladd; of Boston, merchant.
6. Ruth Hardy, 1791-1837, m. Henry Prince.
7. Louisa, 18793-1842, m. 1821 Rev. Samuel Green, Boston.
8. Joseph, 1796-1816.
In 1784, Samuel Ropes' house and shop in ward one were valued at
400 Ii, and his stock & faculty at 100 Ii (per valuations, 1784-5). His
future business partner, John Page, of ward four (Federal Street), had a
house worth 600 Ii and stock & faculty valued at 300 Ii. As may be
seen, many of those who had gained during the Revolution through
privateering did not have much money by the end of the war. Their
future fortunes would depend on the prosperity of Salem's overseas
commerce, their connections to men who did have money, and their
own entrepreneurial abilities. Samuel Ropes was well connected in
Salem, through his merchant brothers-in-law. His younger brothers
were not in a position to assist his coopering business, but all three
brothers-in-law were merchants with extensive shipping interests who
stood in need of barrels as containers for their cargos as well as barrel-
5
�making materials that they might export to the wine islands and
Europe.
In 1783 Samuel's sister Ruth (1761-1850) would marry John Leach
(1741-1805), a privateer commander, shipmaster, and later a
merchant. Samuel' s younger brothers were Hardy, who became a
New Hampshire farmer; Capt. George (1765-1807), a shipmaster who
would marry Seeth Millett (1769-1823) in 1789, and would be lost at
sea in 1807; Joseph (1770-1795) lost at sea schooner Active; and Capt.
Timothy ( 1773-1848) who married Sarah Holmes and would become
a cooper and shipmaster (EIHC 7:196-9).
Samuel's father, Deacon Benjamin Ropes, died in 1790, leaving house
& land worth $1683 and a modest personal estate. His widow Ruth
survived him until 1795 (EIHC 7:150-153).
Through the memoir of a nephew, Benjamin Ropes, we get a glimpse
of Samuel's life and work (see EIHC, "Benjamin Ropes'
Autobiography"), as follows. Samuel Ropes' brother, Lt. Benjamin
Ropes, an officer in the Revolutionary army who died of camp fever
in 1778, left three small children and his wife, Margaret (Symonds)
Ropes, who, in 1788, apprenticed her son Benjamin, sixteen, to his
uncle Samuel Ropes, of Blaney Street, "to learn the cooper' s trade"making barrels and casks and buckets. Ben would serve Samuel for
two years while she provided for Ben' s "board and clothing." After
learning the trade, Ben was to teach it to his younger brother James,
who stayed at home to help their mother. Benjamin served out his time
under uncle Samuel, who thereafter employed him as a journeyman
cooper. One day in January, 1790, Benjamin went to the wharf to pack
a hogshead of fish (a hogshead was a very large barrel); "being shorthanded, (Ben) exerted himself beyond (his) strength by which (he)
sprained his breast," which caused him to cough up blood every
morning into the month of June, with continual night-sweats and great
weakness. To save his health, young Benjamin shipped out on a
fishing voyage, and returned, much stronger, in September, to find that
his brother James had lost a hand due when a gun exploded. Again,
Ben "applied to my uncle Samuel Ropes for employment." Samuel
had no jobs open, and said he was barely able to make ends meet, but
referred Benjamin to another uncle, the rich merchant Jerathmeel
Peirce, who turned down Ben's request for a $30 loan to get started as
a cooper at the North Bridge. This surprised uncle Samuel, who then
advised Ben to seek a loan from the lumber merchant Miles Ward,
6
�who cheerfully complied, and launched Benjamin on a successful
career.
In some places, the post-war loss of the former colonial connections
and trade routes was devastating, for Americans were prohibited from
trading with most British possessions; but in Salem, the merchants and
mariners were ready to push their ships and cargos into all parts of the
known world. They did so with astonishing success. By virtue of
competing fiercely, pioneering new routes, and opening and
dominating new markets, Salem won a high place in the world. Hasket
Derby, William Gray, Eben Beckford, and Joseph Peabody were the
town's commercial leaders. In 1784, Derby began trade with Russia;
and in 1784 and 1785 he dispatched trading vessels to Africa and
China, respectively. Voyages to India soon followed, and to the Spice
Islands and Pepper Islands (Java, Sumatra, Malaya, etc.). All of this
commerce was a boon to the coopers, including Samuel Ropes, who
amassed a good deal of money.
By the 1790s, the new foreign-trade markets- and the coffee trade,
which would be opened in 1798 with Mocha, Arabia- brought great
riches to the Salem merchants, and raised the level of wealth
throughout the town: new ships were bought and built, more crews
were formed with more shipmasters, new shops and stores opened,
new partnerships were formed, and new people moved to town. In
1792 Salem's first bank, the Essex Bank, was founded, although it
"existed in experiment a long time before it was incorporated," per
Rev. William Bentley. From a population of 7921 in 1790, the town
would grow by 1500 persons in a decade. At the same time, thanks to
the economic policies of Alexander Hamilton, Salem vessels were
able to transport foreign cargoes tax-free and essentially to serve as
the neutral carrying fleet for both Britain and France, which were at
war with each other.
Samuel Ropes secured a position as a weigher & gauger in the Custom
House, evidently, for in 1792 William Bentley, minister of the East
Church, refers to him as "cooper, cutter, weigher & gauger"
(Bentley's diary, I:336). In 1793 Samuel Ropes went into business as
a ship-chandler, with a partner, Col. John Page (1751-1838) of 112114 Federal Street. As Page & Ropes, Ship Chandlers, they operated a
large brick store that supplied provisions and supplies to vessels
bound on long voyages (per EIHC I:55). They carried everything from
groceries to cordage, quadrants, charts, tar, brandy, gin, lime stone,
sugar, and rum. Their store was leased from Hasket Derby evidently,
7
�and was located at the head of Union Wharf, on Derby Street opposite
Union Street; and in 1800 for $4000 they purchased the store and land
from the Derby heirs (ED 167:176). At the same time, it is likely that
Mr. Ropes carried on his cooper's business, with supervisor hired to
oversee the journeymen and apprentices. Page & Ropes did an
excellent business along the booming waterfront;,and in 1798 the firm
contributed $100 toward construction of a privat9ly financed Salem
frigate, the Essex, for defense against marauding French ships (EIHC
75:6).
,
a
In the late 1790s, there was agitation in Congress to go to war with
France, which was at war with England. After President Adams'
negotiators were rebuffed by the French leaders in 1797, a quasi-war
with France began in summer, 1798, much to the horror of Salem's
George Crowninshield family (father and five shipmaster sons), which
had an extensive trade with the French, and whose ships and cargos in
French ports were susceptible to seizure. The quasi-war brought about
a political split within the Salem population. Those who favored war
with France (and detente with England) aligned themselves with the
national Federalist party, led by Hamilton and Salem's Timothy
Pickering (the U.S. Secretary of State). These included most of the
merchants, led locally by the Derby family. Those who favored peace
with France were the Anti-Federalists, led by Jefferson and his
Democratic-Republican party; they were led locally by the
Crowninshields. For the first few years of this rivalry, the Federalists
prevailed; but after the death of Hasket "King" Derby in 1799 his
family's power weakened. Samuel Ropes was a staunch and active
Federalist, and would serve as a selectman of the town.
In 1800, Adams negotiated peace with France and fired Pickering as
Secretary of State. Salem's Federalists merchants erupted in anger,
expressed through their newspaper, the Salem Gazette. At the same
time, British vessels began to harass American shipping. Salem
owners bought more cannon and shot, and kept pushing their trade to
the farthest ports of the rich East, while also maintaining trade with
the Caribbean and Europe. Salem cargos were exceedingly valuable,
and Salem was a major center for distribution of merchandise
throughout New England: "the streets about the wharves were alive
with teams loaded with goods for all parts of the country. It was a
busy scene with the coming and going of vehicles, some from long
distances, for railroads were then unknown and all transportation must
be carried on in wagons and drays. In the taverns could be seen
teamsters from all quarters sitting around the open fire in the chilly
8
�evenings, discussing the news of the day or making merry over
potations of New England rum, which Salem manufactured.in
abundance." (from Hurd's History ofEssex County, 1888, p. 65).
The Crowninshields, led by brother Jacob, were especially successful,
as their holdings rose from three vessels in 1800 to several in 1803.
Their bailiwick, this Derby Street district, seeme4 almost to be itself
imported from some foreign country: in the stores, parrots chattered
and monkeys cavorted, and from the warehouses wafted the exotic
aromas of Sumatran spices and Arabian coffee beans and Caribbean
molasses. From the wharves were carted all manner of strange fruits,
and crates of patterned china in red and blue, and piles of gorgeous
silks and figured cloths, English leather goods, and hundreds of barrels
of miscellaneous objects drawn from all of the ports and workshops of
the world. The greatest of the Salem merchants at this time was
William "Billy" Gray, who owned 36 large vessels-IS ships, 7 barks,
13 brigs, 1 schooner- by 1808. Salem was then still a town, and a
small one by our standards, with a total population of about 9,500 in
1800. Its politics were fierce, and polarized everything. The two
factions attended separate churches, held separate parades, and
supported separate schools, military companies, and newspapers.
Salem' s merchants resided mainly on two streets: Washington (which
ended in a wharf on the Inner Harbor, and, above Essex, had the Town
House in the middle) and Essex (particularly between what are now
Hawthorne Boulevard and North Street). The East Parish (Derby
Street area) was for the seafaring families, shipmasters, sailors, and
fishermen. In the 1790s, Federal Street, known as New Street, had
more empty lots than fine houses. Chestnut Street did not exist: its site
was a meadow. As the 19th century advanced, Salem's commercial
prosperity would sweep almost all of the great downtown houses away
(the brick Joshua Ward house, built 1784, is a notable exception).
The Ropes family prospered in these years, but suffered double
tragedy, when the two oldest boys, Benjamin and Samuel, died in
1800 and in 1801, one at Curacao on a voyage of the Henry which he
was supercargo, aged nineteen, and one at Union Wharf, second mate
of the Belisarius, crushed to death by a falling spar, aged eighteen.
The two Ropes brothers were young men of great ability and promise,
and their deaths fell as terrible blows on their family and friends. Two
of their three younger brothers would grow up to become prominent
merchants in Boston.
9
�The Common was covered with hillocks, small ponds and swamps,
utility buildings, and the alms-house. In 1802, Col. Elias Hasket
Derby (Jr.) began a subscription drive to landscape the common and
transform it into a beautiful promenade and paracte ground, to be
known as Washington Square. Samuel Ropes gave $5 to level the
Common (EIHC 4:139), along with many others; and the project was
soon completed.
5
The town's merchants were among the wealthiest in the country, and,
in Samuel McIntire, they had a local architect who could help them
realize their desires for large and beautiful homes in the latest style.
While a few of the many new houses went up in the old EssexWashington Street axis, most were erected on or near Washington
Square or in the Federalist "west end" (Chestnut, Federal, and upper
Essex Streets). The architectural style (called "Federal" today) had
been developed by the Adam brothers in England and featured fanlight
doorways, palladian windows, elongated pilasters and columns, and
large windows.
A new bank, the Salem Bank, was formed in 1803, and there were two
insurance companies and several societies and associations. The fierce
politics and commercial rivalries continued. The ferment of the times
is captured in the diary of Rev. William Bentley, bachelor minister of
Salem's East Church and editor of the Register newspaper. His diary
is full of references to the civic and commercial doings of the town,
and to the lives and behaviors of all classes of society. He had high
hopes for the future of a republican America, with well-educated
citizens. He observed and fostered the transition in Salem, and wrote
in his diary (2 Dec. 1806), "While Salem was under the greatest
aristocracy in New England, few men thought, and the few directed
the many. Now the aristocracy is gone and the many govern. It is plain
it must require considerable time to give common knowledge to the
people." On Union Street, not far from Bentley's church, on the fourth
of July, 1804, was born a boy who would grow up to eclipse all sons
of Salem in the eyes of the world: Nathaniel Hawthorne, whose father
would die of fever while on a voyage to the Caribbean in 1808. This
kind of untimely death was all too typical of Salem's young seafarers,
who fell prey to malaria and other diseases of the Caribbean and
Pacific tropics.
Salem was by no means the Federalist town that some have portrayed
it to be: the political balance was about even between the Federalists
and the Democratic-Republicans; and in 1806, Samuel Ropes was the
�)
sole Federalist chosen town selectman. In that year, the heirs ofE.H.
Derby extended their wharf far out into the harbor, tripling its previous
length. This they did to create more space for warehouses and shipberths in the deeper water, at just about the time that the
Crowninshields had built their great India Wharf at the foot of nowWebb Street. The other important wharves were Forrester's (now
Central, just west of Derby Wharf), White' s (offWhite Street), Orne's
(near White's), and Union Wharf, where Page & Ropes had its store.
Farther to the west, a number of smaller wharves extended into the
South River (filled in during the late 1800s), all the way to the foot of
Washington Street. Each had a warehouse or two, and shops for
artisans (coopers, blockmakers, joiners, etc.). The waterfront between
Union Street and Washington Street also had lumber yards and several
ship chandleries and distilleries, with a Market House at the foot of
Central Street, below the Custom House. The wharves and streets
were crowded with shoppers, gawkers, hawkers, sailors, artisans
("mechanics"), storekeepers, and teamsters; and just across the way,
on Stage Point along the south bank of the South River, wooden barks
and brigs and ships were being built in the shipyards.
Salem' s boom came to an end with a crash in January, 1808, when
Jefferson and the Congress imposed an embargo on all shipping in
hopes of forestalling war with Britain. The Embargo, which was
widely opposed in New England, proved futile and nearly ruinous in
Salem, where commerce ceased. In October, the Federalists of Essex
County held an anti-Embargo convention at Topsfield, at which
Samuel Ropes was one of the delegates (p.275, J.D. Phillips, Salem &
The Indies). As a hotbed of Democratic-Republicanism, Salem's East
Parish and its seafarers, led by the Crowninshields, loyally supported
the Embargo until it was lifted in spring, 1809. Shunned by the other
Salem merchants for his support of the Embargo, the eminent Billy
Gray took his large fleet of ships- fully one-third of Salem's
tonnage-and moved to Boston, whose commerce was thereby much
augmented. Gray's removal eliminated a huge amount of Salem
wealth, shipping, import-export cargos, and local employment. Gray
soon switched from the Federalist party, and was elected Lt. Governor
under Gov. Elbridge Gerry, a native of Marblehead.
At this time, Samuel Ropes and his wife decided to move out of the
east Parish, where they had resided since 1782. On 1 Aug. 1809 for
$2900 Samuel Ropes, merchant, bought from Jacob Lord, carpenter,
the westerly part of the large new house, with barn, at 134 bridge
Street, on the southerly corner ofNorthey Street (ED 187:228). Into
11
�this house Samuel Ropes and his family soon moved; and there he
would live for many years more, until his death in 1841.
After the lifting of the Embargo, Salem resumed its seafaring
commerce for three years, still subject to British predators; and in
June, 1812, war was declared against Britain. Although the merchants
had tried to prevent the war, when it came, Salem swiftly fitted out 40
privateers manned by Marblehead and Salem crews, who also served
on U.S. Navy vessels, including the frigate Constitution. Many more
local vessels could have been sent against the British, but some of the
Federalist merchants held them back. In addition, Salem fielded
companies of infantry and artillery. Salem and Marblehead privateers
were largely successful in making prizes of British supply vessels.
While many of the town's men were wounded in engagements, and
some were killed, the possible riches of privateering kept the men
returning to sea as often as possible. The first prizes were captured by
a 30-ton converted fishing schooner, the Fame, and by a 14-ton luxury
yacht fitted with one gun, the Jefferson. Of all Salem privateers, the
Crowninshields' 350-ton ship America was most successful: she
captured 30-plus prizes worth more than $1,100,000.
Salem erected forts and batteries on its Neck, to discourage the British
warships that cruised these waters. On land, the war went poorly for
the United States, as the British captured Washington, DC, and burned
the Capitol and the White House. Along the western frontier, U.S.
forces were successful against the weak English forces; and, as
predicted by many, the western expansionists had their day. At sea, as
time wore on, Salem vessels were captured, and its men imprisoned or
killed. After almost three years, the war was bleeding the town dry.
Hundreds of Salem men and boys were in British prison-ships and at
Dartmoor Prison in England. At the Hartford Convention in 1814,
New England Federalist delegates met to consider what they could do
to bring the war to a close and to restore the region' s commerce. Sen.
Timothy Pickering of Salem led the extreme Federalists in proposing a
series of demands which, if not met by the federal government, could
lead to New England' s seceding from the United States; but the
Pickering faction was countered by Harrison G. Otis of Boston and the
moderate Federalists, who prevailed in sending a moderate message to
Congress.
At last, in February, 1815, peace was restored.
12
�Toward the end of the war, in November, 1814, for $1300 Samuel
Ropes Esq. sold the house here on Blaney Street to Samuel Derby, Jr.
(ED 205 :36).
Samuel Derby Jr. ( 1785-1828) was a ship chandler, also known as a
trader or grocer. Born 2 Oct. 1785, he was the eldest often children of
Samuel Derby (1764-1826) & Bethiah Watts (17.67-1851) of Salem.
His father, who began his career as an artisan, became a ship chandler,
and prospered until the Embargo, which badly damaged his finances.
In the War of 1812, Samuel Derby Sr., although fifty years old, was
captain of marines on the privateer Montgomery, and fought well in
many battles at sea. Presumably Samuel Derby Jr. was raised up as a
clerk in his father's chandlery and also served during the War of 1812
on board privateers. Samuel Derby Sr. must have been friends with the
sail-maker Nicholas Lane (co-purchaser in 1782 with Samuel Ropes),
for he named his last child Nicholas Lane Derby.
Samuel Derby Jr., 23, married Abigail Buffum, sixteen, in November,
1808. She was the daughter of Joshua Buffum of Salem, and had been
born while the family resided in Connecticut, in 1792. A few years
after Samuel & Abigail's marriage, her mother, Mrs. Mary Buffum, a
widow, married, second, Nicholas Lane, the sail-maker who lived
nearby on Derby Street. Mr. Lane died in May, 1815, and Mary
survived as his widow.
Samuel and Abigail Derby had three children before purchasing this
house, Joshua (1809, died 1810), Lucy Ann (1811), and Mary (1814).
They would have five more surviving children after 1814: Eliza C.
(1817, died an infant), Eliza C. (1819, died 1828), Abigail (1821),
Samuel (1823), and Charles (1826). Soon after Mr. Lane' s death, Mr.
Derby, described as a grocer, had an opportunity to buy the adjoining
property formerly of Nicholas Lane, and did so, for $765.30 from the
Salem Bank, subject to a mortgage for $364 to John Osgood, which he
would pay off in 1817 (ED 206:140, 214:124). This gave him
ownership of the store at the comer and the house to the west of it on
derby Street, and the land belonging.
Post-war, the Salem merchants rebuilt their fleets and resumed their
worldwide trade, slowly at first, and then to great effect. Many new
partnerships were formed. The pre-war partisan politics of the town
were not resumed post-war, as the middle-class "mechanics" (artisans)
became more powerful and brought about civic harmony, largely
through the Salem Charitable Mechanic Association (founded 1817).
13
�In July, 1817, the Derbys had a terrible accident, as their new baby,
Eliza, then three months old, was accidentally given laudanum, a
poison, from which she died right away.
Rev. William Bentley, keen observer and active citizen during
Salem's time of greatest prosperity and fiercest political divisions,
died in 1819, the year in which a new U.S. Custom House was built on
the site of the George Crowninshield mansion, at the head of Derby
Wharf. Into the 1820s foreign trade continued prosperous; and new
markets were opened with Madagascar (1820), which supplied tallow
and ivory, and Zanzibar (1825), whence came coffee, ivory, and gum
copal, used to make varnish. This opened a huge and lucrative trade
in which Salem dominated, and its vessels thus gained access to all of
the east African ports.
In 1820 (per census), Samuel Derby Jr. and family resided here (p. 42)
and he prospered in his business. He evidently conducted his ship
chandlery from the store at the comer of Derby and Blaney Streets;
and he had another house, formerly Lane's, leased out to tenants on
Derby Street west of the store. His chandlery eventually became a
grocery store, as fewer vessels needed outfitting for long voyages to
the Orient.
Samuel Derby Jr (1785-1828), s/o Samuel Derby & Bethiah Watts,
died 18 Jan. 1828. Hem. 9 Nov. 1808 Abigail Buffum (1792-1877),
d/o Joshua & Mary Buffum, died 2 Sept. 1877. Known issue:
1. Joshua, 1809-1810.
2. Lucy Ann, 1811, d. 12 May 1830.
3. Mary, 17 June 1815, artist, d. 19 Jan. 1900.
4. Eliza C., 1817, d. 12 July 1817, by accident.
5. Eliza C., 1819, d. 13 Feb. 1828.
6. Abigail, 1821, m. 1847 Albert A. Gould.
7. Samuel, 1823, settled in Hawaii.
8. Charles, 1826, m. Emeline ___; settled in Hawaii.
Salem's general maritime foreign commerce fell off sharply in the late
1820s. Imports in Salem ships were supplanted by the goods that
were now being produced in great quantities in America. The interior
of the country was being opened for settlement, and some Salemites
moved away. To the north, the falls of the Merrimack River powered
large new textile mills (Lowell was founded in 1823), which created
great wealth for their investors; and in general it seemed that the tide
14
�of opportunity was ebbing away from Salem. To stem the flow of
talent from the town and to harness its potential water power for
manufacturing, Salem's merchants and capitalists tried to harness
Salem' s tidal power for manufacturing, but the effort failed, after
which several leading citizens moved to Boston, the hub of investment
in the new economy.
On Jan. 18, 1828, Samuel Derby died, aged just 42 years. He left his
wife Abigail, 35, and six young children, one of them still a toddler.
Less than a month later, his daughter Eliza died at the age of eight. It
was a double tragedy, and a disaster for the family. Fortunately,
Samuel left a solvent estate. The probate papers (appended) show the
stock in his store at the time (worth $796.32) as well as the household
furniture. He owned one share in the Essex marine Railway
Corporation (worth $75), which was a company that hauled vessels
out of the water for repairs; and he held many notes on loans that he
had made to friends and relatives. The administrator of his estate was
his wife's brother, Samuel Buffum. Before long, the probate court set
off to the widow, Mrs. Abigail Buffum Derby, one-third of the real
estate, for her lifetime use. The "widow' s dower" (copy of court
decree appended), awarded in August, 1829, consisted of most of the
homestead (valued at $1600) here, including all of the house-lot and
all of the rooms other than the three northern lower rooms, which were
reserved to the benefit of her children. Mrs. Derby continued to reside
here with her children.
In April, 1830, occurred a horrifying crime that brought disgrace to
Salem. Old Capt. Joseph White, a rich merchant, now retired, resided
in a mansion on Essex Street. His wealth was legendary in Salem, not
least among the denizens of the nearby Salem Jail, where plots had
long been hatched to break in and steal the Captain's putative treasure
chest. One night, intruders did break in; and they stabbed him to death
in his sleep. All of Salem buzzed with rumors; but within a few
months it was discovered that the murderer was a Crowninshield (he
killed himself) who had been hired by his friends, Capt. White' s own
relatives, Capt. Joe Knapp and his brother Frank (they would be
executed). The murder, and related lurid events, tarnished Salem
further, and more families quit the now-notorious town. One month
after the White murder, Lucy Ann Derby, nineteen, died here at her
mother's house.
In 1830 (per census), Abigail Derby lived here with two boys, a young
man, a girl, two young women, and an older woman, probably her
15
�mother, Mrs. Mary Lane, widow. The house may have had as tenant
Adam Nesmith, a distiller, or Eben Hooper. In 1831 (pr valuations,
p.8), Abigail Derby owned two houses and a store (worth $2500,
valued at $1500), and she lived here with her family, while two blind
men, Joseph Black and Joseph Millett, evidently resided in the tenant
house on Derby Street, as did William Measly.
Salem had not prepared for the industrial age, and had few natural
advantages. The North River served not to power factories but mainly
to flush the waste from the 25 tanneries that had set up along its banks.
As the decade wore on, and the new railroads and canals, all running
and flowing to Boston from points north, west, and south, diverted
both capital and trade away from the coast. Salem's remaining
merchants took their equity out of local wharves and warehouses and
ships and put it into the stock of manufacturing and transportation
companies. Some merchants did not make the transition, and were
ruined. Old-line areas of work, like rope-making, sail-making, and
ship chandleries, gradually declined and disappeared. Salem slumped
badly, but, despite all, the voters decided to charter their town as a city
in 1836-the third city to be formed in the state, behind Boston and
Lowell. City Hall was built 1837-8 and the city seal was adopted with
an already-anachronistic Latin motto of "to the farthest port of the rich
East"-a far cry from "Go West, young man!" The Panic of 1837, a
brief, sharp, nationwide economic depression, caused even more
Salem families to head west in search of fortune and a better future.
Throughout the 1830s, the leaders of Salem scrambled to re-invent an
economy for their fellow citizens, many of whom were mariners
without much sea-faring to do. Ingenuity, ambition, and hard work
would have to carry the day. One inspiration was the Salem
Laboratory, Salem's first science-based manufacturing enterprise,
founded in 1813 to produce chemicals. At the plant built in 1818 in
North Salem on the North River, the production of alum and blue
vitriol was a specialty; and it proved a very successful business.
Salem's whale-fishery led to the manufacturing of high-quality
candles at Stage Point, along with machine oils. The candles proved
very popular. Lead-manufacturing began in the 1820s, and grew large
after 1830, when Wyman' s gristmills on the Forest River, at the head
of Salem Harbor, were retooled for making high-quality white lead
and sheet lead. These enterprises were a start toward taking Salem in a
new direction. In 183 8 the Eastern Rail Road, headquartered in Salem,
began operating between Boston and Salem, which gave the local
people a direct route to the region's largest market. The new railroad
16
�tracks ran right over the middle of the Mill Pond; the tunnel under
Washington Street was built in 1839; and the line was extended to
Newburyport in 1840.
In Salem first directory, published in 183 7, Mrs. Abigail Derby is
listed at 4 Blaney Street, as is William Measly, laborer. Joseph M.
Black, laborer, is listed at 49 Derby Street.
In 1844, #4 Blaney Street was occupied by Mrs. Abigail Derby, her
son Samuel Derby, 20, who probably worked as a sailor, and by Peter
Carraway, a laborer. The tenant house on Derby Street was occupied
by Joseph Black, George Ramsdell, 30, and Thomas Loyd, 20 (per
1844 street book). In the 1846 Directory, Mrs. Abigail Derby is listed
here at 4 Blaney. In 1847 her daughter Abigail married Mr. Gould and
moved to South Danvers; she would have two daughters before her
early death. In 1848 (per street book), the house was occupied by
Charles Derby, 21, Henry Robinson, 39, an Englishman working as a
mariner, and (technically) by Samuel Derby, who, it was noted, had
been absent for three years. Mrs. Derby was not mentioned. In 1849,
she resided here with her son, Charles, and daughter, Mary, an artist,
and with mariner Henry Robinson, all at "the foot of Blaney Street."
In the face of major economic changes, some members of Salem's
waning merchant class pursued sea-borne businesses into the 1840s;
but it was an ebb tide, with unfavorable winds. Boston, transformed
into a modern mega-port with efficient railroad and highway
distribution to all markets, had subsumed virtually all foreign trade
other than Salem's commerce with Zanzibar. The sleepy waterfront at
Derby Wharf, with an occasional arrival from Africa and regular visits
from schooners carrying wood from Nova Scotia, is depicted in 1850
by Hawthorne in his cranky "introductory section" to The Scarlet
Letter, which he began while working in the Custom House.
Although Hawthorne had no interest in describing it, Salem's
transformation did occur in the 1840s, as more industrial methods and
machines were introduced, and many new companies in new lines of
business arose. The Gothic symbol of Salem's new industrial economy
was the large twin-towered granite train station- the "stone depot" smoking and growling with idling locomotives. It stood on filled-in
land at the foot of Washington Street, where the merchants' wharves
had been; and from it the trains carried many valuable products as well
as passengers. The tanning and curing of leather was very important in
Salem by the mid-1800s. On and near Boston Street, along the upper
17
�North River, there were 41 tanneries in 1844, and 85 in 1850,
employing 550 hands. The leather business would continue to grow in
importance throughout the 1800s. In 1846 the Naumkeag Steam
Cotton Company completed the construction at Stage Point of the
largest factory building in the United States, 60' wide by 400' long. It
was an immediate success, and hundreds of people found employment
there, many of them living in tenements built nearby. It too benefited
from the Zanzibar and Africa trade, as it produced light cotton cloth
for use in the tropics. Also in the 1840s, a new method was introduced
to make possible high-volume industrial shoe production. In Lynn, the
factory system was perfected, and that city became the nation's
leading shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted
shoe workers from outlying towns and the countryside. Even the
population began to transform, as hundreds of Irish families, fleeing
the Famine in Ireland, settled in Salem and gave the industrialists a big
pool of cheap labor. In 1849, the Gold Rush was on, and many men
from Salem took a chance at getting rich out west. Some found a little
gold and came home, others died on the way out or back, and some
never returned. Charles Derby was one who tried his luck and
eventually returned.
In 1851, Stephen C. Phillips succeeded in building a railroad line from
Salem to Lowell, which meant that the coal that was landed at Phillips
Wharf (formerly the Crowninshields' great India Wharf) could be run
cheaply out to Lowell to help fuel the boilers of the mills, whose
output of textiles could be freighted easily to Salem for shipment by
water. This innovation, although not long-lived, was a much-needed
boost to Salem's economy as a port and transportation center. Salem's
growth continued through the 1850s, as business and industries
expanded, the population swelled, new churches (e.g. Immaculate
Conception, 1857) were started, new working-class neighborhoods
were developed (especially in North Salem and South Salem, off
Boston Street, and along the Mill Pond behind the Broad Street
graveyard), and new schools, factories, and stores were built. A
second, larger, factory building for the Naurnkeag Steam Cotton
Company was added in 1859, at Stage Point, where a new Methodist
Church went up, and many neat homes, boarding-houses, and stores
were erected along the streets between Lafayette and Congress. The
tanning business continued to boom, as better and larger tanneries
were built along Boston Street and Mason Street; and subsidiary
industries sprang up as well, most notably the J.M. Anderson glueworks on the Turnpike (Highland Avenue).
18
�In 1854, Mrs. Derby and the artist Mary Derby lived here, while son
Charles was listed as having gone to California, no doubt for the Gold
Rush. Henry Robinson, mariner, was still residing here with the Derby
women (per 1855 directory), but shortly after he moved away. Charles
returned about 1852 and married Emeline; and they had a boy, Charles
A., in 1853, and another son in 1855, by which time they resided on or
near Allen Street, and Charles was working as a restorateur ( 185 5
census, house, 48, ward one). Here at #4 Blaney, Mrs. Abigail Derby,
63, and daughter Mary, 41, resided in one unit, while in the other
resided Henry Robinson, 46, a mariner, born in England, his wife
Eliza, 44, born in Maine, and their daughters Eliza G., five, and Mary
A, one year (house 106, ward one, 1855 census).
As it re-established itself as an economic powerhouse, Salem took a
strong interest in national politics. It was primarily Republican, and
strongly anti-slavery, with its share of outspoken abolitionists, led by
Charles Remand, a passionate speaker who came from one of the
city's notable black families. At its Lyceum (on Church Street) and in
other venues, plays and shows were put on, but cultural lectures and
political speeches were given too.
By 1860, with the election of Abraham Lincoln, it was clear that the
Southern states would secede from the union; and Salem, which had
done so much to win the independence of the nation, was ready to go
to war to force others to remain a part of it.
The Civil War began in April, 1861, and went on for four years,
during which hundreds of Salem men served in the army and navy,
and many were killed or died of disease or abusive treatment while
imprisoned. Hundreds more suffered wounds, or broken health. The
people of Salem contributed greatly to efforts to alleviate the suffering
of the soldiers, sailors, and their families; and there was great
celebration when the war finally ended in the spring of 1865,just as
President Lincoln was assassinated. The four years of bloodshed and
warfare were over; the slaves were free; a million men were dead; the
union was preserved and the South was under martial rule. Salem,
with many wounded soldiers and grieving families, welcomed the
coming of peace.
Through the 1860s, Salem pursued manufacturing, especially of
leather and shoes and textiles. The managers and capitalists tended to
build their new, grand houses along Lafayette Street (these houses
may still be seen, south of Roslyn Street; many are in the French
19
�Second Empire style, with mansard roofs). A third factory building for
the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company was built in 1865.
In 1862, Samuel Derby sold his 7/36 interest in the overall property
here to his mother Abigail Derby; and in 1863 Abigail Derby Gould
for $450 sold her interest to her sister Mary Derby (ED 637:40,
646:227). Charles Derby (he is listed here in the 1864 directory) and
family eventually joined his brother Samuel, who had settled in
paradise- the Sandwich Islands, which he had no doubt visited on a
cruise, which are now called Hawaii.
In 1870 Salem received its last cargo from Zanzibar, thus ending a
once-important trade. By then, a new Salem & New York freight
steamboat line was in operation. Seven years later, with the arrival of a
vessel from Cayenne, Salem's foreign trade came to an end. After that,
"the merchandise warehouses on the wharves no longer contained
silks from India, tea from China, pepper from Sumatra, coffee from
Arabia, spices from Batavia, gum-copal from Zanzibar, hides from
Africa, and the various other products of far-away countries. The boys
have ceased to watch on the Neck for the incoming vessels, hoping to
earn a reward by being the first to announce to the expectant merchant
the safe return of his looked-for vessel. The foreign commerce of
Salem, once her pride and glory, has spread its white wings and sailed
away forever" (George Batchelor in History ofEssex County, II: 65).
In 1870 (per census, house 127), this was the home of Mrs. Abigail
Derby, 78, with $2500 in real estate, and her daughter Mary, 55, who
had $1,000 in personal estate; and it was also the home of John Smith,
37, a cigar maker, wife Abba T., 36, and son James H. Smith, 3.
Salem was now so densely built-up that a general conflagration was
always a possibility, as in Boston, when, on Nov. 9, 1872, the
financial and manufacturing district of the city burned up. Salem
continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leathermaking business. In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken
by a minor earthquake. In the following year, the large Pennsylvania
Pier (site of the present coal-fired harborside electrical generating
plant) was completed to begin receiving large shipments of coal.
Beyond it, at Juniper Point, a new owner began subdividing the old
Allen farmlands into a new development called Salem Willows and
Juniper Point. In the U.S. centennial year, 1876, A.G. Bell of Salem
announced that he had discovered a way to transmit voices over
telegraph wires.
20
�In this decade, French-Canadian families began coming to work in
Salem' s mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were
built. The better-off workers bought portions of older houses or built
small homes for their families in the outlying sections of the city; and
by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam Cotton mills would employ 1200
people and produce annually nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Shoemanufacturing businesses expanded in the 1870s, and 40 shoe
factories were employing 600-plus operatives. Tanning, in both Salem
and Peabody, remained a very important industry, and employed
hundreds of breadwinners. On Boston Street in 1879, the Arnold
tannery caught fire and burned down.
Mrs. Abigail Derby died on Sept. 2, 1877, at the age of 85, having
lived here for more than sixty years, and having survived her husband
by 49 years. Her survivors were her son Charles of Hawaii (son
Samuel had already died there), her daughter Mary of Salem, and the
two daughters of her deceased daughter Mrs. Abigail Gould. Her
daughter Mary served as administratrix of the Samuel Derby estate,
which had never been divided, and which included two houses, a
store, and barn, all worth $2300, of which Mrs. Derby' s own interest
was worth $1405, being 11/18 of the homestead (#37369). In 1878
and 1879 Miss Mary Derby bought out the interests of her brother
Charles Derby and heirs of her sister Mrs. Gould in their mother' s
property (ED 1022:204-5). This evidently left Mary Derby the sole
owner of the premises; and on 11 October 1881 she sold the
homestead for $1135 to Mary Durgin, wife of John Durgin, by Mrs.
Durgin' s trustee, George Wheatland, Esq. (ED 1069:160). The
premises fronted 86' on Blaney Street, and 73' each on its north and
its south boundaries.
Mrs. Durgin, the new owner, died by early 1884; and on 1 February
1884 the homestead was conveyed, according to her will, to Thomas
Durgin, her son (ED 1124:99). In October, 1889, for $1600, Thomas
Durgin sold the premises to John H. Cashman of Salem (ED 1261 :77).
Mr. Cashman evidently built a new house to the west of#4, and the
new house was numbered 4 rear. After his death, his widow, Anastasia
Cashman, owned the property (see 1897 atlas), which would remain in
Cashman ownership until 1922.
In the 1880s and 1890s, Salem kept building infrastructure; and new
businesses arose, and established businesses expanded. Retail stores
prospered; horse-drawn trolleys ran every which-way; and machinists,
21
�carpenters, millwrights, and other specialists all thrived. In 1880,
Salem's manufactured goods were valued at about $8.4 million, of
which leather accounted for nearly half. In the summer of 1886, the
Knights of Labor brought a strike against the manufacturers for a tenhour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers imported labor
from Maine and Canada, and kept going. The strikers held out, and
there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but the owners
prevailed, and many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and
suffered, with their families, through a bitter winter.
In 1886, Miss Mary Derby for $850 sold off more of her property, to
John Nash (ED 1172:298), who thus acquired the comer lot and old
store, which had been leased by Albert P. Goodhue. She had moved to
103 Essex Street, where she lived out the rest of her life, and died in
her 84th year in January, 1900.
By the mid-1880s, Salem' s cotton-cloth mills at the Point employed
1400 people who produced about 19 million yards annually, worth
about $1.5 million. The city' s large shoe factories stood downtown
behind the stone depot and on Dodge and Lafayette Streets. A jute
bagging company prospered with plants on Skerry Street and English
Street; its products were sent south to be used in cotton-baling. Salem
factories also produced lead, paint, and oil. At the Eastern Railroad
yard on Bridge Street, cars were repaired and even built new. In 1887
the streets were first lit with electricity, replacing gas-light. The gas
works, which had stood on Northey Street since 1850, was moved to a
larger site on Bridge Street in 1888, opposite the Beverly Shore.
More factories and more people required more space for buildings,
more roads, and more storage areas. This space was created by filling
in rivers, harbors, and ponds. The once-broad North River was filled
from both shores, and became a canal along Bridge Street above the
North Bridge. The large and beautiful Mill Pond, which occupied the
whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue, Canal Street, and
Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage areas, junkyards, rail-yards, and parking lots. The South River, too, with its
epicenter at Central Street (that's why there was a Custom House built
there in 1805) disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza and
New Derby Street, and some of its old wharves were joined together
with much in-fill and turned into coal-yards and lumber-yards. Only a
canal was left, running in from Derby and Central Wharves to
Lafayette Street.
22
�In 1890 this house was occupied by the families of John Shallow and
of James Wade, a laborer and teamster who would soon move to
Derby Street. The Shallows, John and Mary, were born in Ireland and
had moved to Canada as a young couple. Six sons and five daughters
were born to them (not all names are known to me); and in the 1870s
they moved to the United States. They probably moved into this house
in the 1880s, and would reside here for at least three decades, as
tenants of the Cashmans. John Shallow would die here in 1899, aged
about seventy.
John Shallow (1830?-1899) born in Ireland, died 16 Feb. 1899. He
m. Mary _ _ _ (1832-1916), died 4 Dec. 1916. Known issue, all
born in Canada (three others, names unknown):
1. John, currier 1890
2. Patrick J., currrier 1890
3. Mary J., 1857, came U.S. 1876, weaver
4. William A., 1860, currier 1890
5. Bridget, 1864, m. William H. Veno.
6. Catherine F., 1865
7. Annie, 1868
8. Thomas E., 1871, currier 1890
In 1900 or shortly before, William H. Veno appears as head of a
second household residing here. He was born in Washington in 1864,
of parents born in France. He married Bridget Shallow. In 1898 he
went to work for the Salem Water Department, where he came to be
an expert in water supply. He belonged to various clubs and societies,
and was a volunteer fireman and a well-liked "conscientious and
faithful" man and citizen (info from his 1908 obituary). He and
Bridget had five children.
William H. Veno (1864-1908), born Washington; he died 13 April
1908. He m. c. 1888 Bridget (Shallow) (b. 1864, Canada, d/o John
& Mary Shallow; came U.S. 1875). Known issue (three others died
young), surname Veno:
1. Mary F., 1889
2. John, 1890
3. Florence, 1897
4. Anna, 1900
5. Henry, 1905
In 1901, among the many Shallows living here, Miss Mary J. worked
as a weaver, Patrick J. was listed as "U.S. Volunteer", and Thomas E.
23
�was a clerk at V. Dooley's grocery, 122 Derby Street, while William
A. was a currier in the leather trade.
In the early spring of 1908, after responding to a fire alarm, William
Veno, 44, took ill; and he died a month later in April, leaving his wife
Bridget and five children, the youngest, Henry, only three.
Salem kept growing. The Canadians were followed in the early 20th
century by large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families, who
settled primarily in the Derby Street neighborhood. By the eve of
World War One, Salem was a bustling, polyglot city that supported
large department stores and large factories of every description.
People from the surrounding towns, and Marblehead in particular,
came to Salem to do their shopping; and its handsome government
buildings, as befit the county seat, were busy with conveyances of
land, lawsuits, and probate proceedings. The city's politics were
lively, and its economy was strong.
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street
opposite Federal), a fire started in one of Salem' s fire-prone wooden
tanneries. This fire soon consumed the building and raced out of
control, for the west wind was high and the season had been dry. The
next building caught fire, and the next, and out of Blubber Hollow the
fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out
the houses of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and
then sweeping through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other
residential streets. Men and machines could not stop it: the enormous
fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed the neighborhoods
west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of Lafayette
Street itself, and raged onward into the tenement district. Despite the
combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and cities, the
fire overwhelmed everything in its path: it smashed into the large
factory buildings of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company (Congress
Street), which exploded in an inferno-well viewed from Blaney
Street-and it rolled down Lafayette Street and across the water to
Derby Street. There, just beyond Union Street, after a 13-hour
rampage, the monster died, having consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses,
and 41 factories, and leaving three dead and thousands homeless.
Some people had insurance, some did not; all received much support
and generous donations from all over the country and the world. It
was one of the greatest urban disasters in the history of the United
States, and the people of Salem would take years to recover from it.
24
�Eventually, they did, and many of the former houses and businesses
were rebuilt; and several urban-renewal projects (including Hawthorne
Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and widening old
streets) were put into effect.
The Shallows and Venos continued to reside here. Mrs. Mary Shallow
died in 1916, in her eighties. In 1922 the Cashmans sold the premises
to Messrs. Sim and Russell, owners of the Russell-Sim Tanning
Company (ED 2522:89); and they would own it until 1944.
By the 1920s, Salem was once again a thriving city; and its
tercentenary in 1926 was a time of great celebration. The Depression
hit in 1929, and continued through the 1930s. Salem, the county seat
and regional retail center, gradually rebounded, and prospered after
World War II through the 1950s and into the 1960s. General Electric,
Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills (formerly Naumkeag Steam
Cotton Co.), Almy' s department store, various other large-scale
retailers, and Beverly' s United Shoe Machinery Company were all
major local employers. Then the arrival of suburban shopping malls
and the relocation of manufacturing businesses took their toll, as they
have with many other cities. More than most, Salem has navigated its
way forward into the present with success, trading on its share of
notoriety arising from the witch trials, but also from its history as a
great seaport and as the home of Bowditch, McIntire, Bentley, Story,
and Hawthorne. Most of all, it remains a city where the homes of the
old-time merchants, mariners, coopers, chandlers, and mill-operatives
are all honored as a large part of what makes Salem different from any
other place.
25
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Blaney Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
4 Blaney Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1782 for Samuel Ropes, Cooper
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. House Histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1782, 1976
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1782
1976
4
Blaney Street
Booth
Cooper
Salem Massachusetts
Samuel Ropes
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f5e9d11fe53c4d50272cdc42778c7a38.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=QIcNBq0nQRkbjXaytx-6AqnEfWCje9uw4VkAY%7ETXSb7PSAGZ4zVJbXA2avzrjCT%7Eciqb1Wbzz01h6D8SSXu2EnHzfn2d89lUX%7EjkatAIUUBrciW3Mt1vFM4RIfKV4oO8f%7EiGVrFi9wVEFYQ08AXqQZVPpKVHMQQCAyyrw6a0oN%7EKy1u-SADCbrmILja42rLlh6RAo-BmKzsE1ScEivBbVbw%7EAgtfW2ZNi-6hH9YBhIhsK8A1-fMp7u2GfxhVDxLl-4QZJxWK8wWUw5Hzhm-fO-Zfhi4rLjnNxOkSpkegtKF5H%7EP9paYTRWVVJYww19t4pq9a7a7VEf0pL-GXTrOyKQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
1bf242975f5e224b1581214205f12740
PDF Text
Text
~
Two Blaney Street
This strudure was .built as it appears today for John Nash, shoemaker, in 1886.
Very early this land was part of the holdings of Henry Harwood, who died in
1664; his land was sold in 1669 to Jeremiah Butman (3:75), who sold the upper
end to John Becket before 1673, and the rest to Philip Cromwell on 11 July
1673 (4: 18), who in 1680 sold it to Edmund Bridges Sr, a blacksmith, who built
a house, shop & wharf thereon, and in 1682 sold it for 160 li to widow Elizabeth
Turner (6:49). On 28 Oct 1699 John Tunner sold the estate to William Becket,
who immediately conveyed it to blacksmith/anchorsmith Abraham Purchase,
who settled there, dying about 1724 (see Perley's Salem in 1700 , part #22) .
The old house & shop were gone by 1767, when Joseph Mas coll (who had married Ruth, daughter of Abraham Purchase) sold part of the land to Joseph
Blaney and Benjamin Pickman Jr. Mr Pickman in 1769 sold his right to Mr
Blaney, who in 1782 sold a piece of the land to Nicholas Lane, sailmaker, and
Samuel Ropes, cooper, on May 20th (139:128).
In June 1782 Mess rs Lane & Ropes divided the land, Nicholas Lane receiving
the northern half fronting on Derby Street ( 141: 185). On this land Mr Lane
built a dwelling house and store, and here he and his family lived for many
years. The store (which may have housed his sail loft) stood on the corner
- of Derby & Blaney; the house stood to the west of the store on Derby Street,
Nicholas Lane died in 1815., having mortgaged his homestead heavily. On
30 Jan 1815 for $765. 30 Samuel Derby Jr, Salem trader or grocer, bought
up the Salem Bank's mortgage right to the premises (206:140; see also 190:232),
and on 12 Aug 1817 for $364 he bought from John Osgood, merchant, the other
mortgage right (214:124; see also 181:27). These purchases gave Mr Derby
full ownership of the premises; he had bought the Samuel Ropes house in
November 1814, and there he lived; the store he ran as a general store, and
the Lane house he rented out,
Samuel Derby Jr ( 1785-1828), who was also known as a ship chandler, was
descended from one of the less affluent branches of the Derby family of Salem;
he and his wife Abigail (Buffum) had eight children, not all of whom survived
to maturity. (see"Genealogy of the Derby Family" by Perley Derby, 1861,
EIHC 3:205). He died, a trader, on 16 or 18 Jan 1828, aged 42 years, leaving
his wife Abigail and children Mary (1814), Abigail (1821), Samuel (1823), and
Charles (1826) . His real estate consisted of "the homestead in Blaney Street"
(formerly Ropes 's) worth $1600, the Lane "house in Derby Street" and its
land, worth $800, and the "store and iand, corner of Derby and Blaney Street,"
worth $1200. (#7595). The first page of the inventory of his estate details the
contents of this store (see #7595, copy enclosed).
�~
The propert~ occupied by widow Abigail and her eldest daughter Mary,
remained undiv ided among the heirs until 1863, when by two deeds Mrs
Derby and Mary acquired full rights to the estate (637:40, 646:227). On
2 Sept 1877, almost_50 years after her husband, Mrs Abigail (Buffum)
Derby died, leaving her share of the property, a "lot of land at the corner
of Derby & Blaney Streets, occupied with two dwelling houses, a store and
a barn, 11 to her son Charles of Hawaii (son Samuel had died at Hawaii),
daughter Mary Derby of Salem, and to the two daughters of her deceased
daughter, Mrs Abigail (Derby) Gould (#37369). By three deeds, Mary Derby,
the eldest daughter, acquired the property (1009:31, 1022:204, 205).
On 15 May 1886 for $850 Mary Derby granted to John Nash, Salem shoemaker,
the lot at the corner of Derby and Blaney Streets, bounded northerly 29' 9"
on Derby Street and easterly 75 1 on Blaney Street (1172: 298) . Street books_
for the time reveal that there was then a corner store here, rented from
Miss Derby by Albert P Goodhue, with a value of $500. This was probably
the Nicholas Lane /Samuel Derby store. In the summer of 1886 John Nash,
having either torn down the store or incorporated it into the new building,
caused the present structure to be built as a home for himself and his family .
On 26 July 1886, by which time the house may have been finished, he applied
to the city for 104 1 of edgestones, agreeing to have a sidewalk built aroun..
his property within one month of the installation of the edgestones (see city
book, 11 Edgestones, 1881-89, Streets, 11 at the Es sex Institute).
The 1887 Street Book shows that this place, then known as 47 Derby Street,
was worth $1200 for the house and $300 for the land, and that the male occupants
of age were John Nash, 48, shoemaker, and his sons Dennis J Nash, 21, a
baker, and John J Nash, 18, a shoemaker. Perhaps the Derby Street storefront existed then, as a bakery or cobbler's shop . John Nash, who may have
been an Irish immigrant or the son of same, died on 30 Nov 1900, aged about
61 years, leaving his wife Ellen, daughter Mary E, and son John (#87459).
On l July 1901 his heirs granted the land and buildings to Timothy J Kelley
of Salem (1645: 538). On 6 Ap 1907 Timothy granted the premises to Patrick J Kelley
of Salem (1867:271) . On 30 June 1911 Patrick granted the place to Mr & Mrs
Joseph .A Rosenthal of Salem (2091:125). On 6 Feb 1912 Mr Rosenthal granted
his right to his wife Dora L, via straw Max Goldberg (2128:227, 229). And on
11 Nov 1922 Dora L Rosenthal granted the premises to Mr & Mrs Joseph Szetela
of Salem (2535: 125) .
Robert Booth
26 Jan 1978
�NICHOLAS LANE, sailmaker, was born in Gloucseter in 1749 in the section
now called Annisquam . He came to Salem during the Revolution, and died
late in May, 1815, leaving eleven children. He struck Rev. William Bentley
of Salem, who knew. him well, as "a man of great industry, correct habits,
& a good Commonwealth's man, & of talents in his employment." His son
William carried on the sailmaker's business. (see Bentley's Diary, vol. 4,
p. 332.-3).
Note: A thorough inspection of the interior of this building would be necessary
to determining (if possible) whether it was built incorporating the old store,
or was built entirely new.
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Esquire, Judge
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Pursuant to a warrant from your honor, we, the subscribers, the committee thcrem.
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INVENTORY AND APPRAISEMENT OF THE ESTATE OF
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Blaney Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
2 Blaney Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1886 for John Nash, shoemaker
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1886, 1978
Contributor
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Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1886
1978
2
Blaney Street
John Nash
Salem Massachusetts
shoemaker
-
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PDF Text
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bentley Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
19 Bentley Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built by 1854 by and for George Bowditch, a Mason
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem Inc., house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1854, 1981
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1854
19
1981
Allyn Realty Trust
Bentley Street
Bramble
Diman
George Bowditch
Green
mason
Selby
Spector
Witkos
-
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������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bentley Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
12 Bentley Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built in 1838 for Benjamin Sanborn, housewright.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc., house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1838, 1994
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Larry Davis
Language
A language of the resource
English
12
1838
1994
Benjamin B Sanborn
Bentley Street
Boleslaw Mackiewicz
Dore
Harten
Housewright
Lebzelter
Salem Massachusetts
Swiniuch
-
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HISTORIC
SALEM INC
House History and Plaque Program
For Courtney & Robert Heath
17 Barton Street
Salem, Massachusetts O 1970
Research and Writing Provided by
Kimberly Whitworth, J.D., M.A. August
2016
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 I HistoricSalem.org © 2017
�The House History of 17 Barton Street
�17 BARTON STREET, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS
Historical Narrative
According to availaole records.-tse lmt.1se located at 17 Bartos Street -ii~ Salem, MassachMsetts was likely built by
John F. Plummer around 1868. John Plummer's deed at purchase does not indicate that the land included any
buildings, while the deed when he sold the house states that the parcel was conveyed with "all the buildings thereon."
The deed conveying the property to him in 1865 lists his occupation as "Mariner." John Plummer purchased the land
from Albert, also a "pilot", and Sophia Plummer, however the specific relationship between the families is unknown.
John Plummer sold the newly constructed house to Jane F. Staples, wife of William Staples in 1869. The house is a 2
½ story gable front and was built in a plain "folk house national style" which is characteFistic of the period. According
to A Field Guide to American Houses by Virginia & Lee McAlester, this form was particularly common in New
England and was a dominant architectural style into the early 20th century. The 1874 atlas shows that lot was
immediately adjacent to railroad tracks with the Collins Cove waterfront directly beyond the. tracks, this condition
continued well into the 20th century. The 1911 atlas shows that the house was still directly fronting the railroad tracks
and water. The 1897 atlas also shows a trolley line at the top of Barton Street, along Bridge Street ( continues to exist
in the 1911 atlas).
According to the 1870 United States Federal Census, Jane and William were living in t he house with their three
children. The census states that William was 35 in 1870 and was born in Maine, Jane was 36 years old and was born in
Canada. Their three children, Herbert, 10, Bertha, 8 and George, 6 were all born in Vermont. William's occupation is
listed as 'house carpenter." In 1877 the family enlarged the house lot by purchasing land behind the house. This change
is seen in comparison of the 1874 atlas and the 1897 atlas. By the 1880s, the Staples family had moved to Somervilie,
but retained ownership of the house until 1892, when they sold the house to a relative, J. Hartwell Staples, who,
according to deed records, also lived in Somerville.
The house remained a rental property. Old Salem Directories indicate that Henry Waite, a shoemaker, was living
there in 1900. J. Hartwell Staples retained ownership of the property until 1904 when he sold the house to Daniel J.
Spillane and Mary A. Spillane. According to the 1910 United States Federal Census, Daniel and Mary were living in
the house with their 2 nieces and one nephew. Daniel's occupation is listed as "mason." He was 44 years old in 1910,
Mary was 42 and both were born in Ireland. Their niece Mary was 22 and worked as a sales person, John was 18 and
worked as a salesman and Nora, at 15, was still in school. Mary, John and Nora were all born in Massachusetts.
The house was conveyed to Mary G. Dennis in 1913 and she retained ownership until 1948 when the property was
sold to Leo A. Fornier and his wife, Nathaile Fournier. The Fourniers lost the property in foreclosure and it was
bought from the bank by Paul H. Haggard and Isabel Haggard in 1957. The Haggard's sold the property to Edward
C. O'Connell, a World War II veteran and merchant seaman, and his wife, Jane O'Connell. The O'Connells would
retain ownership of the house until 2013, when it was sold to the current owners, Robert Heath and Courtney Heath.
�Bibliography and References
Essex County Registry of Deeds
Essex County Registry of Probate
Salem Directories, various dates
Hopkins, G.M,Atlas of Salem; Massachasetts. Philadelphia: 1&74 Salem
Maps, 1898, 1911
United States Census, 1870-1930
Virginia & Lee McAlester. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., esp. pgs.
88-101.
Macris, http://mhc-macris.net/Results.aspx (Accessed August 12, 2016).
Exhibits Attached
Deed chain of ownership
Deed to John F. Plummer, Mariner, Book 687, Page 109 ·
Deed to Jane A. Staples, wife of William F. Staples, Book 784, Page 158 Hopkins,
G.M, Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874, Plate E Plan of current lot
configuration, Book 4456, page 309 (Parcel 2)
Death Certificates of Edward O'Connell & Jane O'Connell
Kimberly A. Whitworth, J.D., M.A.
Historic Salem, Inc.
August 12, 2016
�Deed Chain of Ownership for Property located at 17 Barton Street, Salem, Massachusetts
Owners
Date of Conveyance
Reference at Essex South County
Registry of Deeds/Probate Court
Notes, if any
Albert Plummer to
July 28, 1865
Book 687, Page 109
John F. Plummer likely built
John F. Plummer, Mariner
John F. Plummer to
house
October 14, 1869
Book 784, Page 158
Parcel that fronts Barton Street
Book 978, Page 129
Appears to be parcel behind
Jane A. Staples, wife of
William F. Staples
George D. Phippen to
June 12, 1877
Jane A. Staples, wife of
house
William F. Staples
Book 1352, Pages 251-252
Jane A. Staples to
August 27, 1892
J. Harwell Staples
William F. Staples and
March 23, 1897
Book 1507, Pages 67-69
November 11, 1904
Book 1761, Page 390
Jane A. Staples to
J. Harwell Staples
J. Harwell Staples to
Daniel J. Spillane and
Mary A. Spillane his wife
Daniel J. Spillane and
Appears to be a 'deed in lieu of
foreclosure' -the Spillanes
March 27, 1912
Book 2139, Page 21
granted a mortgage to Nichols
Mary A. Spillane to
and conveyed the property to
W.S. Nichols
him by this document for nonpayment of the mortgage
1
�Deed Chain of Ownership for Property located at 17 Barton Street, Salem, Massachusetts
Owners
Date of Conveyance
Reference at Essex South County
Notes, if any
Registry of Deeds/Probate Court
William S. Nichols to
May G. Dennis
Book 2238, Page 116
September 25, 1913
Phillip J. Durkin to
Leo E. Fornier and
Appears property was subject to
December 24, 1948
Book 3640, Page 109
Nathalie IV!. Fornier
a partition action which was
resolved by Essex Probate Docket
No. 225048. See also documents
at Book 3621, Pages 8 & 153 and
at Book 3622, Page 43; deed
from Durkin appears to be a
Commissioner's Deed
Leo E. Fornier and
June 14, 1957
Book 4379, Page 350
The Forniers gave a mortgage to
Nathalie M. Fornier
Beverly Savings Bank at Book
to Beverly Savings Bank
3640, Page 110 which was
foreclosed at Book 4379, Page
350
It appears Leo or Nathalie Fornier
Beverly Savings Bank to
H.V. Higley, Administrator
Of Veterans Affairs
September 30, 1957
Book 4409: Page 247
was a veteran and the Beverly
Savings Bank loan was backed by
the VA, which is the reason for
the deed from the bank
Owners
2
Date of Conveyance
Reference at Essex South County Notes, if any
�Deed Chain of Ownership for Property located at 17 Barton Street, Salem, Massachusetts
Registry of Deeds/Probate Court
H. V. Higley, Administrator
Of Veterans Affairs to
Paul H. Haggard and Isabel
Jean Haggard husband & wife
November 26, 1957
Paul H. Haggard and Isabel
Jean Haggard to Edward C.
O'Connell and Jane V. O'Connell
husband & wife
May 1, 1958
Book 4456, Page 309
February 24, 2000
Book 16212, Page 565
Edward C. O'Connell and
Jane V. O'Connell to Edward
C. O'Connell and Jane V.
O'Connell, Trustees
O'Connell Nominee Trust
Book 4424, Page 195
Deed to trust likely for estate
planning purposes, Edward
O'Connell passed on November
23, 2012, occupation was
Merchant Seaman and he was a
WW II Veteran; Jane V. O'Connell
passed on April 15, 2013,
occupation that of a retail clerk
Robert Heath to Robert Heath and
Courtney Heath, f.k.a Courtney
Harris, husband and wife
3
Book 32573, Page 7
August 21, 2013
Nancy Jane O'Connell, successor
Trustee of O'Connell Nominee
Trust to Robert Heath
June 18, 2013
Book 32881, Page 302
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.... i-..._?!i,JJ.j.~.LJ)..11r.k.1n_o!-5.e.l.em, Esse:x_c.aunt,y ..... JLa.a.sac.bWl.e.t:ta ... --·- __ .. -·
flf'f't]ft)RD'lUB· Wil,b:1f, - Jbi)liWIJ.i'ii.&llk:Rk»a:~ .KUJtmllli:~ - COMMISStoNER
IO 9
~xm.« ~~ - amtDl'Y&UJ!BJCU -
----------------~--·---··
....
bI .Power. con fen~ ·by_..Ess.ax..:Erc.ba,ts...;Co.u.i::t . ..Do cke.t. .. #22.j!i)i, 8 , u D der...dJa:t&-'>.f.-
No.vemberJ . .Qc .... J,9.lt8
.-----------•
JU1d every other
'l)OW «,
•..::.=,......EJ,gh.t._Tb.0.11.B.tl.nd..lli~~all....F.i~ty_ljB,5.!ilL,M.l.:,.:c-.-·· Oo!la,i1 p:iid,
grant to-~!.9.µnJ.er.-~~Q."~'tAifl.l".....ll!.l.a'b!WL.snd...:.dJ.'..a...-U-- tenan te by the
entirety. bot·b of S_alftlP, ~Jlid county of Essex
for ----·
COWltv 9L~~ex ami. is bou,gded anddemv.J>,o __ i!lt
follows. to wit:
·thelandin Ssl.elniA said
The several purcels or iaoo anti t'lats situuted in S!il:e;n, in
n1rl County conveyed to -Mary G, Dennis .by deed of 'l/illiam s. Nichols dated
1?epte111ber 25, 191), .,-ecorded Essex South District RaGistry of Deeds. J3ook 2238,
Page 116, and by deed of Hannah c. Roundy, dated July 8, 1918, recorded .In said
Registry ·Book 2394, page 395, ,and of Mary A. Spillane, dated July B, 1Sl6, recorded in
said Regi&try Bovk '2394, ·Page 396, ,also '.al:l rig.bts w.bich Mary G. De.lliliS acquired
by virtue of an assignment or a mortgage by Ho race w. Woodberry adminis .tr~tor or
the estate pf Geo rge Roundy and by her entry to foreclose said mortgage as sho wn by a
certificate reco rded v,itb said :essi{SO:lllent
in said Regi!!try Book 2394, Page 395.
'This land ·i·e ·more p.articulerly bou.nde.d .and .desc.ribed as f'ollovts:
the land in said Salem with the buildings tllereon bounded; So.uthwe.eterly by
Barton Street about 85 feet; Northwesterly by Hnd· now or late of' Poole and
Willd.ns about 127 feet; l~orthessterly by said Wilkins lfllld about 26 feet;
Northwesterly by saili Wilkins Iana: abo·u.t tov feet·; ,Nort:llee.s-terly by l~na· now
or late of Carter about 47 feet and Southeasterly by land of the Boston and Maine
Rallroad about lJI.
reet..
-
•
•
-
.,t'f
•--~-:~. '~:::: _ _,,?JI~~
·---·-· ......-- ______________________ . _ .................. ~.0P1111issione:r. ........
---------··--·--·-·· .. ··· .. -····-···
. .....
.........
~-·~- .. ·-··"·
,_ ,. ,
______________
,
___ ., __________
.
.
...
Then personally npp,arcd ·•he a!,n,·c n;uu.,.1- .. P.h.illJ)
-- ... --•
------··----···----·····
... J., . ..D.ur.klJl.,_.C.0.mmis.sion.e.r ....
-----·····--···· ·····-· -·-··-- .. ------- .. --------·
'•,:
and acknowledgcd·1he·foregaing fo~1rum.:nt.10,he ..... hl,s.... __ •. ircc .:ict and 1lt-c1I. before
me
Nover:1ber 20,
IV '54
Essex ss .Received De~ .2A, l 9AS. 54 lil. :pa"st l P .?~.Recorded and ExB.!llined.
�3640
81
~ 11£.
·"x Lec/f:Fcurn1e,r en~ .Jid!r=:f Fo.uri::.~er, !:ius1:1ar.d and wlf~, _t,fmf,Jnl..r:}>Y
W~ .. the Pnt1rel.y, ·oo'th
•
.
,,r S.a,lem , in tltr County nl t:,<e• nm! C:011111111nw~ultli nl· ~ln,,ndmwt~JllilW<it~arJ •.
for l'Dn~iden1tion pnid, grunt to tl1r JIEVEltLY SAV,INGS llA:NK, A.corpornliou duly •~tnt.lidlttd uuJ,•r !11r !Bu-a o! said
f'ommDTin-cultlt, nnd,:hn,·itui 1111 usun!.plncc of businrss in Beverly in Mid Comninm,·rnllh, with morrgag, CdDfll Dll fJI
to secure lhe payment of ... JO.ne
f3 . .Jf a 7 P. I/ p .:z.
t.hQUGantt ( ,i90~0) ,- -.- --:-.---·dollar.,
;n .. twen tiY.. yenra with .. !.O.IU'per cenl. interest per annum ·p3yuhlc fo monrkly fo•tolnll!nts·of $ 5.~~.5,t
..
·onilhe .21'th day of 1 11 ch mo11th hereafter which payments shnlf br. applit1l tn intt:r("st· 1hen due·
- ---:-
.,App._' 13 q ll' .;liJ 0?.i & 5 11nd the balonce· lhereof temninin11, applied to princip.t, the intettst l o h e computed monthly on tl,e. unpaid
~.'~. G."°1'1'1
balance, lilao·to pay widuaid·in:s111lments .I/12th o!.the.e!tlmnted rent estate taxes nnd b.!uerment usessmenll
f!.,~"\-
1°~19.
·
if33'/ f.Jj.i/
~.J!.e..
B:l+35Q f. Sub
::,-.AA,;~ ~$1, ~. ~ ~
~ f.>.u ":i,'\
~~ =i\.\t, ~,,,
::,, ; Cl
~
~
'.5 \
on the premises hereinafter described. all a~ provided in a note of. ev~n. date, 1uuf nfso to secw-e the _rerform,
r,aj, <1 to be
anee ol nU covenants and agreements 'hereln contained, the ·land with the buildi"SS ,th,reon ,,iruarect on
-····-····+-5.,17 •• .Ber .. ten.; ...........Strc<:t, in
............. ····-Ba:l;-em1c----- in said Co11t1.ty, bo11nded
and. dtacrioed ll S loltow1 :
ZOUTHW ESTERLY by farton Street, ebout elghty-.t'ive ·(g5) feet· NORTHWESTERL Y
by land now or late or Poole and ~llkins, abo~t one hWldred twenty-seven
(127) feetj
?~ORTHEASTERLY by said Wilkins lano., about twent:,-a1x ( 26¾. feet:
.NORTHWESTERLY by st.11.d Willtlne le.lid, abo.ut four ('4) feet; NORTHEASTERLY
by land now or late of Carter, about forty.eeven ·(47) f'e£t; and
SOUTHEAST.!!;RLY
by land
of the Boston end Haine ila1lroad, about
one hundred tt11.rty-four (134) feet.
·
Being th,e eame prern1eee conveyed to me by deed of Philio J,. 11urk1n,
-Coneerva tor, to be recorded here.with.
Thia mortgage including Ma part at ~be realty nil pnrtab!e or occtional buildi11115 nl any time placed-on, tbe l'"'mises, .all
material, ,nppamtu,, or aupp1lcs :intended to enter inlo the construction, l'eP,lir, or remodtlina of the buildingi1 DD said
premise,, alt lumo-. rnntp:s, hcatera, cont 1tokern, plumbing;gas, 011, and eleclricht11re1, cl,:ctric pumps, 151:rccns, ninntele,
abudes; blinds-, shultei,, &wning,i, oci:ecn- doors; storm doors. nnd window 1, oil wtd ,,pa bunJers, ,JIU, electric. or
mtchanicnl rl!frigeml.on1, washing ond ironi11g machines and laundry equipmem, air conditioning apparatus and all olher
fixtures of whatever "kind or nature al present or heredtrr installed in or on the grante d premises in, any manner which
renders· such lllticlu. usable in connection, 1.b.u• . with •o !Ill' aa ·the ume lll'e, or by J1gre,,mf!ftt nf the parties CIID he made, a
p•rt of the really.
The Mortgagor cow1U 111ts and qr,,rs not lo eommit, .permit or 1ulfer nay waate, impairment or deteriora· tion o! the
.Property or any p11rt thereof, oor to use or permittbe premi,es to be uxcl for~ o.r in vi.olBtion. of, lll1)' lnw oununiclpal
OMUWll.'e or ~glilalioo Ill' .!or .11 11y un!nwflll or tm.pmpcr,p~:,e,
The Martgag,ir lll!ltt5· that lo the event the owner,mip oJ lbe moltlf&l!M pn,mitea, or any part I.hereof, becomes
wated in a. pereon other t.luu, the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee IIIAY, without uotim to the Mortgugor, .deal with 111ch
aucceuorur 1111ccesooni in interest with -re!erena:.to the morti:oac and· the debt hereby -llftd, in the tlBmc lllllnner a.a
with the MortgG£Dr, .....ilhoul in any way vitiaw,g or disc:hargln11 the ·ll!Drtaagor'a liability hereunder or the debt hereby
lll!llllred. No 111>!e of the premi,e,s he~ mortg,,a,,d1 no pnrtial. , releaee he2'eunder, no (orbearance_-011 the JJl'rt of the
MortJlll!IC" 11nd no extension t,f the time for the .paymont of tJie debt •herebt se.cttred given by the Mortgage,: wll opcmte
to rel-, diach11'11", modily, cli11 11g e or atJec:t th" original· liability of the Mortpsnr hcreio;-.m,er ia v.•hole or~
Thia ,ID01't g911'1! ia,11pon·the Statutoiy Condition, for IIJIY·breach o! which or for any brench of any or the said
c:onllllnts or agreement.a, th mortgnpe s!ui!Hiave the Statutory Power or Sale. The propertJ is eon11eycd
1111b-Jed to the followingencumbnuu:es: .............................................. _ .. --··-··-·-· .........- .............. ·-·· .......-··--·· ...... • •
111iirnu .............. 0.i.ar.ii..,d ai,;a sw s chia ......... .li.w.en.t.Y..:;:.:LQ./.l.r.J;.l'ijay of ......... P.~Sl~m.v.11.r.: .. _
,19 l!S
l!'tJ!e,~ru:e of
~ ...................~:
~a'..~..........................
..
.. .. 1hd~.J.t;z .. tf.f~ ..
....................................... , ..
.......................................
:j=l.oll.f:., ...................................
~caftfl,of ~1111
Esaa ""·
A.
.. ............. ~~eii.:4............
194£
Thm pe1110nllll1 oppeamJ the abovc,n11med ......... Lt'.o.,.F.o.ur.niet' . WUJ .... • .............. F.our.n.ter. .............. .
nnd aclc4<1wledQ"Fd the foregoing wtrmne~~= .. ~~ ................................................................................................................. ..
Abre.t\il,II OlQY!'l::t • • E •
D.,c,.e•""'r ::> 1 19 52
Notary ru'blic. My ComlllWIOn zp,re11 ........................ , ............... ,.,, ......................., ...
Essex as.Received Dec,24,1948. 54 m,·-p&st l P.M.Reeord-ed and Examined.
.!
�a c.,rporation duly established under the lows of. Massachusetts
and ha,•ing its usu:a! plnce of busine5& at Beverly, Essex County, Massachusetts,
th_e moctgage- named in and present
holder of" morl!l"ll"
1rom Leo A. F,ournier ,and .Nathalie M. F.our.llier, ·husband and wile, tenants by
the entirety, of Salam. in the Co11nty ot Es.sex and.Commonwealth of Massachusetts,,
II.to the said Beverly ·Savings Bank
dated December 24, 1948
book
recorded wi!h Essex South District Registry ofDtt4s
,page 110
3640
, by the power conferred by said mortgage and
Seven ·thousand {$7000,>00) --------·----------------- dQllars
evt!:' other power, .for
1»'.d, grant 10 lhe Beverly Savings Bank, a corporation. duly established by. 111.w., and
havtng an
usuat place .oJ business in said Beverly
thcprcmlscscnn,·cycdby saidmnrtg;,ge. to wlt:- the land with the buildin11s thereon, situated
on 15-17 Barton Street in said Salem in said County, bounded and described as -follows:
SOUTHWESTERLY, by Bn-rton St-reet, about eighty~Cive {85) .feet:
NORTHWESTERLY, by land now .or late of P oole .and Wllklns, .about one hundred
twenty-seven (12'1) foet;
NORTHEASTERLY, by said Wilkins land, about ,twenty-six '(26) •[eet:
NORTHWESTERLY, by said WUkins land, about four (4) feet;
NORTHEASTERL'l, by land now or iate of Carter, about forty-seven (47) feet: and
SOU'l'HEASTERLY, by land of the Boston and Maine Railroad, about one hundred thirty-four
,(134) feet,
Being lhe same premises conveyed to the said Leo A. Fournier and Nathalie M. Fournie,. by deed of
Philip J. Durkin, Conservator, dated December 24, 1948, and reco-rdcd with Essex South Distric\
Registry cif Deeds, Book 3640, Page 110,
Said premises are conveyed subject to all unp11id taxes, ta..,c titles, assess.ments or
other municipal lie ns, if any there be.
day nt. June ....................... ,._19 57
Mass.
Excise
Stamps
f~__affil:ed
and-oanoe-lled .. ·on-ba:lk-o:f·thf-s·inatrument
@Z
U. S. _:Oocum. _ Stamp~
10 aff' i:iced and
cancelled on back of thi·s if.,natl'Ulllent
�JJ.
MASSACHUS'.ElTS
SPECIAL WARRANT¥ DEED
Bever~ SaVings Bar uc
duly established and organized under the laws .of
!ta.ssachusetta
fot• considcrntlon paid,
; a corporatio n
· , hereln{lftcr called Grantor,
the receipt of
--···-----··--------..H.....L... Hi gJey: es Administrator of Veterans'
Affairs, an Officer of the United States of America, whose nddrel!li ie Veterans AdminIstratlon, BOO Vermont Avenue NW,,
Washington 26, District of-Columblo, hereinafter called Grantee, and to his
successors in such office, as such, the following-descrtbed property situated. in ________________ E .. awa .. ax,..__ _______________ _
County in the Commonwealth of Mass:ichusetts, to wit:
,....,,...,
which is ·hc1•oby ackno,vledged; ll'l.'tmts
•to
The land with tha build.il'.lgs thereon situated said to be 15- 17 Barton Street in
Salem County o;f Essex, and C=onwea lth of.' L!assachusetts, bounded:and described as·
follows
SOlf!'![f,'ES'i'E.J!LY by Barton Street about eighty- i'ive (85} i'ee-t;;
HORTHVIF,STE.'UX
by land now or late or .Pool.a· &. Willd.ns about one hundre.d
tlventy-seven feet; {127)
·
~10R.Tff€AS'?E?J2l
by said Wilk ins land about tri- entf- six (26) i'eet;c by said
W ilk ins land about £our (4) i'eet;
by land
nw or late of Garter about forty-seven (47) ·reet, and
SOUTllEASTERU by land of· the· Boston & Maine Ra ilroad about one hundl:ed
i:.\tir ly- i'our (JJ4) i'eet.
·
·
For title or grantor see foreclostll'e deed ·of Beve l' ~ Sav:l. nge i:lanlc dated June
with Essex South Deeds, Book 11319,. page :lSO.
J.li, 1957 recorded
§ass. Excise Stamps$ .S:9s affixed U. a. Docum, Stamps$ s:s-a affixed ind oanoelled
on back of this instrument and cancelled on back ot' this instrument
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Togethei· with an improvemenl:a thereon.
:,,
[Gran tor also llllslgns and transff!l'II to Grnnt!!e herein nil of Qranti>r'a claims ~d notes, nnd the judgment, .
If any, thereon representing the indebtedness heretofore secured' by lisps on the property,hereinabove deB;cribed _and which
liena were heretofore foreclosed, iff.inrimfuo•niA!,o :k11i:. . . ·, !I:--,
~
tmDtba:
·au·~---~.,1:1 .. ·;;mild:
.
--~--------~
:
with
To RAVE AND To HOLD tbe- above-described property, together
all the ·impro\lements tli~reon at!d the. rights,
privileges; and appurtenancea themunto belonging unto the salii-Granteeand hll! successors in suehoQ!ce,
as such, and. his ot their llllsigns, for:uver.
·.
..
,Grantor for itllelf and Grantor's successors covenants with the Grantee and ·hia uuccessors nnd assigns to warrant nnd
defend nil said property unto said Grantee nnd -his successors and asaigna against. every person
clnimi11g or t.o. claim the same or any port thereof by, through or und er Grnntor,
··
IN WlTNF.Ss WHEREOF, Granto1:, on the
30th ··- day of · sbptember.
• A .• D.,
19~2Z,
hllS caused these preaents to be executed in its nmne by the. :nnderai1tt1ed· its ~....;:T.::r"'e"'ac=s:,::ur;;:;;.;e;;.;r;...... __ ....,. __
·-------------------..___..,...._,..~--......;~----'-----,,-'-~-D)enta recorded in volume
.
,~t page
.
·:_-,ou)ie : ; : · . ·
: · . ~: ... _: · ·\ · ·
tlicreunto duly iiuthorized by jt.a' board of directors, eviq~nce wher~of-~~ing f~"!ll;ld -~ Exi1ib1t· A belowi (dilen•'.
•
•
•
•
•
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-~:-: l_:_w- ..
records of said county). such evidence being incol'pomtcd hereio. by l'efefonce, IIJld seaJ~f with itli ClOtJ)!\ra~o s~_nl'.
..
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WITNESS.
,
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·-~t.1.1ttrL-s_.:..tc.(d.E..e~--- .
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.t\'l'l'EST
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:,-. '.l!homas lh-- .Bo~t,· Jr •
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tia ·····~ Tfeasutier·,-·~·, .. ·-· ---~~---- · ··:.
-,, .
.
.. '. • · ··~-- : .
..
�MM.
THE COMMQNWJALTIJ OF" MASSACHUSETfS
;::~~0·
Then personally appea:red the above-named Thom.:,.s H. i3ott, Jr.
.;:orcnairl
1111d ncknowledged
19.27..
1
T reasurer .: ::.: !'; .
the foregoing instrument to be the fl'ee net and. deed of the ___________ . _______________ _
.!trnrJ;r Savhl,10 llsnk
before me,
My commission e.'C}lires ':· ·" c • 17
.• 19.?.2 ...
111 -H:l ~I
••"'!'•~e,
-NoUff'!Jl'ubllo.
"·· -- ~ . .. 4 . 1 4 $. ~ li-. , \., t.
EXHIBIT A
This is to certify that:
'.:lerl.
Coa-:n1ittee
1. I, the undersigned, nm~ of -~he 3evc:,rly dv:vj_,1..-:s· 3ank Irl.VQ_fil.;,J.fill:.1;;_, being the
same curporation which executed ·nnd delivered to .......... -E., ... :l., ... ;!Je_lr,r,, ·----------,·
Admlnistrntor of Veterans' Mairs, a deed <luted .......... :l;J.1:i._l'.'tt°~.:J.!J .......•. day of _$llD .. :t:£mi).l.U: ___ . , 19.5? _ _
l!Ji:: lii.?.-!!. ... u ..... ~Q_j;_t .. __ .j );:,.._______________ ·
· ·.
who executed said deed
oI said corporation, as .i~:::.:;,~_@!!F..§l.J;'P¥@~ thereof waa nt the time .he executed the same the duly . elected,
2. __
011 behalf
-quallfied and acting .2; -; -.e.t'.-EJ.1.:::: a.r._ ~ of s~~ <!Orpor.ati on. hnviilf betm so elected a.t .ll meeting of·
the board of directors of sald corporation held on the _________ !,!!.._ __ dny of --1L.a+"_<;_Q. · , 19~_.
�NN.
MASSACHUSETI'S
SPECIAL WARRANTY DEED
, as Administratol' of Veternns' Affnh-s, an Ollicer of
H• V. Rigley
tho United Stntes of Amc1·ica, whose n<hlt•f.!Ss is Veternns • .\ttministl·ation, BOO Vermont Avunuo NW., Wnshington
25, District of Columbia, he1·oinnfte1· called Grantor, fo1· n valuable· coll!!idel'ntion paid, the receipt .of which is ho1•eb;•
acknowledged, grants to Paul 'H· He.gg11rd and 1$0.bel Jenn &g~ard, busb~d and wife,
as tonnnts by the entirety,
of Marblehead, E1111s:e Co\ldty, !Ja.ssachusotts
described 111·operty sltunted in
Essex
, hereinafter co.lieu Grnntee(s), the :followingco11nty In the Conunon'l\'ei!.lth or 'M!'.F.snchu~ctb,
to wit:
::'lw land ·Jtith the build:ingn thereon sit.U!l.tod said ta be 15-17 Barton Street in Salem County oi'
Esse:x:, and Com:oon»oalth or !,!as.sachusetts, pound11d and deocribed
as fo llo ws :
.50UTni:ESTERLY
by !la.rtcn Street about eie;ht~·-.rivlil (65) feetJ
r:ORTiJWisTE!l.LY
by l!llld now or le.te O:' Poole & 1/lilltins about
one hundrod twenty-seven i'eetJ (127)
WORTHE~STERLY
~y sa.id Wilkin• lo.nd about twenty- six (26) t'eetl
HOR'l'Iff/ESTERL'i'
by !Ill.id Wilkins le.nd a-pout four (4) t'eet;
J!ORT:-iEASTE.:U.Y by land now or late of carter about forty-seven (47)
i'eet, and
SOUTH::hSTEHLY by land of the Booton & Maine Railroad about one
hundred thirty-fa....- (l;il..). i'ae-t.
fc1· title oi' granter see deed of Beve1'llf Se.vin;;;s Bank to H, V. Higle y, au Adminis trntor
Affairs, da.ted September :;o, 1957, recorded wi:th Essex south
;Jistrict Registry
Deeds, Book 4409, pa1:;e 247,
or
TOGETHER with all impro\'emcnts thereon.
or Vaterans
�OO.
'l'O HA VE AND TO HOLD the abcve-descrlbed property, togethei• with all the improvements thereon and the rights,
privileges, mid np1,urtennnces thereunto belonging, unto the said Granteeo(s). and to tlto heirs or sueceasurs and ll!ISignsof
said Grnutee(s), forever.
Grnntor nml his successors In such office, ns such, sh11!1 warrant and· defend· all said property unto snid· (lt'antee (s) nnd
the heirs 01· successors nnd nssigns of said-Grantee(&), 11gainst,every.pG1'son claiming or to claim the same 01• nny part
thereof, hy, through, or under Gxnntm·.
IN WITNESS WHEREO!~, Grnntor, on the 26-;h, __________ day of
November
A. D.19..57..,
has caused this instrument to be signed and sealed in his nnme and on !tis behalf by the undersigned Lonn Gunranty ·Officer,
being thereunto duh• appointed, .qanlified, and.acting pursuant toseef;ions 604 and 509 of the Servicemen's Readjustment Act
of 1D44 (58 Stat. 2s,1), as amended (38 U.S. C. A. 694 (d), 694 (j)), and section 86 :4342 of .t!1e Regulations pursuant thereto,
ns amended, and who is authorized to execute this instrument.
•
--df f · / /·
• _,Z.51.1.:~.-..- c~..,.·: ... ', ---(SEAL] //
\\'!'r-NESS:
........ - .. - ... ···------·--·--·--··""-·-·-···----------·-·
·-·----------·--···-------·-----·--·-·--·--··---·- .. ---
li• V, Higley '" -·
_;*~~r,~
~~r-,
/ ,/Jolm E, J5itchell
., __ _
./'
Lonn Guaranty officer whose authorization is recorded In Vol •. J@J;.L
::~.:~;;;;~:~-~~TH OF MASSACl:~~:~~---- ,s,t:
____ page .... .5.7.._,, __ of the
·--------- records of snit! county.
011 thin __
g(,J!J. ............ dny of , __ lf.!?.¥.~J!lber.
-----·-----·····-·······-·····-·l.~\m .. !i,.,_;.!i:t;.'l.l.1.!\U
__________;_ _____ 19-5.7., beforen1e personally appeared
............................... , a Lonn Gunrnnty Officer of the Vetemns Admin-
lstratinn, to me known to be the person who executed the foregoing Instrument in behalf of _______________ _
---···-· _______________ R. JL._U:;!.g;l..!!
Ad1ninistrato1• of Vetcmns' Affairs, and acknowledged
th:it he executed tho snmc ns tho free net and deed or snid Admin!strntor.
----1l.A.LP.K...I..J.U1~SE,:;_ _________________________ _
if018li' Miit'a'iffg~96J"-'
•Prim. ~ SPl'l'J tlle, o r eta mn r1 a rue:s bf A~lnhitrotDr ~t Vcteruns ' . -\t:'Alra 4 t:d Lc;1 n Gunro ru.r Otn cer who utc11u, llll• l11 .1 trum~ ntJ &ll! O a emee at \rlLn~ !lle:a ud
~a\!lry r -u~ ll1 : h :n :r ..,. U nu l~ · 1.1 c1k r m ;n th l !" Ji :} i 11n m,:1tt~.
.
__ Essex ss._Recorded Dec. 21. 19.§7.:. _3.§ ~--PE;S!_ g
f•Jih _#Ja4,!?, ___________ _
�QQ.
PP.
& Plan
also known as Isabel Jean Haggard,
J,
We, Paul H. Haggard and IsabeV Haggard.I husband and wife, tenants b)' the entirety.
both
of Salem, Essex County, Mnssachus•lts,
/·i'i,1:1u,,rarri,•d, for run.id~r:i1ion·paid,-grant-10. Edward C. O'Connell and Jane V. O'Connell,
husband, and wife, as tenants by the entirely, both
with qulltllllm to11toanta
,.; said Salem
1\w ln111I in satd Sale.m, together with the buildlnga 'thereon, situated on 17 Barton Street, and
bounded and described 8fi:i~Mg:f.S.i.J cnc uml><anm, ii auJ).
SOUTHWESTERLY. hy 'Barton Street fifty-four and sixty-s'tx ·hundredths {54. 66) ·£eet;
NOHTHWESTERL Y, by Parcel l as shown on a plan herelnaiter referred to, .one hundred
sixteen (lltl) feet;
NOHTHEASTERL Y, by said Parcel 1 aa sho wn on said plan, forty-three and. forty
hundredths (43. 40) feet; and
SOUTHEASTERL Y, by land formerly o! the Bos~R!in~.Mi'Jne Railroad, as shown on
said plan, one hundred nineteen and seventy-nveT(ll9, 1srfeet.
.
Containing 5, 750 square feet according to said plan and being Parcel 2 a5 shown on a plan
entitled "Salem, Maas. Parcels l & 2· Lend of Paul H, & Isabel Haggard Scale 1 "=20 1 Aprll 23,
195'8 W. ·T. Foss Co-Engineers" to be recorded herewith.
A'. frt~k
of-,
'Being the same premises conveyed to us by deed of the United States or America,
Admii'listrator of Veterans. ACf.alrs, dated December 2, 1957 and recorded with Essex
South District Re.gistry of .Deeds, .Book 4424 Page 195.
Said premises are conveyed subject to taxes assessed b)' the City of Salem for the year 1958,
which have been apportioned as of the dale 'hereof.
U. S. Do cum. Stamps $- 7, ?"O af'fixed
and
of thiS 1nBtM&~t
canoe-r1;M~f·on···back
M .~-~ ... M .. ..... ~- .. . •M ••-······ . •• -
m~ Cl!o11111U1U111:lill!J ,.;f !I~
May 1, 19 58
Essex. ss,
J.
Tbc:n pcrsonAlly appeared 1hc above named P.aul H. Haggard and Jsabel/Haggard
and acknowledged the ·foregoing instrument to.be their frer act and deed, before me
/;f._,.~-e/ ...... ~_·
Abraha~~;sky,
., .......... _._
- -~S_!X_3!•_
-ef,,fai.~
December 17,u59
~CE~e! Maz ,!,_11!5~-- ,!t_4_o~c.!,O!?,_k_P.!.M.:. 1121_ - -
... ·- - ··---#-·-·
�RR.
02.128/QO 10:04 inst, 115
BK 16212 Pi3 565
QUITCLAIM DEED
We, EDWARD C. O'CONNELL and JANE V. O'CONNELL, husband and wife, both of Salem,
Essex County. Massachusetts, for nominal consideration, grant to EDWARD C. O'CONNELL and JANE
V. O'CONNELL. as they are Trustees of'the O'CONNELL NOMINEE TRUST, under a Declaration of
Trust dated February 24. 2000, to be recorded herewith, both of 17 Barton Street, Salem, MA O 1970, and to
the survivor of them, with quitclaim covenants, the land in said Salem, together with the buildings thereon,
situated at and known as 17 Barton Street, and bounded and described as follows: ·
SOUTIIWESTERL Y by Barton, Street. fifty-four and sixty-six hundredths (54.66)- feet;
NORTHWESTERLY by Parcel 1 as shown on a plan hereinafter referred, one hundred sixteen
(116) feet;
NORTHEASTERLY by said Parcel l as shown on said plan, forty-three and forty hundredths (43.40)
feet; and
SOUTHEASTERLY by land formerly of the Boston. and Maine Railroad, as shown on said plan, one
hundred nineteen and seventy-five ·hundredths (119. 75) feet.
Containing 5,750 square feet according to said plan. and. being Parcel. 2 as shown on a plan entitled
"Salem, Mass. Parcels 1 & 2 Land of Paul H. & Isabel Haggard Scale 1 "=20' April 23, 1958 W. T. Foss
Co-Engineers" which was recorded with. a Deed recorded with- Essex South District Registry of Deeds at
Book 4456, Page 309.
Being the same premises conveyed to us be deed of Paul H. Haggard and Isabel J.
Haggard-dated May l", 1958 and recorded with said Registry in Book 4456, Page 309.
Witness ourhands and seals this 24 th day of February, 2000.
Edward C. O'Connell
ineV.&conneJI
U:Wusco\Word nnd WP9 Filcs\Estatc Planning Documcnts\O'Conncll\Occd.wpd
Glovsky & Glovsky
Box 34 ·L...U.. iG.a,
T # ~\U\{k~
�SS.
BK 16212' PG 566
.. -lo,.
COM:MONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
February 24, 2000
Essex, ss.
Then personally appeared the above named Edward C. O'Connell and Jane V. O'Connell and
acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be their free act and deed, before me,
My commission expires;
ANTifONY P. FUSCO
Notary Public
v, r'lrnm1ss1on Expires Jan. 24. 2003
U:\nfusoo\Word and WP9 Files\EsUllc Plnnning Documcnts\O'Connell\Dccd.wpd
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NAME
OF DECEASED
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O'CONNELL: EDWARD CHARLES'
s.a MALE
NOVEMBER•23,.2012.} \~l•r~n WW II
, 17 BARTON STREET, JAL~M1, ,' MASSACHUSETTS
Death
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., g:ii,0 ' ir: .. MYELOOYSPL.ASTIC S_YNOROM£, POST•OBSTRUCTIVf: PNEUMONIA
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17 BARTON STREET, SALEM. -'Essi=:x co •• ·).fASSACHUSETTS
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'o-nan ME RCHA NT SEAMAN
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ST. MARY'S CEMETERY; SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS
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_____________ :::,e1!.!!r1· h~pl!!•c!.__•......:,R:..:.OC.::..:K:..:.P:..:.OR:..:.T..:.,_M_A .....
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FANN IE' E. MACKEY
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A~E \IERONiCA HOLAK
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(INSTRUCTIONS ON REVERSE SIDE)
F OR USE
av
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PHYSICIANS ~ ~D
~-----
MEDI CAL. ~XMIINE/IS
FIRST
0ECE0eNr. """'e
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Salem
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OTIIER
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WAS OECE OEtr. O F HIS ~4 NIC 01l! GIN7
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17 Barton Street
IF 1/S WAR VETl!RAN
SOCI.A~ SECURllY l'IUMBER
6PECIFY WA R·
00'21o•
CEl;EOEH'l:8 t;:OUC ATI OII /~ Qn > Jt C°""""l<II ......... ., Sec 10-m
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Jane
PLACE OF D!:ATH
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STANDARD CERTIF!C Alll O F OE/Int
A£G1SmY OF YITAI. RECORDS AIID STATISTICS
-~.,,, .
STATE USE
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lli.'.ommonwralt{J of ~usnc{Jusetts
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b1Rn-,PUCE tClrf antf SlAld o, Forc,tp, Cllunl:yJ
'ft.J
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Salem, Massachusetts
11
IJSUAL 0C C UP41I ON
... R IED. NEVER t.lAARISD
Kl~:'> OF nuSINESS on INOusmv
...
fPlfol,/l fl•t'tfd}
WI DOWED OR DIYOR CUl
I Cylltgofl-1 S.I
Clerk
10 A pe
Retail
Massachusetts
STAT E~ Slqt H ( tf r1 at
FATHEF\ • fU\.L N Mtf;
,,- R ri ,nl
ID
15 O'IJt·Sl att
21
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om.
CRE W .110 H
s2/e"0"" FROM s'ATE
Donnell 5 37 2 c,,,«.,,_,
tJ1
61 St, Mar,' s Ce metery
PLA,eg.Q, 01S PCS nt ot,
/HZJ!M
11
(GIIIEH}
Teofila
Melewska
s11.te. ZIP cooe
17 Barton St.,. Sale m, MA 01970
,Pau hter
UC ENs e t
,
Thomas A. 0
1
LOC ATI ON t.a,-JT Olll 't. SZ.IIJ
C~l:ttyer OIM #J
PA T.I: OF D1 SP osn 10N
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US.
MA!UM G ADD RESS."°· & ST .• CF'N,T O W!I,
fNf ORt-l.AtltS Pll.ME
23 Oltp
,1
;-'wand
Anthony Holak
.., Salem Massachusetts
tf AME A!'ID .ADDRE S S OF F/t.ClUiY OR OJH ER O E5 1DNE E
•w.•ttpril ,18, .2013 ~enryJ .O'Donnell&Sonsinc. 46Washin tons • Salem MA01970
29 PART I• E ."' \1,er 1t1n disa&M1. ifl;lr. 1 ft, o, tatup1.ca~1 lb.I\ aius ed. tt,a dea2\. Donat~ anly rho fflOOI ct ct,lr,g. aum., mr.:fa.c
Us1 an ry . on1 aust a11.aa;.h fi ne . (/J. rrtrouplt dJ -PntNf O R TYPE t.EGIBLT.
!"MEDIA TE \:AUS £ /Fu,ol
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SIGNAlUAE•BO CF
HEAL T M AG Ell T
I, Cheryl A. La Pointe, hereby certify that I hold the office of the Cit;y Clerk of the City of Salem, County of
Essex, and Commonwealth of Massachusetts; that the records of Deaths in said C;ty are in my custody, and that
the following is a true copy from the Records of Deaths in said Cit;y, as certified by me.
JUN· 1 0 2013
Witnessed my hand and Seal of the City of Salem onc..-------- ....... -...-...,..---
(JLuJ.,
A'"ITEST:
a. llf~
- Che,JJ A. LaPointe, City Clerk
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Return to:
I~ 111.I ii I ~lllllllllll IIIIIIIII
IIJIIII Ill
H~II
2013061800541 Bk:32573 Pg:7
Southorn E!aex Dhtr lei' ROD
MHSSI- II.HUSETTS EIICJSE
06118/2013 OZ:ZB DEED Pg 112
Dale: 06/18/2013 02:28 PM
1.0: 9 66231 Dactt 201:10618005410 Fee,
$1,413.60 Con~, $310,000.QO
(SPACE ABOVE THIS LINE RESERVED FOR REGISTRY OF DEEDS USE}
.QUITCLAIM DEED
NANCY JANE O'CONNELL, AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE OF O'CONNELL
NOMINEE TRUST, u/d/t dated February 24, 2000, recorded with the Essex South District Registry
of Deeds in Book 16212, Page 559, as amended, in consideration of THREE HUNDRED TEN
THOUSAND AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($310,000.00) paid, grant to
:· ROBERT HEATH,
of 17 Barton Street, Salem, Massachusetts, with quitclaim covenants, the land in said earem, together with
the buildings thereon, situated at and known as 17 Barton Street, and bounded and described as follows:
SOUTHWESTERLY
by Barton Street, fifty-four and sixty-six hundredths (54.66) feet; by
Parcel l as shown on a plan hereinafter referred, one hundred sixteen (1 l
NORTHWESTERLY
NORTHEASTERLY
SOUTHEASTERLY
6) feet;
by said Parcel l as shown on said plan, forty-three and forty
hundredths (43.40) feet; and
by land formerly of the Boston and Maine Railroad, as shown 011 said
plan, one hundred nineteen and seventy-five hundredths (119.75)feet.
Containing 5,750 square feet according to said plan and being Parcel 2 as shown on a plan entitled
"Salem, Mass. Parcels 1 & 2 Land of Paul H. & Isabel Haggard Scale 1 11 ""20' April 23, 1958 W. T. Foss
Co-Engineers" which was recorded with a Deed recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds at
Book 4456, Page 309.
Being the same premises conveyed to Edward C. O'Connell and Jane V. O'Connell, as Trustees,
on February 24, 2000, and recorded with said Registry in Book 16212, Page 565. Edward C. O'Connell
died on November 23, 2012 and Jane V. O'Connell died on April 15, 2013; Death Certificates to be
recorded herewith.
Property Address:
17 Barton Street, Salem, MA OJ 970
�BBB.
CCC.
Executed under seal on June / ~ , 2013
·'{
)
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Essex, ss.
On this 1£L day of June, 2013, before me, the undersigned notary public, personally appeared,
Nancy Jane O'Connell, as Successor Trustee, proved to me through satisfactory evidence of
identification, by showing me a copy of her identification, which was a Massachusetts drivers license,
or personally known to me, to he the person whose name is signed on the preceding or attached
document, and acknowledged to me that she signed it voluntarily
for its stated purpose, as Trustee.
N'6tary Public
My commission expires:
Page 2 of2
�111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
2013101000085 Bk:32881 Pg:302
10110/2013 10:46 Or.ED Pg 1/2
QUlTCLAIM DEED
I, ROBERT HEATH, a married man of 17 Barton Street Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, for
nominal consideration paid
Grant to ROBERT HEATH and COURTNEY HEATH, f/k/a COURTNEY HARRIS, as
Husband and Wife as tenants by the entirety of l7 Barton Street, Salem, Massachusetts,
t
with quitclaim covenants, the land in said Salem, together with the buildings thereon, situated at and
known as 17 Barton Street, and bounded and described as follows:
SOUTHWESTERLY by Barton Street, fifty-four and sixty-six hundredths (54.66) feet;
NORTHWESTERLY by Parcel I as shown on a plan hereinafter referred, one hundred sixteen (116) feet;
NORTHEASTERLY by said Parcel I as shown on said plan, forty-three and forty hundreths E43.40)
feet; and
J
j
C
SOUTHEASTERLY by land formerly of the Boston and Maine Railroad, as shown on said plan. one
hundred nineteen and seventy-five hundredths (I J 9. 75) feet,
Containing 5,750 square feet according to said plan and being Parcel 2 as shown on a plan
entitled"Salem, Mass. Parcels l & 2 Land of Paul H. & Isabel Haggard Scale r·= 2CT April 23, 1958 W.
T. FossCo-Engineers'which was recorded with a Deed recorded with Essex South District Registry of
Deeds at Book 4456, Page 309.
Being the same premises conveyed to Granter on June 18, 2013 and recorded with said Registry in Book
32573, Page 7.
�Witness my hand and seal this a\ s-.t' day of August, 2013
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
COUNTY OF ESSEX
On this day of ~
/l.oii.,r+ -~
•r
Mfi. L.1~
f/,
2013, before me, the undersigned notary public, personally appeared
who proved to me through satisfactory evidence of identification, which were
, to be the person whose named is signed on the preceding or attached
document in my presence and acknowledged to me that he/she signed ii voluntarily for its stated
purpose.
�Unofficial Property Record Card
Page 1 of 1
Unofficial Property Record Card Salem, MA
M
General Property Data
Account Number O
Parcel ID 36-0370-0
Prior Parcel ID 21 Property Owner HEATH ROBERT HEATH
COURTNEY Malllng Address 17 BARTON
Property"Location 17 BARTON STREET Property
Use One Family
STREET
Most Recent Sale Date 10/10/2013
Legal Reference 32881-302
City SALEM
Granter HEATH,ROBERT
Zip 01970
Maillng State MA
Sale Price O
ParcelZonlng R2
Land Area 0.132 acres
Current Property Assessment
Card 1Value
Xtra Features 0
Value
Building 206 800
Value
'
Land Value 95,500
Total V.ilue 302,300
Building Description
Foundation Type Brick/Stone Frame
Building Style Old Style # of
Type Wood
Living Units 1
Roof Structure Gable
Year Built 1870 Building Grade
Average Bulldlng Condition
Avg-Good Finished Area (SF)
Roof Cover Asphalt Shgl
Siding Clapboard Interior Walls
Plaster
1710 Number Rooms 8
# of 3/4 Baths. 0
# of Bedrooms 4
# of 1/2 Baths 0
Flooring Type Hardwood
Basement Floor Concrete Heating
Type Forced H/Alr Heating Fuel
Gas
Air Conditioning 0%
# of Bsmt Garages 0
# of Full Baths 3
# of Other Fixtures o
Legal Description
Narrative Description of Property
This properly contains 0.132 acres of land mainly classified as One Family with a(n) Old Style style building, bullt about 1870, having Clapboard exterior and
Asphalt Shgl roof cover, ·with 1 unlt{s), 8 room{s), 4 bedroomfs), 3 bathfs), O half bath(s}.
Property Images
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Disclaimer: This information is believed to be correct but is subject to change and Is not warranteed.
http://salem.patriotproperties.com/RecordCard.asp
8/11/2016
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>
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projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic Places
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AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR FEDERAL LAWS AND
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FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND
COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www,sec.state.ma.us/mbcl under the subject heading "MHC Fonns.''
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.rna.us/mhc
This file was accessed on:
Thursday, August 11, 2016 at 11 :00 AM
�FFF.
NRDIS 7/19/2002
FORM B - BUILDING
Assessor's Number
USGS Quad
j
Area(s) Form Number
j j ~~ I
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS AR.CHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEY ARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
..___3s_-_o3_7_o _ _JI Salem
Photograph
Pince: (ne;ghborhood or village):
Town/City:
/ SAL.3098 /
Salem
Bridge Street Neck
Address: 17 Barton Street
Historic Name: William F. Staples House Uses:
Present: single family dwelling house
Original: single family dwelling house
Date of Construction: 1869
Source:
deeds, Census
Style/Form:
Architect/Builder:
unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation:
brick
Wall/Trim:
wood clapboard
Roof:
Locus Map
asphalt shingle
N
A
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
none
Major Alterations (with dates):
Before 1955 - removal of rear wing, porch at SE corner Date
unknown - new front porch, addition of dormer and upper
deck
Condition: good
Moved: no !ZI
yes D Date:
Acreage:
I
0.132 acre
Setting:
mixed residential neighborhood
RECEIVED
Recorded by: Lisa Mausolf
Organization: City of Salem Date
SEPT 01 2011
MASS. HIST. COMM.
(month I year):March 2011
3/10
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructionsfar completing this Jo,-111.
�INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
SALEM
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
17 BARTON STREET
Arcats)
Form No.
I lV,EM I SAL.3098
0 Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places .
. (f checked, you must attach a completed National Register· Criteria Statement.form.
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION:
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
Located at the northwest corner of Barton Street and East Collins Street, 17 Barton Street is a simple 2 ½-story gablefront dwelling which is
basically devoid of decoration. Set on a brick foundation, it is notable for retaining a wood clapboard exterior. The gablefr ont displays
projecting eaves which end in cornice returns with a smaller cross gable projecting from the rear of the east wall. The placement of the two
facade bays is somewhat irregular, in vertical alignment but not centered horizontally. Fronted by a large modern deck, the sidehall entrance
has a simple surround and contains a modern replacement door. Originally there was a porch on the east side of the house, filling the space
between the main block and cross gable. The windows retain molded surround and what appear to be original 2/2 sash. A large shed dormer
has been added on the east roof slope. Historic maps indicate that originally there was a single-story wing behind the main house block. This
wing was removed prior to 1955.
This house is a contributing property in the Bridge Street Neck Historic District, listed on the National Register on July 19, 2002.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history; Include uses of the building, and the rolets) the
owners/occupants played within the community.
This house appears to have been constructed in the late 1860s. It is shown on the 1874 map as being owned by W.F. Staples. In 1869
Staples was living on Woodbury Court. In 1869 John F. Plummer, mariner, sold this parcel with buildings to Jane Staples, wife of William
(Book 784, Page 158). The deed notes that this was part of the flat raised and filled since it was purchased in 1865. William and Jane Staples
appear to be living here in the 1870 U.S. Census and by 1872 Staples is definitely listed as a carpenter living at 17 Barton Street. By 1880 the
Staples family had moved to Somerville although they continued to own the property. W.F. Staples is shown as the owner on the 1897 map.
Henry Waite, a shoemaker, was renting the house in 1900. In 1905 George B. Phippen sold the property to Daniel and Mary Spillane.
Daniel Spillane, a mason, was living here with his wife Mary, two nieces and a nephew in 1910. According to deeds, by 1918 she was
living apart from her husband and owned the house. Mary Spillane was still living here in 1920. In 1930 the house was rented by W.P.
Wilson, a gas station employee, who paid $40 a month to live here with his family.
The property has been owned by Edward O'Connell since 1958.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
City of Salem, Building Permits, 1871-1889. [Salem City Hall}.
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Salem, Massachusetts.
Hopkins, G.M. Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874. Salem
Directories, various dates.
Salem Maps, 1897, 1911.
Sanborn Insurance Maps, 1890-1903; 1906-1955. [Essex County Registry of Deeds] U.S.
Census, 1880-1930.
Continuation sheet I
�INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
SALEM
17 BARTON STREET
Arca(s)
Form No. .
I IV.EM I
SAL.3098
Continuation sheet 2
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Barton Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
17 Barton Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for John F. Plummer, Mariner, c. 1865
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1865, 2016
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Kimberly Whitworth
Language
A language of the resource
English
17
1865
2016
Barton Street
John F. Plummer
Mariner
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/3e99e2daae29515754ec64dd7edf2b9e.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=EX6py09tfpZQxQwbKdDHQBDXp52%7Eafw5CMF6Upwg8S-6g2c4cOiQyyc9vBJV8Gr3J0gkN68oHMvw9bMw52nky16y5tjpU4nVuxeSSq%7EWKKQhhu7xCVT5kY6qRecZSwpGWJsS8kGgda61U5XNSOKopZXCRTayzYnAtzrCZhYwvNzecX1XtFGUvw9AeXJzinlMq1IdmM6%7EYJP1kydFVZJ7kXdNJaCubnNFbzoMJDp5MB7CkUyxdEcmhJb5MwLBsf7AAh953ZiQ5AOlY-0QF-b8YG2zrpmGIum4RFaKge51ybsTBqprKnRQZkTrlpcOYxTk83OvLjjSs%7EKUZu-SRaiANg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
baa6ca46f13b1723d9684f80c104b3c4
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
8 Andrew Street
Built for
Captain Samuel Masury, circa 1804, Mariner
Researched by Joyce King, 2002.
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA, 01970
(978) 745-0799 I HistoricSalem.org
©2020
�(
Built for Captain Samuel Masury Jun" mariner Circa
1804
8 Andrew Street RATING: THREE. PERIOD: FEDERAL
"Siding over the clapboards and a pediment supported by metal braces conceal the Federal
characteristics of this house. Under the pediment the front door is framed by pilasters and a
fanlight. Evidently the house was built by Captain Samuel Masury. According to B.F. Browne,
this house was plastered on the outside at first -- an innovation in Salem at that time-- but the
plaster did not stand up and was removed, being replaced with clapboards." (Historic District
Study 2:1)
"Benjamin F. Browne in an article in the Essex Institute Historical Collections said that the
land now Andrew Street was first owned by Captain Joseph Gardner, who was slain fighting
the Narragansett Indians in 1675. It was then sold to Joseph Andrew, whose grandson sold it
about 1780 to William Browne, who had a tannery here until 1802 when he opened up Andrew
Street and sold house lots. Mr. Browne mentions that when he was young, water came up to
Milk Street occasionally and that there was a spring east of the street and a stone wall at the
end of it by Cove (Webb Street did not exist then)." (Historic District Study 2:1)
As mentioned above, William Brown (also Browne) and his son, Benjamin, carried on a
tannery business on their large parcel ofland. An entry in Rev. William Bentley's diary, on
September 3, 1812, details the life of William Browne. "Died-William Browne, a Deacon,
Warden of the Second Church, aet 79 ... In his youth he learned the Taylor's trade & was
distinguished by the name of his occupation from the W. B. of the first family in Salem. He
practiced his trade for many years at the head of Union wharf in a small building belonging to
the Browne estate ... Br. Browne then removed to a shop which he bought upon a water lot at
the foot of Curtis street below Derby street,_& he purchased a
house in Curtis street in which he lived above 30 years & in which he died. By engaging in a
little shop & of an uncommon economy, he retailed groceries & kept boarders till he
purchased the part of the Andrew Estate eastward of Washington Square, of the Town swamp
above the Common. Here he carried on the Tanning business for several years with one of his
Sons & upon the rise of real estate he laid out Andrew street &still possesses several lots &
dwelling houses as well as other buildings upon it. He married three times & had three
excellent wives." " He was small in person, active, & on Monday
___ last was in every pa_!! of town. He said, since a tum last winter, he was often faint & he · · fainted
last week in his field. His indisposition last winter seemed lethargic inclining to paralysis but
without any visible effect after his recovery. It was of the same kind when he died. He lay
Tuesday & Wednesday in sensible & died this day at 11 a.m. A man of the best affections to
his family ~ much maligned." (Bentley 4: 113)
Research'by, Joyce King
February 2002
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Andrew Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
8 Andrew Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built circa 1804, for Captain Samuel Masury, Mariner. Documents provided are of research conduction on house; formal house history unavailable. Plaque was granted after research was presented by homeowner; no formal house history on record.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. House Histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Circa 1804, 2002.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1804
2002
8
Andrew Street
Captain Samuel Masury
Joyce King
Salem Massachusetts
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/3e00a68493c66f22f2ad491edaa72b54.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=rdn0JlOKhSuKeVWEbDzfiKQ0z1RPIezThYk1Q1b5dldHlpGdFBmOTowjdBbJP6yR64tI8ZNJnYKpUU7bnxVgphtQG9v8eT88aeRum30hnw2jWjYG3FNYwVnFYHvyd0VEB0Qn9ZWFE1Ve4GJ1%7Eogc4ckkujmfbWR-MYNsTwn3GCzUwX3qXlot10QaCNMtGvnbvvx0EW8CR5EKltKzMryBnwEnS5g5cP7KhF3sLqoiKfLPQajiV0nB4Ezm2gqkJqlFUznf2cLSr-Qk8yH92KWmROzkyAXpAY7oY-mvinUy%7ErQ%7E-Hz6pDcnj9wRwGWoSJqUuKg8PHyWndOlXXRQVSu-zQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
c0885a4cae073aa26b72c52e1afd9847
PDF Text
Text
��������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Andover Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
12 Andover Street
Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Michael McCarthy, 1876, Tanner
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc.
Date
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House built 1876,
house history information completed 1977
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
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English
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Historic Salem Inc., House History
12 Andover Street
1876
1977
Massachusetts
McCarthy
Salem
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Text
24 Buffum Street
Built for
Ernest F. Symonds
Book-keeper
Descendant of James Symonds
Renowned 17th-century furniture maker
Built in 1897 on land granted to John Symonds,
a master joiner from Norfolk, England
Researched & written by
David Moffat
November 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�I.
The Property, 1665-1736
Throughout Salem’s early history, North Salem was primarily an agricultural area known
as the North Fields (or Northfields) which was largely undeveloped. Development arrived here in
the mid- to late 1800s as the population of Salem grew, but the area did not reach the density it
has today until the 1930s, later than many other parts of the city.
In A Storm of Witchcraft, historian Emerson W. Baker explains how the common division
of land in medieval England, with small villages surrounded by fields for farming divided into
private ownership, was brought in Salem:
Farming was a cooperative activity; the villagers agreed what to plant and when to harvest.
This tradition continued in Salem, where most early settlers lived on the neck on a one- or
two-acre house lot. North Fields lay, logically enough, across the North River, to the north
of the Neck, and South Fields sat to the south of the South River. Residents of the Neck
made a daily trek to farm the ten-acre strips or lots they owned in one of the fields.”1
In the early twentieth century, the antiquarian Sidney Perley studied the deeds of early
Salem in order to construct a map of Salem as it would have appeared in 1700, which was
assembled and edited by the historian James Duncan Phillips in 1937. This map and Perley’s study
of the area provide a sense of how it may have appeared at the turn of the eighteenth century.
Perley states that “when the North field was laid out is unknown, but it must have been
before the town records were begun. Apparently most of the original lots consisted of ten acres
each.”2
A road, roughly following the path of School Street today, went from the horse pasture in
northeast Salem to Trask’s mill in what is today Peabody. The “highway leading into ye North
Field” was roughly equivalent to North Street. Surrounding both sides of this highway was the
Baker, Emerson W. A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2014.
2 Perley, Sidney. The History of Salem, Massachusetts, Vol. I: 1626-1637. Salem, Sidney Perley, 1924. Print, p. 315.
1
�land of a joiner named James Symonds. It was on Symonds’ land that Symonds’ descendant built
24 Buffum Street two centuries later.
Symonds land was bordered to the west by a strip of farmland owned by Caleb Buffum, a
carpenter. Farther west was the vast tract of Jonathan Corwin, a merchant and magistrate, and
beyond that, the land of Robert Buffum, where Mack Park is today. To the east, Symonds’ tract
was bordered by John Bliven, a husbandman. When John Bliven died in 1704, his inventory listed
a ten-acre lot “joyning to James Symonds Land” worth £55, and an additional ten-acre lot adjoining
the horse pasture worth £35. His inventory also lists 3 cows, a calf, 8 sheep, and a “breeding sow,”
giving a sense of the livestock which may have been grazing in the area. 3 Like the Buffums, Bliven
was a Quaker.
Farther east, smaller tracts of farmland belonged to brothers Joseph and Jeremiah Neale
and their sister, Lydia Hart, widow of the mariner Jonathan Hart. 4 Another lot farther away
belonged to Joshua Buffum, a carpenter. According to Perley’s research, James Symonds had the
only house in the North Fields, built in 1665 roughly where the Shell Gas Station is on North Street
today, at number 111.
The Symonds family were master joiners who “dominate[d] the furniture-making trade in
Salem.”5 Art historian Benno Forman first attributed several prominent examples of seventeenthcentury furniture to the Symonds in the 1960s, using evidence from the family’s probates. 6 John
Symonds, James’ father, was a joiner who emigrated from Norfolk, England to Salem in the 1630s,
3
Essex County Probates, Probate #2646, 1705. p .5.
Perley, Sidney. “Part of Salem in 1700: #34” The Essex Antiquarian, Vol. 13. 1909. p. 37.
5
Willoughby, Martha H. “Patronage in Early Salem: The Symonds Shop and Their Customers.” American
Furniture, 2000. pp. 169-84. Chipstone.org.
6
Forman, Benno M. 1968 "The Seventeenth-Century Case Furniture of Essex County". M.A. University of
Delaware Winterthur Program in Early American Culture
4
�and trained his sons and other apprentices in the trade.7 John died in 1671, but his sons, James and
Samuel, continued the trade into the early eighteenth century.
The pieces attributed to the Symonds workshop are among the finest and most desired
furniture pieces which survive from the seventeenth century. Their signature item is a type of
intricately carved valuables chests, usually measuring around 17 inches tall and 17 inches wide
and 9 inches deep. These pieces tend to be constructed of red or white oak and white pine, with
decorative moldings in red cedar, black walnut, and maple.
Many prominent museums with collections of Early American decorative arts have pieces
attributed to the Symonds workshop. The Wintherthur Museum in Winterthur, Delaware has a
valuables chest monogramed for T.B. & S.B. from 1676.8 The Massachusetts Historical Society
in Boston has a chest of drawers from the late seventeenth-century.9 The Metropolitan Museum in
New York City has two valuables chests, one made in 1679, likely for Ephraim and Mary Herrick,
and another made in the last quarter of the seventeenth century. 1011 The Peabody-Essex Museum
in Salem has a valuables cabinet belonging to Joseph and Bathsheba Pope from 1679, painted a
reddish black color. 1213 The museum purchased the chest at auction at Christie’s in 2000 for
$2,422,500.14 The Pope cabinet is directly attributed to James Symonds. The Peabody-Essex
7
“Salem Witch Bureau” Massachusetts Historical Society Collections Online,
https://www.masshist.org/database/viewer.php?item_id=2309&pid=15
8
“Chest of Drawers (Spice Box or Chest)” Winterthur Museum Collections,
http://museumcollection.winterthur.org/print-record.php?srchfld=irn&name=7688&port=40138
9
Massachusetts Historical Society.
10
“Cabinet” The Metropolitan Museum of Art Collection Online.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/1076
11
“Chest of Drawers” The Metropolitan Museum of Art Collection Online.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/2005
12
“Valuables Cabinet, 1679” Peabody-Essex Museum Collection Online http://explore-art.pem.org/object/americandecorative-arts/138011/detail
13
“Valuables Cabinet, 1679” Peabody-Essex Museum educator’s guide.
http://teh.salemstate.edu/educatorsguide/pages/pre-contact-pdfs/Pope%20Chest.pdf
14
“The Joseph and Bathsheba Pope Valuables Cabinet,” 21 January 2000. Christie’s,
https://www.christies.com/lotfinder/Lot/the-joseph-and-bathsheba-pope-carved-and-1729638-details.aspx
�Museum also owns and displays the Putnam Family Cupboard from 1680, also attributed to
James.15 A chest which descended in the Trask family, from around 1690, also attributed to James,
sold at Southeby’s in 2011 for $37,500. 16
When Symonds died in 1714, his executors determined that his real estate “will be spoiled
to devide it there being nine Children to have shears in it.”17 Subsequently, Thomas, Joseph, and
Benjamin Symonds relinquished their shares of the real estate to their brother John. 18
The dwelling house was valued at £40, the barn and the shop were valued at £11. The
“westerly lott with ye highway,” where 24 Buffum stands today, was valued at £45. The easterly
lot and some adjoining marsh were valued at £52. Symonds owned another 30 acres of land, split
evenly between lots described a pond, an orchard, and a hill. These were valued respectively at
£43, £43, and £50. Along with some other small lots, Symonds’ total real estate added up to £323,
a sizeable sum. 19 His moveable goods offer a picture of his work: a level, wedges, two small old
saws, an old auger, a glue pot, and a mortise chisel. His other possessions of value were silver, a
“small peice of Gold,” two old skillets, and a silver spoon. In total, the rest of his estate came to
£29..1.20 A second, more detailed inventory placed the value of “his dwelling house part of a barn
an old shop and ten akres land” at £137.
The second inventory gives a clue as to the appearance of Symonds’ early house. The first
floor consisted of the “Great Lower Room,” with a feather bed. The second floor featured the “Best
15
“Putnam Family Cupboard, 1680”, Peabody-Essex Museum Collection Online http://exploreart.pem.org/object/american-decorative-arts/108889/detail
16
“The Important Trask Family Pilgrim Century Oak, Maple and Walnut Chest with Drawer, attributed to the
Symonds Shop, Salem, Massachusetts, probably James Symonds, circa 1690” Sotheby’s.
http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2011/important-americana-including-american-stonewareassembled-by-mr-and-mrs-edwin-hochberg-n08710/lot.225.html
17
Essex County Probates, Probate #27083, 1714. p .4.
18
Ibid. p. 6.
19
Ibid. p. 5.
20
Ibid. p. 7.
�Chamber,” with a mix of feather and straw beds, a great deal of furniture (4 chests of drawers, 2
cupboards, 13 chairs, 3 tables, a joined stool, a box, and a trunk), 2 hourglasses, and some books.
For animals, Symonds owned 30 “old sheep,” 15 lambs, an “old hors,” 3 pigs, and 5 1/3 cows.
This second inventory left the valuation of real estate at £323..10, but raised the value of his other
property to £94..14. 21
II.
The Property, 1736-1836
John Symonds died in 1729, “the principal part” of the estate laying “in lands in the North
feild in Salem”22 His real estate came to £315..13..4. 23 In apportioning John’s widow, Sarah Foster
Symonds, her customary third of the estate, some clues are given to the appearance of the Symonds
house in 1729. Sarah is to have “the easterly lower room in the Dwelling house, the Leantoo
Chamber, [and] the westerly third part of the Sellar.” Clearly either the house that James Symonds
built in 1665 had been improved upon or a new house had been built in the interim. A new barn is
mentioned, which Samuel Symonds built. 24
In 1736, James Symonds, aged 19, and Anna Symonds, aged 15, both the children of John,
chose Joseph Pickering to be their legal guardian, as they were minors. 25 Sarah Foster Symonds
died in 1743.26
Phillips’ speculative map of Salem in 1780 shows only Robert Foster’s blacksmith shop
and an empty space in the area called “Buffum’s Hill.” 27 James Symonds was a mariner who
21
Ibid pp. 10-12.
Essex County Probates, Probate #27092, 1729. p. 8.
23 Ibid., p. 19.
24 Ibid., p. 23.
25
Essex County Probates, Probate #27084, 1736. p. .2.
26 Perley (1924), p. 393.
27
Phillips (1937), supplemental map, “Map of Salem, About 1780.”
22
�attended Rev. Barnard’s meetinghouse, where he owned 1/3 of a pew. James Symonds died in
1790. He may be the James Symonds, a ship’s cooper, who died on a ship returning from Aux
Cayes, Haiti, under Capt. Jonathan Tucker. 28 His estate was left to his widow, Mary, John Symonds
III, a shoreman, and John Symonds V, a yeoman. 29 James Symonds’ house, barn, well, along with
a half an acre “situated in the North Fields” were valued at £80. An adjoining 3 ½ acres was valued
at £29:15, a half acre opposite at £6, and two acres of pasture on the main road in the recentlyindependent town of Danvers, £9. His land totaled 6 ½ acres worth £124. His personal estate
included 6 silver tea spoons, a silver spoon, nine earthenware plates, two teapots with cups and
saucers, a cross-cut saw, two flat irons, a hand saw, an ax, two small arms, and a number of small
articles and clothing, totaling £30:2. 30
John Symonds’ nephew, Nathaniel Symonds, became a potter and married Jane Phipps.
Nathaniel’s oldest son, William was born around 1749. William Symonds, a cordwainer and potter,
married Eunice Gardner in 1772. His oldest son, William Phipps Symonds I, was born in 1773. 31
III.
The Property, 1836-1897
Benjamin Ropes Symonds I was born in 1801 to William Phipps Symonds I, a merchant,
and Margaret Ropes, who were married in 1798. Benjamin’s older brother, William Phipps
Symonds II, was born in 1799 and became a cordwainer and a shoemaker. William married Nancy
Phelps in 1825, they had five children, only two of whom survived to adulthood. William died in
28
Vital Records of Salem, Massachusetts to the End of the Year 1849. Salem: The Essex Institute, 1916. Deaths, p.
262.
29
Essex County Probates, Probate #27085, 1790. pp. 4-5.
30
31
Ibid.
Perley (1924), p.395.
�1850 and Nancy died in 1887. 32 His younger brother, Ephraim G., became a cordwainer, and
married Priscilla Ellen Quiner of Beverly in 1834. He died in 1885 and she lived until 1906. 33
Benjamin R. Symonds I married Elisabeth R. Shatswell April 11, 1829 and they had six
children together. Benjamin Ropes Symonds II, the oldest, was born in Nov. 22, 1829, followed
by Thomas Shatswell, Joseph, George C., who died in infancy, and Elisa S. 34 In 1842, the couple
were living at 101 North Street and Benjamin R. Symonds I was working as a cordwainer. 35
Buffum Street was developed in 1836, when the estate of Jonathan Buffum, who owned
the left side of Buffum Street from what is today number 13 to number 41. 36 Buffum, a tailor and
yeoman, built the Federal mansion at 25-27 Buffum Street around 1818.37 Buffum died aged 81 in
1835.38 His children inherited various houselots, which they sold off. The left side of Buffum Street
developed quickly. Buffum’s daughter, Anna Frye, sold a lot to Mark Sanborn, a tanner, teamster,
and hair dealer, around 1836.39 In 1844, Jonathan’s son Edward Buffum built a house at 21 Buffum
Street.40 17 Buffum Street, the house directly across from number 24, was built in 1849 by Joseph
Towne, a bookkeeper on land that had passed rapidly from Israel Buffum to Mark Sanborn to
Nathaniel Horton. 41
An 1851 map of Salem by Henry McIntyre, shows only two houses on the right side of
Buffum Street between Randall and Mason, that of N. Horton at 22 Buffum and C. Buffum at 16
Perley (1924), p. 398.
Ibid.
34 Ibid.
35 1842 Salem Directory, p. 101.
36 MHC MACRIS, SAL.1424, “16 Buffum St.- The Caleb Buffum-Nathaniel Very House.”
37 MHC MACRIS, SAL.1397, “25-27 Buffum St.- The Jonathan Buffum House.”
38 Vital Records, Deaths, p. 123.
39 MHC MACRIS, SAL.1391, “15 Buffum St.- The Mark Sanborn House.”
40 MHC MACRIS, SAL.1394, “21 Buffum St.- The Edward Buffum House.”
41 MHC MACRIS, SAL.1392, “17 Buffum St.- The Joseph Towne House.”
32
33
�Buffum.42 Nathaniel Horton, a currier, built 22 Buffum in a late-period Greek Revival style in
1850.43 Caleb Buffum, a shoe-maker, built 16 Buffum street as a Federal-style house with
Italianate trim around 1845. 44
In 1855, Benjamin R. Symonds I worked as a grocer at 109 North Street and lived at 107
North Street, where Benjamin R. Symonds, Jr., boarded.45 In 1869, Symonds I was working as a
grocer at 79 Federal Street and living at 14 Barr Street. 46 Benjamin R. Symonds II was boarding
at 1 Holly Street, along with Mrs. Lucy W. Holt and dressmaker Lucy Jane Holly in the home of
Mrs. Nathan Poole. 47
In September of that year, Benjamin R. Symonds II purchased a plot of land on the corner
of Buffum and Randall Streets from Nathaniel Horton for $2,200. The parcel measured 150 feet
by 99 feet square. 48
The Atlas of the City of Salem in 1874 shows the property at the southeast corner of Buffum
and Randall streets as belonging to B.R. Symonds, with a house and another structure at the back
of the property. Nathaniel Horton still owns the lot to the south. 49
Benjamin R. Symonds II was also a grocer. There were roughly nine grocers in Salem in
1855, and 73 in 1886.50 Benjamin had retired by that later year, but three Symonds, cousins Joseph
and Thomas, and Benjamin’s brother, Thomas Shatswell, who all ran their own grocery stores on
42
McIntyre, Henry. “Map of the City of Salem, Mass. From an actual survey By H. Mc. Intyre. Cl. Engr.” Map,
1851. Henry McIntyre, Salem, MA. Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library.
http://www.leventhalmap.org/id/15108
43MHC MACRIS, SAL.1422, “22 Buffum St.- The Nathaniel Horton House.”
44 MHC MACRIS, SAL.1424, “16 Buffum St.- The Caleb Buffum-Nathaniel Very House.”
45 1855 Salem Directory, p. 145.
46 1869 Salem Directory, pp. 88, 135, 144, 161, 187.
47 Ibid.
48 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 782:13. 16 Sep 1869.
49 Busch, Edward. Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts. From actual Survey & Official records. G.M. Hopkins
& Co. Philadelphia, 1874.
50 Salem Directory, 1886, p. 395.
�North Street. With the exception of two grocers on Mason Street and Edmund F. Night at 86 North
Street, all of North Salem was served primarily by the Symonds. 51
He married Sarah Cox Fillebrown on July 13, 1856. They had four children, Benjamin R.
Symonds III, born 1857, became a physician and married Ida E. Shapleigh in December of 1885.
He died in October of 1912 and she was still living in 1924. They had four children, Walter
Shapleigh, Bertrand Ropes, Helene, and Benjamin Shapleigh. 52 James F. was born in 1860 but
lived only until 1867. Apphia Chesler was born 1868 and married married Arthur L. Pattee of
Peabody in October of 1898. 53 The youngest child, Ernest F. Symonds, was born Oct. 3, 1872.
In the late nineteenth century, the foot of Buffum Street by the North River was an
industrial area, with three curriers and a tanner occupying the area south of Mason Street in 1886. 54
Benjamin’s cousin, Jonathan Shove Symonds, a city assessor, lived at the other end of the street
at 67 Buffum Street with his son, George Gardiner Symonds, a paperhanger. 55
Benjamin R. Symonds II died April 22, 1890. The 1895-1896 Directory of Salem shows
that 26 Buffum Street belonged to Mrs. S.C. Symonds.56 Ernest F. Symonds, then 23, was a clerk
at Salem National Bank, and lived at home. Sarah Cox Symonds died May 22, 1903, and the 1914
Directory lists 26 Buffum Street as vacant. 57 In 1915, John T. Street, a clerk, was living in the
house.58
IV.
Ernest F. Symonds, 1897-1914
Ibid.,
Perley (1924) p. 401.
53 Perley (1924) p. 400.
54 Salem Directory, 1886, p. 32.
55 Ibid., pp. 351-352.
56 Salem Directory, 1895-6, p. 109.
57 Salem Directory, 1914, p. 417.
58 Salem Directory, 1915, p. 391.
51
52
�Ernest F. Symonds, the youngest child Benjamin R. Symonds II purchased the land on
which he built his house from the estate of his late father for one dollar and other valuable
consideration paid on June 5, 1897. His mother, Sarah C. Symonds, and siblings Benjamin R.
Symonds III and Apphia C. Symonds, and Ida E. Symonds, Benjamin’s wife.59
The house at 24 Buffum Street first appears in the 1897 Atlas of Salem, as part of the estate
of B.R. Symonds.60 It is an eclectic and handsome Colonial Revival house, with a porch supported
by six Tuscan columns and a Federal-style urn finial on the post at the top of the entrance stairs.
Above the porch is a dentilled cornice. A half-turret runs up the left side of the façade to the second
story. A bay window sits above the roof of the porch on the right side of the second story. The
fenestration on the North side of the house is very interesting, with an oriel window looking onto
26 Buffum Street and a square diamond-paned window set into the exposed chimney. The eave
has a modillioned cornice and the hipped roof featured two dormers.
Ernest F. Symonds was a bank clerk. The 1897-98 Directory lists him as the bookkeeper
at the Salem National Bank, which was at 114 Washington Street. 61 A 1900 ad in the Salem
Directory lists Symonds fourth among the personnel at the bank, after the president, the cashier,
and the assistant cashier. 62
Ernest F. Symonds married Jessie M. Hatch on June 16, 1897 and they had three children,
Sarah Cox, born June 2, 1901, Helen, born July 8, 1905, and an unnamed son, who was stillborn
on Nov. 4, 1907.63 By 1906, Symonds was working as a bookkeeper in Revere. 64
59
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1515:443. 14 Jun 1897.
1897 Atlas of Salem.
61 Salem Directory, 1897-98, p. 333.
62 Salem Directory, 1900, p. 1263.
63 Ibid. p. 401.
64 Salem Directory, 1906, p 293.
60
�In 1901, Ernest took out a $3,500 mortgage against the property from Aroline C. Gove, a
noted philanthropist and daughter of famous nineteenth-century marketer of medical conconctions
Lydia Pinkham.65 The document for the mortgage describes the property:
“Beginning at the southern corner thereof and running northeasterly by land now or
formerly of Horton one hundred and eight (108) feet more or less to land of the estate of
Benjamin R. Symonds; then turning and running northwesterly by said land of the estate
of Benj. R. Symonds thirty seven (37) feet; thence turning and running southwesterly by
land of the estate of Benj. R. Symonds one hundred and eight (108) feet more or less to
Buffum Street, there turning and running south easterly by said Buffum Street thirty seven
(37) feet to the point begun at.”66
A 1911 Atlas shows 24 Buffum as belonging to E.F. Symonds, 67 and the 1914 Salem
Directory shows Ernest F. Symonds as the owner. 68 In January of 1913, Ernest transferred the
property to his wife, Jessie. 69
Bessie C.I. Hussey, 1914-1928
Jessie Hatch Symonds, wife of Ernest F., sold the property to Love B. Ingalls, in September
of 1914.70 Ten days later, Aroline Gove transferred the mortgage to Ingalls’ daughter, Bessie C.I.
Hussey.71 On December 1 st, Bessie C.I. Hussey made “an open, peaceable, and unopposed entry
on the premises described in said mortgage, for the purpose, by her declared, of foreclosing on
Cutter, William Richard. Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern
Massachusetts, Vol. III. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1908. p. 1386.
66 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1648:462. 7 Aug 1901.
67 1911 Atlas.
68 1914 Salem Directory, p. 317.
69 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 2193:176. 20 Jan 1913.
70 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 2274:220. 10 Sep 1914.
71 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Document 2271:100. 14 Sep 1914.
65
�said mortgage for breach of condition thereof.” 72 The 1915 shows 24 Buffum Street as vacant and
states that Ernest F. Symonds had removed to Boston. 73 Love B. Ingalls, also referred to as Sarah
L. Ingalls, was the widow of Seth H. Ingalls, and had previously lived at 129 North Street. 74
VI.
Lucy B. Jones, 1928-1935.
In July of 1928, Bessie and Fred Hussey conveyed the property to Lucy B. Jones, wife of
Ralph E. Jones, for consideration paid. The couple received a mortgage of $7,990 from Salem
Savings Bank at the time they purchased the house. 75 Ralph and Lucy Jones received a further
mortgage of $1500 from David V. Nason in September of that year. 76 Ralph moved between a
number of jobs during his residency, beginning as an accountant in 1929, 77 then as a advertising
manager 1930-1932.78 In 1933, 1934, and 1935 he was a salesman in Boston. 79 In 1935, Salem
Savings Bank took possession of the house. 80 Roland Stanley, treasurer of the Salem Savings Bank,
attested that “default has been made in payment of interest and taxes.” An auction was held to sell
the house, subject to “all unpaid taxes, assessments or other multiple liens.” 81 The following year,
Ralph returned to being an accountant and the couple moved to 77 Linden Street. 82
VII.
72
Frank T. McDonald and Rachel G. Barry, 1935-1941
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Document 2280:477. 1 Dec 1914.
Salem Directory, 1915, p. 395.
74 Salem Directory, 1916, p. 300.
75 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Document 2772:448. 16 Jul 1928.
76 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Document 2781:473. 25 Sep 1928.
77 Salem Directory, 1929, p. 181.
78 Salem Directory, 1930, p. 336.
79 Salem Directory, 1933-34, p. 213.
80 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Document 3043:005. 23 Jul 1935.
81 Ibid.
82 Salem Directory, 1936, p. 212.
73
�In 1936, 24 Buffum Street stood vacant. 83 The following year, a leather worker, Frank T.
McDonald, and his wife, Florence E. moved in and remained until 1940. In that year, Mrs. Rachel
G. Barry, a nurse at the Lamp Division of Hygrade Sylvania, moved in and lived there until 1942.84
VIII. The Constantines, 1942-2004
Lawrence H. Constantine purchased the foreclosed property from the Salem Savings Bank
in August of 1942, and secured a mortgage of $5,200 from Harris S. Knight. 85 Lawrence H.
Constantine, a car salesman, married Katherine L. Donovan between 1926 and 192986. Katherine
had been born January 28, 1900. In 1926, Constantine was at Broad Street market and lived at 46
Broad Street.87 By 1929, he had gotten a job as a salesman at McKenzie Moto Company at 65a
Bridge Street, where he worked until 1936. 8889 In that year, he became the president of Naumkeag
Chevrolet, which as at 17 Canal Street. 90 By 1952, he had become the President and General
Manager of Naumkeag Chevrolet, a role he continued in until his death in September of 1960. 9192
Harris Knight, from whom Constantine received a mortgage was the treasurer of Naumkeag
Chevrolet and chairman of the board of directors of the Merchants National Bank of Salem. 93
The Constantines had three daughters, Muriel, born in 1922, Rosamund, born in 1924, and
Anne, born in 1933.
1936 Salem Directory, p. 412.
Salem Directory, 1940, p. 31.
85 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 3308:145, 15 Aug 1942.
86 Salem Directory, 1926, p. 260; Salem Directory, 1929, p. 216.
87 Salem Directory, 1926, p. 260.
88 Salem Directory, 1929, p. 216.
89 Salem Directory, 1930, p. 56.
90 Salem Directory, 1937, p. 89.
91 Salem Directory, 1959, p. 162.
92 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 16697:170, 20 Mar 2001.
93 Salem Directory, 1959, p. 305.
83
84
�Muriel received a teaching degree from Salem State College in 1944 and began teaching
at the John Brown Elementary School in Manchester, Massachusetts. In 1946, Muriel married
Capt. Raymond H. Bates, who was in the United States Navy. 94 Raymond’s father, George J. Bates,
served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1918 to 1924, and then served 13 years
as the mayor of Salem, from 1924 until 1937. From 1937 until his untimely death in an airplane
crash in 1949, Bates was a United States Representative from Massachusetts. 95 Bates’ son, William
H. Bates, took Bates’ office and occupied it until his untimely death in 1966. 96 Raymond,
subsequently, was the son and the brother of a Representative in Congress for almost thirty years.
Raymond and Muriel Bates purchased a house on Trinity Road in Marblehead for $36,000
on June 3, 1968.97 She lived there until she passed away in 2013.
Rosamund Constantine also received a teaching degree from Salem State College and
taught elementary school. She married Henry J. Rodden, who was a salesman for Armour & Co.,
a meat wholesaler at 260 Bridge Street.98 She lived much of her life in Beverly but moved to
Colorado, where she passed away in Castle Rock in 2009.99
Like her two sisters, Anne L. Constantine also became a school teacher. She married
Harold Sabean, a salesman. She passed away in 1966 at age 33.100
Katherine deeded the land to her daughters, Rosamund Rodden and Muriel Bates, as joint
tenants in 2001. Katherine L. Constantine passed away in April of 2004, at the age of 104.101
Obituary, “Muriel Constantine Bates, Nov. 11, 1922- April 19, 2013,” Murphy Funeral Home, Salem.
“BATES, George Joseph (1891-1949).” Biographical Directory of United States Congress.
http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=B000232
96 “BATES, William Henry (1917-1966).” Biographical Directory of United States Congress.
http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=B000239
97 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 5532:755. 3 Jun 1968.
98 Salem Directory, 1949, p. 244.
99 Obituary, “Rosamund A. Rodden, September 16, 1924-October 2, 2009”, The Salem News.
100 “Anne Constantine Sabean” Findagrave, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/47024221
101 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 28914:11. 8 Sep 2009.
94
95
�IX.
2004 to the Present
Aaron A. Sasseville, a construction worker, and Tara, his wife, purchased the home from
Rosamund Rodden and Muriel Bates in 2005.102 After 2009, the property was owned for short
periods of time by various well-to-do professionals as the houses’ property value rose. Katherine
Curley, a journalist, and Matthew Kazman, a software specialist, purchased the property in 2009
and sold it three years later to Paul Helms, an editor, and Jane Helms, a publisher. 103 Paul and Jane
Helms moved to Roslindale and sold the property in 2014 to Sarah N.K. Teasdale, a physician,
and Pedro Poitevin, a mathematics professor at Salem State University. 104 Teasdale and Poitevin
moved to Marblehead and sold the property to Danielle K. Capalbo in December of 2017. 105
X.
Summary
24 Buffum Street is a fine Colonial Revival house built in 1897 by Ernest F. Symonds, a
middle-class bank clerk and book-keeper, on land that had belonged to his family over two
centuries before. After Symonds’ mortgage was foreclosed, the mortgage holder’s mother, a
widow, purchased the house and lived there for 13 years. In 1928, an aspirational accountant and
his wife moved in, but as he shuffled between jobs they were unable to keep up with their mortgage
payments and taxes, so the house was repossessed in 1935. The bank rented the property to a series
of two working-class tenants, a leather worker and then a nurse at the Sylvania plant in the years
leading up to World War II. Lawrence Constantine, the president of Salem’s Chevrolet dealership
for over twenty years, purchased the house and raised three daughters who became teachers.
102
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 23393:406. 24 Feb 2005.
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 28914:11. 8 Sep 2009.
104 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 33461:345. 1 Aug 2014.
105 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 36424:435. 17 Dec 2017.
103
�Constantine’s widow, Katherine, lived in the house until 2004, when she died at age 104. She lived
at 24 Buffum Street for over 60 years and experienced the whole twentieth century in Salem. After
the Constantines, a construction worker owned the property for a short period, followed by short
residences by upper-middle-class and upper-class professionals.
TABLE 1- Ownership History of 24 Buffum Street
Date
17 Dec
2017
1 Aug
2014
14 Dec
2012
8 Sep
2009
24 Feb
2005
26 Mar
2001
15 Aug
1942
15 Aug
1942
23 Jul
1935
25 Sep
1928
16 Jul
1928
14 Sep
1914
10 Sep
1914
20 Jan
1913
Conveyed to
Danielle K.
Capalbo
Sarah N.K.
Teasdale and
Pedro Poitevin
Paul C. Helms and
Jane Helms
Matthew Kazman
and Katherine M.
Curley
Aaron K.
Sasseville and
Tara C. Sasseville
Rosamund A.
Rodden and
Muriel C. Bates
Harris S. Knight
(Mtg.)
Lawrence H.
Constantine
The Salem Savings
Bank
David V. Nason
(Mtg)
Lucy B. Jones,
wife of Ralph E.
Jones
Bessie C.I. Hussey
(Mtg)
Love B. Ingalls
Jessie Hatch
Symonds
Conveyed by
Sarah N.K. Teasdale
and Pedro Poitevin
Paul C. Helms and
Jane Helms
Amount
$593,000
Book Page
36424 435
$512,000
33461 345
Matthew Kazman and
Katherine M. Curley
Aaron K. Sasseville
and Tara C.
Sasseville
Rosamund A.
Rodden and Muriel
C. Bates
Katherine L.
Constantine
$462,500
32019 61
$430,000
28914 11
$365,000
23993 406
-
16997 170
Lawrence H.
Constantine
The Salem Savings
Bank
Ralph E. Jones and
Lucy B. Jones
Ralph E. Jones and
Lucy B. Jones
Fred Hussey and
Bessie C.I. Hussey
$5,200
3308
145
-
3308
144
-
3043
5
$1500
2772
448
Consideration
Paid
2772
448
Aroline C. Gove
-
2271
100
Jessie Hatch
Symonds
Ernest F. Symonds
Consideration 2274
Paid
Other
2193
considerations
220
176
�7 Aug
1901
5 Jun
1897
Aroline C. Gove,
wife of William H.
Gove (Mtg.)
Ernest F. Symonds
Ernest F. Symonds
$3,500
1648
462
Estate of Benjamin R. $1 and other
1515
Symonds
considerations
443
�TOWN RECORDS
OF
SALE
M^,
MASSACHUSE
VOLUME I
1634-1659
SALEM, MASS.
THE ESSEX INSTITUTE
1868
TJTJS
.
�8
own towns,
not repugnant to the laws and orders here
established by the General Court ; as also to lay mulcts
and penalties for the breach of these orders, and to levy
and distrain the same, not exceeding the sum of xx s ;
also to choose their own particular officers, as constables,
surveyors for the highways, and the like
and because
much business is like to ensue to the constables of several
towns, by reason they are to make distresses, and gather
fines, therefore that every town shall have two constables,
where there is need, that so their office may not be a
burthen unto them, and they may attend more carefully
upon the discharge of their office, for which they shalbe
liable to give their accompts to this Court when they
shalbe called thereunto."
;
The following copy of the first records of Salem is
from the original. The spelling, punctuation, &c, will
be strictly preserved, and passages erased or interlined in
the original will be retained, and indicated by being enclosed, the former between brackets and stars, and the
latter between double parallels.
The missing portion of the Book of Records from Oct.
1, 1634 to Dec. 26, 1636, is supplied from the Book of
Grants.
Extract
[The
taken,
first
is
part of the
the 4
[is to]
Book
in the handwriting of
The
One
from
th
first
the
Booh of
Grants.
of Grants, from which this extract
is
Emanuel Downing.]
of the 8 th moneth 1634
day seaventhmght next the Market
at
Salem
begyn, and to continew from 9 a Clock in the
morning
[until] 4 of the
Clock
19. of the 11 th
after noone.
moneth 1634
After discourse about deviding of 10 acre
lotts, Its or-
dered that the least family shall haue 10 acres, but greater
familyes
may
[haue] more according to y r nombers
�18
out
&
sett
vp togeather
five shillings for
shall
pay a fyne or penaltye of
every such trespas, soe
except such trees as grow in their
own
left as
aforesaid
qpp lott or growncle,
any fell any trees w th in the said limits and lett
them lye vnoccupied for the space of one moneth, that yt
shalbe lawfull for any other man observing the order
And
if
aforesaid to take the said tree to his
The Informer
to
owne
<pp vse
haue one halfe of the fyne, the other
to the towne.
By
towne representative the 20 th of the tenth
moneth 1636
r
Its ordered that m Hathorne shall haue one howse lott
of an acre on this side the Rocks towards the Millf being
the sixt lott from the Marshalls howse and to be laid out
by the former layers out
the
Original Record, Dec. 26,
[This,
which
is
1636
to
July 12, 1637.
the earliest of the original records
now
in existence,
Ralph Fogg, and is called by him the "Waste
Book." The frequency with which erasures and interlineations, and
short-hand minutes occur in it, show that it was intended to be more
fairly and correctly copied out into another book, but if such a book
was used, it is now lost. Ralph Fogg at this same time kept the records of the Quarter Court for Salem, then just established; and there
he first used a waste-book and then copied out the record in a corrected
form, into another book. (See Essex Inst. Hist. Collections, vol. vii,
The short-hand minutes have, with some difficulty,
p. 238, Note.)
been deciphered, and their meaniug, though as it happens of no special
importance, will be given as they occur. There may be seen in a letter from Edward Howes to John Winthrop, jr., Nov. 23, 1632 (Mass.
Hist. Collections, 4th ser., vol. vi, p. 481) an alphabet of short-hand
characters, very similar to that used by Ralph Eogg, described as invented by Mr. (Rev. Thomas) Archisden. The writer of the letter
remarks that "they are approved of in Cambridge to be the best as yet
is
in the handwriting of
jThis was a corn mill owned by Capt. Trask, and was near where the Essex Depot is in South Danvers. Capt. Trask, in 1(340 built another mill about half a mile
lower down the river, and soon after removed it to a place (uoav Frye's Mills) a mile
below the first mill. See Essex Registry, book 20, leaf 124.
�19
'
invented and they are not yet printed nor common." The system of
short-hand used by John Hull in his Diary, and ascribed to Theophilus
Metcalfe as the inventor (Am. Antiq. Soc. Col. Ill, p. 279), is evidently
founded on that of Mr. Archisden and this, with some variations con;
;
tinued to be used by ministers and others for more than a century.
Though of course
inferior to the
modern system,
it
was, in
its original
form, remarkably simple and ingenious.]
Ann* 1636
1VL
Roger Connanfc
[*Pasca
ffoote
f.f
3
200
Woodbury f.
Humphry woodbury *]
Jn° Woodbury
po. to
fol.
po. to foil
to 9.
1
to 9.
f.
W
m Traskefr
10 [*Cp.
Ric? Norman
& son Jn° Norman *]
Jn° Sweet
9.
[*Jn° Hardy f.
m Allen f.
Jn° Gaily*]
Cp. Endicot f.
[*W m Walcot f.
W
to 10.
M^Read f.
[*M r Gott
to 9.
Geo
to 9.
to 10.
Peter woolf
f.
RicfRaym*
f.
to 9.
Sam Archer
to 10.
Ric? Brakenbury
to 10.
Wr
i
S.
Sharp
1
200
200
200
100
>>
Granted
00
50
40
^J
G
200
40.*]
300.
G.
75.
40.
50.
f.
f.
:
M'
to 10.
:
G.
f.
Jn° .
Peter Palfrey
John Balch f.
^
f.
f.
f.
[*Jn° Hornef.
Law Leech f.
Robt. Leech
[180.]
40.
75.*]
300. Gr. as
p
[14]
75.
100.*]
:
2035
2385
2015.
3
[* Samuel]
f
More
f.
Freeman.
50
to 9
�24
Ric? Norman
Robt Pease
John Pease
*
Perry
Joseph Pope
m r w m Pester
ffrancis
Jonathan Porter
John Pikworth
John Pride
Geo
Tho
Tho
Roaps
Reade
:
:
Roots
Josua Roots
Tho: Ringe
:
James Standish
James Smith
John Stone
John Shepley
mich Shaflen
Elias Stilman
:
widow Smith
John Symonds
ffrancis
mich
m
m
r
r
:
Skerry
Sallowes
Smith
John Thorndik
Abram Temple
20 acres
10 acres
20 acres
20
20
20
[20]
10
20 acres
20 acres
20
20
10
20 acres
20
30
20 acres
20 acres
20
150 acres
100 acres
next
mr Johnsons
460
Phillip Virrin
wm
Vinsent
Ric? Waters
r
Ricf Walker
m
10 acres
40 acres
Stukley Wescott
Abram Warren
Tho: Watson
Humphrey woodbury
20
10 acres
40 acres
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Buffum Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
24 Buffum Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Ernest F. Symonds
Book-keeper
Descendant of James Symonds
Renowned 17th-century furniture maker
Built in 1897 on land granted to John Symonds,
a master joiner from Norfolk, England
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1897, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
David Moffat
Language
A language of the resource
English
1897
2018
24
Buffum
ernest
History
House
James
John
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Symonds
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f8d6746f60c5b0a2489603ed5f3de282.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=gDALs%7E0-fT0m1e-Yj5WrB5oDMDXaI-hid6UVSxu94sx5IM-Qlkkc74WWUKl2HLPi9jE7FQ1fv4mbVUquPt38LlfGri76NNmnwQEW-tIm2H7Xj2KhC%7Ex7ggxm0ppgX8awfvzVKz7NggySl3%7EMFJ8vgQA2As0hd6x7NCGXoNyTQVP2aig2UWmPeOwY8dzC9k-mUXwW7fUdEEF6vDbSodU0XeODLPJKaSsjhbieGxdy3p589do4hiWs3mr4ag8iFHeHtHfK1gFOry9wleiEsK1DEWg4WnMMUubOmrm0pgreGbAJzs-M1m%7Er5dmS8Dm-YFh8T6zRMd7tusS0tIb-ULTVlg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e7ade1823916a0dcc38ee525c728d8a7
PDF Text
Text
19 North Street
Built as a
medical office for
Dr. John G. Treadwell
in 1852
Remodeled for
J. F. Appleton
in 1893
Research & writing by
Robert Booth
October 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
��������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
North Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
19 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built as a
medical office for
Dr. John G. Treadwell
in 1852
Remodeled for
J. F. Appleton
in 1893
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1852, 1893, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1852
1893
19
2019
Appleton
Dr.
G.
History
House
J. F.
John
Massachusetts
North
Salem
Street
Treadwell
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/ba869399f96a6a567a9099d9be880312.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=Ed6BOpd6oinkLYdbNqTBI2HtbuJB1ZQ50QQlqN6-w9rL2gEc2A6Vf-%7Efz9DR7jvvn78BcQ1FmC0cOcHE0B-evTn-zT4kLf2FlI5g3xoiTLAUhYXixa1AImXbovUO9mkCPagShwjbYpRVhbT4YrEGCwZsvqML353RX1EatiR-28UJay3-RJMf6FMX-hD3AbLpNKeqXhvXhtzfWhJvSAzMM9QRwjhxudyrQ4z-49rAElOvcTPLDTqd1w33i0FQ%7EKp2UFkqJLacvnnocct6mPhgUgVvCZtPAL5VL43JERIUGoxi4CkIiVPoXFL6XYjT2%7EVnEWYmADqOQywecMUlVC1BaQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
88831778ff90c933fa8de8024e7bf20d
PDF Text
Text
69 Summer Street
Built for
George W. Fuller
Retailer
and his wife
Harriet Guy Fuller
in 1914
Researched & written by
Robert Booth
September 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
���������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Summer Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
69 Summer Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
George W. Fuller
Retailer
and his wife
Harriet Guy Fuller
in 1914
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1914, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1914
2019
69
Fuller
George
Guy
Harriet
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Summer
W.
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/8458c1d2e898d80291bd4917e127b280.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=QyRuraSg-hV0VASdEgsMspIO-jShvwX-cmHdviyU6ZJ%7Ektc4wVeeswDXZIIgdxjv4%7EZI0JMpbZ6pTvpZ2YxEt%7E89z39DtRGXx8Rai6ZL5zLVU-Z9bA7FF2KljJsCqTHq9aQcVudvPGUaaCPDb2X1FqEgkisucz4hMAoTIlMn8mcuP2uWbOFldO66yB2bwjPGaHg-o45p1Z5VuA%7ENTgrfEyQVnf6rmIn%7E8aTLohM4Z2bPbH3zJdosReceN8NA15cUyPXaSftWmpI5vHy8wAt4zHJmmpdMGsMSbdSaWxoK7ponR9Tr6eBRUSABP7AhizeSuicNzadWELZto91t1XiX9Q__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
2af67162c89d776f9b9bc7128068ed54
PDF Text
Text
16 Cross Street
Built for
John F. Wells
Railroad Carpenter
and his wife
Maria L. Weeks
in 1876
Researched & written by
Robert Booth
September 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�������������������
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Cross Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
16 Cross Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
John F. Wells
Railroad Carpenter
and his wife
Maria L. Weeks
in 1876
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1876, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
16
1876
2019
Cross
F.
History
House
John
L.
Maria
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Weeks
Wells
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/aa325596247bc7348eac3e1d7ab04236.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=TVN162s5QyHFXG9AyCvo4Nh9kGeSRJPwz-RquFBSmwvxgtjqlmKYq0TwfA8QeZM-Dqpt%7EGs399PniKoz61YJf6VPxnioBoSEi2xCDdEHmO4BtEB4Z1bnlgEuE8eNNYGTPvEbit%7Eq%7E9wUWmjpx-cYsntYmpinVkIYL2dmYkPlRiooMsxu8cmwRovTTNNA3i9FvVHCChn-VZeIZ6vfIDVHoUFMX0exieN%7EadBlQlT38qSJ%7E-AXgzXkM2%7EihaC1Aosr5C59UaacOIn%7EP6e7Wh-rkfVazqlIkSfZC%7Etk2S5tdZdxC9O%7EMdia06ctFQn2Efy5d3ekLicvvgoGGug3M7PNIQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
cb177fb22ac738975582456bfe112d75
PDF Text
Text
23 Briggs Street
Built for
John Goodhue
Fisherman
and his wife
Anna Preston
c. 1740
Researched & written by
Robert Booth
October 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
������������������������������������������
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Briggs Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
23 Briggs Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
John Goodhue
Fisherman
and his wife
Anna Preston
c. 1740
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1740, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1740
2019
23
Anna
Briggs
circa
Goodhue
History
House
John
Massachusetts
Preston
Salem
Street
-
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PDF Text
Text
360 Essex Street
Built for
Capt. Emery S. Johnson
Shipmaster & Merchant
Spring 1853
Research & Writing Provided by
Amy E. Kellett
July 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Suggested Text for HSI Plaque:
Built for:
Capt. Emery S. Johnson
Shipmaster & Merchant
Spring 1853
Homestead of Dr. Alan P. Freedberg
Physician
1936-2007
Researcher’s Note:
The contents of this report are based on research done through the
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, the Salem City Directory
archives, Salem Street Books, Tax Assessment Records, Mystic Seaport
Salem Crew Lists, and other primary sources. (Where secondary sources
have been quoted or otherwise referred to, there are corresponding citation
footnotes and/or appendices.) This report is completed to the best of my
knowledge at the time of its publication. However, I reserve the right to
update, revise, and otherwise edit this report if and/or when new
information is discovered.
This report is published and copyrighted by Historic Salem, Inc.
July 2019
Amy E. Kellett
Researcher & Author
�A. Kellett
June 2019
1843-1853 Property History Prior to Building of 360 Essex Street
The earliest records in regards to the lot of land that is now 360 Essex Street in Salem,
Massachusetts date to June of 1843 when Salem merchant Emery Johnson purchased “a
certain piece of land with the buildings thereon situated in Salem […] on Essex Street” from
Salem industry mogul David Pingree for $5,000:
[…]bounded as follows, Viz., Southerly on Essex Street one hundred and
two feet, more or less, Easterly on land partly now or formerly of Mrs.
Sarah Clark to land of Joseph Winn to a corner, Northerly on land of said
Winn and R. S. Saunders as the fence now stands, to a corner at the fence
just northwest of the barn and thence running Southerly to Essex Street
and bounded Westerly by Ferguson’s land, together with all the privileges
and appurtenances thereto belonging.1
1851 Salem, Mass. Atlas | McIntyre
Area of 360 Essex Street, then owned by Emery Johnson
1
Property Deed from David Pingree to Emery Johnson; Southern Essex Registry of Deeds: Book 353 Page 34.
2
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Reference points alluded to in the 1843 deed are reflected in the 1851 Salem City
Atlas, published by Henry McIntyre, just six years after Emery Johnson’s purchase of the
property on Essex Street, (specifically the properties belonging to Winn and Ferguson).
Furthermore, the Atlas shows that there is no apparent building footprint at the current
location of 360 Essex Street which confirms that the Italianate home could not have been
standing before 1851.
In 1845, just two years after the purchase of the property that is now 360 and 362
Essex Street from David Pingree, Emery Johnson passed away from scurvy at the age of 54
on the 18th of January, leaving his wife a widow, Sarah (Saunders) Johnson, and their three
surviving sons, Emery Saunders Johnson, Charles Augustus Johnson, and Horace Palmer
Johnson, without a father.
Emery S. Johnson became the man of the house at seventeen and went to work with
his two younger brothers: Charles, aged fifteen in 1845, and Horace, who was just twelve.
Benefiting from their father’s business connections with Salem’s maritime elite, the Johnson
boys were employed at sea working for David Pingree and other Salem ship owners in the
perilous trade with South America, Africa, and Asia.
Tragedy struck the Johnson family again in 1851 when the two youngest surviving
sons of Emery and Sarah Johnson both perished while on dangerous trade voyages between
the shores of Zanzibar and Salem. Charles Augustus Johnson was just 21 years old when he
lost his life in Zanzibar North, Tanzania in May of 1851, then less than 3 months later the
youngest Johnson brother, Horace, was lost at sea in August at the age of nineteen.
Now the only surviving child of Emery and Sarah S. Johnson, Captain Emery S.
Johnson, then aged twenty-five, had already retired from his seafaring career before the age
of 25. Having inherited a sufficient amount of capital from his father’s estate and no remaining
siblings to divide the property, he also purchased the buildings and land at 360 and 362 Essex
Street from his father’s estate, and then leased the home at 362 Essex back to his mother,
Susan Johnson, who remained in the house for the next few decades until her passing in 1880.
3
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Spring 1853 Italianate Revival Home Built at 360 Essex Street for Capt. Emery S. Johnson
Image Source: Tolles, c.1982
The physical history of the home at 360 Essex Street has been well documented by
architectural historians of the past, including Bryant F. Tolles’ 1982 illustrated guide entitled
‘Architecture in Salem’:
The Emery S. Johnson house is situated above the level of Essex Street on
sloping terrain and is one of Salem’s finest and most imposing Italian
Revival-style residences. […] Familiar Italian Revival features include
corner quoins, rusticated fade boarding, carved and paired cornice brackets
and medallions, segmental-arch dormers, thin modeled chimneys, a front
window bay (second story), heavy molded window frames, and flat molded
pediment caps above the first floor windows, which, judging by old
photographs, appear to have been 20th-century additions.2
2
Tolles, Bryant F. & Carolyn K.; Architecture in Salem: An Illustrated Guide, 1983, p.165.
4
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On the 28th of August 1973, the Emery S. Johnson House was added to the National
Register, and then added to the Local Historic District in March of 1981. The Massachusetts
Historical Commission also completed its own physical and historical evaluation of the
property at 360 Essex Street:
The 2 1/2-story, hip-roofed dwelling displays a symmetrical facade with
the two end bays bowed and flanking a central entrance porch. The facade
of the Italianate style dwelling is sheathed in wood boards scored to
resemble stone with quoins at the corners; the side elevations are
clapboarded. The projecting eaves are adorned by paired brackets and
dentils. Sheltering the central entrance is a single-story entrance porch
supported by octagonal posts. The flat roof is decorated by curved consoles.
The four-panel door is flanked by partial sidelights and a full transom
filled with stained glass in a foliate pattern. To each side of the entrance is
an elongated 6/6 window with footed sills and heavy molded window
frames. The entablature lintel is supported by two brackets with
modillions [sic] between. The second floor windows consist of smaller 6/6
windows with molded surrounds, footed sills and a simpler entablature
with two brackets. A single-story, three-sided bay window projects from the
west elevation. Resting above the entrance is a rectangular bay window
outlined by simple pilasters with horizontal, recessed panels below the
windows. The hip roof is punctuated by two segmentally arched dormers
with dentils. The balustrade has simple posts with railings in an " x "
pattern. Two interior chimneys punctuate the asphalt-shingled roof. 3
These reports do little to explain the social and familial history of the building, which
began with Emery S. Johnson in 1853. Johnson hired Salem architects William H. Emmerton
and Joseph C. Foster to design an Italianate home to be a statement of the Johnson family’s
relatively new prominence in one of the Nation’s oldest cities. The road to 360 Essex Street
had certainly not been an easy one for Emery Saunders Johnson, but one whose richness
extended beyond his material wealth.
3
Mausolf, Lisa; Researcher. Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey, SAL-1561, 1997.
5
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June 2019
Emery S. Johnson & Family
Emery Saunders Johnson was born in Salem on the 7th of May, 1827, the first child to
Captain Emery Johnson (originally of Warren, Mass.) and Salem native Sarah Saunders
(Johnson). The elder Emery Johnson had migrated to Salem from Western Massachusetts
after the death of his father, Eli, and began working in the flourishing shipyards of Salem’s
waterfront, eventually working his way into the inner circles of Salem’s wealthiest traders and
manufacturers.
In April, 1817, Capt. Emery Johnson was co-owner (with James C. King) and master
of the 126-ton Salem brig Roscius and in April, 1819, Captain Johnson was owner and master
of the Salem 114-ton schooner Madeira Packet. In the 1820s he came ashore and became a
partner in the merchant house of the wealthy Rogers Brothers — merchant shippers who
traded overseas to Madagascar and other markets. Together they owned the ship
Perseverance, the ship Clay, and the brig Talent. In the 1830s Captain Johnson joined David
Pingree in ownership of the 240-ton bark Eliza, the large new ship Thomas Perkins (596 tons
burthen) and the 374-ton bark Cynthia, of which, in 1838, Captain Johnson went back to sea
as commander.
By the time his oldest son and namesake came of apprenticeship age, Captain Emery
Johnson, Sr. was able to procure work for his son with David Pingree, at the time Salem’s
wealthiest citizen. Pingree made his fortune in trading cloth, made by the Naumkeag Steam
Cotton Co. in the Point neighborhood of Salem, and bartered throughout markets of the
world, most especially with Zanzibar in Eastern Africa. After the death of Emery Sr., the
three surviving Johnson boys all went to work at sea for the Shipmasters of Salem — only
one would survive to the age of twenty-two.
6
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360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
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Rigging Pattern of a 19th C. American Bark (Barque)
The type of ship that two of the Johnson boys would lose their lives aboard.
Charles Augustus Johnson boarded the Brig Eagle destined for Para, Brazil on the 19th of
September in 1848 and returned home some months later, undoubtedly with stories of
adventure abroad. He sailed again at the age of twenty-one on September 13th in 1850 on the
Bark4 named Lewis with Zanzibar as the cargo’s destination. This voyage was likely shipping
cotton cloth manufactured at the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company, then the largest steampowered manufacturing operation in the world. Sadly, during the return trip from Zanzibar,
the young Charles A. Johnson lost his life on the 8th of May, 1851.5
bark (n.) : (French origin: barque) a sailing ship of three or more masts with the aftmost mast fore-and-aft
rigged and the others square-rigged
4
5
Source: Mystic Seaport Archives, Boston, Mass. — Salem Crew Lists, 1799-1879.
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In December of 1848, a seventeen-year-old man named Horace Palmer Johnson, the
youngest surviving son of Emery (Sr.) and Sarah, embarked on his first voyage. La Plata, a
263 ton Boston Bark built in 1839, was loaded with commodities and bound for Western
Africa, and young Horace aboard.6 The trip would have taken anywhere between three to six
months to return. Available records do not indicate he ever sailed to return again; instead, the
only available records show that during the return trip from Zanzibar in August of 1851, 19year-old Horace suffered the same fate as his older brother, Charles, and was lost at sea.
An American Brig
The only type of ship sailed by
Emery S. Johnson in his short but
successful seafaring career.
(Image: The Seaman’s Friend, R.H.
Dana, Jr., 13th Ed., 1873.)
Several months before either of his younger brothers first ventured onto a shipping
vessel bound for exotic lands, Emery S. Johnson had his first voyage as Second Mate aboard
the Brig Garland, which departed the 19th of January in 1848, and safely returned to Salem
after delivering and exchanging commodities and cargo in Para. Apparently proving himself,
then 21-year-old Emery S. Johnson is listed serving as First Mate on his second voyage to
Brazil, this time on the Brig Russell bound for Rio Grande and a ‘Market’. The Russell left
Salem’s shores on December 19, 1848, while Emery’s brother Charles was on his first voyage
aboard the Eagle, and the same month that young Horace embarked towards Zanzibar
aboard La Plata.
6
Ibid.
8
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360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
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After only two successful voyages, Emery S. Johnson was promoted to Shipmaster by
the time the Brig he captained, named Draco, set sail for Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil in May
of 1849. Capt. E. S. Johnson went on to captain the Draco once again to Rio Grande,
departing on the 29th of November 1849, and returning by spring 1850. 7 By this point he had
amassed fortune from his time as a shipmaster, and by the sizable wealth left to the Johnson
family by Emery Sr.’s will. Thus, Emery S. Johnson was able to retire from seafaring after
only two voyages as captain of the merchant brig Draco — he was 22 years old.
During the interim between voyages, Emery S. Johnson met and courted Ann
Elizabeth Creamer, and upon his final return trip from sea the two were wed in June of 1850.
The newlyweds resided in an apartment at 81 Essex Street, at the time the Law Offices of
Stephen P. Webb, located in the historic Capt. J. Hodges House. Tragedy plagued the
Johnson family the following year in 1851, when both of Emery’s younger brothers, Charles
and Horace, died at sea in May and August of the same year. After the passing of his brothers,
Emery S. Johnson became the sole male heir to his father’s fortune, and in October 1852 he
officially purchased the property at 360 and 362 Essex Street from Emery Sr.’s Estate:
[…]executor of the last will and testament of Emery Johnson, late of
said Salem, deceased […] and with the written consent of the widow of
said Emery, as required in said will, in consideration of five thousand
dollars paid me in my said capacity, by Emery S. Johnson of said Salem,
ship master […] being the same estate which was conveyed to said
Emery Johnson by David Pingree, by his deed dated 12th June 1843, and
recorded Book 353, leaf 34.8
WorldCat.org Source: Peabody Essex Museum Archives, Draco (Brig) Logbook, 1849-1850.
Summary: The logbook of the brig Draco details two voyages between Boston, Rio Grande, Brazil and Salem
(May 1849 to Mar. 1850). Home port was [Salem, Mass.]; owners were [the Kimball Brothers]; master was
[E.S. Johnson]; log keeper was Emery S. Johnson. It is an incomplete daily log that describes wind, weather,
location, and sightings of ships. Bound with the ship Ann Maria, the brig Garland, and an unknown vessel.
7
Property Deed from Estate of Emery Johnson to Emery Saunders Johnson; Southern Essex Registry of
Deeds: Book 470 Page 186.
8
9
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Image Source: Library of Congress, c.1933
81 Essex Street | Salem, Mass. | Historic Capt. John Hodges House
Residence of newlyweds Emery S. & Sarah Johnson, from 1851 to 1853, while their new home was
being designed and constructed just blocks down the same road at 360 Essex Street.
Emery S. Johnson mortgaged the property at 360 Essex, leased his father’s home at 362
Essex back to his mother, Susan (Saunders) Johnson, and hired local Salem architects
William H. Emmerton (1828-1873) and Joseph C. Foster (1829-1906) to design and contract
the construction of an Italianate home — a statement that Capt. Johnson and family, although
not a Salem native, had established their place in Salem’s history.
10
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Building contract draft by W. H. Emmerton & J. C. Foster with Emery S. Saunders for Italianate
dwelling at 360 Essex Street, Salem, Mass. | Page 1
11
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Building contract draft by W. H. Emmerton & J. C. Foster with Emery S. Saunders for Italianate
dwelling at 360 Essex Street, Salem, Mass. | Page 2
12
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Floor Plan of 360 Essex Street — Commissioned by E. S. Johnson — First Floor
Wm. H. Emmerton & J. C. Foster, c.1852
13
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Floor Plan of 360 Essex Street — Commissioned by E. S. Johnson — Basement Level
Wm. H. Emmerton & J. C. Foster, c. 1852
14
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360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Historic Salem, Inc.
1853-1886 Emery S. Johnson & Family at 360 Essex Street
By the time the Italianate home was completed at 360 Essex Street for Captain Emery
S. Johnson, he had entered into the second half of the 19th century in his early twenties, flush
with cash and ready to move on to the next chapter of his career. The opportunity arose in the
form of Emery’s new father-in-law, Benjamin Creamer, with whom he established Johnson &
Creamer and began their own mercantile shipping business moving commodities of all types
throughout the world.
1855 Massachusetts State Census | Essex Co., Salem | Ward 4
The even side of Essex Street, showing the Emery S. Johnson household as well as his mother, Sarah
S. Johnson, at 360 & 362 Essex (respectively), neighbored on either side by jeweller Benjamin
Shreeve (364 Essex), and Richard & William R. Wheatland (358 Essex), gentlemen farmers.
According to the 1855 Massachusetts State Census, Emery S. Johnson and his wife,
Annie E. Johnson, both aged twenty-seven, had settled into their beautiful new home at 360
Essex Street. (Just across the street at 361 Essex lived Benjamin and Anne Creamer, Annie’s
parents, Emery S. Johnson’s in-laws.) The couple welcomed their first child the same year on
the 3rd of February; just four years after the passing of both Emery’s younger brothers in
1851, the new Mr. and Mrs. Johnson decided to name their first child for the lost Johnson
boys — Charles Horace Johnson. Two years later, another child was born to Emery and Ann
E. Johnson on the 15th of September in 1857, Emery Walter Johnson, who completed this
generation of the Johnson family.
15
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Regrettably, tragedy followed the Johnson name, and Charles Horace suffered a
similar fate than that of his departed uncles; at the age of seventeen, in early December of
1872, Charles H. Johnson suffered an accidental shooting through his hand, which he initially
survived. As was commonly the case before the advent of antibiotics and penicillin, young
Charles developed a bacterial infection, tetanus, and passed away on the 17th of December.
His premature death was reported the following day in the daily Boston Globe newspaper on
December 18, 1872:
Sad Result — In the Globe of the 9th was mentioned a case of accidental
shooting by the premature discharge of a patent cartridge with which Mr.
Charles Johnson was loading a gun. Young Johnson’s hand was
considerably shattered by the explosion, but the wound was dressed and, up
to Sunday morning, seemed to be doing well, but at that time severe lockjaw set in, and, despite the strenuous efforts of the most skilled doctors,
resulted in his death yesterday afternoon. Young Johnson was about 18
years old, and was the son of Emery S. Johnson, Esq. He was a young
man of marked abilities, and was a member of the senior class of the
Salem classical and high school, and was intending to enter Harvard
College. His early death, just at the beginning of manhood, will be a cause
of deep mourning to a large circle of friends and acquaintances.
Fifteen-year-old Emery Walter Johnson suddenly found himself an only child in a
family with a legacy to maintain in Salem. Named for his wildly successful grandfather and
father young Emery undoubtedly benefitted from his family’s material wealth. His life’s work
shows that he did not take this responsibility lightly and worked throughout his life to live up
to the magnitude of his name. After the passing of his older brother, Emery W. Johnson
attended Phillips Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire9, then returned to Salem after
graduating in 1874 at the age of seventeen. In Salem’s 1880 Directory he is noted as having
been ‘removed to Colorado’ — confirmed by an 1890 U.S. Passport Application submitted by
Emery Walter Johnson, which describes his residence as being located at 59 Symes Block in
Denver, Colorado (still standing today).
9
Catalogue of the officers and students of Phillips Exeter Academy, 1783-1883.
16
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360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
1890 U.S. Passport Application of Emery Walter Johnson
17
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While Charles H. and Emery W. Johnson grew through the years, the elder Emery S.
Johnson and his wife, Ann E. (Creamer) Johnson, remained living at 360 Essex Street.
Emery S. managed a successful international shipping business with his in-laws, the Creamer
family.
1852 Invoice of Johnson & Creamer regarding cargo carried by the Ship Golden, one of two
merchant vessels owned by Johnson & Creamer, the other being named ‘Winged Arrow’
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Captain Emery S. Johnson resided in the house until his death in December of 1886,
almost exactly fourteen years to the day that his son, Charles Horace Johnson, suffered an
accidental shooting and subsequent fatal infection. Upon his passing, the Salem Gazette
published a paragraph (albeit with a typo in the decedents address) entitled ‘Another
Shipmaster Gone’:
Capt. Emery S Johnson Passes Away at His Residence
Captain Emery S. Johnson, another of Salem’s shipmasters, died
yesterday afternoon at his residence, No. 380 Essex street, of rheumatism
of the heart. His illness was quite brief. Capt. Johnson was brought up in
the counting room of David Pingree, and very early in life became a
seaman, working his way up until he became a master mariner, and was
engaged in the East India carrying trade. As early in life as 23 years old,
he retired from active business pursuits, having a large income left him by
his father. He was a great traveller and spent several years in the other
countries, visiting all points of interest. He leaves a widow and one son, the
latter being Walter P. Johnson, a lawyer, now engaged in business in
Denver, Col. He was 58 years old. Although he had been quite ill, his death
was somewhat unexpected. 10
Following the passing of Emery S.
Johnson, Ann E. (Creamer) Johnson relocated
to Summer Street until just before her death in
1899, while living at 362 Essex Street, as
reported in the Salem Evening News on the
22nd of July, 1899:
Mrs. Annie E. [Johnson] widow of Capt.
Emery S. Johnson, died at her residence, 362
Essex street, this morning. She was a native
of Salem, a daughter of the late Benjamin
Creamer, and in her 75th year. She leaves a
son, Walter Johnson.
10
1888 Salem City Directory
Ann, identified as the widow of Emery S.
Johnson—who is noted as having passed on the
13th of December, 1886.
Salem Gazette, December 14, 1886.
19
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1886 360 Essex Street becomes a rental property owned by Emery W. Johnson
The Captain’s estate transferred ownership to the Johnson’s only surviving son, Emery
Walter, who had yet to return to Salem from his time in Denver, Colorado. After the passing
of his mother in 1899, Emery W. Johnson returned to Salem and moved into 362 Essex Street
and maintained the neighboring property at 360 Essex as a rental property occupied by a
number of tenants. (For a complete timeline of residents at 360 Essex Street, see appendix
section.)
1911 Salem City Atlas | 360 Essex Street
Noted at both 360 and 362 Essex Street is E. Walter Johnson
The first occupant of 360 Essex Street after Emery S. Johnson’s passing, according to
contemporaneous Salem City Directories, was Andrew W. Dodd and family (including wife,
Ella (Ashton) Dodd, James W. Dodd, and Andrew W. Dodd, Jr.. The Dodd family were
20
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Historic Salem, Inc.
tenants of 360 Essex Street from 1890 until Andrew W. Dodd Sr.’s passing in 1909. The
Dodd’s hailed from Gloucester, Mass. where the family owned a Glue & Oil Manufacturing
business, which continued to operate and prosper while the Dodd’s lived on Essex Street in
Salem.
After the passing of A. W. Dodd, Sr. in April of 1909, the property at 360 Essex was
occupied by famed airplane engineer, Greeley Stevenson Curtis, Jr., one of the pioneers of
American Aeronautical Engineering. Along with N. Starling Burgess, Greeley S. Curtis
established the Aero Club of America and went on to engineer the first sea-plane ever created.
25 June 1914 | Salem, Mass.
The Great Salem Fire raged for more than thirteen hours, destroying an entire third of the City.
On June 25, 1914, a fire started at the Korn Leather Factory, one of Salem’s fire-prone
wooden tanneries. This fire soon consumed the building and raced out of control, for the west
wind was high and the season had been dry. The next building caught fire, and the next, and
out of Blubber Hollow the fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping
out the houses of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping
21
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through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets.
Men and machines
could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed the
neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of Lafayette Street itself,
and raged onward into the tenement district.
Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire
crews from many towns and cities, the fire overwhelmed everything in its path: it smashed
into the large factory buildings of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company (Congress Street),
which exploded in an inferno; and it rolled down Lafayette Street and across the water to
Derby Street. There, just beyond Union Street, after a 13-hour rampage, the monster died,
having consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses, 41 factories, and leaving three dead and thousands
homeless.
The home at 360 Essex was thankfully spared, but in the aftermath of the Great Salem
Fire, Mr. Curtis decided it was time to move on from the City and his home at 360 Essex
Street, and owner Emery W. Johnson rented the property to other tenants. In 1917 Charles
E. Morgan took up residence at the Johnson property, along with his wife, Daisy M. Morgan,
as well as John Morgan Jr. and his wife, Rose. The Morgan family owned and operated a
market gardening business as well as the Alaska Fur Company at 264 Cabot Street, and
remained living at 360 Essex Street through 1926.
1914 Advertisement for ‘New
Fall Velvet Hats,
manufactured by the Alaska
Fur Co., owned by the
Morgan Family who lived at
360 Essex Street from
1917-1926
New Castle Herald (New Castle,
Pennsylvania) 4 Sept. 1914
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1927 Estate of Emery W. Johnson Sells 360 Essex Street to Susan L. Brown
Upon returning from Colorado in the first year of the 20th century, Emery Walter
Johnson and his wife, Annie E. (Cloutman) Johnson resided at 362 Essex Street while
managing 360 Essex as a rental property. According to the 1920 Salem Directory, E. Walter
Johnson had moved to Winchendon, along the northern border of Massachusetts, in an effort
to regain his failing health — on the 29th of July in 1921, at the age of 63, Emery Walter
Johnson passed away suddenly at his home in Winchendon. As a member of the Fraternal
Organization, the Freemasons, his life and passing was diligently memorialized in
contemporaneous Masonic Records:
In Winslow Lewis Lodge
October 14th, 1921
Once more, one of our older members has gone to meet the
Supreme Architect of the Universe, and it is our sad duty to record the
passing of Brother Emery Walter Johnson, a member of our Lodge for over
twenty-eight years.
Brother Johnson was born in Salem, Mass., on September 15th,
1857 and after graduating from the High School, entered Phillips Exeter
Academy. After completing his studies there he went to Denver, Colo.,
where he entered a law office and studied a year or more. He then returned
East, married and went to Europe where he and his wife spent many years
in travel. When in Paris, during the Exposition of 1900, he was appointed
by the Paris Exposition Commission as a member of the Jury.
After his return to America, he went back to his old home in
Salem to live. Owing to failing health, a few years later, he bought a home
in the country, to take up the simple life and to regain his health. Although
greatly improved, he never fully recovered from a serious illness he had
while living in Paris. On July 29th, he passed suddenly away in his home
in Winchendon, Mass. His body was taken to Salem for interment in the
Harmony Grove Cemetery.
He received his degrees in Masonry in Union Lodge, Denver, Colo.,
where he was initiated May 18, 1888, passed June 20, 1888 and raised to
the sublime degree of Master Mason, July 25, 1888. He became a member
of our Lodge on February 24, 1893. While Brother Johnson was not a
23
�A. Kellett
June 2019
frequent visitor to the Lodge, due to failing health and therefore was not
well known by our younger members, his cheerful disposition and genial
good fellowship made him a host of friends. All who knew him well feel that
they have suffered a personal loss by his unexpected death.
Be it therefore resolved that we, the members of Winslow Lewis
Lodge, realizing our loss, deeply sympathize with his widow, in the keen
sorrow of her earthly separation.
Be it further resolved that these resolutions be spread upon the
records, and that a copy of this Memorial be engrossed and sent to the
widow of our deceased brother.
Wor. Daniel J. Strain
Wor. Philip T. Nickerson
Wor. Thomas O. Paige
Obituary of Emery Walter Johnson
Salem Evening News
30 July 1921
Emery Walter’s will names Mrs. Annie C. Johnson as the beneficiary, and she
continued to rent the house at 360 Essex Street to the Morgan family until the property was
sold in 1927 to Susan L. Brown and her husband, Hulings C. Brown.
24
�Historic Property Report
360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Historic Salem, Inc.
1927 Property Deed from Annie Johnson to Susan L. Brown
Southern Essex Registry of Deeds: Book 2715 Page 409
1927-1936 Hulings C. & Susan L. Brown reside at 360 Essex Street
Originally from Germantown, Pennsylvania, Hulings Coperthwatte Brown built a
career as a publisher with Little, Brown & Co. — established in 1837 by Charles Coffin Little
and partner, James Brown — early publications include ‘Little Women’ by Louisa May
Alcott, poetry by Emily Dickinson, the first U.S. iteration of the ‘Encyclopedia Britannica’,
and John Bartlett’s ‘Familiar Quotations’.
At the age of 25, Hulings met and courted Salem native, Susan L. Waters, daughter of
William C. & Susan Waters — the two were wed on the 4th of June, 1886. By the time
Hulings and Susan Brown purchased the home at 360 Essex Street from the Johnson family,
both were in their mid-sixties, ready to enjoy a comfortable retirement in the city of Salem.
Five years after their purchase of the home, Hulings C. Brown passed away in 1933, leaving a
sizable estate, as reported by the Boston Globe on May 9th, 1933:
25
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June 2019
Hulings C. Brown Leaves Estate of $250,000
Salem, May 8 — The will of Hulings C. Brown of Salem,
disposing of an estate estimated at $250,000, was allowed in the Essex
County Probate Court today. The property was left to his wife and
relatives.
The Salem Country Club, of which Mr Brown was a prominent
member, was given 16 paintings now in the Brown home, and the Salem
Billiard Club a set of 16 books. Robert E. Gardiner of Concord and Robert
R. Duncan of Cambridge are named as executors. Mr Brown was a
member of the firm of Little, Brown & Co., Boston book publishers.
Mrs. Brown, now a widow, remained living at 360 Essex Street until her own passing
1935-6, at which point the property was sold to Alan P. Freedberg from Susan L. Brown’s
estate:
1936 Property Deed from Estate of Susan L. Brown to Alan P. Freedberg
Southern Essex Registry of Deeds: Book 3093 Page 116
26
�Historic Property Report
360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Historic Salem, Inc.
1936-2007 Dr. Alan P. Freedberg & Family reside at 360 Essex Street
Solomon and Rose Freedberg arrived on the shores of Boston in 1908 — Rose was
expecting, and they knew that their homeland would be no place to raise their child; for
Russian Jews, the socio-political tensions in Eastern Europe were rising to a fever pitch, with
increasing anti-Semitism and more frequent pogroms throughout the region. Rose “Rosie”
Freedberg was 23 years old when she joined her husband, 20 year-old Solomon H. Freedberg,
in building a life in an entirely new world; by 1912 the couple settled into a home at 28 Ward
Street (and later 8 Cliff), Salem along with family members Hyman, a peddler, and Simon, a
meat cutter. Solomon went to work in Salem’s first kosher butchery, established by the
Freedberg family — the Salem Kosher Meat Co. at 26 1/2 Peabody Street.
Solomon and Rosie Freedberg welcomed their first child, a son named Alan Phillips
Freedberg, on July 30th, 1909 — as new arrivals to a centuries-old city, the couple named
their first-born for one of Salem’s legendary maritime families, the Phillips (the descendants of
whom lived in the same neighborhood at 34 Chestnut Street). Over the next eleven years, the
family would add three more Freedberg children: Abraham in 1910, Edith in 1915, and Ruth
in 1920.
The 1931 Hub | Boston University College of Liberal Arts Yearbook
22 year-old Alan P. Freedberg attended Boston University while residing at 8 Cliff Street, five years
before his purchase of 360 Essex Street.
27
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June 2019
The Freedberg family worked tirelessly to provide a better life to their children than
the previous generation, and were successful in doing so — their firstborn, Alan, attended
Boston University College of Liberal Arts where he majored in Biology and minored in
Chemistry, and then attended medical school, earning his degree from the University of
Chicago in 1934. Upon his return to Salem, Alan P. Freedberg established a successful
practice serving the City as a physician and surgeon for the remainder of the 20th century.
Upon purchasing the property at 360 Essex Street from the Estate of Susan L. Brown
in 1936, Alan insisted that his aging parents also occupy the grandiose building on upper
Essex Street, while Solomon continued to work in the real estate industry. One can only
imagine the difference between the world that Solomon and Rosie Freedberg experienced and
fled as a young Jewish couple in turn-of-the-century Russia, and the contrast with life in
Salem at 360 Essex Street. It is encouraging for humanity to see an instance where former
refugees are able to attain a better life for themselves and their families, and even more the
gratitude and responsibility their son, Alan, was able to take on for them later in life.
1944 Salem City Directory | Alan P. Freedberg
When Kamikaze pilots attacked Pearl Harbor in Hawaii on December 7, 1941, Alan
Phillips Freedberg decided his skills as a physician and surgeon would best be put to use in
the United States Armed Forces — he joined up at the age of 32, eventually earning the rank
of 1st Lieutenant in the US Army for the duration of World War II. Upon his return, he met
and married Charlotte Rosenberg in 1945, at which point the couple settled into their home at
360 Essex Street, where they would remain for the rest of their lives.
28
�Historic Property Report
360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Historic Salem, Inc.
On the 2nd of May in 1957 Solomon Freedberg passed away at the age of 71. Rosie
Freedberg continued to reside with her son, Alan, at 360 Essex Street until her own passing a
decade later on June 24, 1967. Both Solomon and Rosie undoubtedly enjoyed the sunset
years of their lives spent watching their grandsons grow.
Obituary of Solomon H.
Freedberg
Salem Evening News
30 July 1921
In December of 1995, Dr. Alan P. Freedberg (aged 85) and his wife, Charlotte (75),
officially declared the home at 360 Essex as their Homestead.11 Both would live to see the new
century, as the Doctor passed away in January of 2007 at the age of 97, and his beloved wife
Charlotte a decade later in 2018. Alan, his mother Rose, and father Solomon are all interred at
the Sons of Jacob Cemetery in Danvers, Massachusetts.
Headstone of Alan Phillips
Freedberg, M.D.
Sons of Jacob Cemetery
Danvers, Mass.
The Homestead Act is Massachusetts General Laws (MGL) Chapter 188. The homestead estate is designed to
protect home ownership from execution and forced sale, so long as the owner or covered family member
occupies or intends to occupy the property as his or her principal place of residence.
11
29
�A. Kellett
June 2019
1995 Elderly Person’s Declaration of Homestead | Alan P. Freedberg & Charlotte L. Freedberg
30
�Historic Property Report
360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Historic Salem, Inc.
Appendix — Salem City Directory Timeline of Occupants at 360 Essex Street 1855-1964
[brackets indicate researcher notes]
Name
Year
Spouse
Notes
Emery S Johnson
1855
[Mrs. Emery Johnson @ 362 Essex]
Emery S Johnson
1857
Captain
Emery S Johnson
1864
House 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1869
House 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1872
House 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1876
House 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1878
House 360 Essex
E Walter Johnson
1879
B 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1879
h 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1880
House 360 Essex
E Walter Johnson
1881
Boards 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1881
House 360 Essex
E Walter Johnson
1882
Boards 360 Essex
Emery S Johnson
1882
House 360 Essex
Andrew Y Dodd
1890
Oil Manufacturer ((Gloucester) h. 360
Essex
John H Sutton
1893
[no notes]
Andrew W Dodd
1897
Glue Manufr. (Gloucester), h. 360 Essex
Andrew W Dodd
1901
Glue Manufr. (Gloucester), h. 360 Essex
Andrew Dodd
1904
Student, b. 360 Essex
31
�A. Kellett
June 2019
Name
Year
Spouse
Notes
Andrew W Dodd
1904
Glue & Oil Mnfr. (Gloucester), h. 360
Essex
Andrew W Dodd
1905
Glue & Oil Mnfr. (Gloucester), h. 360
Essex
Andrew W Dodd Jr
1905
Student, b. 360 Essex
James W Dodd
1905
Student, b. 360 Essex
Alfred J Smith
1906
Carpenter, b. 360 Essex
Andrew W Dodd
1906
Glue & Oil Mnfr. (Gloucester), h. 360
Essex
Andrew W Dodd Jr
1906
Glue mfr. (Gloucester), b. 360 Essex
Benjamin F Morgan
1906
(Morgan Bros.), 453 and r. 360 Esse, b.
451 do.
Charles E Morgan
1906
(Morgan Bros.), 453 and r. 360 Essex, h.
360 do.
James W Dodd
1906
Student, b. 360 Essex
John F Morgan Jr
1906
453 and r. 360 Essex, b. 360 do.
Charles E Morgan
1907
(Morgan Bros.), 453 and r. 360 Essex, h.
360 do.
John F Morgan Jr
1907
(Morgan Bros.), 453 and r. 360 Essex, h.
360 do.
Andrew W Dodd
1908
(A. W. Dodd Co. Gloucester), h. 360 Essex
Andrew W Dodd Jr
1908
(A. W. Dodd Co. Gloucester), b. 360 Essex
Charles E Morgan
1908
(Morgan Bros.), 453 and r. 360 Essex, h.
360 do.
John F Morgan Jr
1908
(Morgan Bros.), 453 and r. 360 Essex, b.
360 do.
John F Tuttle
1908
Farm Hand, b. 360 Essex
32
�Historic Property Report
Name
360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Year
Spouse
Historic Salem, Inc.
Notes
George F Watson
1909
Farm Hand, b. 360 Essex
John F Morgan Jr
1909
(Morgan Bros.), 451 and r. 360 Essex, b.
360 do.
John F Morgan Jr
1910
(Morgan Bros.), 451 and r. 360 Essex, b.
360 do.
Greeley S. Curtis
1911
(Burgess & Curtis, Mhd.), h. 360 Essex
John F Morgan Jr
1911
(Morgan Bros.), 451 and r. 360 Essex, b.
360 do.
Charles A Morgan
1912
(Morgan Bros.), 453 and r. 360 Essex, h.
360 do.
John F Morgan Jr
1912
(Morgan Bros.), 451 and r. 360 Essex, b.
360 do.
Cornelius Driscoll
1914
Gardner h. 21 Orne sq (360 Essex) [staff]
Greeley S Curtis
1914
(Burgess Co & Curtis Mhd) h. 360 Essex
Charlotte F Chase
1915
b. 360 Essex
Clara K Hammond
1915
h. 360 Essex
Ethel Hammond
1915
Teacher Phillips school h. 360 Esses
Charlotte A Chase
1916
Charlotte F Chase
1916
b. 360 Essex
Guy Smith
1916
Farm Hand, b. 360 Essex
Charles E Morgan
1917
(Morgan Bros) 83 Standley and r 360
Essex h 360 do
Guy F Smith
1917
Farm Hand, b. 360 Essex
John F Morgan Jr
1917
George Chase
[widow of George] h. 360 Essex
(Morgan Bros) r 360 Essex and Standley h
do
Rose Morgan
33
�A. Kellett
June 2019
Name
Year
Spouse
Notes
John F Morgan Jr
1917
Rose Morgan
(Morgan Bros) r 360 Essex and Standley h
do
John L Wishart
1917
Margaret P Wishart
Chauffer h off 360 Essex
John L Wishart
1917
Margaret P Wishart
Chauffer h off 360 Essex
Walter Drewey
1917
Alice Drewey
Gardner [@] A C Lawrence h off 360
Essex
Walter Drewey
1917
Alice Drewey
Gardner [@] A C Lawrence h off 360
Essex
Charles E Morgan
1918
Daisy M Morgan
(Morgan Bros) 83 Standley h 360 Essex
Guy F Smith
1918
Farm Hand, b. 360 Essex
Charles E Morgan
1920
Daisy M Morgan
(Morgan Bros) 83 Standley h 360 Essex
Charles E Morgan
1922
Daisy M Morgan
Mkt gardner also (Alaska Fur Co) 264
Cabot h 360 Essex
Charles E Morgan
1922
Daisy M Morgan
Mkt gardner also (Alaska Fur Co) 264
Cabot h 360 Essex
Henry K Roberts
1922
Florence L Roberts
(Star Refining Co B[oston]) h 360 Essex
Henry K Roberts Jr
1922
Appren[tice] b 360 Essex
Charles E Morgan
1924
[City Directory] Market Gardner @ 360
Essex
Charles E Morgan
1924
Daisy M Morgan
Mkt gardner also (Alaska Fur Co) 264
Cabot h 360 Essex
Charles E Morgan
1924
Daisy M Morgan
Mkt gardner also (Alaska Fur Co) 264
Cabot h 360 Essex
Daisy M Morgan
1924
Charles E Morgan
Finisher 264 Cabot h 360 Essex
John E Morgan
1924
Opr [operator] 264 Cabot b 360 Essex
Mildred E Morgan
1924
Clk [clerk] b 360 Essex
34
�Historic Property Report
Name
360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Year
Spouse
Historic Salem, Inc.
Notes
Mildred L Morgan
1924
Mgr [manager] 264 Cabot b 360 Essex
Carrie A Palmer
1926
John E Morgan
1926
Opr [operator] 264 Cabot b 360 Essex
Mrs Daisy M Morgan
1926
Finisher 285d Cabot h 360 Essex
George Northend
1929
Chauf[fer] b 360 Essex
Margaret McDonald
1929
Maid b 360 Essex
Nora Horan
1929
Cook b 360 Essex
Mary Horan
1930
Opr [operator] 264 Cabot b 360 Essex
Hulings C Brown
1931
Susan L Brown
Ret[ired] h360 Essex
Hulings C Brown
1931
Susan L Brown
Ret[ired] h360 Essex
Mabel McGee
1931
Hulings C Brown
1932
Mabel McGee
1932
Ret[ired] h360 Essex
Bertil Akerlind
1934
Chauf[fer] r360 Essex
Helen O'Hare
1934
Dom[estic staff] r360 Essex
Hulings C Brown
1934
Henrietta Reaphe
1935
Dom[estic staff] r360 Essex
James Morgan
1935
Chauf[fer] r360 Essex
Mabel J Magee
1935
Companion r360 Essex
Susan L Brown
1935
Hulings C Brown
(wid[ow] Hulings C) h360 Essex
Soloman H Freedberg
1937
Rose Freedberg
Real Est[ate] (Pea)[body] h360 Essex
Soloman H Freedberg
1940
Rose Freedberg
Real Est[ate] (Pea)[body] h360 Essex
Elmer Palmer
Wid [widow of Elmer] b 360 Essex
R360 Essex
Susan L Brown
Susan L Brown
35
Ret[ired] h360 Essex
(wid[ow] Hulings C) h360 Essex
�A. Kellett
June 2019
Name
Year
Spouse
Notes
Soloman H Freedberg
1942
Rose Freedberg
Real Est[ate] (Pea)[body] h360 Essex
Soloman H Freedberg
1943
Rose Freedberg
Real Est[ate] (Pea)[body] h360 Essex
Alan P Freedberg
1944
David J Gordon
Phys[ician] USA h 360 Essex
1944
Edith F Gordon
USA [United States Army] r 360 Essex
David J Gordon
1944
Edith F Gordon
USA [United States Army] r 360 Essex
Soloman H Freedberg
1944
Rose Freedberg
Real Est[ate] (Pea)[body] h360 Essex
David J Gordon
1945
Edith F Gordon
USA [United States Army] r 360 Essex
Soloman H Freedberg
1945
Rose Freedberg
Real Est[ate] (Pea)[body] h360 Essex
Alan P Freedberg
1948
360 Essex
Alan P Freedberg
1949
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedberg
1950
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedberg
1951
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Bella Dailitka
1951
Dom[estic staff] r360 Essex
Alan P Freedberg
1952
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Bella Dailitka
1952
Dom[estic staff] r360 Essex
Alan P Freedberg
1953
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedberg
1955
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedberg
1957
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
36
�Historic Property Report
Name
360 Essex St. | Salem, Mass.
Year
Spouse
Historic Salem, Inc.
Notes
Alan P Freedberg
1958
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedberg
1960
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedlberg
1960
Alan P Freedberg
1961
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedberg
1962
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Alan P Freedberg
1964
[City Directory — Physicians and
Surgeons]
Phys Freedberg
1964
Phys[ician] 360 Essex H360 Essex St
Charlotte L Freedlberg
37
Phys[ician] 360 Essex h do
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
360 Essex Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Capt. Emery S. Johnson
Shipmaster & Merchant
Spring 1853
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1853, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy E. Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
1853
2019
360
Captain
Emery
Essex
History
House
Johnson
Massachusetts
S.
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/fbfba0285c83831c1a3f7ac43fdfcfd4.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=qtLQEgD0RolRBdI9VKUEPunIp-ojlxfoQvOU7frynUuNNCFknlGFMiHNZOzhvlujJw1-aZ4A4q0i4ozpysiQJW7KqtHKooT8sTCnLJOtpEj5ZJad0pC3oRoSA7iYUtVrx9I2gmIKofJmc7l0XZOvpyhlIJzLWzwjUJ20ssnoY6bNx1xLuAsQpQxrwxOfj6XM%7Ej7q6lSel6X0SFcqtNkYbit-ukquaYHNHCspbaAywA7nl0HjluX6DuvUguBmJEoen%7EZEnOABC7Xfx2AZP4mkBdXX3j9R9dcm-kmk2aZMvHJAzaQyCX2NbC1ox6mbBOwsFLO%7Ep%7ElPQ9l0ewbwNe7uWQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
969f5fde5ed1d48e8d20e71b515f5982
PDF Text
Text
130 Bridge Street
Built by
Moses Hale
Carpenter
in 1804
Research & writing by
Robert Booth
July 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
���������������������������������������������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bridge Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
130 Bridge Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by
Moses Hale
Carpenter
1804
Home of Capt. Joseph Beadle
Master Mariner
1825
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1804, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
130
1804
2019
Beadle
Bridge
Captain
Hale
History
House
Joseph
Massachusetts
Moses
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f32d74d67ac414e2ac1a381c841eb2eb.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=PTqvvhUB53Rocvn7z%7E8CaSM1TjcmZ85%7EcREgW4rNR34ixNHN2Xm6MgCP74TjWthA9fw7cKhMIJBkj4NWJiFGhIYi63nAqBklQzjpI6FZu9nyoK048ahEUwF0fX57cfiYoKMosx091t2aitbO9ECryOqy8TKnUk5oO0LvsAbiqka95eErUFQ%7EpMhZb-pUbV9yadQFTZ8uKhYpw4mEdT8povn6X65fZx%7EQeb-vtp7DkFBm76i57i4fa2RwLPpbnrS0eR99u7fSWyc%7EFUZOh1iUAxTCabuUXidF0Z4T3CA2SE%7EM0cJOZ4H1i4PziWINtltO8Yb%7EnTi5v%7E-Dsou4CHldiA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
55c6b3e4c5b473cdb2cd1676eacf6dca
PDF Text
Text
107 Bridge Street
Built for Benjamin Chever Jr.
Leather Dresser
by Andrew Merrill, Housewright
1799
Home of Capt. Thomas Dean, Shipmaster, 1825-1846
Home of Capt. Josiah P. Creesy &
Eleanor Prentiss Creesy
of Clipper Ship “Flying Cloud”
Researched & written by
Robert Booth
July 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
������������������������������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bridge Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
107 Bridge Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Benjamin Chever Jr.
1799
Home of Capt. Josiah P. Creesy &
Eleanor Prentiss Creesy
of Clipper Ship “Flying Cloud”
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1799, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
107
1799
2019
Benjamin
Bridge
Captain
Chever
Creesy
Eleanor
History
House
Josiah
Jr.
Massachusetts
P.
Prentiss
Salem
Street
-
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6b8e96e264545cb95c52639a037cfdf2
PDF Text
Text
98 Washington Square East
Built for
Elbridge G. Kimball
Merchant
c. 1849
Research Provided by
Amy E. Kellett
July 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�����
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Title
A name given to the resource
Washington Square East
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
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Title
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98 Washington Square East, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Elbridge G. Kimball
Merchant
c. 1849
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1849, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy E. Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
1849
2019
98
circa
East
Elbridge
G.
History
House
Kimball
Massachusetts
Salem
Square
Washington
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/5afb10b1b4b1d7858dfb9cdf687b8bec.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=U7el0EVZcKHCSpbIjamdE-HJ3kD2sDT6UOqjMzasEb38EgIrp7etXhYUDyaD4bA%7E7O-hG-bqCLc1MqrKRQa98Lo6%7EUqpB%7EKKdMEPAev1wQwH90j%7EGqhwZ4KVYw1rm4dedy5uL5D46UUB8SqLpyrBLsi%7ECYrRyJS28lYNssZf5kI8a566dZslOqSxEyuL26eQe7s%7E29oPii-JG9QXM%7EdLRgP6l2EepUJ17Wsg8kZXEXkYNyr7i1h-sQGNXqeP3vGaIpmTyos4rWz32jkJgWRr2CXW%7EODnAvF68gWX-PKYeJ8dZZ5InDDVSsMbfFoKucJm60wzvu%7ExWnxgejktfn2Ihg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
92f95ee11b61fa499bc1cf63b11fbb93
PDF Text
Text
16 Pickman Street
Built as a
Double House by
David Lord
Housewright
1806
Research Provided by
David Moffat
May 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
16 Pickman Street, Salem, MA
Built by David Lord, Housewright, 1806.
The house was built as a double house.
Undivided (1967-Present):
Date
Conveyed by
1980,
Dec. 15
1978,
Dec. 15
1975,
Aug. 29
Amount Doc
Book
Page
Peter S. Godfrey and Nancy T. Lloyd G. Ternes
Godfrey, Trustees of the
and Kathleen J.
Pickman Realty Trust
Keefe Ternes
$112,600 Deed
6776
56
Louis A. and Jane M. Schmitz
Peter S. Godfrey
and Nancy T.
Godfrey
$65,900 Deed
6549
98
Transfermation Realty, Inc.
Louis A. and Jane
M. Schmitz
$56,300 Deed
6176
604
Transfermation
Realty, Inc.
$48,900 Deed
6068
3
1974, May Anthony G. and Cecilia R.
6
Rosati
Conveyed to
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
1970, Jan. Robert Cook, Trustee of
2
Hampton Realty Trust
Anthony G. and
Cecilia R. Rosati
$28,500 Deed
5659
424
1968,
Dec. 5
Robert M. Cook
$18,950 Deed
5578
179
1968, Apr. Ida M. Maron, wife of Nathan
18
Maron
John L. Hyland
$6,318 Deed
5522
712
1968, Jan.
Joseph Donald Tahany
27
Ida M. Maron
Consideration Paid Deed
5507
799
1967, Jan.
Ida M. Maron
26
Joseph Donald
Tahany
Consideration Paid Deed
5426
191
Consideration Paid Deed
5298
686
John L. Hyland
Western Half (1807-1967):
1965,
Sep. 2
Ernest A. Sanborn, half-brother
Ida M. Maron
of Jennie M. Trow
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
1945,
Dec. 5
Jennie M. Trow
Harry H. Bennett
1919,
Dec. 16
Sarah S. Kimball
Jennie M. Trow
1910, Jun.
Margaret A. Upton
22
Power of
Attorney
3434
366
Consideration Paid Deed
2432
592
Sarah S. Kimball
$1 and Other
Valuable Deed
Consideration Paid
2025
189
1903, Jul.
Edward C. Battis
20
Margaret A.
Upton, wife of
Sumner W. Upton
$1 and Other
Valuable Deed
Considerations Paid
1711
388
1898,
Aug. 8
James Kenney and Mary E.
Kenney
Edward C. Battis
$1,950 Deed
1554
72
1894,
Nov. 4
Margaret J. Shattuck, Charles
E.W. Clough, Mary A. Clough,
Hannah A. Dodge, Martha R.
Mary E. Kenney
Perkins (Executors of Martha E.
Barnes Estate)
$1 and Other
Valuable Deed
Considerations
1462
523
$200 Deed
797
289
1870, May
William Cabeen
26
Martha Barnes
---
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
1865,
Sep. 28
Samuel Varney, mariner
William Cabeen
$1200 Deed
690
250
445
80
356
83
287
35
$1,000 Deed
286
112
$1400 Deed
286
111
?
1851, May
Joshua Cleaves
10
Nathaniel Cleaves
1845,
June 3
Nathaniel Cleaves
Joshua Cleaves
1835,
Dec. 5
Nathaniel Cleaves, ship
chandler; Joshua Cleaves,
gentleman; Teresa Cleaves,
widow
David Lord
1835 Oct. Henry Prince, Inspector of
1
Customs
Nathaniel
Cleaves, Joshua
Cleaves, Teresa
Cleaves
1835,
Oct.1
- Discharge
$500 Deed
Mortgage
Henry Prince
Nathaniel Cleaves, ship
chandler; Joshua Cleaves,
gentleman; Teresa Cleaves,
widow
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
1821,
June 28
Benjamin Archer, mariner
Nathaniel Cleaves
$1,000 Deed
1807, Jan. David Lord, housewright
1
226
176
$775 Deed
181
5
Book
Page
Consideration Paid Deed
3898
204
Consideration Paid Deed
2851
303
$1 and Other
Deed
Consideration Paid
1479
505
$1800 Deed
1169
191
Benjamin Archer
Eastern Half (1807-1967):
Date
Conveyed by
1947, Nov.
William T. Walke & Sons, Inc.
21
Conveyed to
Ida M. Maron
John J. and Gertrude M.
1930, July
Fleming, Raymond P. and Lucy William T. Walke
9
D. Grant, and Florence E. Walke
1896, May Adelaide L. Osgood, widow
25
Carrie A. Osgood
1886, Mar. David Cabeen; Thomas J.
1
Cabeen
Adelaide L.
Osgood
Amount Doc
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
1865, Sep. Samuel Varney, mariner
28
William Cabeen
1826, June Nathaniel Archer, mariner
14
Samuel Varney
1807, Sep. David Lord, housewright
8
Nathaniel Archer
$1200 Deed
240
277
$1600 Deed
Conveyed to
David Lord
250
$900 Deed
Undivided (1806):
Date
Conveyed by
1806,
Samuel Archer, 3rd, Esq., John Andrew,
Aug. 5
William Balch Parker, merchants
690
181
285
Amount
Doc
Book
$600
Deed 179
Page
57
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
16 Pickman Street- Built by David Lord, Housewright, 1806.
Built as a real estate venture in 1806 by David Lord on the lot he purchased from Samuel Archer, William B. Parker, and
Nathaniel Andrew, who had purchased the pasture of Benjamin Pickman in 1803.
Originally built as a double house- Benj. Archer, Jr., mariner, on the west half from 1807 to 1831
Nathaniel Archer, mariner, on the east half from 1807 to 1826
Benj. Archer moved to Wethersfield in 1821, selling his half to Nathaniel Cleaves. Nathaniel Archer sold his half to Samuel
Varney in 1826. Other owners included Henry Prince, inspector of Customs, George H. Ropes, master mariner, and William
Cabeen. Aug. 7th, 1806, Daniel lead from Samuel Archer 3rd et al. -179:57
Lord to Nath. Archer, 181:285 (Sept. 8th, 1807)
Lord to Benj. Archer, 181:5 (Jan. 1st, 1807)
There are a number of real-estate transactions between David Lord and the Cleaves regarding a lot on Pleasant Street between
1835 and 1845.
1851 Map: Eastern Side: C. Newcomb, Western Side: S.T. Kimball
1855 Directory: Samuel T. Kimball (Henderson & K.), 16 Pickman; Caleb H. Newcomb, h. 2 Milk Street,
1861: Samuel T. Kimball (Henderson & K.,) furniture, 16 Pickman; Penn T. Kimball, clerk, boards 16 Pickman, Elizabeth Flint,
widow, boards 16 Pickman, Caleb Newcomb, 2 Milk
1864: Elizabeth Flint, widow, board 16 Pickman; Caleb Newcomb, 2 Milk
1869 Directory: Capt. Henry Barnes, 16 Pickman; William Cabeen, weigher at W.P. Phillips, h. 2 Milk, John Cabeen, teamster
18 Pickman
1872 Directory: Frank L. Clapp, 16 Pickman; William Cabeen, weigher at W.P. Phillips, h. 2 Milk
1874 Atlas: Eastern Side: (William Cabeen), Western Side: Mrs. M. Barnes
1876 Directory: Capt. Henry Barnes, 16 Pickman, Henry E. Barnes, boards 16 Pickman. William Cabeen, clerk, 2 Milk
1878 Directory: Capt. Henry Barnes, 16 Pickman, Henry E. Barnes, boards 16 Pickman; William Cabeen, clerk, 2 Milk
1879 Directory: Capt. Henry Barnes, 16 Pickman, Henry E. Barnes, boards 16 Pickman; William Cabeen, clerk, 2 Milk
1895-96 Directory: Miss Edith M. Kenney, James Kenney, James A. Kenney, 16 Pickman; Adelaide L. Osgood, widow of Eben,
botanic physician, 12 Milk, Bertram Osgood, carriage painter, b. 2 Milk, Miss Carrie E. Osgood, boards 2 Milk
1897 Atlas: Eastern Side: (A.L. Osgood), Western Side: Mary E. Kenny
1899-1900 Directory: Mrs. A.L. Osgood-Harris, botanical physician, 2 Milk,
�Ownership History of 16 Pickman Street, Salem MA 01970
1904 Directory: W. Sumner Upton, pharmacist, 16 Pickman, William A. Stark, machinist, 2 Milk
1911 Atlas: Eastern Side: (Carrie E. Walke) Western Side: Sarah S. Kimball?
1914 Directory: James H. Trow, plumber, h. 16 Pickman, Carolyn Proctor, masseuse, widow of Edwin L., 2 Milk, Dorothy D.
Proctor, student, boards 2 Milk, J. Worthen Proctor, student, 2 Milk,
Poll Listings:
1964: No Listing
1968: No Listing
1970: No Listing
1971: Just Anthony & Cecilia Rosati
1972: Rosatis + Louis T. Rosati, age 29, draftsman
1973: Rosatis, Cecilia is a housewife
1974: Cecilia R. Rosati, secretary, b. 11/14/44, Anthony G. Rosati, draftsman 6/5/41
1975: Marcia L. Spink, Teacher, b. 5/29/1951
1976: Jane M. Schmitz, Stewardess, b. 8/24/1948), Louis A. Schmitz, Computer Tech (b. 03/06/48), both RLY Lynn
1977: Bruce R. Marshall, Dir. Of Trilogy, Lucinda M. Simpkins, Counselor Simpkins RLY 8 Barton Sq.
1978: Bruce R. Marshall, Director of Trilogy (b. 11/13/46), Lucinda M. Simpkins, Counselor (b. 7/19/48)
1980: 16 Pickman Street Unlisted (1979 no book)
1981: Kathleen (b. 1952), veterinarian & Lloyd Ternes (b. 1949), business manager
1982-2006: Ibid.
2007: Judith E. Ternes, b. 3/29/1989, Catherine M. Ternes (b. 1992),
2008-2016: Ibid.
Both Varney to Cabeen to Barnes and Varney to Cabeen to Adelaide L. Osgood?
Missing Deeds: 1858-1870 western half
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Pickman Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
16 Pickman Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built as a
Double House by
David Lord
Housewright
1806
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1806, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
David Moffat
Language
A language of the resource
English
16
1806
2019
David
History
House
Lord
Massachusetts
Pickman
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f9e280cda3d32075a5e0a66f0d56503f.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=N0rABLBvGoWg5QjSxumc6fO5N11-BYeSlbDdSRryv3H69pF8rE5IgcHQwYOyupGkjrC0ROxYqXbReUpa2rFHmobr909zKt47lUQfpgv39081CUZbCI1KfjAfQKUR1EQYeHo2EKDx-rrrVhibntN%7EB%7E0ipMPGMmJGiR8o1mUR6qUu5Onh2FryCkTbiFAKwTnyz8yRksopJANXmhepsWhDvUiCOmsA%7Ei9pFdGsy9oRpR6POr00Mb4ZK0mOpDZ7oDzh%7Efl%7ErRgkGw8DafBWF77Xc7FrwVlWsILeDonWr6oXX4SX6Iknhh7oPhtTjPT9c6gxQ3OJxpkTtanEpBd7%7Eev7Jw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
a589d23490b36f449037184ac9a0c103
PDF Text
Text
34 Summer Street
Built by
John Perkins
Housewright
c. 1839
Research by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
July 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Chain of Title, 34 Summer Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
John H. Stone of Calais, ME and
John Perkins of Salem,
May 13, 1839 Lucy P. & Henry O. Stone of Salem Housewright
August 12, 1845 John Perkins of Salem
Benjamin Cox & Francis Cox, both
of Salem
Joseph B. F. Osgood, John
Pickering, & Edward C. Browne,
Executors under the will of Francis
March 28, 1899 Cox, late of Salem
Alice Browne of Salem
April 26, 1899 Alice Browne, unmarried, of Salem Edward C. Browne of Salem
Charlotte C. Browne, widow, of
January 15, 1917 Cambridge
August 22, 1957 Rebecca C. Putnam of Salem
Alfred E. Chase, Executor under
the will of Everett H. Black, late of
July 13, 1965 Salem
Robert E. Michaud & Yvonne F.
October 16, 1968 Michaud of Salem
Consideration Conveyance of
Source
Document
"a lot of land in Salem bounded as follows:
Beginning at the Northwest corner of it by land
$935 now sold to Luther Upton 25 feet 2 inches..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
"All that piece of land situate in said Salem...
Said land is situate on Chestnut and Summer
Streets...together with the dwelling house and
all buildings which I have since erected...
bounded as follows: 'beginning at the
Northwest corner of it by land now sold to
$4,000 Luther Upton, 25 feet 2 inches..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Book : Page
Notes
313 : 61
No buildings mentioned
357 : 196
"all that lot of land with the two dwelling
houses and other buildings adjacent which
messuage is located in Salem...and is bounded
and described as follows...Beginning at the
northwesterly corner of it by land formerly of
$10,100 Luther Upton, now of Fenallossa..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1572 : 345
"one undivided half portion of that lot of land
with the two dwelling houses and other
buildings adjacent, which messuage is located
in Salem...and is bounded and described as
follows...Beginning at the northwesterly corner
of it, by the land formerly of Luther Upton, now
$5,050 of Fenallossa..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1575 : 341
"the land in SALEM, Massachusetts, situated on
Summer Street, bounded and described as
follows: Beginning at the northeasterly corner
of the premises at a stone post at the land now
Rebecca C. Putnam of Salem, wife "consideration or formerly of Frank P. Fabens; thence running
of Alfred W. Putnam
paid"
westerly..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2353 : 378
Everett H. Black of Swampscott
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings
thereon, bounded as follows: Beginning at the
northeasterly corner of the within granted
premises at a stone post at land formerly of
"consideration Fabens, now Mekelatos, thence running
westerly..."
paid"
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
4396 : 408
Robert E. Michaud & Yvonne F.
Michaud, husband and wife
formerly of Marblehead, now of
Salem
"the land in Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts, with the buildings thereon,
bounded as follows: Beginning at the
northeasterly corner of the within granted
premises at a stone post at land formerly of
Fabens, now Mekelatos, thence running
$14,000.00 westerly..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
5284 : 236
"the land in Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts, situated on Summer Street in
said Salem and said to be numbered 34...
bounded and described as follows: Beginning
at the northeasterly corner of the within
granted premises at a stone post at land
Richard D. Henken & Marguerite A.
Henken, husband and wife of
"consideration formerly of Febens, now or formerly Mekelatos,
thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Salem
paid"
5565 : 561
"For my title see wills of Edward
C. Browne and Alice Browne,
both duly probated in Essex
County Probate Court."
�Chain of Title, 34 Summer Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Grantee(s)
Alan E. Schaefer & Edith J.
Schaefer, husband and wife of
July 11, 1980 Salem
November 5, 1980 Susan D. Brown of Arlington
Mary R. Chapin as Trustee of the
78 Morton Road Realty Trust, of
November 15, 1983 Revere
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company As Trustee for
Residential Asset Securitization
Trust, the present holder of a
mortgage from Stephanie M.
December 19, 2016 Fitzgerald
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company As Trustee for
Residential Asset Securitization
September 29, 2017 Trust
Source
Document
Book : Page
"the land in Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts, situated on Summer Street in
said Salem and said to be numbered 34...
bounded and described as follows: Beginning
at the northeasterly corner of the within
granted premises at a stone post of land
formerly of Febens, now or formerly Mekelatos,
$1.00 thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
5887 : 434
Alan E. Schaefer & Edith J.
Schaefer, husband and wife of
Salem
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings
thereon, situated on Summer Street numbered
34...bounded and described as follows:
Beginning at the northeasterly corner of the
within granted premises at a stone post of land
formerly of Febens, now or formerly of
$56,000.00 Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6128 : 677
Susan D. Brown of Arlington
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings
thereon, situated on Summer Street numbered
34...bounded and described as follows:
Beginning at the northeasterly corner of the
within granted premises at a stone post of land
formerly of Febens, now or formerly of
$92,500.00 Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6716 : 466
Mary R. Chapin as Trustee of the
78 Morton Road Realty Trust, of
Salem
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings
thereon situated on Summer Street numbered
34...bounded and described as follows:
Beginning at the northeasterly corner of the
within granted premises at a stone post of land
formerly of Febens, now or formerly of
$100,000.00 Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6759 : 741
Stephanie M. Fitzgerald of Salem
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings
thereon situated on Summer Street numbered
34...bounded and described as follows:
Beginning at the northeasterly corner of the
within granted premises at a stone post of land
formerly of Febens, now or formerly of
$130,000.00 Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deeed
7270 : 65
Richard D. Henken & Marguerite A.
Henken, husband and wife of
Marguerite A. Henken of Salem,
July 20, 1972 Salem
individually and in her own right
February 19, 1975 Marguerite A. Henken of Beverly
Consideration Conveyance of
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company As Trustee for
Residential Asset Securitization
"by the power
conferred by
said mortgage
and every
other power,
for
$404,000.00
paid"
34 Summer Street, Salem, MA 01970
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
35542 : 432
Rem D. Le & Vuong Duong of
Everett, as Tenants in Common
$380,000.00
"and other
valuable
"all that certain land situate, lying and being in
considerations the City of Salem...More commonly known as:
"
34 Summer Street..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
36219 : 248
Notes
�Chain of Title, 34 Summer Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
April 26, 2018 Vuong Duong, married, of Lynn
August 31, 2018 Rem D. Le, unmarried, of Saugus
Grantee(s)
Consideration Conveyance of
Source
Rem D. Le, unmarried, of Saugus
"all my right, title and interest as Tenant in
Common...All that certain parcel of land with
the buildings thereon situated in 34 Summer
"consideration Street, City of Salem...bounded and described
paid of less
as follows: Beginning at the northeasterly
than one
corner of the within granted premises at a
hundred
stone post of land formerly Febens, now or
dollars"
formerly of Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
36671 : 206
"All that certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon situated in 34 Summer
Street, City of Salem...bounded and described
as follows: Beginning at the northeasterly
corner of the within granted premises at a
stone post of land formerly of Febens, now or
$630,000.00 formerly of Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
36984 : 576
"All that certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon situated in 34 Summer
Street, City of Salem...bounded and described
as follows: Beginning at the northeasterly
corner of the within granted premises at a
stone post of land formerly of Febens, now or
$1.00 formerly of Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
36987 : 445
"All that certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon situated in 34 Summer
Street, City of Salem...bounded and described
as follows: Beginning at the northeasterly
corner of the within granted premises at a
stone post of land formerly of Febens, now or
$640,000.00 formerly of Mekelatos, thence running..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
37303 : 438
Andrew Balter, married, now of
Salem
Andrew Balter, a married person of Andrew Balter & Sara Balter,
September 4, 2018 Salem
husband and wife of Salem
Andrew Balter & Sara Balter,
January 31, 2019 husband and wife of Salem
Jessica Bombardier & Christopher
Bombardier, husband and wife
now of Salem
Document
Book : Page
Notes
������������������������������������1842 Salem Directory
�1874
�1911
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Summer Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
34 Summer Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by
John Perkins
Housewright
c. 1839
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1839, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1839
2019
34
circa
History
House
John
Massachusetts
Perkins
Salem
Street
Summer
-
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28 Arbella Street
Built for
Sarah H. Plummer and William H. Plummer
Shoemaker
c. 1873
Researched and written by Jen Ratliff
July 2019
Historic Salem Inc.
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2019
�This house was known as 12 Arbella Street (also called Arabella Street) until it was moved in 1906,
then 10 ½ until the street was renumbered in 1917.
This house was moved on same lot from street frontage to current rear location in 1906,
likely to allow for sale of land and construction
of #30-32 (12 and 12 ½)
Date of Purchase
Conveyed by
Conveyed to
Amount
Document
Notes
April 19, 1872
Robert Hill
Abraham Edwards
Martha P. Edwards
$950
851:85
Only references land
September 6,1872 (#12)
September 1, 1873 (#10)
Abraham Edwards
Martha P. Edwards
William H. Plummer
Sarah H. Plummer
$3,110
$1,000
862:199
887:283
November 1, 1905
George D. Edwards
William H. Edwards
$1 and other valuable
considerations
1800:352
Purchased #10 and
#12 Arbella Street
Abraham died September 29, 1891
(Did not die in this home)
House used as a rental property
Martha died on April 20, 1905
(Did not die in this home)
Son George then sold the home.
Probate #96531
June 24, 1910
William H. Edwards
Alice R. Meek
$1 and other valuable
considerations
2028:570
December 10, 1948
Annie (Meek) Hutchins
Mabelle F. (Warner)
Adlard
Mary Etta Callahan
Mary Elizabeth
Callahan
Arthur G. Spark
Martin Callahan
Mary Etta Callahan
$4,200
3637:205
Arthur G. Spanks
Marilyn P. Spanks
$15,900
5355:534
Christine Makary
Stephanie L. Bailey
$295,000
24950:421
April 25 1961
October 14, 2005
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com
3 parcels on Arbella Street
purchased
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������������������������������������������������Inventory No:
SAL.3135
Historic Name:
Plummer, William H. House
Common Name:
Edward, William H. - Meek, Alice R. House
Address:
28 Arbella St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Bridge Street
Local No:
36-0393
Year Constructed:
c 1870
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Italianate
Use(s):
Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.ER: Arbella Street Area
SAL.IV: Bridge Street Neck Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (07/19/2002)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Asbestos Shingle; Wood
Foundation: Brick
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
The MACRIS database and scanned files are highly dynamic; new information is added daily and both database
records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
note that there may be a considerable lag time between the receipt of new or updated records by MHC and the
appearance of related information in MACRIS. Users should also note that not all source materials for the MACRIS
database are made available as scanned images. Users may consult the records, files and maps available in MHC's
public research area at its offices at the State Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, open M-F, 9-5.
Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Friday, June 7, 2019 at 6:48: PM
�NRDIS 7/19/2002
FORM B BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Assessor’s Number
USGS Quad
36-0393
Area(s)
IV,
ER
Salem
Town/City:
Form Number
SAL.3135
Salem
Place: (neighborhood or village):
Bridge Street Neck
Photograph
Address: 28 Arbella Street
Historic Name: William H. Plummer House
Uses: Present:
single family dwelling house
Original: single family dwelling house
Date of Construction: ca. 1870
Source:
visual inspection
Style/Form:
Italianate
Architect/Builder:
unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation: brick
Wall/Trim:
asbestos shingle
Roof:
Locus Map
asphalt shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
none
Major Alterations (with dates):
Date unknown – asbestos shingles, front dormer, new
window sash
Condition:
Moved: no
fair (due to siding)
yes
Date:
ca.1900
Acreage:
0.09 acre
Setting:
mixed residential neighborhood
RECEIVED
Recorded by: Lisa Mausolf
SEPT 01 2011
Organization: City of Salem
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Date (month / year): March 2011
3/10
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
�INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
SALEM
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
28 ARBELLA STREET
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
IV,ER
SAL.3135
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form.
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION:
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
The house at 28 Arbella Street is set on the back lot between 26 and 30-32 Arbella Street. The 1 ½-story, side-gabled dwelling
is set on a brick foundation and is sheathed in asbestos shingles. The gable roof is sheathed in asphalt shingles with
overhanging eaves ending in returns. Centered on the three-bay facade, the main entrance is sheltered by a well-preserved,
flat-roofed denticulated door hood with the two brackets adorned by large beads, rondels and pendants. The door itself is a
modern multi-light replacement but it is capped by two original transom lights. The adjacent window openings have modern 2/2
vinyl sash but retain molded surrounds and entablature lintels set on brackets that are smaller versions of those on the entrance.
The shed dormer spanning the front roof slope is a later addition. Aligned with the east wall of the house is a single-story ell and
a rear deck.
This house is a contributing property in the Bridge Street Neck Historic District, listed on the National Register on July 19, 2002.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the
owners/occupants played within the community.
It appears that this house may have been originally located on the present site of 30-32 Arbella Street. The 1874 map shows a
house with roughly this shape on that site, owned by William H. Plummer. Plummer was a shoemaker who lived at 16 Saunders
Street and apparently rented this house out.
The 1897 map shows the land was still vacant at that time but was owned by William H. Edwards a contractor and building
mover. The house appears to have been moved to its present site about 1906. The 1911 map shows a house believed to be 28
Arbella Street (?) in place, but without the rear ell and aligned directly behind #26. This house along with 22, 24, 26, and 30 , is
shown as being owned by William H. Edwards although deeds suggest he sold the property in 1910 (see below).
From 1907 to about 1910 the house (then 10 ½ Arbella Street) was rented to George S. Norton who worked as a traveling
salesman for an oil company. He lived here with his wife May, two daughters, his mother Emeline and his father George. In
1917 the house number was changed from 10 ½ to 28.
Deeds indicate that in 1910 the entire Arbella Street property was sold by William H. Edwards to Alice R. Meek (Book 2028,
Page 570). Miss Meek apparently purchased them as income-producing properties. She lived on Essex Street and was the
head of the Henry M. Meek Publishing Company, makers of directories. The property was sold by Annie (Meek) Hutchins and
Mabel Adlard to Martin and Mary Callahan in 1948 (Book 3637/205). Census records indicate that in 1920 the house was rented
to Louis Benway, a French Canadian wagon driver for a coal company. He lived here with his wife Hattie, two daughters, two
sons and a son-in-law.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
City of Salem, Building Permits, 1871-1889. [Salem City Hall].
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Salem, Massachusetts.
Hopkins, G.M. Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
Salem Directories, various dates.
U.S. Census, 1880-1930.
Continuation sheet 1
�Inventory No:
SAL.3134
Historic Name:
Edwards, William G. Double House
Common Name:
Address:
30-32 Arbella St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Bridge Street
Local No:
36-412
Year Constructed:
1911
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Colonial Revival
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.ER: Arbella Street Area
SAL.IV: Bridge Street Neck Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (07/19/2002)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood; Wood Clapboard
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
The MACRIS database and scanned files are highly dynamic; new information is added daily and both database
records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
note that there may be a considerable lag time between the receipt of new or updated records by MHC and the
appearance of related information in MACRIS. Users should also note that not all source materials for the MACRIS
database are made available as scanned images. Users may consult the records, files and maps available in MHC's
public research area at its offices at the State Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, open M-F, 9-5.
Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 3:10: PM
�3134
£\L
FORM
B
-
80
\
BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS
BOYLSTON
AREA
HISTORICAL
STREET",
FORM NO.
3(P
COMMISSION
BOSTON,
MA
02116
Salem
30-32
Arbella
St.
Name
esent
residential
inal
"
"
PTION':
1911
City
'SKETCH MAP
Show property's l o c a t i o n i a r e l a t i o n
to nearest cross streets and/or
geographical features.
Indicate
a l l buildings between inventoried
property and nearest i n t e r s e c t i o n .
Indicate north.
Style
Directories
Colonial
Revival,
Two-Family
Architect
Exterior wall fabric
Outbuildings
clapboards
n o n e
Major a l t e r a t i o n s (with dates)_
Date
Moved
Approx. acreage
Recorded
by
Organization
' Date
M
-
Malaguti/K.
Salem P l a n n i n g
August.
Murphy
Setting
Dept.
1985
(Staple a d d i t i o n a l sheets here)
about
residential
4,300
s.f.
�(
ARCHITECTURAL S I G N I F I C A N C E d e s c r i b e i m p o r t a n t a r c M t e c t u r a l f e a t u r e s - a n d
e v a l u a t e i n terms o f o t h e r b u i l d i n g s w i t h i n the community.)
30-32
St.
Arbella St.
area.
including
Built
is
in
one
Doric porch
paneled bays
on
the
of
1911, i t
several
s t i l l
columns,
a
examples
features
full
n o r t h and west
of- t w o - f a m i l y
much o r i g i n a l
pediment,
a
dentiled
facades.
residences
material
cornice,
in
and
and
the
Bridge
detail,
two-story
' .
HISTORICAL S I G N I F I C A N C E ( E x o l a i n t h e r o l e o w n e r s p l a y e d i n l o c a l o r s t a t e
h i s t o r y a n d how t h e b u i l d i n g r e l a t e s t o t h e d e v e l o p m e n t o f t h e c o m m u n i t y . )
T h i s h o u s e was b u i l t f o r W i l l i a m G. E d w a r d s , a b u i l d i n g mover a n d c o n t r a c t o r
who w o r k e d a t 64 B r i d g e S t r e e t .
The t w o - f a m i l y r e s i d e n c e was a s e n s i b l e
s o l u t i o n to the B r i d g e S t r e e t a r e a ' s n e e d f o r i n e x p e n s i v e and r e n t a l h o u s i n g .
•
BIBLIOGRAPHY a n d / o r REFERENCES (name o f p u b l i c a t i o n , a u t h o r , d a t e a n d p u b l i s h e r )
S a l e m Maps
& Directories
•
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arbella Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
28 Arbella Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Sarah H. Plummer &
William H. Plummer
Shoemaker
c. 1873
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1873, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Jen Ratliff
Language
A language of the resource
English
1873
2019
28
Arbella
circa
H.
History
House
Massachusetts
Plummer
Salem
Sarah
Street
William
-
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ac735a447420e1927f783784dfc56e8f
PDF Text
Text
2 - 4 Emerton Street
Built for
James A. Gillis
Counsellor
by 1894
Research Provided by
Diana Dunlap
June 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�2-4 Emerton Street, Salem, MA
Built for James A. Gillis, Counsellor, by 1894
1. The lot of 2-4 Emerton Street was originally part of the estate of Elizabeth Emerton of Salem,
who died intestate March 28, 1837. Her eldest heir, her son William, requested that his brother
Ephraim be appointed to administer the estate. Essex County, MA: Probate File Papers,
1638-1881.Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical
Society, 2014. (From records supplied by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Archives.)
https://www.americanancestors.org/DB515/i/13765/9033-co2/30163294
2. An 1851 map of Salem shows two buildings on Forrester Street (then called East Street)
marked “J. Emerton;” this is likely Elizabeth Emerton’s son James, who is described in deeds for
other properties as an apothecary or druggist (his brother William was a tailor and his brother
Ephraim a merchant; Registry of Deeds Book 421, Page 83). However, the building is too far
west on Forrester Street to be the same house; the eastern end of Forrester Street is still
marked as a creek emptying into Collins Cove and was not yet developed. McIntyre, H. (Henry),
and H. E. B. Taylor. "Map of the city of Salem, Mass." Map. Philada., Pa: Henry Mc. Intyre,
1851. Digital Commonwealth, https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/9g54xk154
(accessed June 25, 2019). https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/9g54xk154
3. On April 13, 1871, William, Ephraim, and James Emerton of Salem sold a portion of the
“Emerton Estate” to James A. Gillis of Salem for $5,000.00. This was a lot bordering 283 feet on
Forrester Street, 213 feet 6 inches on the land of Eunice P. Richardson, 461 feet on land of
“Silsbee and others,” and 309 feel on other land of “Silsbee and others.” The deed specifies that
the land was sold “with buildings theron standing,” Registry of Deeds Book 819, Page 277. On
an 1872 map of Salem, the buildings marked on Forrester Street are the same as on the 1851
map, and the far end of the street has not yet been filled in. This indicates that the current house
is not one of the buildings reference in the above deed.
https://digitalcommons.salemstate.edu/maps_salem/1/
4. On October 19, 1894, James A. Gillis sold part of the land he had purchased from the
Emerton brothers over twenty years earlier to Ellen M. Hartshorne, widow, “in consideration of
one dollar paid me...a certain lot or parcel of land with buildings theron standing...on the
northerly side of Forrester Street, being a portion of the Emmerton Estate formerly so-called.”
This deed outlines a rectangular lot, running 47.5 feet along Emerton Street but running 108 feet
to Forrester Street, and also includes a rectangular piece of land to the west of the property
“upon which stand the steps of one of the tenements above conveyed,” plus the interest in and
right of way to the “strip of land...sometimes known as Emerton Street.” Registry of Deeds Book
1426, Page 380. One of the buildings referenced in this deed is likely the current house.
�5. On October 25, 1894, Ellen M. Hartshorne mortgaged the property to Elizabeth H. Osgood for
$2,000. This mortgaged was discharged “with full payment and satisfaction” on April 30, 1908.
Registry of Deeds Book 1426, Page 382, and Book 1916, Page 481.
6. On April 30, 1908, Ellen M. Hartshorne sold the property to Joanna A. Fitzgerald “for one
dollar and other valuable considerations.” Registry of Deeds Book 1916, Page 481.
7. On January 12, 1909, Joanna A. Fitzgerald, wife of Joseph A. Fitzgerald, sold the property to
John J. Caplice. The lot is defined as 53 feet 3 inches x 47 feet 6 inches x 53 feet 5 inches,
bordered by Fitzgerald’s property, Emerton Street, the land of John Casey, and Fitzgerald’s,
“running westerly as the fence now stands.” These are more or less the modern boundaries of
the property. This deed does not reference buildings on the property, but the mortgage Caplice
took out two days later does; see below. Registry of Deeds Book 1951, Page 233.
8. On January 14, 1909, John J. Caplice mortgaged the property, including buildings, to the
Salem Savings Bank for $2,200.00; the Bank acknowledged this mortgage fully paid on
September 8, 1916. Registry of Deeds Book 1951, Page 234.
9. John J. Caplice sold the property to William A. Clapp on September 16, 1911. Registry of
Deeds Book 2106, Page 118.
10. Roger F. Clapp, administering the estate of William A. Clapp, sold the property to John J.
and Nellie J. Foley, husband and wife, on March 12, 1924. Registry of Deeds Book 2590, Page
96.
11. John J. and Nellie J. Foley mortgaged the house to the Salem Savings Bank for $3,000.00
on March 12, 1924, for one year at 5.5% interest. Registry of Deeds Book 2590, Page 97.
12. The Salem Savings Bank foreclosed the Foleys’ mortgage on May 28, 1927. Registry of
Deeds 2722, Page 392.
13. On June 9, 1927, the Salem Savings Bank sold the house to Philippe Belanger for
$6600.00.
14. Also on June 9, 1927, Philippe Belanger and his wife, Malvina E.D. Belanger, mortgaged the
property to the Salem Savings Bank for $4500.00 for one year at 5.5% interest. On December
29, 1927, the Belangers took out another one-year mortgage of $1500.00. The bank
acknowledged this was fully satisfied on April 4, 1960. Registry of Deeds Book 2725, Page 432;
Book 2746, Page 562; and Book 4655, Page 249.
15. On June 11, 1938, Philippe Belanger sold the property to Lilian Gordon of Salem. Registry
of Deeds Book 3147, Page 131.
�16. The same day, June 11, 1938, Lilian Gordon sold the property back to Philippe Belanger “for
a consideration of under $100.00.” Registry of Deeds 3147, Page 131.
17. On November 15, 1941, Philippe and Malvina Belanger purchased one tankless hot water
heater from the Harvard Oil Burner Company for $129.23. Registry of Deeds 3301, Page 87.
18. On May 16, 1955, Georges Paul Belanger of Salem, executor of the estate of Malvina E.D.
Belanger of Salem, granted the property to Philippe Belanger of Paris, France, for $3000.00.
Registry of Deeds 4174, Page 365; Probate Docket 246, Page 223.
19. On May 27, 1955, Phillipe J. Belanger of Paris, France, granted the property to George Paul
Belanger, “reserving to myself for the duration of my natural life, the right to use and occupy two
rooms on the second floor...Being the same premises conveyed to me by a deed of Georges
Paul Belanger, executor of the will of Malvina E.D. Belanger...the consideration is less than one
hundred dollars.” The deed was signed by Philippe’s wife, Charlotte Eugenie Belanger. Registry
of Deeds 4174, Page 366.
19. On April 4, 1960, Georges Paul Belanger and his wife Vivian sold the property to Jean R.
and Eva O. L’Italien. Registry of Deeds Book 4655, Page 250.
20. On January 12, 1962, Jean R. L’Italien of Beverly and Leonard P. L’Italien of Peabody
formed the “Len and Jean Real Estate Trust.” Jean and Eva L’Italien transferred ownership of
the property to the trust on March 8, 1962. Registry of Deeds Book 4870, Page 118; Book 4889,
Page 198.
21. Jean R. and Leonard P. L’Italien, as the Len and Jean Real Estate Trust, sold the property
to Barbara A. and Roger N. L’Heureux for $12800.00. Registry of Deeds 5594, Page 473.
22. Barbara A. and Roger N. L’Heureux mortgaged the property to the Salem Co-Operative
Bank for $19,500.00 on February 25. 1972. Registry of Deeds Book 5747, Page 436.
23. On June 12, 1980, Barbara A. L’Heureux of Danvers granted the property to Roger N.
L’Heureux of Lafayette Street, Salem. Registry of Deeds Book 6716, Page 406.
24. Roger N. L’Heureux of Oakland Park, Florida, created the Emerton Street trust on July 27,
1992, and transferred the property to said trust on October 1, 1992. Registry of Deeds Book
11512, Page 560.
25. On March 29, 1994, Sharon L’Heureux of Fairbanks, Alaska, and Michael L’Heureux of
Salem, were appointed trustees of the Emerton Street Trust due to the death of Roger N.
L’Heureux on February 2, 1994. The Massachusetts Real Estate Tax lien M-792 was released
on February 22, 1994. Registry of Deeds Book 12512, Page 210; Book 13417, Page 215.
�26. On November 20, 1996, Sharon L’Heureux of Fairbanks, Alaska, and Michael L’Heureux of
Boston, Trustees of the Emerton Street Trust, sold the property to John T. Kilroy for
$125,000.00. Registry of Deeds Book 13898, Page 310.
27. John T. Kilroy sold the property to Philip J. Malonson for $127,000.00 on March 16, 2001.
Registry of Deeds Book 16972, Page 374.
28. On March 16, 2001, Philip Malsonson established the Step Four Realty Trust with himself as
Trustee. Registry of Deeds Book 16972, Page 370.
29. On July 22, 2016, Philip J. Malonson, of the Step Four Realty Trust, Burlington, sold the
property to the Gregory Investment Group for $299,000.00. Registry of Deeds 35109, Page 130.
30. A master deed of August 22, 2017, established the Emerton Estates Condominium, and
submitted a site plan by the Gregory Investment Group. Registry of Deeds Book 36118, Pages
49-67.
31. On October 12, 2017, David Cole and Bradley Epps, a married couple, purchased 2-4
Emerton Street Unit 2 from the Gregory Investment Group for $560,000.0, with a 60% interest in
the Common Area of Emerton Estates Condominium. Registry of Deeds 36247, Page 029-032.
�Salem Directory, 1872
SALEM DIRECTORY.
83
Gifibrd James B. (T. J. Giford cfi 00.), house 18 Mason
Gifford Rufus B.EET. J. Gzfiord d5 00.), house 11 Dean
Gifford
Thomas
. carpenter,
house Mason,
near
Gifford Thomas J. & 00. (J. B. déR. B. Giford),
Bufi’um
carpenters,
rear Carpenter, house 20 Mason
Gifford
Thomas
Gifford
Gilbert
Gilbert
Gilbert
William, carpenter, boards 64 Washington
Charles W. mariner, house 26 English
Fitz E. carpenter, house 15 Crombie
James, house 148 Federal
S. Mrs. house Mason, near
Gilbert
James,
carpenter,
house
Buffum
14 Aborn
Gilbert John, laborer, house 23 Phelps court
Gilbert John T. shoemaker, house 10 Woodbury court
Giles Lydia G. Mrs. house 28 Lynde
Gill Catharine,
widow,
house
26 Congress
Gill Harriet P. Mrs. boards 4 Harbor square
Gill Michael, laborer, boards 9 Flint
Gilligan Daniel, laborer, boards rear 36 Charter
Gilligan John, laborer, house rear 36 Charter
Gilligan Matthew J. machinist, house 32 Turner
Gilligan Owen, laborer, house 36 Charter
Gillie James A. counsellor, 243% Essex, house 333 do.
Gillis Lydia D. Mrs. house 333 Essex
Gillis Randall, mariner, house 6 Webb
Gillpatrick Azuba Mrs. matron, Seaman’s Orphan Society,
7 Carpenter
Gilman
Daniel
M. ropemaker,
house
14 English
Gilman Joseph, house 14 English
Gilman Joseph jr. ropemaker, boards 14 English
Gilmore John, carpenter, house 12 Broad
Glass Abraham, laborer, house 14 Peabody
Glazier Charles H.
Glazier
Glazier zfiSon), h. 11 Lagrange
Ezra & Son ( C’. H. Glazier),
furniture,
crockery,
&c.
23 Central, house 11 Lagrange
Glazier
Glazier
George
Joseph
W. machinist,
house 31 Harbor
B. mason, Dean, house 2 North _Pine
Gleason Michael Mrs. house 1 Prospect
Glidden Isaac, tin peddler, house 12 Upham
Gildden John, tin peddler, boards 101 North
Gildden Joseph H. grocer, 31 Boston, house do.
Glidden Joseph P. Mrs. house9 Federal
9
Glover Deborah M. Mrs. house 14 Salem
Glover George D. (Bosson cfi GK), shoes, 6 Lafayette,
Hancock
Glover George H. currier, boards 86 North
Glover
John
P. (Steclman
cfi Glover),
9 Beckford,
h. 6
house
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Emerton Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
2-4 Emerton Street
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
James A. Gillis
Counsellor
by 1894
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
by 1894, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Diana Dunlap
Language
A language of the resource
English
2-4
2019
A.
by 1894
Emerton
Gillis
History
House
James
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/7d3fed17f48466d6fc39d1b9bcc66f60.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=XCu1l-cDbwKr6Er8fwFZ1Txy%7ED9ro9oTG7q9rByEIcsP-cLvzBzxp9qdFjdjTIIF7n15THGaEsUnT4sewxARhG7BhW3q0pA6zX-eD%7EWqoGo1Gx0KYE9yKsSl38cn-1jnMAM63PJhO4Sl7y7nWR8XyzJSoLFkBKjbw179kkBLy%7ELILbgl3mo9JxoxEGABn0auuQIg7l3gI7WAqMtz%7E5RFyCTt-bSjcYQ4BLooP2soKH-0T%7EBWZucJ8mZBWn%7E%7E%7EsNGeNrBOJC6%7ESaAkYGtmhhH5N1a6EwD42JwYnDCdwwgdJ7QVf1HW%7EY8yEYg4JhCVYDLVPsqQGbesyFsYn4193oQkw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e85422505b08dffc032b01e3071168b5
PDF Text
Text
25 Beach Avenue
Built for
Harriet F. Perkins
Widow of
Salem City Alderman
Fitz W. Perkins
1896
Researched & written by
Amy Kellett
May 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�House History Report
25 Beach Avenue
Salem, Massachusetts
The Perkins Family Summer Cottage
1896-1937
The Poulter Home
1938-1953
Research & Report by
Amy E. Kellett
2019
Researcher’s Note:
The contents of this report are based on research done
through the Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, the
Salem City Directory archives, Salem Street Books, Tax
Assessment Records, and other primary sources. (Where
secondary sources have been quoted or otherwise referred
to, there are corresponding citation footnotes.) This report is
completed to the best of my knowledge at the time of its
publication. However, I reserve the right to update, revise,
and otherwise edit this report if and/or when new
information is discovered.
This report is published and copyrighted by Historic Salem,
Inc., Feb. 2019.
Amy E. Kellett
Researcher & Author
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
Part I: A History of the Land before 1896
The earliest official records regarding the land at Salem Neck, including Winter Island and
Juniper Point, date to November 1792 when the Supreme Judicial Court held at Salem granted
the peninsula of Salem Neck to Edward Allen, Sr. as an estate including the wharves and
warehouses thereupon. In 1801 Allen divided his estate with his son and namesake, Edward Allen
Jr., recorded in the Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds, Book 176 Leaf 196.
1801 Land Deed | Edward Allen, Sr. to Edward Allen, Jr.
Nine years later, in 1810 Edward Allen, Jr. sold a portion of the estate left to him by his father to
Salem merchant Josiah Orne, the deed for which describes the ‘parcel of land’:
…called Allen’s farm with all the buildings thereon standing being situated
partly on the Neck so called, and partly on Winter Island so called and
containing about forty five acres more or less, being bounded by the stone wall
as the same now stands, together with all the walls adjoining…
Orne was in possession of the property at Winter Island for only a half dozen years, after which
the property once again transferred hands in 1816 to Danvers native, Jonathan Dustin.
According to the 1816 Deed from Josiah Orne, Jonathan Dustin’s profession is noted as
‘Victualler’, meaning the Dustin’s family fortune was made in the licensed trade of alcoholic
liquor (and other provisions). The property would remain in the Dustin family for the next halfcentury and in subsequent records, including the 1874 Salem City Atlas, the portion of land
known as ‘Juniper Point’ of the Salem Neck is recorded as belonging to the ‘Heirs of Dustin’,
1
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
which included Dustin’s two adult daughters, Eliza Sutton and Serena Ayers. Just one year after
the publication of the 1874 Salem Atlas, the entire forty-five acres of the Dustin estate was sold to
Daniel B. Gardner for $21,000:
…we, Eliza Sutton and Serena Ayer of Peabody in the County of Essex… in
consideration of twenty one thousand dollars to us paid by Daniel B. Gardner,
Jr. of Salem… a parcel of land formerly called Allen’s Farm situated in Said
Salem partly on the Neck so called and partly on Winter Island so called and
containing about forty five acres more or less… Easterly by the sea shore and
Northerly North Westerly, Southwesterly and Southerly by land of the City of
Salem as the same to now enclosed by the stone walls and boundaries being
more particularly shown on a plan entitled “Plan of the Dustin Farm on Salem
Neck, 1854… Being the same premises that Josiah Orne conveyed to Jonathan
Dustin the father of said Eliza and Serena… [who] inherited the same.
1874 Salem City Atlas | Salem Neck & Winter Island
2
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
Immediately after purchasing the property from the Heirs of Dustin, in October of 1875 Gardner
commissioned the land to be officially surveyed and divided by local surveyor, Charles A.
Putnam, the result of which was a plan to subdivide the Juniper Point peninsula, entitled ‘Plan of
Cottage Lots at Juniper Point Salem Neck’. Gardner, one of the wealthiest land owners in Salem
during the 19th century, planned to subsequently sell the individual parcels for others to build
summer homes along the Juniper Cove waterfront (see images on page 4).
The following Spring, in April of 1876, Daniel B. Gardner, Jr. sold two parcels (numbered 32 and
33 on the Putnam plan) to Horatio D. Allen for $500. The deed between Gardner and Allen
includes a specific condition that further confirms Gardner’s vision for the Juniper Point
development:
This conveyance is made on condition that no shop, public house, boarding
house, saloon or stable shall ever be erected on said lot, nor any building
thereon used for any of said purposes… and further that a strip of land ten feet
wide next to high water mark shall forever be kept open free and unobstructed
as a public ride walk and promenade.
1876 Land Deed | Daniel B. Gardner to Horatio B. Allen
3
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
1875 Plan of Cottage Lots at Juniper Point Salem Neck
(top) Overview of Cottage Lots at Juniper Point as subdivided and surveyed by Charles A. Putnam,
surveyor, who divided Gardner’s land into 73 individual lots to be sold.
(Bottom) Denoted by the bold line on the top picture, a closer view of the neighborhood of Juniper
point, including Beach, Central, and Cheval Avenues, lots 23-37.
4
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
Salem in the 1870s was in flux; the maritime industry that had held up Salem’s economy for
decades had crumbled in the 1820s and 30s, and by the middle of the 19th century the entire
industry had changed from seafaring to an international capitol of cloth and shoe manufacturing.
Salem continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leather-making business. In
1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor earthquake. In the following year,
the large Pennsylvania Pier (site of the present harbor-side electrical plant) was completed to
begin receiving large shipments of coal.
1876 Alexander Graham Bell demonstrating his telephone invention at the Lyceum in Salem, Mass.
In the U.S. centennial year, 1876, A.G. Bell of Salem announced that he had discovered a way to
transmit voices over telegraph wires. In this decade, French-Canadian families began coming to
work in Salem’s mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The better-off
workers bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their families in the outlying
sections of the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam Cotton mills would employ 1200 people
and annually produce nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Shoe-manufacturing businesses expanded
in the 1870s, and 40 shoe factories were employing 600-plus operatives. Tanning, in both Salem
and Peabody, remained a very important industry, and employed hundreds of breadwinners.
5
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
1883 Salem, Mass. Lithograph | The Willows
On Juniper point, the Allen family continued to use the land for farming and working purposes.
In 1883 Horatio D. Allen sold the property to his son, Joseph P. Allen (whose name again appears
in this report on the 1897 Salem Atlas as the neighboring house to 25 Beach Avenue) — Allen in
turn decided to sell half of the property, the lot numbered 33 on the Plan of Cottage Lots at
Juniper Point.
1897 Salem Atlas | Juniper Point at Salem Neck
6
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
The 1891 Deed details the sale between Joseph P. Allen and Frank A. Wendell who purchased the
lot for $800, and includes the stipulation that a “strip of land thirty two (32) feet in width
extending from Central Avenue to the Sea shall be kept open and used in common by the owners
of said adjoining Estates.” Wendell then sold the land at Lot 33 in March 1896 to Samuel Shaw
from Newton, Mass. for “one dollar and other valuable considerations” (a common price for land
exchanges in 19th and early 20th century Essex County). One year prior in 1895, two brand new
streets were approved to be developed on Juniper Point: Central and Beach Avenues. Shaw
commenced work immediately on building the Queen Anne home at the intersection of Beach,
Central, and Cheval Avenues. By the end of the Spring 1896 the waterfront home was completed,
and Shaw sold the new home to the widow Harriet F. Perkins for $4,100. Just one year later, a
new official Atlas was published (presumably surveyed in 1896-7), the page showing Juniper
Point notes Mrs. Perkins at the new home, next door to J. P. Allen.
1896 Land Deed | Frank A. Wendell to Samuel Shaw
7
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
Part II: The Perkins Family
Mrs. Harriet F. Perkins was given the name Mary Elizabeth at birth, but someone in the Bingham
family decided better of it shortly after she was born on February 26th of 1845, and changed her
name to Harriet F. Bingham.
1845 Mass. Birth Records
Harriet F Bingham born
Feb. 26 on Central
Street in Manchester.
She was born to Mary Jane and Henry Tuck Bingham, a cabinetmaker, on Central Street in
Manchester, Massachusetts. Harriet was the third born of four Bingham children born to Mary
Jane and Henry, and their only daughter.
1850 US Federal Census | Essex Co. Massachusetts | Manchester | The Bingham Family
8
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
22 February 1868 Massachusetts Marriage Record of Fitz W. Perkins & Harriet F. Bingham
At the age of 22 Harriet was married to 23 year-old Fitz W. Perkins, a grocer and Gloucester,
Mass. native on the 22nd of February, 1868. Eighteen months later Harriet gave birth to the one
and only child born to the couple; Fitz and Harriet welcomed their son, Charles F. Perkins on
July 15th of 1869. The family spent the first few years of their marriage living in Gloucester while
Fitz worked as a grocer, as neighbors to Mr. Perkins’ parents, Jacob and Margaret, until 1874
when they relocated to Central Street in Salem, Mass.
1870 US Federal Census | Manchester, Essex Co. | Fitz & Harriet (Hattie) Perkins, et al.
9
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
During this decade in Salem, hordes of French-Canadian families began coming to work in
Salem’s mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built. The better-off workers
bought portions of older houses or built small homes for their families in the outlying sections of
the city; and by 1879 the Naumkeag Steam Cotton mills would employ 1200 people and produce
annually nearly 15 million yards of cloth. Shoe-manufacturing businesses expanded in the 1870s,
and 40 shoe factories were employing 600-plus operatives.
1883 Salem, Mass. Lithograph | The Point & the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co. neighborhood
Fitz W. Perkins established a successful business with a Mr. Leroy Philbrick soon after he and his
family arrived in Salem. The partners created L. B. Philbrick & Perkins and dealt in ‘oils, paints,
and papers.’ Mr. and Mrs. Perkins, along with their son Charles, lived at several addresses
throughout the City, according to concurrent directories: in 1874 the family lived at 7 Central
Street, while Mr. Perkins’ business was located at 16 Central; then, by 1878 the business of
Philbrick & Perkins is at 229 Derby Street, and the Perkins’ home at 23 Pickman; in 1880 the
business had relocated to 36-38 Central Street, and the Perkins family to 91 Essex, in 1888 they
are at 13 Orne Sq, after which the family moved to 2 Pickman Street by 1890, and then 19 Winter
Street by 1893. Evidently, Fitz was also deeply involved in the politics of Salem, and by the age of
fifty he had gotten himself elected to the City Board of Alderman. It was 1894 when Mr. and Mrs.
Perkins took a trip to Washington, D. C. Fitz W. Perkins became gravely ill and died at the Hotel
Oxford. His obituary, published in the Salem Evening News on October 1st, details the
extraordinary man’s life (and a bit of 1894 Salem politics):
10
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
Alderman Perkins Dies at Washington
cords of the neck. The G. A. R. Post of
Washington had in the meantime been
communicated with by the local post, and they
visited the sick man at about that time. The
attending physician stated the seriousness of the
case, and the post immediately ordered the
department physician to attend. That gentleman
was one of Garfield’s physicians.
A consultation was held, and the
doctors decided that in order to combat with the
disease it was absolutely necessary to open the
growth at the back of the neck. That operation
was successfully performed, and a large amount
of poisonous matter removed.
The poison accumulated so rapidly,
however, that the skill of the best physicians in
the country was of no avail and Mr. Perkins soon
after passed away.
The disease so rapidly enveloped his
system that his mind was unbalanced on several
occasions during the first three weeks of his
sickness. Sunday morning it was evident that the
end was near. He lapsed into unconsciousness
and remained in that state until death ensued.
He was unconscious some little time
before his final attack, and failed to recognize his
brothers, who had gone on to see him.
The attending physicians stated
yesterday that they had Mr. Perkins started for
home upon the first attack of illness, it was
exceedingly doubtful if he would have made the
journey alive. During his unconscious spells his
mind continually preyed upon city affairs, and
repeatedly he would rise and ask to be taken
home, as he must get there and vote on the
Longham meadow matter. The doctors were of
the opinion aided materially in the progress of
the disease, as it was impossible to keep him,
while suffering so frightfully from these
deliriums.
Mrs. Perkins, accompanied by her two
brothers, left Washington last evening, arriving
home this forenoon. The son, Charles F., will
leave Washington today with the body. It was the
intention of the Washington post, to send a
member with the son.
Second Death in Board This Year.
Has a Very Important Political Aspect.
Leaves Longham Supporters a Clear Majority.
Opponents Will Petition to Have Both Seats
Filled.
Fitz W Perkins died at Hotel Oxford,
Washington, at 1.08 Sunday afternoon, after an
illness dating from the national encampment of
the G. A. R. At Pittsburg, a month ago.
Three weeks ago the deceased was
taken to the hotel ad Washington, upon the
advice of physicians, he having developed
alarming symptoms for typhoid fever. Mrs.
Perkins, his wife, was with him and remained by
his side until death ensued.
Soon after his admittance to the hotel ,
typhoid fever set in. The attuning physicians did
everything within their power to allay the ravages
of the disease, and were successful in
counteracting its influence on the system. He
rallied slightly, only to be attached by erysipelas.
A growth was soon noticeable upon the
11
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
condition was such that he was unable to
withstand the ravages of the disease.
Its Political Significance.
If VacancyIs Not Filled Longham Meadow Basin
Is Assured.
The death of Alderman Perkins is the
sole topic of conversation in political circles. It
means considerable to the citizens. If his
successor is not elected Messrs. Knight, Gove
and Stickney would form a majority of the board
and the Longham meadow scheme would go
through with a rush.
That movement will be checkmated by
the opponents to the measure, however, by a
petition for an election to fill the vacancies in the
board. That means two new aldermen.
The canvass for the offices would be
bitterly contested by the men favoring Longham
meadow, as, unless they win a victory their
scheme for furnishing water to the citizens can
never pass.
The opponents will not work so hard,
but will endeavor to induce gentlemen to run for
offices that the citizens can rely upon, the men
who will thoroughly investigate matters before
rushing a scheme of any description through the
board.
The Dead Alderman.
It Was His First Political Office — A Good
Record as a Soldier, Extending Over 26 Years.
Fitz W. Perkins was born in
Gloucester, Aug. 20, 1844. He was educated in
the public schools, and after finishing his
education entered the grocery business. After
concluding his career as a groceryman he entered
the paint and oil business. He associated himself
with L. B. Philbrick & Perkins, dealers in oils,
paints and paper, with headquarters in this city.
The firm has enjoyed prosperity and run teams to
all portions of the county and this section of the
state.
Mr. Perkins has a long military record
with some 26 years continuous service. When the
war broke out he enlisted as a private in Co. G,
Eighth Regiment, and after serving nine months
was discharged. He re-enlisted June 4, 1863, as
sergeant in the Second Massachusetts Heavy
artillery and refined in service until June 27, 1865.
In August, 1863, he enlisted as a
member of Co. . Eighth Regiment. M. V. M. He
served time as a corporal and sergeant, and on
May 15, 1868, was elected second lieutenant.
April 20, 1869, he was promoted to the first
lieutenancy, and August 18, 1869, was
discharged.
He again mustered into service March
15, 1875, as quartermaster sergeant of the Eight
Regiment, Aug. 11, 1879, he was appointed
quartermaster, and held that office for a number
of years.
He was a member of the G. A. R. Royal
Arcanum and one of the leaders in the Pilgrim
Fathers, having occupied many offices in that
order.
Mr. Perkins was originally a member of
Allen post 45, G. A. R., of Gloucester, and was a
past commander of that organization. He was a
past president of the Eighth Regiment Veteran
association. He was a deputy supreme governor
of several Pilgrim Father lodges. When the Salem
Board of Trade was formed he became a member
and has since taken great interest in its work.
He was elected to the board of
aldermen last December, that being the first
Was on a Pleasure Trip.
Succumbed to Illness In Washington About Two
Weeks Ago
The death of Alderman Perkins is the
second to be recorded among the members of the
board of aldermen of this city for the year of 1894,
Alderman Fabens having been the first to pass
away.
Death was the result of an attack of
erysipelas, with other complications.
Alderman Perkins left Salem a few
weeks ago to attend the national G. A. R.
Encampment at Pittsburg. He was not feeling
very well at the time, but insisted upon making
the trip.
At Pittsburg he partially succumbed to
an attack of illness, but rallied an insisted on
starting for the battle field of Newburn, N. C.
With a large party. He got as far as Washington,
where he was forced to take to his bed. Here he
remained ever since, attended by the best
physicians in the Capitol city. His physical
12
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
political office he had ever held. He was an
opponent to the Longham meadow scheme, and
it was his illness that brought about the present
condition of affairs.
He was married and leaves a widow, and
one son, Charles F., of the firm of Odell &
Perkins.
through him that in 1882 I severed my connection
with the Cadets and joined the Eighth Regiment.
Our social relations were pleasant and friendly.
We visited at each other’s homes, and the
friendship extended to the other members of our
families.”
The day before he started for Pittsburg
he came into my shop and in talking over the
matter he expresses the wish that I would
accompany him. I said it would be a pleasure but
business would not permit. That evening he and
Mrs. Perkins came to my house and bid Mrs.
Stickney and myself good bye. His death removes
a friend that I shall ever deplore.”
Alderman Flynn— “My relations with
Mr. Perkins began at the Columbus Day parade,
Oct. 21, 1892, we serving together on the staff of
Wm. G. Webber, marshal of the trades’ division.
Then I found him a perfect gentleman and a
pleasant companion. Since his coming into the
board of aldermen I found he displayed the same
gentlemanly qualities. He was earnest and sincere
in all his actions, and although sometimes we
differed on the wisest courses to follow in
municipal matters, any such difference never
interfered with our personal relations. His death
is a loss to the city, which in common with all
citizens I regret, and also regard his death as a
personal loss, it being the removal of one whom I
regarded as a dear friend. By his death I am left
the only member of the committee on elections
which was originally Messrs. Fabens, Perkins and
myself.”
Alderman Sawyer— “My acquaintance
with Alderman Perkins dates back 25 years,
having first met him on the road before either of
us moved to Salem.
“The death of Mr. Perkins comes home
to me as though he was a member of the family.
He was the only member of the bard that I was
personally acquainted with, before the recent
election.
“He was as good a friend as a man could
have and if he ever gave his word you could rely
on it. He was faithful to all trusts and everything
placed in his care was always looked alert. He was
an earnest, honest and fearless worker, attending
to his duties in a thoroughly impartial manner.
“In politics, he was a Republican.
While in office, he never cared for the future,
desiring only accomplish what, in his mind was
the true solution of the problem which
confronted him.”
His Associates.
Mayor Turner and the Five Remaining Aldermen
Speak in High Terms of His Worth as a Man and
as a Public Servant.
The news of Alderman Perkins’ death,
though somewhat expected by his fellow
members, as well as by the public, was
nevertheless a great shock to them, more
especially as it was the second time within the
year that death has entered the chamber.
Regardless of political differences, Alderman
Perkins was highly regarded by all his associates.
They ever found him considerate and courteous
man, a man f honor, high minded and having the
interest of the city at heart, doing what he saw to
be his duty, and holding steadfastly to his course.
The mayor and the five remaining
aldermen each had a warm tribute to offered
when the news of his death was brought to them.
Mayor Turner expressed sorrow and
spoke in feeling terms of Mr. Perkins’ many
excellent qualities. Especially he did refer to the
genial companionship of the deceased member in
the executive sessions of the board, where they
were more manifest than at the open sessions; at
the latter, he was dignified and earnest in debate
and conscientious in action.
Alderman Knight — “I regret sincerely
the death of Mr. Perkins. My acquaintance with
him was not so lang as other members of the
board, it having begun at the city election last
year. Since meeting him in the board of aldermen
I learned to respect and esteem him highly. Our
reactions were always pleasant, differences of
opinion as to public matters not marine in the
least our personal relations. He was a pleasant
companion and conscientious public official.
Alderman Stickney— “I knew Mr.
Perkins better than any other member of the
board. Our relations began many years ago in the
militia, I being a member of the Second Corps
and he a member of the Eighth Regiment. It was
13
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
“His death is to be regretted by all classes.”
Alderman Gove— “It is indeed very sad
to lose another member of our board. I
considered Alderman Perkins as a most valuable
member of the board and we shall feel his loss
very much. We seem to have been singularly
unfortunate this year. Two deaths and the serious
injury to Alderman Sawyer, which compelled him
to be absent from the meetings for some time, is a
remarkable state of affairs. I trust that no other
calamity will befall us for the remainder of our
term of office.”
Mayor Turner, Aldermen Knight and
Gove were appointed a committee to draw up
resolutions on the death of Alderman Perkins.
The mayor, with full board, was
appointed a committee to make arrangements for
the funeral.
The city messenger was requested to
drape the late alderman’s chair in mourning.
It was voted not to hold any other
meeting until after the funeral. On the day of the
funeral the City hall will be closed and all the
departments of the city will be closed.
The only business done was the
drawing of jurors. Frank W. Benson, Charles W.
Read and William Sutton drawn.
Alderman Knight and Flynn will
probably go to Boston to accompany the remains
to Salem.
Second Death on Board
Alderman Fabens Passed Away Early in the Year.
It is a little singular that there should be
two deaths in the board of aldermen within eight
months, yet such is the case. Alderman Fabens
died suddenly at Bridgeport, Conn., early in the
year while on his way home from Europe whither
he had been in search of health. This death left
the board a tie on the water question, and now
that tie is broken by the second death.
Funeral Tuesday.
It Will Be Held from His Late Home on Winter
Street at 2.30.
Alderman Perkins’ brothers arrived in Salem this
morning. They announced that the funeral would
be h eld from his late home on Winter street,
Tuesday afternoon at 2,30 o’clock, and that it was
the wish of the widow to have it as private as
possible. The body will arrive in Boston about
8.30 this evening.
The G. A. R. Notified.
Local Post Has Followed the Sickness of Its
Comrade — Adjutant Goes to Meet the Remains.
The local post of the G. A. R. Has kept
constantly informed of the condition of its sick
comrade, and I. W. Stone, assistant adjutant
general of the department of the district, has
acted as the agent of the post. A message was
received from him Sunday, conveying the
intelligence of Mr. Perkins’ death, and Dr. A. M.
Dudley, the adjutant, immediately started for
New York, to meet the remains. A committee
from the post will meet the remains in Salem.
Board of Trade Meeting.
The board of trade will meet this
evening at 8 o’clock to take action on the death of
Alderman Perkins, who was a member of the
executive committee.
Aldermen Meet.
Appropriate Action Taken On the Death of Their
Fellow Member.
The board of aldermen held a special
meeting at 9 o’clock this morning. Mayor Turner
presided and all members were present.
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�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
After twenty-five years of marriage, Harriet F. Perkins found herself widowed at the age of 49.
She continued to live at the couple’s last address, 19 Winter Street (until 1899), and presumably
she and her son Charles were the beneficiaries of her late husband’s Estate. Two years after Fitz
W. Perkins passing, Harriet purchased the house on Juniper Point from Samuel Shaw in June of
1896:
…in consideration of forty-one hundred dollars paid by Harriet F. Perkins,
widow, of Salem … do hereby give, grant, bargain sell and convey unto the said
Harriet F. Perkins a certain lot of land situate on Juniper Point, so called, in
said Salem being lot numbered thirty three (33) on a “Plan of Cottage Lots at
Juniper Point Salem Neck, C. A. Putnam, Surveyor Oct. 1875”…
1896 Property Deed | Samuel Shaw to Harriet F. Perkins
The design and layout of the neighborhood at Juniper Point was entirely intentional; the vision of
Daniel B. Gardner, who had bought, surveyed, and subdivided, and sold the property in the
mid-1870s was clearly intended in some of the earliest deeds granted to the residents of Juniper
Point (and Salem Neck), which included explicit language as to what the premises could (or more
accurately, could not) be used for:
15
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
“… no building nor any part thereof on said land shall be used as a hotel,
boarding-house, saloon, shop, livery or boarding stable, or for manufacturing
purposes, or for any purposes than for a private dwelling house, with the usual
out-buildings, including a private stable; no stable, however, to be rested within
50’ of any street, and with the further agreement that no swine shall be kept on
said land…”
1911 Salem Atlas | Mrs. Perkins at 43 Central Avenue (now 25 Beach Avenue)
By the time of Mrs. Perkins’ purchase of the home in the early Summer of 1896, much of the land
that had once been owned and parceled out by Daniel B. Gardner had been purchased and
developed into a retreat of sorts for well-to-do Salemites looking to escape the heat of Downtown
Salem in the humid New England summers. At the turn of the 20th century, Salem Willows was
being developed with amusement rides and restaurants just around the corner from the Juniper
Point summer homes along the waterfront. Apparently Mrs. Perkins enjoyed living on Salem
Neck enough that she decided to make it her permanent residence (though she retained
ownership of 19 Winter Street) and by 1900 she is listed living on Central Avenue. (The address
of the Perkins’ waterfront home changed once more in the time between 1911 and 1915, when the
current address of 25 Beach Avenue became the permanent identity of the Queen Anne home.)
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�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
On the morning of June 25, 1914 in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street opposite Federal), a fire
started in one of Salem’s fire-prone wooden tanneries. This fire soon consumed the building and
raced out of control, for the west wind was high and the season had been dry. The next building
caught fire, and the next, and out of Blubber Hollow the fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of
flame and smoke, wiping out the houses of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street,
and then sweeping through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men
and machines could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed
the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of Lafayette Street
itself, and raged onward into the tenement district.
25th June 1914 | The Great Salem Fire consumes a third of the City
Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and cities, the fire
overwhelmed everything in its path: it smashed into the large factory buildings of the Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Company (Congress Street), which exploded in an inferno; and it rolled down
Lafayette Street and across the water to Derby Street. There, just beyond Union Street, after a
13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed some 250 acres, 1600 houses, and 41
factories, and leaving three dead and thousands homeless. Some people had insurance, some did
not; all received much support and generous donations from all over the country and the world.
It was one of the greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States, and the people of
Salem would take years to recover from it; fortunately, the Perkins family did not lose anything.
17
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
1900 US Federal Census | Salem, Mass. | Central Avenue, Juniper Point
Harriet ‘Hattie’ F. Perkins remained living at the home until she disappears from the local
records in 1916, as she presumably passed away in 1915 at the age of 70. Documents show that
Mrs. Perkins left her estate (including both homes on Winter Street and Beach Avenue) to her
only son, Charles F. Perkins, now a married man with a career as an accountant, who is listed in
the Salem Directory as living at 25 Beach Avenue in 1916 through 1918, after which he retained
ownership but did not live at the home on Juniper Point full-time; rather it was used by the family
as a summer retreat from the sweltering heat of downtown Salem in the summertime.
1916 Salem City Directory | Charles F. & Elizabeth B. Perkins at 25 Beach Avenue
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�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
1926 Survey of Salem Neck| Waterfront Homes at Juniper Point
Charles F. Perkins continued to own the home at 25 Beach Avenue and the Perkins family and
friends undoubtedly spent many a long summer evening on the shores at Juniper Point.
Throughout the 1920s and early 1930s the home is listed on the Salem Street Directories as
being the summer residence of C. F. Perkins until 1938. From the time that Charles’ widowed
mother purchased the brand new home on the waterfront of Juniper Point in 1896 until the
property was sold in 1938, the home at 25 Beach Avenue and the Perkins family were witness to a
rapidly changing city just across the Salem Sound.
After the Great Salem Fire of 1914, one of the greatest urban disasters in the history of the United
States, the people of Salem would take years to recover from it. Eventually, they did, and many of
the former houses and businesses were rebuilt; and several urban-renewal projects (including
Hawthorne Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and widening old streets) were put
into effect.
19
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
1926 Salem Mass. City Hall | Salem’s Tercentenary Celebration
By the 1920s, Salem was once again a thriving city; and its tercentenary in 1926 was a time of
great celebration. The Depression hit in 1929, and continued through the 1930s. Salem, the
county seat and regional retail center, gradually rebounded, and prospered after World War II
through the 1950s and into the 1960s. General Electric, Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills
(formerly Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.), Almy’s department store, various other large-scale
retailers, and Beverly’s United Shoe Machinery Company were all major local employers.
20
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
Early 20th Century Postcard | Salem, Mass. | The Willows
In May of 1938 Charles F. Perkins sold the property at 25 Beach Avenue to Alfred T. Poulter and
his wife, Marion E. Poulter. (Charles Perkins relocated to Los Angeles, California in the late
1930s where he would spend the rest of his life until his passing in 1943.) Evidently, according to
contemporary directories the Poulter family made 25 Beach Avenue their year-round residence.
(Researcher’s note: 25 Beach Avenue is sometimes labelled 136 Bay View Avenue in contemporary
City directories.)
21
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
Part III: The Poulter Family
Alfred Thomas Poulter was born in Plaistow, in Essex, England in the County Borough of West
Ham, the second youngest of the four children of Samuel James and Charlotte Poulter (née
Raisbeck): James, born in 1894, Joy Hilda born in 1895, Alfred Thomas Poulter born in 1899, and
finally Herbert born in 1901. The Poulter family emigrated through Boston, Mass. in May of 1906
from London, England when Alfred Thomas was just turning seven years old, and settled in
Connecticut. Samuel James Poulter earned a living as a painter to support his family, while the
Poulter children were educated in local schools.
Alfred Thomas Poulter remained in East Windsor, Connecticut where he lived and worked in the
Warehouse Point Village neighborhood of the city. According to the 1920 Federal Census ,
Alfred was living with his family as a single 20-year old, working as a foreman at a local cotton
mill. He had been naturalized as an American citizen just one year before in 1919.
In 1922 Alfred T. Poulter relocated to Salem, Mass. which sustained on its own booming cotton
mill industry, where he found work as a bookkeeper and a place to board at 75 Hathorne. By 1924
Alfred had found a new place to board at 116 Columbus Avenue on Juniper Point, while working
as a cashier (i.e. bookkeeper) at Swift & Co., a local beef wholesale provision market, located at
274 Bridge Street. During his time boarding on Columbus Avenue, Alfred Poulter would meet
the young woman who would eventually become his wife: Marion Elizabeth Spencer; the two
were wed in 1926.
Marion E. Spencer was born in Salem on the 22nd of September, 1899, the only child of Alfred
and Margaret E. Spencer (née Hamilton). Alfred Spencer came to Salem from England to apply
his trade as a shoemaker. Margaret E. Hamilton was born in the burgeoning industrial town of
Northbridge, Massachusetts in a neighborhood village called Whitinsville; it is no coincidence
that her family made their way to Salem in the second half of the 19th century, as Salem’s
booming industrial economy drew thousands from all over the world, especially those involved
with steam power manufacturing.
The Spencer family including Alfred, Margaret, and Marion Elizabeth lived at 12 Margin Street
with Marion’s paternal grandmother, Martha Spencer (née Crabtree). At just seven years old,
22
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
Marion’s father Alfred passed away after a week-long bout of peritonitis 1 in March of 1908.
Marion and her mother continued to live at 12 Margin Street, along with Margaret Spencer’s
mother (Marion’s maternal grandmother), Isabella Hamilton, and a 66 year-old boarder from
Maine named Sarah Leighton.
Marion lived on Margin Street until she finished with her primary school education, after which
she moved (along with her mother) to a boarding house on Brown Street in 1919-20. According
to the 1920 US Federal census, Marion was one of seven ladies living at 18 Brown Street; she was
the youngest of the seven at age 20 (Marion’s mother, Margaret, worked as a housekeeper for the
boarding house.) Helen A. Sutton, the homeowner, worked for the ‘gentlemen’s home’ as a
social worker, sisters Mary and Christine Sutherland came from Canada and both worked in a
local lamp factory, Amelia MacArtie, the daughter of an Italian woman and an Irish man worked
as a bookkeeper at a general furnishing store, and Hannah Shepherd who worked as an
‘attendant’ to a private family.
1921 Salem Normal School Yearbook | Marion E. Spencer
“The secret of success is constancy to purpose.”
By 1921 Marion and her mother moved once again, this time to 15 Messervy Street while Marion
attended the Salem Normal School (now North Campus at Salem State University), where she
studied to become a teacher. She remained living on Messervy Street while working as a teacher
until she met and married Alfred Thomas Poulter in 1926.
1 peritonitis — (noun) inflammation of the peritoneum, typically caused by bacterial infection either via the
blood or after rupture of an abdominal organ
23
�25 Beach Avenue | Salem, Mass.
After the wedding, the new Mr. and Mrs. Alfred T. Poulter resided at 16 Leach Street for a short
time, just long enough to apply for naturalization as a United States citizen in 1927. In February
of 1928 the couple welcomed their first child, Marylyn Margaret Poulter. Later in the same year
the couple had relocated to Gardner, Massachusetts, and in 1931 the second Poulter child was
born: Hamilton Thomas Poulter (named for his maternal grandmother’s surname and father’s
middle name). The young Poulter family lived in several different places within Gardner, where
they remained until 1936, when the Gardner, Mass. Directory notes that the Poulter family had
relocated back to Salem.
The 1936 and 1937 Directories indicate that the Poulter family lived at 2A Willow Avenue in
Salem, and Alfred returned to working for Swift & Co. as a cashier/bookkeeper. In May of 1938
Alfred T. Poulter purchased the home at 25 Beach Avenue from Charles F. Perkins for $3,500
and the cost of back-taxes to the City of Salem. The Poulter family moved in to their newly
procured home and made the seaside home their year-round residence until 1953, when the
property was sold to the Dumas Family.
1938 Deed | Sale of 25 Beach Ave. from Charles F. Perkins to
Alfred T. & Marion E. Poulter
24
�Historic Salem Inc. | House History Report
At the end of the summer in 1953 Alfred T. Poulter sold the property to Leo H. Dumas, whose
heirs still reside at the property on Juniper Point. According to the family, the deal to sell the
home was struck during a friendly night out in Salem’s Derby Street neighborhood.
1953 Deed for 25 Beach Ave. from Alfred T. & Marion E. Poulter to Leo H. & Anastasia Dumas
Southern Essex Registry of Deeds — Book 4006 Page 410
25
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Beach Avenue
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
25 Beach Avenue, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Harriet F. Perkins
Widow of
Salem City Alderman
Fitz W. Perkins
1896
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1896, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy E. Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
1896
2019
25
Avenue
Beach
F.
Fitz
Harriet
History
House
Massachusetts
Perkins
Salem
W.
-
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PDF Text
Text
29 Dearborn Street
Built for
Walter T. Berry
Grocer
& his wife
Adelaide S. Warner
in 1911
Researched & written by
Robert Booth
May 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�����������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Dearborn Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
29 Dearborn Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Walter T. Berry
Grocer
& his wife
Adelaide S. Warner
in 1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1911
2019
29
Adelaide
Berry
Dearborn
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Walter
Warner
-
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6aeb17f34d3bebc8a744dfd7f90ddc0e
PDF Text
Text
����������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Boston Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Industrial and Social Development of Boston Street, Salem
Subject
The topic of the resource
Street History
Description
An account of the resource
The Industrial and Social Development of Boston Street, Salem
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1978
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Dan Campbell, Anne Van Ingen, Paula Bailey, Karen Walsh, Robert Booth, Virginia M. Gagnon
Language
A language of the resource
English
1978
Boston
Development
Industrial
Massachusetts
Salem
Social
Street
-
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87e4d375e8864f10605d5d94cc9eb201
PDF Text
Text
1 Essex Street
Built by
James Fanning
Carpenter
c. 1894
Research Provided by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
June 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Chain of Title, 1 Essex Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded Grantor(s)
William F. Chapple of
October 11, 1893 Salem
Grantee(s)
Conveyance of
"one dollar and
other valuable
consideration paid"
all that parcel of real estate situated in
said Salem and bounded south westerly
by Webb Street, southeasterly by land of
Nichols, now or late, north easterly by
the location of the Essex Rail Road, north
westerly by the line of Essex street as
extended across said Webb street to
said Railroad location by the fence as it
now stands one hundred twenty three
feet.
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Source
Document Book or Vol. Page
Notes
1390
206 No mention of any buildings.
Katie J. Fanning, widow, of
October 27, 1923 Salem
the land in said SALEM, together with the
buildings thereon, bounded
northwesterly by the continuation of
Richard H. G. Hichens and
Essex Street from Webb Street to the
Catherine Hichens, husband
location of the Boston and Maine
and wife, of Salem
"consideration paid" Railroad 41 feet...
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2574
"Being a portion of the premises
conveyed to James Fanning by
William F. Chapple by deed
recorded with Essex, South
District, Deeds, Book 1390 Page
494 206, and by him devised to me."
Richard H. G. Hichens,
February 19, 1942 widower, of Salem
the land in said SALEM, together with the
buildings thereon, bounded
northwesterly by the continuation of
Essex Street from Webb Street to the
location of the Boston and Maine
Richard H. Hichens of Salem "consideration paid" Railroad 41 feet...
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3286
300
Richard H. Hichens of
May 28, 1942 Salem
the land in said SALEM, together with the
buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows: Northwesterly by
the continuation of Essex Street from
Webb Street to the location of the
Boston and Main- Railroad Forty-one (41)
Joseph J. Cichocki of Salem "consideration paid" feet...
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3295
80
Joseph J. Cichocki of
July 30, 1945 Salem
the land in said Salem, together with the
buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows: Northwesterly by
the continuation of Essex Street from
Webb Street to the location of the
Joseph & Alice Cichocki,
Boston and Maine Railroad Forty-one (41)
husband and wife, of Salem "consideration paid" feet...
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3411
414
Harriet J. Robbins of
Wilmington, MA, Amelia
Borders of Gretna, LA,
Helen N. O'Donnell of
Salem, MA, and Pamela
June 7, 1983 Murphy of Haverhill, MA
Patricia A. Woolf and
Thomas J. O'Donnell, CoExecutors of the Estate of
July 23, 2004 Alfred Cichocki
James Fanning of Salem
Consideration
Alfred Cichocki
Alan R. Barth and Allison C.
Duff, husband and wife, of
Salem
The land in said Salem, together with the
buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows: by the continuation
of Essex Street from Webb Street to the
location of the Boston and Maine
"consideration paid" Railroad forty-one (41) feet...
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
7128
The land in said Salem, together with the
buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows: by the continuation
of Essex Street from Webb Street to the
location of the Boston and Maine
$300,000.00 Railroad forty-one (41) feet...
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
23163
"For title reference see Estate of
Alice Cichocki, Essex Probate
64 #357062"
408
��������������1874
�1897
�1911
�1895-96 Salem Directory
216
FABENS.
FARRELL.
[Salem.]
Fabens Benjamin F. h. 195 Lafayette
Farley Alice M. ]Hiss, b. 26 West ave.
Bessie H. widow of Charles E. h. 34
Annie Miss, servant at 114 Derby
Summe1·
Charles O. farmer, b. 26 West ave.
Caroline A. Miss, b. 33 Summer
Ernest, watchman, 3! Front, b. 26
Frank P. b. 195 Lafayette
West ave.
!Boardman
George H. painter, h. 40 Harbo1·
Henry, cooper, 225 Derby, b. 40
Margaret D. widow of Augustus J. h.
Herbert N. salesman, h. 40 Boardman
18 Chestnut
James A. driver, h. 13 Winthrop
Sarah, widow of J osepb, b. 5 Bott's ct.
James H. janitor, Bertram school
Fagan James E. machinist, b. Fort ave.
house, b. 26 West ave.
n. Willows
Joseph L. cooper, h. 1 Hazel
John J. died Oct. 19, 1894
Mary C. widow of Alfred M. h. 364
Moses M. E. fisherman, b. 6 Allen
Essex
Thomas, laborer, h. rear 22 Becket
Mary E. i\Iiss, b. 26 We.st ave.
Fahey Joseph, laborer, b. 72 Mason
Farmer Amelia, widow of James D.
Fairfield Charles E. clerk, 52 Central, h.
115 Webb
died Nov. 9, 1893
9 Forrester
Annie W. Miss, clerk, 188 Essex, b.
Charlotte W. Miss, bookkeeper (26
Elizabeth E. Miss, teacher, Oliver
Bedford, Bo•ton). b. 13 Pleasant
school, b. 109 North
AIRFIELD EDWARD W. stationer,
Elizabeth P. Miss, music teacher, 15
Webb, b. do.
20 Boston. h. do. See front cover.
AIRFIELD JAMES, dealer in lumber,
Joseph P. (Farmer & Egell), h. 15
lime, cement and coal, 52 to 60
Webb
[North
Central, and 283 Derby, h. 13
Lucy E. widow of Georite S. b. 109
Pleasant. See opp. page 97,
William S. tinsmith, h. 59 Highland
Jane S. widow of Samuel G. h. 4
AR'MER & EGELL (Joseph P. Farmer
Becket
and Edward M. Eitell), masons
and builders, 15 Webb and 10
Mary A. widow of James, b. 13 Pleas
Essex. See page 1132.
ant
Farnham Edwin A . clerk, 32 Front, h.
Falconer Allan, rem. to Portland, Me.
Jane J. Miss, nurse, h. 14 Margin
at Swampscott
Edwin P. pastor, First Baptist church,
Fall Howard M. fireman, b. 35 Washington
h. 15 Heckford
Fallis Sidney W. milkman at Cabot fa1·m
Thomas, currier, h. 26 Bow
Mary E. Miss, h. 8 Lynde
Fallon Bernard, tanner, b. 2 1-2 Grove
Orrin L. painter, B. & M. car shop, h.
21 Prescott
Bridget, widow of Malachi, h. 4 1-2
Phelps
[ave.
see Farnum
Edward F·. shoeworker. b. 71 Ocean Farnswol·th Albertus, confectioner, b. 3
Logan
[h. 3 Logan
Joanna C. widow of Thomas R. in
telligence office, 40 Norraan, h. po.
Frank P. foreman currier (Peabody),
Frederick J. morocco dresser, b. 24
. JohnH. ,iboe\vorker. b. 71 Ocean ave.
Ord
ALLON J. HOW ARD, supt. Danvers
Lucy A. widow of Francis R. nurse,
Bleachery (Peabody), h. 348
ll. 28 Beckford
Essex
Sarah E. Miss, nur�e, h. 28 Beckford
Malachi J. b. 83 Bow
Farnum Abby, widow of George W. A. h.
Patrick J. currier, h. 87 Mason
4 Friend
Patrick M. died March 18, 1894
A. Frank, currier, b. 4 Friend
P. Joseph, 56 Mason,died Dec. 21,1892
Eliza Miss, shoeworker, b. rear 78
Thomas, currier, h. 5 Flint
Washington
Thomas 13. laborer, h. 56 Mason
Elizabeth, widow of Nathan, seam
Thomas P. carpenter, h. 156 Federal
stress, h. 145 North
William H. shoelaster, b. 4 1-2 Phelps
see Farnham
Fanning Albert F. carpenter, b. 76 Webb
Fanar Benjamin P. shoelaster, h. 1 Essex
Amelia J. widow of Samuel, h. 22
Farrell Ann. widow of Hugh, h. 9½ Creek
Nichols
Hugh F . E. reporter, Salem Daily
Edward J. carpenter, h. 15 Becket
Gazette, b. 9 1-2 Creek
�'rancis, wood worker, h. 84.9 Bridge
James, currier, h. 19 Phelps
'1eorge T. rem. to Peabody
James J. shoewr,rker, b. 24 Phelps
Herbert J. st.ockfitter, b. 22 Nichols
John', currier.�- 24 Phelps
ANNING JAMES, carpenter, rear 11
Maria S. wi,fow of John, b. 7 Salem
St. Peter, h. 76 Webb. See page
Mary J. G. Miss, at 45 Federal
1126.
[Bridge
Michael.;;, delivery clerk, h. 7 Salem
Margaret, widow of William, b. 349
Patrick, 61 Harbor, rem. to Boston
Samuel, died Dec. 17, 1892
Sylvester, laborer, h. 32 Charter
Samuel, shoelaster, b. 22 Nichols
Sylve/jter J . removed to Lynn
Theresa Miss, b. 349 Bridge
Thooias, currier, h. 7 High
Thomas H. carpenter, h. 40 English
Tho·.nas F. hack driver, 4 Charter, h.
William F. clerk (Boston), b. 76 Webb
22 Perkins
Farley Abbie Miss, b. 364 Essex
F
F
F
F
F
COURT ATT EN DA N
·rs
A;l
get
the BEST DINNERS
at
Porter's R.estaurant, 7 Central Street.
�1895-96 Salem Directory
�1895-96 Salem Directory
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
1 Essex Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by
James Fanning
Carpenter
c. 1894
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1894, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Research by Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1
1894
2019
circa
Essex
Fanning
History
House
James
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
-
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903fb40254c1cbfa318476e416729baa
PDF Text
Text
4 Carpenter Street
Built for
the Nichols family
c. 1905
Designed by
Ernest Machado
Architect
June 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
����Inventory No:
SAL.1604
Historic Name:
Nichols, Francis W. House
Common Name:
Address:
4 Carpenter St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Central Salem
Local No:
26-589
Year Constructed:
c 1905
Architect(s):
Machado, Ernest M. A.
Architectural Style(s):
Colonial Revival
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House; Single Family Dwelling
House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HD: Federal Street
SAL.HJ: Chestnut Street Historic District
SAL.HU: McIntire Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (08/28/1973); Local Historic District
(03/03/1981)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Aluminum Siding; Wood
Foundation: Stone, Uncut
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220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Wednesday, June 5, 2019 at 12:54 PM
�A1?
67u_.lw)4-
N R D I S 1973;LHD 3/3/81
FORM B - BUILDING
Assessor's number
U S G S Quad
26-589
Area(s)
Salem
Town
F o r m Number
HD,HR,HU,HJ
1604
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village)
Address
Central Salem
4 Carpenter Street
Historic Name
Francis W. Nichols House
Uses: Present
Residential
Original
Residential
Date of Construction
Source
c. 1905
Salem City Directories
Style/Form
Colonial Revival
Architect/Builder
Ernest Machado
Exterior Material:
Foundation
Stone
Wall/Trim
Aluminum Siding
Roof
Asphalt Shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
M a j o r Alterations (with dates)
Condition
Moved
t
Recorded by
Lisa Mausolf
Organization
Salem Planning Department
RECEIVED^
Setting
Cm
MASS. Hi ST. COMM.
good
__
no
_
yes
Date
less than one acre
set back slightly from sidewalk by area o f
hedges and plantings, residential area o f 18th-20th
century buildings
11997
AUG 0 5 f997^°" ' Massachusetts
Acreage
c. 1960 - aluminum siding
Historical
®'
Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
®
?
�C
BUILDING F O R M
^
vSfTV
llpO^
A R C H I T E C T U R A L DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural
community.
features.
Evaluate
the characteristics
of the building
in terms of other buildings
within the
4 Carpenter Street is a 2 1/2-story dwelling oriented with its narrow end to the street and its principal elevation facing north.
The building is sheathed in aluminum siding and capped by a flared gambrel roof which displays projecting eaves and cornice
returns and is covered with asphalt shingles. The foundation consists o f uncut stones. The north facade is two bays wide.
Projecting from the eastern bay on the facade is a single-story entrance porch supported by paired Roman Doric columns.
There is a wooden deck and stairs and the simple stick balustrade has an inset central diamond. The two-part door is flanked
by leaded sidelights. Windows primarily contain 6/6 sash with molded surrounds, exterior storm windows and shutters.
Centered in the gable is a tripartite window consisting of a 6/6 sash flanked by two narrow 2/2 sash. T w o pedimented
dormers rise from the north slope. Offset to the southeast is a two-story wing.
The house is set back slightly from the sidewalk with a narrow margin of hedges and plantings along the sidewalk.
HISTORICAL
NARRATIVE
Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building
the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
and
According to the previous 1975 survey form for this property, this house was constructed about 1905 according to designs by
local architect, Ernest Machado. Based on interior evidence including the location o f the fireplace, the present owner of the
house believes that the house was built on the site of an earlier dwelling although this could not be verified. Sanborn maps
indicate that there was no building on this site in 1890 although a house is present by 1906. The 1905 City Valuation
indicates that the land was vacant and owned by Jennie Emmerton. The house was apparently constructed shortly thereafter
for Francis W . Nichols who had an antiques store at 67 North Street. The Nichols family continued to own the property until
the 1950s; the last family member to liver here was Millicent Nichols. The property has had numerous occupants since that
time and served as a multiple dwelling for some time. It has now reverted to single-family use.
*
B I B L I O G R A P H Y and/or
REFERENCES
Hopkins, G . M . Atlas of Salem. Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
Mclntyre, Henry C . E . M a p o f the City o f Salem. Philadelphia: 1851.
Reardon, Elizabeth K . Salem Historic District Study Committee Investigation, v. 3, p. 20.
Richards, L . J . Atlas o f the C i t y o f Salem. Massachusetts. 1897.
Salem City Directories, 1836-1970.
Sanborn Insurance M a p s , 1890, 1906, 1950, 1957, 1965, 1970. [Massachusetts State Library].
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company. Atlas of the City of Salem. Massachusetts. Boston: 1911.
m
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attached a completed
National Register Criteria Statement form.
�F O R M
B
-
B U I L D I N G
In A r e a n o .
!• T o w n
F o r m no.
ScxVVO
A d d r e s s l \ C(\\^K\W^WgA
Name
^€S\\.V\QQ
Present use
Present owner
VC\Ck\V)^ V • ^ o c Y
bN^"
3. D e s c r i p t i o n :
Date
CUv(\
Source
Style
4. M a p . D r a w s k e t c h o f b u i l d i n g l o c a t i o n
in relation to nearest c r o s s streets and
other b u i l d i n g s . Indicate n o r t h .
S.W/WC."X.-
Q C Y X ^ C A 'Vto^.VloA
vC\Q^\\Cx^O
Architect
E x t e r i o r w a l l f a b r i c Q\vrtft\.ftlNtf\
SjAjQ.^,
Outbuildings (describe)
Other features
Altered
Date
Moved
Date
5. L o t s i z e :
One a c r e o r l e s s
O v e r one a c r e
*l£
A p p r o x i m a t e frontage
A p p r o x i m a t e distance of building f r o m street
15'
[DO N O T W R I T E I N T H I S S P A C E
USGS Quadrant
6. R e c o r d e d b y
Organization
M H C Photo no.
^^.\ft\>ft^C)
SW-Q.
.
Date
™*
*
(over)
OCT
7 1975
HL'^lASo. Hi31.
20M-5-73-075074
C O M M .
�7. O r i g i n a l o w n e r ( i f k n o w n )
\\\QV.f_\^.
^CVAT\\V|^
Original use
S u b s e q u e n t u s e s ( i f any) a n d d a t e s _
8. T h e m e s ( c h e c k a s m a n y a s a p p l i c a b l e )
Aboriginal
Agricultural
Architectural
The A r t s
Commerce
Communication
Community development
Conservation
Education
Exploration/
settlement
Industry
Military
Political
Recreation
Religion
Science/
invention
Social/
humanitarian
Transportation
9 . H i s t o r i c a l s i g n i f i c a n c e ( i n c l u d e e x p l a n a t i o n of t h e m e s c h e c k e d a b o v e )
SEP
.
67
10. B i b l i o g r a p h y and/or r e f e r e n c e s (such as l o c a l histo:
early maps, etc.)
3/73
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Carpenter Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
4 Carpenter Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
the Nichols family
c. 1905
Designed by
Ernest Machado
Architect
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1905, 2019
Language
A language of the resource
English
1905
2019
4
Carpenter
circa
ernest
History
House
Machado
Massachusetts
Nichols
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f19c5adfa6e459e1e67a94617ecb1894.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=eQxVu6WiAq3AbkoDV0Q9HFTu3i8DcyxowEkptWt01x1fEwS1uVbe9rLY7Bicst8cX8nFMDJhALbaBIPc1m9zZUGwNEhAoVbkFY57WmAHiR8v7P6DoC%7EtWeHJ4JmdFvHba%7EXgKv0rupu-E-j9G0IJdJPmsH4dxCdJ1fOqkkKbJedYFThIQELLNv%7E2bufJ3gboAtDEB%7EA54jc4YTpGaHHJwrSSZcrHOsGI8m9YcPfIcbFV72T5qFuOIbxA3dlnFKFq9DmP-MPthTMFRPExS4x8okDYv21w7RivVH5FOpM-nXXOc7me7rxS94blyZ05b8kNQDQazkJIH8K4yHxwnztVeg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
7fe5304d88a491e384b37a7698144661
PDF Text
Text
HISTORIC
SALEM INC
126 Bayview Avenue
Built for
Alfred Peabody,
Merchant
c. 1876
Researched and written by Jen Ratliff
May 2019
Historic Salem Inc,
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2019
�126 Bay View Avenue, January 1989 (MACRIS SAL.3484)
The Juniper Point neighborhood was conceived of by Salem grocer Daniel B. Gardner,
Jr., who purchased 45 acres of former farm land in September 1875, at the cost of $21,000. 1
The area had long been used as a summer retreat, with many Salemites and tourists camping
along the waterfront in tents. Gardner filed a plan with the City for cottage lots in October 1875
and in November submitted an updated plan which also included stable lots, two parks, and a
public hall. The proposal created over 50 residential lots, more than 20 of which were sold in a
single day, November 6, 1875. More lots were auctioned off in the summer of 1876 as the
neighborhood expanded. 2 The deed for each cottage stipulated that “no shop, store, public
house, boarding house, saloon or stable shall ever be erected on said lot nor any building
1
MACRIS SAL.HA – Gardner is incorrectly referred to as Danial B. Goodwin, Jr. on the neighborhood plans
submitted with the City of Salem in October and November of 1875.
2
The stable lots are now a strip of garages on Cheval Avenue.
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 2 of 10
�thereon used for any of said purposes.” The deeds continue to state, “that a strip thereof ten
feet wide next to the high-water mark shall forever be kept open free and unobstructed as a
public sidewalk or promenade.” These stipulations have been upheld in perpetuity. 3
The completion of this new summer community helped encourage the growth of the
adjacent Salem Willows, a city-owned park which quickly grew to include amusements,
restaurants, and entertainment. In 1875, the Naumkeag Street Railway Company began
offering horsecar service to the area from downtown, attracting visitors who could travel by
train to Salem and conveniently take a horsecar to the new neighborhood. Aside from Salem’s
elite business men, this summer resort community was especially popular with travelers from
Lawrence and Lowell.
The Gothic Revival cottage design of 126 Bay View Avenue is indicative of the 19th
century and features wood shingle siding and ornate cornice trim. The home has been greatly
altered in recent years to accommodate a basement level garage; the porch has been reduced
and is devoid of its decorative balustrade. New windows have been added with rounded
transoms on the front façade and the back of the home features a large atrium addition.
Furthermore, windows have been removed throughout the sides of the home. 4
3
4
Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds, 941:166, 1875.
In comparison with the home’s 1989 MACRIS report (SAL.3484)
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 3 of 10
�Detail of stereoview by Edwin N. Peabody, c. 1878
126 Bay View Avenue (54 Central Avenue) in the center
(Salem State University Archives and Special Collections)
The Peabody Family, 1875-1880
Alfred Peabody (1806-1879) and his son Henry W. Peabody (1838-1908) appear to be
the earliest adopters of the Juniper Point neighborhood, purchasing multiple cottage plots from
Daniel B. Gardner, Jr. on November 6, 1875. Henry W. Peabody purchased #25 and #26, present
day 136 Bay View Avenue, and together with his father Alfred, purchased #22. 5
The land in which 126 Bay View Avenue sits was Plot #22 in Gardener’s Plan of Cottage
Lots for Juniper Point. The original address for this home was 54 Central Street, later renamed
and renumbered as 126 Bay View Avenue, around 1915. There is no indication that the
5
Ibid.
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 4 of 10
�Peabody family ever stayed in the home, it is likely that it was an investment property that they
leased to summering families from out-of-town. The family may have frequented 130 Bay View
Avenue, a larger home owned by Henry W. Peabody.
Alfred Peabody was born on February 3, 1806 in Salem, Massachusetts to Nathan and
Hannah (Stickney) Peabody. He came from a well-established family, descended from
Lieutenant Francis Peabody, an early settler of the area who arrived on the ship Planter in
1635. 6 Alfred became a renowned merchant in Salem and Boston, participating in multiple
industries including dry goods and shoe manufacturing. He often lost large amounts of money
in his ventures but was remembered fondly for his adaptability to the economy and his integrity
in business. 7
On November 30, 1833, Alfred Peabody married Jerusha Tay (1808-1891) of Salem.
Together, the couple had children as follows: Alfred, Henry, Everett (died in infancy,) Everett,
Mary, Edwin, and Charles. Their family home was at 45 Summer Street.
Like his father, Henry W. Peabody become a well-known merchant, working for Williams
& Hall on Central Wharf in Boston. Henry later joined Samuel Stevens & Company but took a
break from maritime trade in 1866 due to decline in the industry and substantial loss of income.
Henry opened his own company, Henry W. Peabody & Company in Boston and New York City.
As his business grew, he became increasingly involved with politics, appearing in front of
Congress on multiple occasions to advocate for maritime industries. In 1864, Henry W. Peabody
purchased 17 Chestnut Street in Salem where he lived until 1907, before moving to Beverly.
6
Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts, Volume 3
William Richard Cutter, 1908, pg. 1334-1335.
7
Ibid.
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 5 of 10
�Peabody married three times, first to Lila Rea Mansfield in 1862. Together the couple
had six children, three of which died during childhood. Lila died in August 1890 and in
December 1892, Henry W. Peabody married Nannie Brayton Borden (1853-1905) of Fall River.
Nannie had previously been married to Norman E. Borden (1850-1880), second cousin, once
removed of Lizzie Borden. The murders of Lizzie’s father and stepmother had occurred in
August 1892, followed by a very public trial. It is likely that Nannie viewed this marriage as a
welcomed escape from Fall River.8 Nannie appears to have assumed a large amount of money
following her first husband, Norman’s death. This was chronicled in multiple letters held in the
archives at Harvard University, which contains the Henry W. Peabody Collection. Found in
Henry’s personal correspondence with his step children, Henry stated that he had no interest in
Nannie’s estate, writing: “…I married Nannie Brayton Borden for her love and companionship,
and not for money."9 Nannie died in 1905 and Henry married for a third time to Lucy W.
Waterbury.
Alfred Peabody’s younger son, Edwin N. Peabody was also well known in Salem. He was
an active photographer from 1876-1894 and photographed much of Salem, including the
Juniper Point neighborhood. His images of the neighborhood date to the late 1870s and were
likely inspired by his family’s properties there. 10 Edwin traveled often and in his obituary it was
said: “He traveled considerably over the United States and whenever he heard of a Salem
family in any city that he visited, he would be sure to hunt them up, even though they were
perfect strangers to him. He was always made to feel welcome and he was sure to bring home
8
Ibid.
Harvard University, Henry W. Peabody and Company Collection, MSS 766 1867-1957, Volumes HD-1 and HE-9
10
Stereoviews by Edwin N. Peabody can be seen at Salem State University Archives and Special Collections
9
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 6 of 10
�pleasant messages to their Salem kindred.” 11
Alfred Peabody died of heart disease on June 13, 1879, he was 73 years old.12 In July
1880, Henry W. Peabody sold 126 Bay View Avenue (then 54 Central Avenue) to Joel A. Abbott
of Lowell, Massachusetts for $1,500. 13
The Abbott Family, 1880-1894
Joel A. Abbott (1820-1903) was born on October 3, 1820 to Joel Abbott and Hannah
(Bowman) Abbott of Charlestown, Massachusetts. 14 The family later relocated to North
Reading, where Joel A. Abbott worked as a shoe manufacturer. On November 26, 1847, Joel
married Sarah A. Parker (1826-1901), also of Reading. By 1865, the couple had relocated to
Lowell, along with their eight children. Joel became proprietor of “The Old Corner Store” at 174
Merrimack Street and become very involved in community politics, specifically the Democratic
party. In 1878, Joel was nominated for Mayor of Lowell by members of the Butler Club but lost
to John A. G. Richardson.
In 1880, Joel purchased 126 Bay View Avenue (then 54 Central Avenue) for use as his
family’s summer residence. During Joel’s first summer at Juniper Point, he suffered from a
debilitating kidney and liver disorder, becoming unable to walk. The following year, The Boston
Journal and The Boston Globe chronicled his recovery, which he credited to an herbal
supplement, Kidney-Wort. 15 Joel and his family owned the cottage at Juniper Point for 14 years.
11
Salem Evening News, March 20, 1920
Massachusetts Vital Records, 1840–1911. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
13
Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds: 1040:248, July 8, 1880.
14
Massachusetts Vital Records, 1840–1911. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
15
“The City of Spindles,” The Boston Globe, June 22, 1881, pg. 3.
12
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 7 of 10
�In 1894, Joel and his wife Sarah sold the home to Joseph F. Appleton.
The Appleton Family, 1894-1907
Joseph Frederic Appleton (1854-1929) was born in Beverly, Massachusetts on March 18,
1854 to Joseph B. Appleton and Rachel E. (Foster) Appleton. He attended school in Beverly and
later began working as a salesman in the shoe industry. On March 9, 1878, Joseph married
Mary B. Dunbar in Beverly, Massachusetts. 16 He later partnered with William McKean of Salem,
a manufacturer of shoes. In 1894, John and his wife Mary purchased 126 Bay View (then 54
Central Avenue) for $1.00 and other considerations from Joel and Sarah Abbott. 17
After leaving the shoe industry he became a manager and vice president of Underwriters
Salvage Company of the United States, where he traveled between offices in Boston and New
York before retiring in 1915. He then partnered with Fred A. Norton in selling insurance under
the name Appleton & Norton.
Appleton earned quite a bit of money in these businesses, splitting his time between a
Boston residence, 19 North Street, and Juniper Point. He purchased a 30-foot yacht which he
named Takitesy (take-it-easy) for use at Juniper Point. In June 1899, the Boston Globe reported
that Appleton’s yacht, valued at $1,000, had been stolen. It was recovered a month later at the
Hudson River Yacht Club in New York City and carpenter Frank Westin was arrested. 18 After
selling 126 Bay View (then 54 Central Avenue) in 1907; he purchased the larger adjacent home
16
Town and City Clerks of Massachusetts. Massachusetts Vital and Town Records. Provo, UT: Holbrook Research
Institute (Jay and Delene Holbrook)
17
Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds, 1862:473
18
“Yacht Takeiteasy Found at Last,” The Boston Globe, July 28, 1899, pg. 7.
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 8 of 10
�at 130 Bay View Avenue (then 60 Central Avenue) which has also been previously owned by
Henry W. Peabody. When Joseph F. Appleton passed away at age 76 in 1929, he left an estate
worth over one million dollars. 19
The Cabeen Family, 1907-1939
John F. Cabeen (1866-1954) was born in Salem in 1866 to Lydia and John Cabeen, a
teamster. The couple also had three daughters Sarah, Julia, and Lila. Sarah attended the nearby
Salem Normal School, where she graduated in 1878. She then taught in Salem for sixteen years,
primarily at the Bentley Grammar School on lower Essex Street. John F. trained as a plumber
and opened his own shop on the corner of Essex and North streets.
On October 18, 1886, John married Sarah A. Merrick, originally of England. 20 The couple
lived at 18 Cabot Street and had two children, Charles and Helen. Charles would apprentice
under his father and join the family business.
John was incredibly involved in his community, serving on multiple committees and
boards, including the Salem Chamber of Commerce, Salem Savings Bank, Salem Rotary Club and
the Board of Trade. After purchasing the home at 126 Bay View (then 54 Central Avenue) in
1907, John F. Cabeen became very involved with the Juniper Point neighborhood. In 1912, he
helped organize the Juniper Point Realty Trust to assist in the purchase of the nearby Ocean
View Hotel. 21
Following the Great Salem Fire of 1914, Cabeen played an instrumental role in the
19
“Estate of $1,072,103.70 left by Joseph Appleton,” The Boston Globe, January 14, 1930, pg. 1.
New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; Massachusetts Vital Records, 1911–1915
21
The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts)25 Aug 1912, Page 14
20
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 9 of 10
�recovery effort by assisting in the organization of incoming funds and supplies for the city. In
the following months, he rallied for the importance of a fire department to protect Juniper
Point, becoming temporary President of the Juniper Point Volunteer Fire Association in
February 1915. This association received a hose carriage, ladders, and was granted the
installation of a fire alarm box at Columbus Square.22
In 1939, John and Sarah sold the Juniper Point home to Nora Harrington.
22
The Boston Daily Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) 08 Feb 1915, Page 13.
Jen Ratliff | www.jenratliff.com| Page 10 of 10
�Street Address
54 Central Avenue
126 Bay View Avenue
Buyer
Occupation
Alfred Peabody
Henry W. Peabody
Merchant
Joel A. Abbott
Sarah A. Abbott
John F. Appleton
Mary B. Appleton
1875-1915
1915-Present
Years of
Ownership
1875-1880
Number
of Years
5
Purchase Price
Deed
Notes
$250
941:166
Shoe Manufacturer
Grocer
Insurance and Real Estate
Park Commissioner
1880-1894
14
$1,500
1040:248
Purchased from Daniel B. Gardner Jr.
Plot #22 - Book 1, Plan 15
Henry also owned plot #25 and #26
54 Central Avenue
1894-1907
13
1408:86
54 Central Avenue
John F. Cabeen
Sarah A. Cabeen
Plumber
1907-1939
32
1862:473
54 Central Avenue
126 Bay View Avenue
Nora Harrington
Admin. Assistant
1939-1946
7
$1.00 and
other
considerations
$1.00 and
other
considerations
$3,000
3182:477
Leo F. Harrington
Marjorie R. Harrington
U.S. Navy
1946-1950
4
Considerations
paid
3479:301
John A. Conway
Helen M. Conway
Peter J. Fallon
Marilyn E. Fallon
Natalio F. Bettencourt
Deliea C. Bettencourt
Gabriel Demelo
Maria D. Demelo
Cheryl A. Vickery
Insurance and Real Estate
1950-1975
25
$9,000
3778:334
Unknown
1975-1996
21
$26,5000
6122:616
Nora assumed payment of the Cabeen’s $3,000
mortgage.
Widow of Leo F. Harrington
126 Bay View Avenue
Nora Harrington remained in the home until
1950
126 Bay View Avenue
Probate: (#281964 11/8/64)
126 Bay View Avenue
Unknown
1997-2011
14
$305,000
126 Bay View Avenue
Unknown
2011-2019
3
$400,000
13741:36
13974:487
28875:213
Unknown
20112019+
8+
$630,000
30543:266
126 Bay View Avenue
126 Bay View Avenue
�Resident
J.F. Appleton
Vacant
John F. Cabeen
Nora Harrington
Nora Harrington
Arthur F. Dooley
Nora Harrington
John A. Conway
Rodolph J. Pelletier
John A. Conway
John Flynn
Rodolph J. Pelletier
John A. Conway
John A. Conway
Robert Allen
Patrick Cyr
John A. Conway
Richard L. Coluppy
Patrick Cyr
John A. Conway
Richard L. Coluppy
Robert C. McCarthy
John A. Conway
Norman R. Brouilette
John A. Conway
Directory Year
1899-1905
1906
1906-1939
1940-1942
1943-1945
1946-1950
1952
1953
1954-1955
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961-1964
Notes
�1875 Plan of Cottages belonging to Daniel B Garder Jr. (Not Goodwin) Lot #22
(Book 1, Plan 15)
�1874 Salem Atlas (Plate B)
�1897 Salem Atlas (Plate 11)
�1890-1903 Salem Atlas (Plate 39)
�1911 Salem Atlas (Plate 6)
�1906-1938 Salem Atlas (Plate 73)
�Boston Post
Boston, Massachusetts
22 Feb 1876, Tue • Page 3
The Boston Globe, Saturday, July 15, 1876
�The Boston Globe
Boston, Massachusetts
12 Jul 1876, Wed • Page 5
�The Boston Globe
Boston, Massachusetts
15 Jul 1876, Sat • Page 8
�Trade card for Henry W. Peabody & Co., Australian Line, 114 State Street, Boston, Mass., May 26, 1884
Historic New England (GUSN-190920)
https://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44807197.pdf
�Biographical History of Massachusetts:
Biographies and Autobiographies of the Leading Men in the State, Volume 2, 1911
�Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts, Volume 3
William Richard Cutter, 1908
�Boston Globe
June 14, 1879, Page 4.
Boston Daily Globe
March 20, 1920, pg. 9
�Nannie and Abby Borden both served on the YMCA’s Woman’s Auxiliary Board
Fall River Daily Globe, May 20, 1891
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
�The Peabody Family Plot on Greenwood Avenue
Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem Massachusetts
(Find a Grave: 25156113)
�The Boston Globe
July 28, 1899. pg, 7.
�Appleton & Norton Advertisement
Salem Directory, 1905
�The Boston Globe
23 Jul 1909, Fri
Page 12
�The Boston Globe
07 Apr 1910, Thu
Page 9
The Boston Globe
Boston, Massachusetts
05 Oct 1929, Sat • Page 7
�The Boston Globe
January 14, 1930, pg. 1
The Boston Globe
November 11, 1923, pg. 52
�The Boston Globe
February 8, 1915, pg. 13
�The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts)
13 Jun 1931, Sat
Page 9
�John F. Cabeen’s Store
81 North Street, Salem
Salem State University Archives & Special Collections
�Sarah Lizzie Cabeen, c. 1878
Salem State University Archives and Special Collections
�166
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this fifth day of Juhe 1939.
, THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSA- )
3182
----
---
447
-
William D. Chapple
(seal)
Beverly National Bank (Corporate seal)
I
iCBUSETTS Essex ss. June 5th)
By Ruel P. Pope
Vice-Pres.
11939. Then personally ap-)
Fred H. Porter
Asst. Cashier
jpeared the above-named Wil-)
Trustees u/w Laurence E. Pedrick
lliam D. Chapple, trustee as aforesaid, and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free act and deed, before me
Mary B. Tudbury
Notary Public
My commission expires January 22 1944
I, Edward S. Webber, hereby certify that I am the Clerk of the Board of
Vote
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Directors of the Beverly National Bank of Beverly, Massachusetts and thatl
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at a regular meeting of the Directors duly held on August 2, 1927, a quorum
being present, the following vote was unanimously adopted:
VOTED:
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That
the President, or any Vice President, together with the Cashier or any
Asi
sistant Cashier of this Bank be, and they hereby are authorized and empowered
I
in the name and on behalf of this Bank to sell, assign, transfer and de-
liver, shares of stock or of any interest in any corporation, association!
or trust, certificates of such shares of stock or of interest, registered
bonds, notes, certificates of indebtedness and all other forms of intangi le
property now or hereafter owned by or standing in the name of this Banko¼
standing in the name of this Bank as collateral security or otherwise,
ant
for that purpose to make and execute all necessary acts of assignment and
transfer thereof, including the appointment of an attorney, with power of!
substitution, with like full power, to lawfully act by virtue hereof, and,
to assign, convey, discharge, in whole or in part, any mortgage of real
I
estate or personal property standing in the name of this Bank, to fore-
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close any such mortgage and to execute and deliver any deed of transfer
and other instruments incidental thereto or desirable in connection there~
~ith. I further certify that said vote has not been amended or rescinded,:
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and is in full force and effect and that Ruel P. Pope is a Vice President
and that Fred H. Porter is an Assistant Cashier of this Bank. Attest:
Edward S. Webber Clerk of the Board of Directors.
(Corporate seal)
Essex ss. Received June 6, 1939. 34 m. past 4 P.M. Recorded and Examined.I'
i
--:----------------------------------------------------------------------1'
I, John F. Cabeen of Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts for consideration' Cabeen
paid, grant to Nora I. Harrington of said Salem with WARRANTY COVENANTS I
to
a certain lot of land in said SALEM on Juniper Point being lot twenty-two!
Harrington
on a plan entitled ~Plan of Cottage Lots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck, c.t. One $2. R. Stamp
Putnam, Surveyor, Oct. 1875~ recorded with Essex, So. Dist., Deeds, Book
~jary
:1 of Plans, Plan No. 15, with all buildings thereon; also a parcel ad- I
- '
B::1
�448
---- -
· - -~-
_,
_________,
joining said lot twenty-two and between it and high water mark bounded
beginning at the southeasterly corner of said lot twenty two and running
southeasterly in a line which is the extension in a straight line of the
line between lots twenty two and twenty three on said plan fifty feet mor•
or less to high water mark, thence running southwesterly on high water
mark to a point which an extension in a straight line of the line between
lots twenty one and twenty two would strike, thence running northwesterly
on said extended line twenty eight feet to the southwesterly corner of
lot twenty two, thence running northeasterly on said lot twenty two thirty feet to the point of beginning.
Said premises are conveyed subject to
the restrictions contained in a certain indenture between N. Augusta Gard1er
et al and said John F, Cabeen, dated February 28, 190? and recorded with
said Deeds, Book 1862, Page 478, so far as said restrictions are now in
!force and effect. Said premises are the same premises conveyed to the
granter herein by Joseph F. Appleton, by deed dated January 29, 190? and
recorded with said Deeds, Book 1862, Page 4?3. Said premises are conveyea
subject to a mortgage in the amount of $3,000.00 held by the Salem Savingtl
Bank, and the taxes for 1939, both of which the grantee herein, by the
acceptance of this deed, agrees to assume and pay.
I, Sarah A. Cabeen wi e
of said granter, John F. Cabeen release to said grantee all -rights of dowbr
and homestead and other interests therein. WITNESS our hands and seals
(seal)
John F. Cabeen
this fifth day of June 1939.
THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
)
Sarah A. Cabeen
(seal)
Essex ss. June 5 1939 Then personally appeared the above named John F.
Cabeen and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free act and
deed, before me
Robert VI. Hill
Notary Public
My commission expires September? 1945
Essex ss. Received June 6, 1939. 34 m. past 4 P.M. Recorded and Examined.
------------------------------------------------------------------------I, Nora I. Harrington, widow, of Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, for
Harrington
to
consideration paid, grant to John F. Cabeen of said Salem, with MORTGAGE
Cabeen
COVENANTS, to secure the payment of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars in
one year with five per cent interest per annum, payable quarterly as provided in a note of even date, a certain lot of land in said SALEM on Juni-
J
..e.,L
.,,(?
{
11--'I-!
~~-
CB.3L\1~
&.300
per Point being lot twenty-two on a plan entitled "Plan of Cottage Lots
at Juniper Point, Salem Neck, C. A. Putnam, Surveyor, Oct. 18?5" recorded
with Essex, So. Dist., Deeds, Book 1 of Plans, Plan No. 15, with all buillings thereon; also a parcel adjoining said lot twenty two and between it
and high water mark bounded beginning at the southeasterly corner of said
lot twenty two and running southeasterly in a line which is the extension
r-·
-
~-------
�449
3182_ ---·--·
in a straight line of the line between lots twenty two and twenty three
on said plan fifty feet more or less to high water mark, thence running
southwesterly on high water mark to a point which an extension in a straight
.
I
line of the line between lots twenty one and twenty two would strike,thence
.
I
running northwesterly on said extended line twenty eight feet to the sout westerly corner of lot twenty two, thence running northeasterly on said·
lot twenty two thirty feet to the point of beginning. Said premises are
•conveyed subject to the restrictions contained in a certain indenture be-I
!tween N. Augusta Gardner et al and said John F. Cabeen, dated February 28l
1907 and recorded with said Deeds, Book 1862, Page 478, so far as said
restrictions are now in force and effect. Said premises are the same
premises conveyed to me by the said John F. Cabeen by deed of even date
and to be recorded herewith. Said premises are subject to a prior mort- .
•
gage in the amount of $3,000.00 held by the Salem Savings Bank. Th1s mortgage is upon the statutory condition, for any breach of which the mortgagee
I
shall have the statutory power of sale. WITNESS my hand and seal this
I
lfifth day of June 1939
Nora I. Harrington
(seal)
THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETI'S Essex ss. June 5th, 1939 Then personially appeared the above-named Nora I. Harrington and acknowledged the
!foregoing instrument to be her free act and deed,
before me,
Charles F•. Manning
Notary Public
Essex ss. Received June 6, 1939. 34 m. past 4 P.M. Recorded and Examined.
------------------------------------------------------------------------I~ John F. _Cabeen of Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, holder of a mortL Assgt.
gage from Nora I. Harrington to me dated June 5, 1939 recorded on said
Cabeen
date with Essex South District Registry of Deeds and being instrument num•
bered-of that date, assign s~id mortgage and the note and claim secured
to
Beverly Nat'l
Bk. , et al Trs.
thereby to Beverly National Bank and William D, Chapple, Trustees under
the Will of Laurence E. Pedrick, late of said Salem, WITNESS my hand and
seal this fifth day of June 1939
John F. Cabeen
(seal)
THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Essex as, June 5th 1939 Then personally
appeared the above-named John F, Cabeen and acknowledged the foregoing int
strument to be his free act and deed before me
Robert W. Hill
Notary Public
My commission expires Sept 7 1945
Essex ss, Received June 6, 1939. 34 m. past 4 P.M. Recorded and Examined,;
------------------------------------------------------------------------The Newburyport Five Cents Savings Bank, holder of the foregoing mortgage, Discharge
Ihereby acknowledges satisfaction of the same. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the
N'port. F.C.S,Bk.
'said Savings Bank has caused its corporate seal to be hereto affixed and 1
On back M.. deed
Rec. B. 2903
·P, 25
I
�3Dis'tbarge of JMortgage:
3778
1 ,..
The SALEM SA\'INGS BANK, the holder of the within molt~ge, ~ereby acknowledges satisfaction of ardt I.!"
discharges the same.
3 34
2
Jn WitntH Wbtrtof,
the said SALEM SAVINGS BANK has caused its corporate seal to be· hcnto affixed
and these presents to be Si1?11ed in its name and behalf by
Roland A. Stanley
~
its Treasurer.
ben:unto duly authorized, this
nineteenth
day of
October,:-:'
·· ....
in the year nineteen hundred and
f if t y.
·
By
C:ommonllltaltb of Jlas!Satbusttts
ss, On this nineteenth
day of
October
Roland A. Stanley
, to me personally known, who,
ESSEX,
19 50, before
appeared
being by me duly sworn,
uy that he is the Treasurer of said SALEM SAVINGS BANK, and that the seal affixed to the foregoing instrument is
corporate seal of said Corporation and that said instrument was signed and scaled in behalf of said Corpo · n
authority of its By-Laws, and acknowledged said instrument to be the free act a1><hll!rd:,o/ said Corpo
'-L_..:C......~,C-
me
did
the
by
~--~LJ~. . .~---
'{4
···son··········
r
I
-de.,
/3.S?'-j/
t?'l9i
My commission expires ...
Esau ss. Recorded Oct. 20,
19so.
k.00.-Y"'-"
JO m. past .1 P.M.
K!IO'{I ALL Lll~N DY TilliSB PRJ.;S.t<,!JTS Tr.i!.T I, Leo F. H;irr ington
of Salem,
1~ s
lfJ3
sex. County. Massachusetts
1
t,-,::nme.; ri, for consideration paid, grant to Jo!'ln ;,. Con•·n-y "nd JIGlen·J:. Co!Wrny,
husband and.wife, as tenants by the entirety, both
of said Saler.i
with UlttmU1ty tOll1'ltlUttll
the land in said Salem with the buildinr,s thereon hounded and rlescri bed
as follows:
(Ocx:iptio:. a:.~ ev:enmh ances, if mcs)
· Nortl,v1esterly by Central Avenue, no" called Bay View Avenue,
thirty three and six-tenths (33.6) feet, northeaste·ly by lot 23
on plan hereinafter referred to fifty ei8ht (58) feet, southeasterly
by the parcel next hereinafter described thirty (30) feet and southwesterly by lot 21 on said plan sixty three (63) feet. ,,lso a narcel
adjoining said lot and between it and high water mark, bounded as
follows: Beginning at the southeasterly corner of said lot and
running southeasterly in a line which is ~he extension.in a straiP,ht
line of the line betr1een lots 22 and 23 on said plan about fifty (50)
feet to high water ma1·]!:, thence runi1inr, southv1esterly b·.· high Vlater
mark to a ;,>oint which is the extension of a str<1ic.ht line of the line
between lots 21 and 22 on said plan I thence running nortlr.vesterly by
said extended line twenty eight (2&J feet to the southwesterly corner
of said lot 22, 1thence running northeasterly on said lot 22 thirty
(30) feet to the point of b0r,i'nning. Being lot 22 and· rear of lot 22
on plan recorded in Book of Plans 1 Plan~,15.
111
And __ I_,_ llar .jori~;larri ,!'.to
.
.
:\';:" of said grantor,
tenaa;r ~· the act=IH3•
.
,
homestead and other mterests therem.
release to said grantee all nghts of dowe;
and
,,_____ . ~ day
z_..a_ __,,,.,__
of_ ___,O~.t.ob.er
J950,
1;:t;;J:::L~
l!J(ir Qtommonurralt(i of dlassar(iusdts
__________..·.1s..~.ox.,_____ _ss.
Then personally appeared the above-natn~d ....... Le..Q ...F. .......l!.i:tr.ri.:.1~.t.Q.•••____________
and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be ........: ... is ...
l:a::ier ,/. Liebsch
----------~--..
.Es~ex ss. Recorded Oct. 20, 1950. 30 m. pest 1 P.M.
�3778
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS THAT ..... He.~ .. J.ohn.a •... Conm,.;., ,:we. .. H.n.len. L: •
.Co.nway., .... hu.s.baod ....and ....,v.i.fe., ....bo.th ...................................................................... .
~f
:::saiem; :. :: : ::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ::::::::::
:£:SScx ........ County, Massachusetts,
•••I
1t111::an ied, for consideration paid, grant to the SALEM FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK, a corporation
duly established by law and located in Salem in the County of Essex, Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
with MORTGAGE COVENANTS, to secure the payment of
.
·····1··
............................................
........ Nine ... Tho.usanc
............. Dollars
In .......................... t:w.e.nty ..........................years with....
.. .... .f.o.ur.
......... per cent interest, per annum, payable
as provided in a note of even date, the land in .... s.ai.cl.. ..S.n.le.r.i .....
with the buHdings thereon bounded as follows:
I
Northwesterly by Central Avenue, now called n;...y View',,ve:1ue,
thirty three and six-tenths (33.6) feet, northeasterly by lot 23 on
plan hereinrfter referred to fifty eiRht (58) feet, southeaste1·ly by
the oar.eel next hereinafter described thirty (30) feet and soutJwmsterly by lot 21 on said plan sixty three (63) feet. ,,1so a parcel
adjoining said lot and between it and hir;h water r.1ark, bounded as
follcws: Beginning at the southeasterly corner of said lot and runni11g
southeasterly in a line which is the extension in a straight line of
the line between lots 22 and 23 on said plan about fifty ( 50) feet to
high water mark, thence running southwesterly by :1i,c:h wat, r mark to a
point which an extension in a straight line of the line bet\'ieen lots
21 and 22 on said ::,lan would strike thenr.e running northl'iesterly. on.
said extended line twenty eight (28) feet to the southwesterly corner"
of said lot 22, thence running ~ortheasterly on said lot 22 thirty (30)
feet to the point of beginning. BeinG lot 22 and the rear of lot 22
on plan reccrded in Book of Plans 1 Plan 15. Said premises are subject
to restrictions and stipulations contained in Indenture dated February
28, 1907 and recorded in Book 1862 Page 478. Being the same ~remises
conveyed to us by deed of Leo F, Harrington recorded herev1ith,
Including as a part of the realty all portable or sectional buildinge, heating apparatus, plumbing, mantels, storm doors and
window,, oil bumel"8, gas and oil and electric fixtures, screens, screen doors, awnings, air conditioning apparatus and other
fixtures of whatever kind or nature, on said premises, insofar as the same are, or can by agreement of the parties, be made
a part of the realty.
The mortgagor agreea and covenants to pay to the mortgagee, on the payment do.tee of the note secured by this mort•
gage, in addit:on to the payments of principal and interest therein required, a monthly apportionment of the sum estimated .
by the mortgagee to be sufficient to make payment of all municipal taxes, chargeu and assessments and insurance premiums,
upon the mortgaged property as they shall become due and any balance due for any of said payments shall be paid by the
mortgagor. The mortgagee is hereby specifically authorized to pay when due, or at any time thereafter, all of said payments
and to charge the same to the account of the mortgagor.
In the event of the ownership of the mortgaged premises, or any part thereof, becomes vested in a person or persons
other th&n the mortgagor, the mortgagee may, without notice to the mortgagor, deal with the successor or successors in
interest with reference to the mortgage and the debt hereby secured, and in the same manner as with the mortgagor without in
any way vitiating or discharging the mortgagor's liability hereunder or upon the debt hereby secured. No sale of the
premises hMeby mortgaged and no forbearance on the pa?'t of the mortgagee and no extension, whether oral or in writing,
of the time for the payment of the debt hereby secured given by the mortgagee shall operate .to release, discharge, modify,
change or affect the original liability of the mortgagor herein, either in whole or in part.
'
The mortgagor covenants and agrees to perform and observe RII of the term! and conditions of the mortgage note secured
by this mortgage, and further covenants and agrees to pay on demand to the mortgagee, or the mortgagee may at its option add to the principal balance then due, any sUms advanced or paid by the mortgagee on account of any defsuit, of whatever nature, by the mortgagor, or any sums edvanced or paid, whether before or after d~fault, for taxes, repairs, improvements, in!Utance on the mortgaged property or any other insurance pledged as collateral to secure the mortgage loan, or
any sums pe.id to the mortgagee, including reasonable attorney's fees, in prosecuting, defending or intervening in any legal
or equitable proceeding wherein any· of the rights cr~ated by this mortgage are, in the sole judgement of the Bank, jeopardized or in issue.
· '.
This mortgage ia upon the STATUTORY CONDlTION.; for any breach of which the mortgagee shall have the STATUTORY
POWER OF SALE.
A11ti I,...............................................
rel care ta the mcs:tjfugce all I ights of don ct
WITNESS.
our
...... Jn1ahrnd mjfo ef eeid nu,tgsxer
tcSJ ,ami hoamstead mid st112: inbc: c ,a iM tho mortQ'.aged..px.emi8@8.
I
ltc,
.hand.sand seals this. .. ......... /.,?.. .. d
.......... 0.ctob.er............ 19,50.•
t&I
/
'
✓
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
...0c.toller... I 'l.,.
EsSF.X, SS.
Then personally appeared the above named ..... J oh.n A.
and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be .......... his ..
Conw.iy
..... free act and deed. ·
Before me,
l',lrier ,i. Liebsch
D--111
19;i0.
cornwission expires,..
Essex ss. Recorded Cct. 20, 19~0. 30 m. past 1 P .M.
~
Justice of the Peace.
�MASSACHUSETTS OUl'fCLA.IM DIEl:D SHOJIT PO"M tlNDIVIDUALI lat
WE, Peter J. Fallon and Marilyn E. Fallon, husband and wife
as tenants by the entirety
of
county, M:uuchU&CtU,
Salem, Essex
Three Hundred Five
Thousand and 00/100 ($305,000.00) Dollars_
09/04196 0t:4~ Inst 3°l6
gr:mtto Natalio F. Bettenco~rt
'~ for consldcr:itlon paid, 211d In full coosklcratloo of
BK 13741 PG 36
of
with quttdatm anttllmll
126 Bayview Avenue, Salem, MA
UI.IXk the land in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
(Dacrlptlon lU>dencwnl,nnca, ll1ay)
FOR A COMPLETE LEGAL DESCRIPTION
SEE EXHIBIT "A" AT'l'ACHED HERETO
..
Ill
Ill
I
03773;JNV:J
DEEDS REG 10
ESSEX SOUTH
G9/f14/96
TAX
CASH
1390,80
1390.80
3722A000 13:42
EXC!SE TAX
llIIIll Ill Ill IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II IIIIII IIIIIll
1996090400376 Bk:13741 Pg:36
09/04/1996 13:45 :00
•ttu.eH
hand 5
our
s
-Jfr:;4-#= ~
____
-_
Essex
211dsc:al
thla ,
3'd
mq>tember
dayof
, 19~
@l.y~
...
September
ss.
Then personally appeared the :lhovc named
DEED Pg 1/2
,3J,
19 96
Peter J. Fallon and
Marilyn E. Fallon
and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be
,
.
. I• ' ,.
.
(' Individual - Joint Tenants- Ttt'.ts In Common.)
.
}.· ~...r . .
.
.
·
CHAl'TEll 183 ~ - 6AS AME1
· Ej7.BYCkAPTl!ll ◄97 o<l969
··k chc:.tull name, -rc11dcnce and M office Mldn::11 of chc grantee
~ lb<un: olll>c ochercbnoldttalro!, 1hcrefoc. lf noc delivettdlou
spcclllc monet21)' sum. The run con&idcralloa wll mcsn ch<, 1oc11 price ot thc convcy:ana: without d<duc:t:IDa for 1ay liens or enc:umbnnces
Ulumcd by the aisntec <>< Rmlinll\l thetean. All 1111Ch endonemcnu ond·rec1ur. shall be rttordtd :u pan ol chc deed. Failure to con,ply
willl tbll s«tionlblll not affect Che Yalldlcy ohny deed. Norqbtcr of dccdl shall accq,ta deed for: n:conling unlcH Ir II la compll2Jlcc wllh
tl>e require-n11 of this ICCllon.
·
EYery deed p,ctcntcd ror ra:ord lhall con<aln or h a v e ~ -
and a ffi:IUI of d>e amoonc ofchc full coaaldcntlon thereof In dollan
�BK 13741 PG 37
EXHIBIT A
126 Bayview Avenue
Salem, MA 01970
The land in aaid Salem, with the
described as follows:
building■
thereon, bounded and
NORTHWESTERLY
by Central Avenue, now called Bay View Avenue,
thirty-three and six tenths (33.6) feet1
NORTHEASTERLY
by Lot 23 on plan hereinafter referred to fiftyeight (58) feet;
SOUTHEASTERLY
by the parcel next hereinafter des~ribed thirty
(30) feet; and
.<
SOUTHWESTERLY
by Lot 21 on said plan sixty-three ·:.( 63) feet•
Alao a parcel adjoining said lot and between it •nd high water
mark, bounded aa followas
Beginning at the Southeasterly oorner of said lot and running
SOUTHEASTERLY
in a line which is the extension in a straight line
of the line between Lots 22 and 23 on said plan
about fifty (50) feet to high water mark1 thence
running
SOUTHWESTERLY by high water mark to a point which is the extension
in a straight line of the line between Lots 21 and
22 on said plan; thence running
NORTHWESTERLY by said extended line twenty-eight (28) feet to the
Southwesterly corner of said Lot 22; thence running
NORTHEASTERLY
on said Lot 22 thirty (30) feet to the point of
beginning
Being Lot 22 and rear of Lot 22 on plan recorded in Essex South
District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan 15.
Being the same premises conveyed to Peter J. Fallon and Marilyn E.
Pallon, husband and wife, as tenants by the entirety, by deed of
John A. Conway dated January 10, 1975 and recorded with Essex South
District Registry of Deeds in Book 6122, Page 616.
�·et< s, 2 2 PG s , s·
I, John A. Conway
of. Beverly,
Essex
County, Massachusetts,
being llimarT"Ud, for the full _consideration of • - - - - - - - - -$2.6, 500. 00- - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - '7. paid
1·
I
'
grant to Peter J. Fallon and Marilyn E. Fallon, husband and wife, as tenants by
the entirety, both residing at 12.6 .Bay View Avenue in Salem in said Countr of Essex,
i
rd
~
'
I
e
I ..
Gl
~
ti)
I
..
Gl
.
::,
~
Gl
>
.
<
~-
-~
>
Gl
~
IXl
-
N
"'
i
w
. Ill
Q
<
,....
It)
.......
w
w
t
~
0
with
quttdalm cooenant, t.beJSDdcin
The land in _said Salem, with the buildings thereon, bounded and described
as follows:
NORTHWESTERLY
by Central Avenue, now called Bay View Avenue,
thirty-three and six tenths (33. 6) feet;
NORTHEASTERLY
by Lot 23 on plan hereinafter referred to fifty- eight
{58) feet;
SOUTHEASTERLY
by the parcel next hereinafter described thirty (30)
feet; and
SOUTHWESTERLY
by Lot 21 on said plan sixty-three (63) feet.
Also a parcel adjoining said lot and between it and high water mark, bounded
as follows:
Beginning at the Southeasterly corner of said lot and running
SOUTHEASTERLY
in a line which is the extension in a straight line of
the line between Lots 2.2 and 23 on said plan about
fifty (50) feet to high water mark; thence running
SOUTHWESTERLY
by high water mark to a point which is the extension
in a straight line of the line between Lots 2.1 and 22.
on said plan; thence running
NORTHWESTERLY
by said extended line twenty-eight (2.8) feet to the·.
Southwesterly corner of said Lot 2.2; thence running
NORTHEASTERLY
on said Lot 2.2 thirty (30) feet to the point of beginnin •
Being Lot 22 and rear of Lot 22 on plan recorded in Essex South DistTict.
Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan 15.
·
·
Being the same premises conveyed to John A. Conway and Helen M. 'Conway,
husband and wife, as tenants by the entirety, by deed of Leo F. Harrington, dated
October 20, 1950 and recorded with said Deeds, Book 3778, Page 334, the said
Helen M. Conway having deceased on November 81 1964 (EBsex County Probate No.
281964).
Executed
88
a sealed instrument this
10th
19 75
Kue.• hoise Stampa t t(', {.2
atftie'4
and. OMoellec! an baok ot this 1nstrurn
I,,,•
~
Essex,
\~ '. -r '
...-
,,
Januafy.:10 •..::. .;;ig 75
~. . ( \.. •.·' $ t "•.. /
ss.
Then personally appeared the above named
J:
John A. Conway
...
~
-;'" ": "'"
J:
..·
...
.'\.)•--•">r..t=J
~ •
.
,
: •
"'
C":
:;: Cl
the,.,.,.,•• '"'""""'"' 1o he
his
l1
,.
L
'-•.
Y-::? ,Ci..·&·~·~~,~
~
aod ..,,.~1,d1ed
lo.
f • .~
·~;.~o~ ,.,.. _
...
r
0
·..
·- -·..
..... -
~
~
-/:.1
..:.:., .
Bt/<We ma.r-c::::::s:a,~""°"...--~.c=;....;....:...:..,.__..;_•- - - - - - - Willi:a111· G. Co.untie
Nola,v l'wbllc:
My commission e1plres
ESSll SS. RECORDED
r·
/0
May 31,
19
.7,9
'.
~~J~_$_M_._PA_S_Tc:2_ &. IN.S.!· ·tt/Sf
_
--------·------------- ------ --------
I
•
1.-....-----.--:-
�QUITCLAIM DEED
I, NATALIO F. BETl'ENCOURT of 126 Bayview Avenue, Salem, Eue1 Coanty,
Musachusett,
02114197 12:53 Inst 297
BK 13974 PG 487
for nominal consideration paid
grant to NATALIO F. BETIENCOURT and DELIELA C. BETTENCOURT, husband and
wife. as tenants by the entirety both of 126 Bayview Avenue, Salem, Essel County,
Massachusetts
The land In aaid Salem, with the buildl.np thereon, bounded and described as follows:
NORTHWESTERLY
by Central Avenue, now called Bay View Avenue, thirty-three
and six tentht (33.6) feet;
NORTHEASTERLY
by Lot 23 on plan hereinafter referred to fifty~lgbt (58) feet;
SOUTHEASTERLY
by the parcel nut hereinafter described thirty (30) rm; and
SOUTHWESTERLY
by Lot ll on said plan silty-three (63) feet.
Also a parcel adjoilllng ,aid Jot and between It and high water mark, bounded as follows:
Beginning at the Southeasterly corner of said lot and running
In a liae which b tbe exte1Uion in a straight liae of the line
between Lota 22 and 23 on said plan about fifty (SO) feet to
SOUTHEASTERLY
high water mark; thence running
SOUTHWESTERLY
by high water mark to a point which b the eltemlon In a
straight line of the line betwHD Lota ll and l2 on uld plan;
thence running
NORTHWESTERLY
by said extended line twenty-eight (18) feet to the
Southwesterly corner of said Lot 22; thence running;
NORTHEASTERLY
on aald Lot 22 thirty (30) feet to the point of beginning
Being Lot 22 and rear of Lot l2 on plan recorded In E.uex South District Registry of Deeds,
Book of Plans 1, Plan 15.
·
For title see deed of Peter J. Fallon and Marilyn E. F'allon dated September 3, 1996
recorded with aaid Regbtry of Deeds in Book 13741, Page 36.
~~E.:ml~l3•:,f:;;:,..,,..a::::.,.i:::::.:.---~~
'Natali.:F. Betteneourt
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Ease1,ss.
Febrauy 13, 1997
Then penoually appeared the above named NataUo F. Bettencourt and acknowledged
the foregoing inatrament to be bl!I free act and deed,
~i,km /.a :
Beforure,,_-:-)::;:;;=~~~~~~~O....:::_
NUCELES. HARMON a SONFANTI
27 Lowell Slreet
Peabody, MA 01880
~ieG
�Ill III Ill IIll IIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIII II IIIIII Ill Ill
2009082000340 Bk:28875 Pg:213
0B / 20/2009 02:26 DEED Pg 1/2
l'l1-t:,~H1r.,nU~t;. I 1 ~ t.A\, 1 !Jt.
I 1-4A
Southern Essex District ROD
Date: 0B/20/2009 02:26 PM
QUITCLAIM DEED
10: 743388 Doc# 20090820003400
Fee : $1,824.00 Cons: $400,000.00
We, NATALIO· F. BETTENCOURT and DELIEIA C. BETTENCOURT, both of Salem, Essex
County, Massachusetts,
for consideration paid and in full consideration of FOUR HUNDRED THOUSAND AND 00/100
($400,000.00) Dollars
grant to GABRIEL DEMELO and MARIA D. DEMELO, husband and wife as tenants by the
entirety, both of 126 Bay View Avenue, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts 01970, with
@UlTCLAIM COVENANTS
The land with all buildings thereon in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, being known as and
numbered 126 Bay View Avenue, bounded and described as follows:
NORTHWESTERLY by Central Avenue, now called Bay View Avenue, thirty-three and six
tenths (33.6) feet;
0
:;
.....
NORTHEASTERLY by Lot 23 on plan hereinafter referred to fifty-eight (58) feet;
0
SOUTHEASTERLY by the parcel next hereinafter described thirty (30) feet; and
SOUTHWESTERLY by Lot 21 on said plan sixty-three (63) feet.
Also a parcel adjoining said lot and between it and high water mark, bounded as follows:
Beginning at the Southeasterly corner of said lot and running
SOUTHEASTERLY in a line which is the extension in a straight line of the line bet\veen Lots
22 and 23 on said plan about fifty (50) feet to high water mark; thence running
SOUTHWESTERLY by high water mark to a point which is the extension in a straight line of
the line bet\veen Lots 21 and 22 on said plan; thence running
NORTHWESTERLY by said extended line twenty-eight (28) feet to the Southwesterly corner
of said Lot 22; thence running
NORTHEASTERLY on said Lot 22 thirty (30) feet to the point of beginning.
Being Lot 22 and rear of Lot 22 on plan recorded in Essex South District Registry of Deeds in
Plan Book 1 as Plan 15.
Being the same premises conveyed to the within granters by deed of Natalie F. Bettencourt,
dated February 13, 1997, recorded in said Deeds in Book 13974, Page 487.
�EXECUTEDas a scaled instrument this 20th day of August, 2009.
· Witness
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Essex, ss.
On this 20th day of August, 2009, before me, the undersigned notary public, personally appeared
NATAUO F. BETTENCOURT and DELIELA C. BETIEJiCOURT, and proved to me through
satisfactory evidence of identification, which was n,Pl'iotographic identification with signature
issued by a federal or state government agency, o oath or affirmation of a credible witness, ~
personal knowledge of the undersigned, to be the person whose name is signed on the preceding
or attached document(s), and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to e their free act and
deed.
DAVID LANl<ELES
·
Notary Public
Commonwealth or Massachuetts
My Commission Expires
October 5, 2012
�Inventory No:
SAL.3484
Historic Name:
Appleton, Joseph House
Common Name:
Address:
126 Bay View Ave
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Salem Willows
Local No:
44-118
Year Constructed:
r 1880
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Gothic Revival
Use(s):
Secondary Dwelling House; Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture; Recreation
Area(s):
SAL.GZ: Salem Neck and Winter Island
SAL.HA: Salem Willows Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (03/25/1994)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood Shingle
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220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
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This file was accessed on: Thursday, February 14, 2019 at 1:07: PM
�V
-
~
I,,(,/
FORM B - BUILDING
AREA
SftL-.3454
FORM N .
O
44-llb
MASSACHUSETlS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
80 BOYLSlON SlREET
BOSTON, MA 02116
----------
I
Salem
126 Bay View Ave.
.- ·
Name
Present
Residential
Original
Residential
IPTION
Between 1871 and 1897
Atlases, deeds
Gothic Revival
Sketch Map: Draw map showing property's location
in relation to nearest cross streets and/or
geographical features. Indicate all buildings
between inventoried property and nearest
intersection(s).
Indicate north
'/1t-1iq
itect
----------
Exterior Wa 11 Fabric wood shingles
Outbuildings
Major Alterations (with dates)
Nt
Condition
Excellent
Moved ______ Date _ _ _ _ _ __
Acreage
Less than one
Setting
On shoreline in extremely
dense 19th c. residential resort
neighborhood
UlM
REFERENCE
-------------
Recorded by Northf ields Preservation
Associates
US GS ~ADRANGLE
Organization
SCALE
Date
-------------
----------------(
Sal 1
;;un Pla:i;:ii::i.ii::i.g l)Qpt
May 1989
�(
(
NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA STATEMENT (if applicable)
Located within the recommended Salem Willows Historic District,
eligible under Criteria A and c.
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE Describe important architectural features and evaluate in terms of
other buildings within the community.
126 Bay View Avenue is a richly detailed example of the small
summer cottages constructed in the Salem Willows area in the late
19th century.
It is a 1 1/2-story, two bay cottage with Carpenter
Gothic details.
The complex roofline consists of a gabled front
section with central gable, and a two-story, gabled roof extending
to the rear.
The one-story porch extends across the facade and
east elevation, featuring a handsome jigsawn balustrade.
The main
entry is at the west end of the facade.
The entire front section
of the house is oranamented with jigsawn vergeboards and cornice
trim.
The window sash is varied including some replacement.
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE Explain the role owners played in local or state history and how the
building relates to the development of the co111n.1nity.
This house is characteristic of the development of Salem
Willows with summer cottages during the late 19th and early 20th
centuries.
It stands upon lot 22 of a plan of cottage lots dated
October 1875.
The house was standing by 1897, when it was owned as
a summer residence by Joseph Appleton, a manager for A.B. Russell &
Co., Boston.
Appleton's year-round residence in 1897 was at 19
North Street, Salem.
It is not known when the house was
constructed, but the lot had previously been purchased by Henry W.
Peabody (1875) and Joel Abbott (1880) before Appleton purchased it
in 1894.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Essex County Registry of Deeds
- •
Hopkins, G. M. Atlas of Salem. Philadelphia, 1874
Richards, Atlas of Salem, 1897
8/85
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bay View Avenue
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
126 Bay View Avenue, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Alfred Peabody
Merchant
c. 1876
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
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Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
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Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1876, 2019
Contributor
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Researched & written by Jen Ratliff
Language
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English
126
1876
2019
Alfred
Avenue
Bay
circa
History
House
Massachusetts
Peabody
Salem
View
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/6ceb7642d22122e1ac80037a637b1d79.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=iw0xOZNRQTUQhCrph6q55zu9kaI6RlJ2oPy0spWfx6QkaulmCVQ3WGL6ZcMxwgGHEuI6m5W%7EtKVN2wC1wOYJwTcwiyNm%7EqaCR6rCS5uo3A1F1sqljHWemszvFWGbpKLpl1c7gvA0EMYtnrq7nkjYGeYwJFEC8vRJ7%7EFy8F3cd1-EZxOqTSKzRzblGdkCD0kuAt7D4vg83ZQKcDehlxDgNZwSl364if219k7o5zRQQLxrVnxgzpAA0mvc7sAqFQOf4qVbGKzgJfutzjT3zsx3%7EuK-I7i3v2Taf2HpelZUeWVewW7yFPMk0xqlLpz%7ElPfMC1vjR%7EyJND6PHtno-JWRDA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
6e6233fd748f8014f5d2927e372d7d09
PDF Text
Text
52 Essex Street
Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Built for Daniel Sage
Mariner and Merchant
c. 1800
Researched and written by David Moffat – January 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 ‖ HistoricSalem.org © 2019
�I.
The Property, 1680-1800
John Turner, mariner and builder of The House of the Seven Gables, owned this property
by 1680. His father, Robert Turner, had arrived in Boston from England in the 1630s as an
indentured servant. John Turner was born in 1644 and married Elizabeth Roberts of Boston in
1668, the year he moved to Salem and began construction of his grand mansion nearby on what is
now Turner Street. 1 He owned the property which is today 52 Essex Street at the time of his early
death in 1680. In his probate inventory that year, it was listed as “Land by Christopher Babidges,”
valued at £40.2 Essex Street began as a pathway used by the Naumkeag people who inhabited
Salem for ten millenia before the arrival of English settlers and was one of the first streets in Salem.
By the late seventeenth-century, it was already considered the main street of the town. 3
When John Turner’s property was divided March 22, 1696/7, the lot (then worth £32 11s
was given to his youngest child, his daughter Abial. 4 Abial Turner was born October 14, 1680,
five days after her father’s death. 5 Abial never married and lived until 1723, though she conveyed
the property along Essex Street of Joseph Andrews, a yeoman from Boxford, on January 22, 1705
for £45.6
The land was along the creek which ran from the Salem Common into the cove which is
today called Collins Cove. To the east was the land of Christopher Babbidge, a tailor, by 1683. 7
His house, may survive on the other side of the old Bentley School, hidden between Essex and
Moriarty, G. Andrews “The Turner Family of Salem,” Essex Institute Historical Collections, Vol. 48, 1912, p. 263
Essex County, MA Early Probate Records, Vol. 3, p. 399, 1680.
3
Perley, Sidney. “Part of Salem in 1700: #19” The Essex Antiquarian, Vol. 9. 1905. p. 72.
4
Ibid, p. 74.
5
Perley, Sidney. The History of Salem, Massachusetts, Vol. 3: 1671-1716. Salem, Sidney Perley, 1928. Print, p. 37.
6
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 18:146. 22 Jan 1705.
7
Perley, 1905, p. 74.
1
2
�Forrester streets. Babbidge’s son, Christopher, Jr., a cordwainer, conveyed the house and property
to merchant Richard Derby in 1757. 8
The property to the west, from what is today number 56 Essex Street to Washington Square
East, was part of the parcel of land owned by John Turner. In 1695, Col. John Turner conveyed it
to Thomas Beadle, a mariner and tavern-keeper for £16.9 Beadle’s Tavern, where accused (and
later executed) witches Reverend George Burroughs, George Jacobs, Sr., and Mary Easty were
held before their pre-trial examinations during the Salem Witchcraft Trials of 1692, stood on the
opposite side of Essex Street, near where number 65 is located today. His house remained until
merchant Clifford Crowninshield acquired the land in 1791 and tore it down. 10
After the death of Joseph Andrews in 1737, his dwelling house and lands in Salem were
inherited by his sons, Nathaniel and John.11
In 1777, Richard Derby purchased the present site of 52 Essex Street from mariner Daniel
Conant along with the rest of Conant’s “goods, chattels, and lands” for the enormous sum of £4,000
18s.12
II.
Daniel Sage, 1800-1831
In 1800, Salem was the eighth largest city in the United States, with 9,457 residents
according to the census conducted that year. 13 After the Revolution, Salem’s maritime trade
flourished as privateers like the Derby family turned their sights on foreign trade which had been
8
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 105:16. 8 Nov 1757.
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 11:30. 4 Jun 1695.
10
Perley (1905), p. 74.
11
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 73:135. 6 Jul 1737.
12
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 135:43. 29 Jan 1777.
13
Gibson, Campbell. “Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in The United States: 1790 to
1990.” United States Census Bureau, 1998. https://www.census.gov/library/working-papers/1998/demo/POPtwps0027.html
9
�forbidden under the mercantilist British system. The first American ships to trade with ports in
Russia, South Africa, Madagascar, Martinique, and India, left Salem in the period between 1781
and 1800. Salem is often considered the wealthiest city per capita in the United States in that
period, and Elias Hasket Derby was the wealthiest American in the 1790s.
In 1800, the heirs of Samuel Derby (Richard Derby, Samuel Derby, Charles Derby, and
Edward Preble) sold a parcel of land to Capt. Daniel Sage, who constructed 52 Essex Street not
long afterwards.
The deed describes the property as such:
“three fourths parts and seven tenths of a fourth part of a piece of land in said Salem,
bounded as follows, to wit, southerly by Essex Street, there measuring 78 feet,
easterly by land of Mrs. Mary Elkins, there measuring two hundred & seven feet,
northerly by east street there measuring seventy nine feet & six inches, westerly by
land of Capt. Benjn Ward, there measuring two hundred feet” 14
Daniel Sage was born in 1758 in Greenock, a fishing port in Inverclyde in the west central
lowlands along the Firth of Clyde. 15 Greenock had a successful harbor and fishing industry since
the middle ages, largely exporting salted cod. It is unclear when Sage came to the United States,
but he was in Salem by the 1780s.
Sage was a shipmaster, captaining the Patty, a Newbury-built schooner in 1794 for Nathan
Richardson.16 In July of 1795, he carried £3,425 17s 2d worth of provisions to the army of JosephGeneviève de Puisaye at Quiberon in Brittany. 17 De Puisaye was leading a counter-revolutionary
14
Essex Country Registry of Deeds. Deed 166:240. 28 May 1800.
Salem Vital Records, Deaths, p. 204.
16
Hitchens, A. Frank, with Stephen Willard Phillips. Ship Registers of the District of Salem and Beverly,
Massachusetts, 1789-1900. Salem: Essex Institute, 1906. p. 142.
17
Emmerton, James A. A Genealogical Account of Henry Silsbee and Some of his Descendants. Salem: Essex
Institute, 1880. p. 31.
15
�invasion of France backed by British, which lasted from June 23rd to July 23rd, 1795. Two days
after Sage delivered provisions, the counterrevolutionary forces were routed at the Battle of
Quiberon.
In 1796 he captained the Elizabeth, for William Gray.18 In 1800 he supervised the building
of the Laurel for Gray. Built in Danvers, the Laurel was 425 tons, the fourth-largest ship in Salem
at that time.19 He travelled to India aboard the Laurel.20
In 1809, he was part owner with Nathaniel Silsbee, Robert Stone, Jr. Joseph Ropes, Thomas
Whitteridge, Jeremiah Briggs, Daniel Sage, James Devereaux, Moses Townsend, Joseph White,
Jr., Joshua Ward, Joseph J. Knapp, Archelaus Rea, Richard Crowninshield of the brig Romp, which
was confiscated at Naples on her first voyage. 21 There is a half-hull model of the Romp in the
collection of the Peabody Essex Museum.22 Regarding its capture in Naples, there is a “Naples
claim” in Sage’s probate valued at $1592.59.23
Sage married Deborah Silsbee October 8, 1786.24 Silsbee was born in April of 1767, the
daughter of carpenter Samuel Silsbee. 25 The Silsbees were descendants of Henry Silsbee, who
came to Salem by 1639. 26 Samuel was the son of After his marriage, Sage lived in the Silsbee
family house on the corner of Derby and Essex streets for nearly thirty years according to family
genealogist, James A. Emmerton. 27 That house was the Stephen Daniels house, one of the oldest
in Salem, built 1667 and still standing at 1 Daniels Street.
18
Hitchens and Phillips, 1906. p. 50.
Hitchens and Phillips, 1906. p. 104.
20
Emmerton, 1880. p. 31.
21
Hitchens and Phillips, 1906. p. 159.
22
Ibid.
23
Essex County Probate Records, Probate 24516.
24
Salem Vital Records, Marriages, p. 283.
25
Emmerton, 1880, p. 19.
26
Emmerton, 1880. pp. 5-6.
27
Ibid., p. 32.
28
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2616, “Daniels, Stephen House”
19
28
Samuel’s mother, Mary Daniels
�Silsbee, was Stephen Daniels’ daughter. She married Nathaniel Silsbee, who died in 1731 when
he killed during a construction project when the staging collapsed. 29 Samuel Silsbee built the
northern half, third floor, and leanto in 1756 and lived in the home his whole life. 30 Two Silsbee
houses of the era survive in the immediate neighborhood at 69 Essex Street,31 and 27 Daniels
Street.32
Somewhere around 1800, Capt. Sage built a three and a half story Federal house, five bays
wide, on the land he had purchased from the Derby heirs. Architectural historian Bryant F. Tolles
identifies 52 Essex Street as “unusual” as “the only house in Salem with brick ends incorporating
paired chimneys.”33 Sage constructed a small store on the western end of the property, today 54
Derby Street, and owned a lot across the street with a barn.
Capt. Daniel and Deborah Sage had 12 children, only five of whom survived to adulthood,
two sons and three daughters. Joseph Prince, aged 18 months, died September 23rd, 1795, of fever.
Fever claimed two more children within 12 days. Daniel died of fever at age four September 26 th,
followed by Hannah, age six, on October 4th. 1802 was a similarly dark year for the Sages, with
Hannah, aged five, and Daniel, aged three, dying of fever on May 28th and 29th. Deborah, aged 19,
died of dysentery on July 30th of that year. 34 Martha Silsbee, aged one, died of dysentery on
September 26th, 1808.
John Sage, the oldest son, was born in July 1787 and became a mariner. William Sage was
born in September 1803 and became the Secretary of the Union Marine Insurance Company and
is listed in the probate with the profession of gentleman. Mary Ann Sage was born in April 1805.
29
Emmerton, 1880. p. 17.
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2616, “Daniels, Stephen House”
31
MHC MACRIS, SAL.2591, “Silsbee, Nathaniel, Jr.-Upton, Mercy House.”
32
MHC MACRIS, SAL.3449, “Silsbee, Capt. Nathaniel House.”
33
Tolles, Bryant F. Architecture in Salem: An Illustrated Guide, University of New England Press, 2004. p. 40.
34
Vital Records, Deaths, pp. 204-5.
30
�She married the mariner and merchant Ephraim Emmerton. 35 Sarah Sage was born in October
1809 and married Charles Fisk Putnam, merchant and grocer, in 1828. Margaret Sage was born in
December 1811 and married Charles’ younger brother, Edward Putnam in 1839. Edward was
involved in the Brazil trade, particularly in the importation of rubber, and with Charles shipped a
steam sugar mill to Brazil. 36
Sage owned pew number three in the East Meeting House, at the corner of Essex and Hardy
streets.37 The East Church had been established in 1718 and took on Unitarian leanings with the
ministership of the famous Reverend William Bentley between 1783 and 1819. Bentley married
Deborah and Daniel in 1786. 38 In 1812, Bentley notes in his diary that he received “Lady blush
apples” from Sage. 39 In 1817, a subscription was taken to cover deficiencies in the salary of Rev.
Bentley. Capt. Sage contributed $15, ranking number 16 among the donors. The other contributors
were wealthy merchants of the harbor and common neighborhood. 40 After Bentley’s death in 1819,
the minister of the East Church was Dr. James Flint, from 1821 until 1855. 4142
A standing clay figure of Daniel Sage is in the collection of the Peabody Essex Museum,
by an unknown face maker in Canton, 1798. This is the last known example of this art (known
35
The Genealogical Magazine, Vol. 3, Dec. 1915-September, 1916, Boston Mass, Google Books. p. 211
Putnam Family Papers, Phillips Library, MSS 153, Finding Aid.
http://phillipslibrarycollections.pem.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15928coll1/id/3002
37
Essex County Probate Records, Probate 24516.
38
The Genealogical Magazine, Vol. 3, Dec. 1915-September, 1916, Boston Mass, Google Books. p. 211
39
Bentley, William. The Diary of William Bentley, Vol . 4: 1811-1819. Salem: The Essex Institute, 1914. p. 123.
40
Ibid., p. 529. The others Benjamin William Crowninshield, Nathaniel Silsbee, Joseph White, Gamaliel Hodges
(?), Robert & Anstiss Stone (?), J. Dodge, Zachariah F. Silsbee, Moses Townsend, Henry Prince, and Jonathan
Archer.
41
Colman, Henry. A Sermon, preached at the Installation of the Rev. James Flint, in the East Church in Salem.
Boston, Thomas B. Waite, 1821.
42
Clapp, Dexter. A discourse occasioned by the death of Rev. James Flint, D.D. : senior pastor of the East Church
in Salem : with an address delivered on the day of his burial, March 7, 1855.
36
�figures are from 1710 to 1798, and the only known depiction of an American. Most depict
Englishmen and there is one known figure of a Frenchman.
4344
Deborah Silsbee Sage preceded her husband to the grave by a month, on April 13, 1836. 45
When Daniel Sage died May 18, 1836, he was 77 years old and had amassed the large fortune of
$42,396.33.4647 Of that figure, $5,076 was in real estate. 52 Essex Street, called “The Homestead”
in the probate, was worth $4,000. The lot across Essex Street was valued at $675. There are two
lots of land along Liberal Street in the North Fields worth $225. 48
Sage’s furnishings and possessions came to $523.97. The inventory gives some sense of
the furniture that Sage had in his home. A green sofa and a black sofa, a Turkish rug, bamboo
couch, straw carpet, and a square dining table are listed among less descriptive items of furniture.
Other possessions included a spyglass, two looking glasses, a compass, scales and weights, a
musket, a sword, money scales, and twelve pictures. He owned a Bible and a number of books, as
well as charts and bound newspapers.49
In 2016, a lot of eight mahogany dining chairs carved by Samuel McIntire around 1800
was auctioned by Sotheby’s. The catalogue notes that similar chairs can be found in the SageWebb-Wilkins House in Salem. 50
Schokkenbroek, Joost C.A. “Figuring Out Global and Local Relations: Cantonese Face Makers and Their Sitters
in the 18th Century.” Navigating History: Economy, Society, Knowledge, and Nature: Essays in Honour of
Professor C.A. Davids. Eds. Pepijn Branden, Sabine Go, Wybren Verstegen. Leiden: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2018. p.
182.
44
William R. Sargent, “A figure of Captain Daniel Sage discovered.” Sept. 2015 issue of Antiques Magazine. Vol.
182, issue 5, p. 54.
45
Salem Vital Records, Deaths, p. 204.
46
Ibid.
47
Essex County Probate Records, Probate 24516.
48
Ibid.
49
Ibid.
50
Sotheby’s, “Important Americana,” 22-23 January, 2016. Sale #N094056.
43
�Lastly, he had investments and other assets valued at $36,796.36. These included shares in
five banks (Merchant, Exchange, Mercantile, Commercial, and Salem) three insurance companies
(Oriental, Marine, Union Marine), the Essex Marine Railway Corporation, the Salem and Danvers
Aqueduct Corporation, and the Marine Hall Corporation. 51 His son, William, was secretary of the
Union Marine, of which he had more than twice the number of shares than the other two firms.
The subscribers to his estate were Charles F. Putnam, John Sage, Margaret Sage, and
Ephraim Emmerton. William Sage was initially named the administrator, but he died February 19,
1838, before completing the probate and on April 3, Ephraim Emmerton was named administrator
in his place.5253 Daniel Sage’s papers are in the Phillips as part of the Emmerton Family Papers,
MSS 24.54
III.
The Webbs, 1831-1902
William Webb purchased Daniel Sage’s mansion on Essex Street on July 26, 1836, less
than two months after the captain’s death. 55 Webb paid only $100 less than the estimated value of
the property in Sage’s probate. 56 Webb was a trader and an apothecary.
Webb was born in October 1783 to Benjamin Webb and Hannah Bray.57 He married in
1825, the much younger Isabella (or Isabel) Donaldson, who was born in 1800 to Alexander
Donaldson and Elizabeth Peele. 58 William and Isabella had four children, three of whom survived
51
Probate 24516.
Salem Vital Records, Deaths, p. 205.
53
Probate 24516.
54
Emmerton Family Papers, Phillips Library, MSS 24. Finding Aid.
http://phillipslibrarycollections.pem.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15928coll1/id/2114
55
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 291:262. 26 Jul 1836.
56
Probate 24516
57 Salem Vital Records, Births, p. 405.
58 Salem Vital Records, Births, p. 258.
52
�to adulthood. Isabella, the firstborn, died in December 1834 at the age seven. 59 Benjamin was born
in May 1829.60 His first marriage was to Lizzie Brown. Elizabeth Donaldson was born in 1831. 61
She married George Whipple, secretary of the Essex Institute and a writer on local history, such
as the history of the Salem Light Infantry. 62 Lastly, William, Jr. was born in September 1833.63 He
moved to Winchester, Massachusetts by 1874. 64
Webb ran his apothecary out of the little shop constructed by Daniel Sage which is today
54 Essex Street.65 In the 1840s, Gardner Barton, an apothecary with a shop at 6 Newbury Street
resided with the Webbs at 52 Essex Street. 66 In 1842, there were only seven apothecaries listed in
the Salem Directory, including Barton and Webb. 67
In 1846, Isabella died of consumption in January 1846.68 Henry McIntyre’s 1851 map of
Salem depicts the home as the property of “W. Webb.” 69 William Webb died April 29, 1870.70
Webb’s son, Benjamin Webb, purchased the property in July of 1870 for $2,666.71 In the 1874
atlas of Salem, Benjamin Webb is listed as the owner and the store at number 54 is located at the
center of the lot, with more property to the west. 72
59
Salem Vital Records, Deaths, p. 313.
Salem Vital Records, Births, p. 401.
61
Salem Vital Records, Births, p. 402.
62 Whipple, George Mantum. History of the Salem Light Infantry, 1805-1890. Salem: Essex Institute, 1890.
63 Salem Vital Records, Births, p. 405.
64 Booth, Robert. “54 Essex Street, Salem History of the Building and Occupants” Salem: Historical Salem, 2007. P.
7.
65
Salem Directory, 1846. p. 121.
66
Salem Directory, 1842. p. 7.
67 Salem Directory, 1842. pp. 7, 29, 41, 95, 115, 116,
68
Salem Vital Records, Deaths, p. 313.
69 McIntyre, Henry. “Map of the City of Salem, Mass. From an actual survey By H. Mc. Intyre. Cl. Engr.” Map,
1851. Henry McIntyre, Salem, MA. Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library.
http://www.leventhalmap.org/id/15108
70
Booth, 2007. p. 7.
71
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 813:299. 5 Jul 1870.
72 Busch, Edward. Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts. From actual Survey & Official records. G.M. Hopkins
& Co. Philadelphia, 1874.
60
�In January 1877, Benjamin Webb sold the western half of the lot to John Stevenson, an
engineer living at 2 North Pine Street, for $1,973.97.7374 John Stevenson constructed a double
house on the lot in 1877, which is today 56-58 Essex Street.75
In the 1878 directory, Benjamin Webb, is listed with his shop at 54 Essex and his house at
52 Essex.76 In the 1893-4 Directory, an advertisement for Benjamin Webb, Apothecary lists the
following specialties: “’Old Dr. Webb's Cough Mixture,’ a cheap and effectual remedy, try it! ‘Old
Dr. Webb's Worm Powders,’ Successful through years of trials. A sure remedy! and ‘Dr. Little's
Green Ointment’ positively cures eczema and all skin diseases. Also pills.”
Webb’s second wife, Angie, received the property in September 1897 for $1 and other
considerations.77 He was listed as a chemist and a druggist in the 1899-1900 Directory, with his
shop at 54 Essex and his home at 52 Essex. 78 In that year, there were 14 druggists listed in Salem,
and 26 apothecaries, with all the druggists listed as apothecaries. 79 Benjamin Webb died in
November 1900.80
IV.
The Wilkins, 1902-1951
Marietta B. Wilkins purchased the property in April 1902 for $1 and other considerations. 81
Marietta was the wife of S. Herbert Wilkins, of Briggs & Wilkins, “proprietors of dry and fancy
goods,” 221 Essex street.82 In 1903, number 54 was the bakery of the Pierce Brothers, and in 1904,
73
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 970:258. 27 Jan 1877.
Salem Directory, 1878. p. 180.
75 MHC MACRIS, SAL.2664. “Stevenson, John Double House.”
76 Salem Directory, 1878, p. 196.
77
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1524:86. 20 Sep 1897.
78 Salem Directory 1899-1900, p. 395.
79 Salem Directory, 1899-1900, pp. 365, 369.
80 Booth, 2007. p. 7.
81
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1679:447. 17 Apr 1902.
82 Salem Directory, 1904. pp. 116, 394.
74
�home bakery of S.F. Martinage, 8384 The 1911 Salem atlas shows Marietta B. Wilkins as the owner
of the property, with the part of the lot to the west now occupied by the Stevenson double house. 85
V.
The Harringtons, 1951-1977
In April 1951, Paul P and Mary E. Harrington purchased 52 Essex Street from the estate
of Marietta B. Wilkins for $10,000. 86 The couple immediately took out a mortgage in that amount
from Roger Conant Co-Operative Bank. Paul and Mary Harrington were born in 1905. Paul P.
Harrington was a city worker. Their two sons, Patrick J. and Paul P., Jr., born in the early 1940s,
were in the Merchant Marine. 87 Mary transferred the house to Patrick J. Harrington in August of
1975.88
The Harringtons had a number of boarders or tenants living at 52 Essex Street. Charles A.
O’Connell, a laborer, and James Connell, a city worker, and in 1964 and 1975, respectively. Lucian
L. St. Amand, a laborer, and his son, Lucian R. St. Amand, Jr, a maintenance worker, lived in the
house from 1964 until 1975. Others included Frank Wroblewski, a leather worker, Robert D.
Bouvre, an assistant electrian, Kasimierz A. Lisaj, Michael Krulisky, a leather worker, Louis
Maynard, a train driver, and Conrad J. Verrette, a laborer. John I. Kozak, Edward Shea, Edward
McCoy, Henry S. Klosowski, Joseph Esko, and William Conovan, are listed, all five of them
retired.89
83
Salem Directory, 1904, p. 115.
Booth, 2007. p. 12.
85 Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts Based on Plans in the Office of the City Engineer. Walker Lithograph &
Publishing Company, Boston, 1911.
86
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 3813:542. 26 Apr 1951.
87 Street List of Persons, 1973, 1975.
88
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 6174:95. 20 Aug 1975.
89 Street List of Persons, 1954-1975.
84
�In 1975, Gerald Labonte, a firefighter, and his wife, Patricia, lived at the house. 90 A year
later, Robert F. Quinn, retired, is listed. 91
VI.
The Sets, 1977-2002
April 11, 1977, Patrick J. Harrington sold the property to Set Ming Fong and Set Ngor
Shun How for $53,000.92 Set Ming Fong, also called Set Hing Fong, was the proprietor of the Soe
Hoo Laundry at 54 Essex Street. He and his wife, Set Ngor Shun How, were born in 1917. 93Set
Den Jin (written in legal documents Den Jin Set) was born in 1956, was a student when his father
bought the property, but the laundry owner by 1990. Set Gen Yu, a housewife born in 1962, may
be Set Den Jin’s wife.
From 1980 to 1984, tenants at 54 Essex Street included Robert A. Bergeron, a veteran, Ken
Gibbs and Joseph Labonte, machinists, Kenneth R. Barr, a taxi driver, Heather Crofts, a bank teller,
and Christine Bak, a processing supervisor, Matthew Macfadee, a surveyor and engineer, and four
students.94
Ngor Shun How transferred the property in April 1985 to Set Ngor Shun How, Den Jin Set,
and Moy Ching Sezto for nominal consideration. 95 From 1985 to 1990, the Sets occupied Unit #1
and rented the second and third units. The tenants included Richard Bush, and Jeff Western,
roofers, Susan Harmon, a student, Heidi J. Gage, a therapist, Jeffery D. Summers, a painter, and
Donna A. Frenette, a housewife. 96
90
Street List of Persons, 1976.
Street List of Persons, 1977.
92
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 6361:149. 11 Apr 1977.
93 Annual Listings, 1980, 1986.
94 Annual Listings, 1980-1984.
95
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 7735:541. 26 Apr 1985.
96 Annual Listings, 1986-1990.
91
�Den Jin Set gave his share of the property to Set Ngor Shun How for nominal consideration
in September of 1990.97 52 Essex Street was listed as unoccupied in 1991 and 1992. 98 In 1993,
1994, and 1995, there were several residents: Richard Holder in Unit #2 in 1993 and 1994, Marillis
D. Brooks, Randy C. Hills, both in retail, in Unit #2 in 1995, and Alez Gurreo, a banker, and
Edward I. Reeves, a government worker, in Unit #3 in that latter year. From 1996 to 2002, the
property was not listed in the Annual Listings of Salem. 99
VII.
Condominiums, 2002-Present
Moy Ching Szeto Chew, Den Jin Set, Tsang Mei Shung sold 52 Essex Street to Jon M.
Cahill in April 2002 for $298,000. 100 Cahill subsequently drew up a condo association agreement
and sold the property as three units. In January 2003, he sold Unit #3 to Robert E. O’Brien. 101 In
February, he sold Unit #2 to Daniel P. and Donna M. Thompson. 102 In April of the same year, he
sold Unit #1 to Madeleine Saunders.103
In 2005, the Thompsons sold Unit #2 to Robert and Laura Brooks. 104 In 2008, Madeleine
Saunders and her heirs sold Unit #1 to Dorothy Malcolm, a writer and editor. 105
In 2016, the residents of the building were Karen Barter, the director of development at
The House of the Seven Gables, in Unit #1, Laura L. Brooks, a graphic designer, and her husband,
97
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 10605:120. 28 Sep 1990.
Annual Listings, 1991, 1992.
99 Annual Listings, 1996-2002.
100
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 18627:242. 25 Apr 2002.
101
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 19935:199. 3 Jan 2003.
102
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 20237:132. 26 Feb. 2003.
103
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 20486:311. 1 Apr 2003.
104 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 24179:489. 15 Apr 2005.
105 Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 27863:408. 20 Jun 2008.
98
�Robert L. Brooks, a counselor, in Unit #2, and Paul F. Dolimpio, a data collector, and Julia M.
O’Brien, a designer in Unit #3. 106
VIII. Conclusion
Called the Sage-Webb-Wilkins House, this classic Salem house has a storied history and
is a fine example of Federal architecture in the harbor neighborhood. Captain Daniel Sage, a native
of the western coast of Scotland, came to America as a young man. In 1786 he married Deborah
Silsbee and lived in her ancestral home, the First Period Stephen Daniels House on Daniels Street.
In 1800, Sage purchased the property at 52 Essex Street from the Derbys and began construction
of the present building. Sage had success as a shipmaster and later as a merchant. When he died in
1836, he had amassed considerable assets. The house was sold immediately to William Webb, an
apothecary. Webb used 54 Essex Street next door as his apothecary shop. When he died in 1870,
his son, Benjamin Webb, took over the shop and home, living there until 1900. Benjamin’s widow,
Angie, sold the property to Marietta B. Wilkins, the wife of a dry goods merchant.
Paul P. Harrington and his wife, Mary, purchased the house in 1951. Their two sons were
in the merchant marine. Parts of the house were rented to various working-class tenants, many of
them of Polish or French-Canadian heritage.
The Sets, proprietors of a Chinese laundry next door at 54 Essex Street, purchased the
house in 1977, living in it off and on until 1990 and renting parts of the house to various young
and working-class tenants.
106
Annual Listing for the City of Salem, 2017.
�After the building was turned into condominiums in 2002, it has been the home to a few
couples of urban professionals. The home remains an important landmark of Salem’s maritime
and architectural legacy.
Appendix One: Probate Inventory of Capt. Daniel Sage, 1838
Real Estate
The Homestead, with the buildings thereon situated upon the North side of Essex Street-- $4,000
A lot of land with a barn thereon situated opposite upon the south side of Essex Street-- $675.
A lot of land in North Fields situated upon the south side of the road leading to Ornes Point &
part of barn thereon-- $175
A lot of land in North Fields situated upon the South side of Liberal Street— $150
A lot of land in North Fields sitatued upon the North side of Liberal Street -- $75
Pew No. 3 in East Meeting House-- $1
Total-- $5,076
Personal Estate
Furniture &c. Green Sofa $10 Two Tables & Seven Chairs $9.50-- $19.50
Brass Fire Set $4 Looking Glass $5 Turkey Carpet & Two Rugs $20-- $29
Five pieces Plated Ware $10 Sideboard $9 Black Sofa $9--$28
Six Chairs $2.40 Clock Case & Book Case $10-- $12.40
Table & Writing Desk $4.50 Set of Chartes & Bound News Papers $3--$7.50
Bible Lot of Books & Pictures $10 Spy Glass $8 Watch & Case $5—23
Money scales Old Buckels, Reel, Sand Box $0.50 Looking Glass $3- $3.50
Carpet $5 Square Dining Table $4 Stair Carpet, Rods & Lamp $12--$21
Bed, Bedstead & Bedding $25 Easy Chair $7-- $32
Two trunks containing Sheets, Pillow Cases &c $15 Set of Blankets, Bed Quilts & Bed Dress
$30-- $45
Two Baskets $1 Lot Napkins, Table Linins, & Cloths $20-- $21
Carpet & Rug $7 Two Tables, Wash Stand Bowl & Pitcher $4-- $11
Six Chairs $1,50 Twelve Pictures $3 Light Stand $1-- $5.50
Bedstead & Beding $10 Bureau $5.50 Table 25 cts. Seven Chairs 70 cts. – $16.45
Carpet $3 Looking Glass $2 Two Trunks $5-- $5
Bureau and Case of Drawers $7 Cot bedstead $3 Thirty Chairs $5—$15
Bamboo Couch and Straw Carpet $1.50 Light Stand & Paint Box 75 cents—$2.25
Bedstead $1.50 Three Looking Glasses $1.50-- $3
Two Beds, Pillows, and Bolsters-- $20 Sword, Musket & accoutraments $1.50-- $21.50
Lot of Sticks—12 cents Bed Bedstead & Beding $5 Rocking Chair $2.50-- $5.37
Chest Drawers & Cot 25 cts. Chest 50 cts. -- $.075
Bed, Bedstead, Beding, Case drawers and Carpet $4.50 Chest, Case Drawers Bed Bedstead &
Beding $6.50-- $11
Desk $5 Round Table & Work Stand $3.50 Easy Chair $1-- $9.50
�Three Chairs 50 cts. Lot of wooden Ware $2-- $2.50
Two brass fire Sets $5 Two Tea Caddies sugar Box & Knife Case $1-- $6
Three Lanthornes Two foot Stoves $1.25—$1.25
Two Cases bottles and box of Vials $1.25 Three Demijons $1.50 Four Jars China Ware $1.50-$4.25
Nine preserve Pots $1— $1
Lot of China & Crockery Ware consisting of Dining & Tea Sets $18 Looking Glass & Lot of
Glass Ware $7.50-- $25.50
Fire buckets & a lot of Baskets $2-- $2
Lot of Waiters, Compass and a reflector $1.50 Lot Knives & forks $7.50--$9
Chest Drawers and Table $1.50 Lot of Tin & Pewter Ware $5--$6.50
Iron & Copper Ware $5 Steel Yards Scales & Weights $1.50 --$6.50
Lot of Stone and Potters Ware 50 cts. Five Kitchen Tables & five chairs $2 -- $2.50
Lot of Brass Ware $1.50 Kitchen Fire Set $1 Lot Bottles $4.50--$7
Lot of empty Barrels & Boxes $6.50—$6.50
Ladders, wheelbarrow and Sled $1.50 Lot old Tools, old bow, & Rubish $5 half ton Coal $3—
$9.50
Grind Stone & Cloaths line $1.50 Two stoves with funnels $5-- $6.50
Seventy four & a quarter ounces Silver @ $1 per oz. -- $74.25
Stocks, Debts Due to the Estate, & Viz.
Seventy shares in the Merchants Bank-- $7,000
Twenty shares in the Exchange Bank—$1333.33 1/3
Forty-Five shares in the Mercantile Bank— $4500
Ten shares in the Commercial Bank—$666.66 2/3
Fifteen shares in the Oriental Insurance Co.—$1500
Five shares in the Marine Insurance Co.—$1000
Thirty-Four shares in the Union Marine Insurance Co.—$1360
Four shares in the Salem Bank—$400.
Seven shares in the Essex Marine Railway Corporation—$1330
Four shares in the Salem and Danvers Aqueduct Corportation— $2000
Two shares in the Marine Hall Corporation—$190
Deposite in the Grand Bank, present value—$7720.
Deposite in the Nahant Bank, present value—$3777.77
Deposite in the Naumkeag Bank, present value- $1300
Naples claim valued at—$1592.59
Cash on hand—$1126.
Personal Estate: $37,320.33
Total Estate: $42, 396.33
�Appendix Two: Table of Ownership
Date
Conveyed by
Conveyed to
1800,
Richard Derby, Samuel Derby, Charles Derby, Daniel Sage,
May 28 and Ebenezer Preble, Merchants
mariner
1836,
Jul. 26
John Sage, mariner, Wlliam Sage, gentleman, William Webb,
Margaret Sage, singlewoman, Ephraim
trader
Emmerton, and Mary Ann Emmerton,
Charles F. Putnam, trader, and Sarah Putnam
1870,
Jul. 5
George M. & Elizabeth D. Whipple
Benjamin Webb,
Jr., apothecary
Amount Book
Page
$747.40 166
240
$3,900 291
262
$2,666 813
299
1897
Benjamin Webb, Jr., apothecary
Sep. 20
Angie Webb,
wife of Benjamin $1 and other 1524
considerations
Webb
1902
Angie Webb
Apr. 17
Marietta B.
Wilkins, wife of
S. Herbert
Wilkins
1951,
Estate of Marietta Wilkins
Apr. 26
Paul P. & Mary
E. Harrington
1975,
Mary K. Harrington
Aug. 20
Patrick J.
Harrington
86
$1 and other
1670
considerations
447
$10,000 3813
542
$1 and other
good and
valuable
consideration
6174
95
�1977,
Patrick J. Harrington
Apr. 11
Set Ming Fong,
Set Ngor Shun
How,
$53,000
6361
149
1985,
Ngor Shun How, widow of Set Ming Fong,
Apr. 26
Set Ngor Shun
How, Den Jin
Set, Moy Ching
Sezto
Nominal
consideration
7735
541
1990,
Den Jin Set
Sep. 28
Set Ngor Shun
How
Nominal
10605
consideration
120
2002,
Moy Ching Szeto Chew, Den Jin Set, Tsang
Apr. 25 Mei Shung,
Jon M. Cahill
$298,000 18627
242
Amount
Book
Page
$268,000
20486
311
$241,200
27863
408
$275,000
35045
213
$379,900
36887
114
Unit # 1
Date
2003,
Apr. 1
2008,
Jun. 20
2016,
Jun. 29
2018,
Jul. 25
Conveyed by
Jon M. Cahill
Madeline E. Saunders, Charles M.
Saunders, Miriam J. Phelan, Hobart P.
Saunders,
Dorothy Malcolm
Karen C. Barter
Conveyed to
Madeline E.
Saunders
Dorothy
Malcolm
Karen C. Barter
Lisa Marie
Mendelson
Unit # 2
Date
2003,
Feb.
26
2005,
Apr.
15
2017
Sep.
29
Conveyed by
Jon M. Cahill
Daniel P. & Donna M. Thompson
Robert L. & Laura Lynn Scheer
Brooks
Conveyed to
Daniel P. & Donna M.
Thompson
Amount
Book
Page
$278,900
20237
132
Robert L. & Laura
Lynn Scheer Brooks
$329,900
24179
489
John R. & Sandra N.
Pittinger
$345,900
36216
259
�Unit # 3
Date
2003,
Jan. 3
2015,
Nov. 16
Conveyed by
Jon M. Cahill
Robert E. O’Brien
Conveyed to
Robert E.
O’Brien
Julia M. O’Brien
Amount
Doc
Book
Page
$285,400
Deed
19935
199
$1 and
consideration paid
Deed
34524
38
���
Dublin Core
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Title
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Essex Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
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Title
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52 Essex Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Daniel Sage
Mariner and Merchant
c. 1800
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1800, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Researched & written by David Moffat
Language
A language of the resource
English
1800
2019
52
circa
Daniel
Essex
History
House
Massachusetts
Sage
Salem
Street
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039af0f782fc24d4653840473fa66408
PDF Text
Text
1 Gedney Court
Built for the heirs of
George S. Arrington
Policeman
1886
Researched & written by
Robert Booth
March 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�����������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Gedney Court
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
1 Gedney Court, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for the heirs of
George S. Arrington
Policeman
1886
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
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Date
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1886, 2019
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Robert Booth
Language
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English
1
1886
2019
Arrington
Court
Gedney
George
History
House
Massachusetts
S.
Salem
-
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8dcf5160f76e3bf9456a095fff4cfe8c
PDF Text
Text
25 Warren Street
Built for
Dennis Brady
Currier
c. 1870
Researched by
Diana Dunlap
March 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�25 Warren Street
Built for Dennis Brady, currier, c. 1870
1. The land that now forms 25 Warren Street was sold as a larger lot, with no buildings or
improvements mentioned in the deed, by Joseph Wallis, cabinetmaker of Salem, to
James Stone, bricklayer of Salem, on October 18, 1838, for $150.00. The property is
described as bordering northwards on Green Street 44’6”, eastwards on land of Henry
Reed’s 91’, southwards on Wallis’s own land 33’, and westwards 84’6” on land Wallis
had already sold to Stone. Wallis was involved in two different land sales around the
area then called Green Street in the 1830s. Registry of Deeds Book 309, Page 23.
2. On May 20, 1870, James Stone sold a parcel of this land to Sarah Saul, wife of John F.
Saul of Salem, carpenter. Registry of Deeds Book 798, Page 219.
3. Only a few weeks later, on June 2, 1870, Sarah Saul sold the land to Dennis Brady of
Salem, currier, for $387.50. The lot is described as running northwards on Warren Street
40’, eastwards on land of Henry Reed 42’, southerly on land of James Stone 35’, and
westerly on Stone’s land 38’. The deeds does not reference any buildings on the lot, so
the house must have been built after this. Registry of Deeds Book 800, Page 299.
4. On November 5, 1870, James Stone, mason of Salem, sold a small, 7’ wide strip
bordering the south side of Brady’s property to Dennis Brady for $100.00. This second
purchase of Dennis Brady’s created the modern lot. Registry of Deeds Book 809, Page
273.
5. On October 15, 1907, Dennis Brady and his wife Emma T. Brady mortgaged the land
and buildings to the Federal Trust Company for $1000.00, with the condition that they
provide fire insurance on the property. Registry of Deeds Book 1899, Page 39.
6. On December 12, 1907, Emma T. Brady and her husband Dennis sold the land and
buildings to Florence J. Mahoney “for one dollar and other valuable considerations
thereof.” Registry of Deeds Book 1905, Page 388.
7. Florence J. Mahoney sold the house and land to Catherine B. Whelton on September
30, 1914. Registry of Deeds Book 2276, Page 26.
8. Catherine B. Whelton sold the property to Andrew Mossett on September 8, 1920.
Registry of Deeds Book 2463, Page 83.
9. Andrew Mossett and his wife Angie mortgaged the house, also on September 8, 1920,
for $650.000 with a term of one year and 6% interest. Registry of Deeds Book 2463,
Pages 84-85.
10. On October 6, 1922, the mortgagee (the Helburn-Thompson Leather Company of
Salem) foreclosed on the the Mosetts’s mortgage. The mortgage listed here is larger
than that referenced in the previous record. Registry of Deeds Book 2530, Page 120.
11. That same day, the Helburn-Thompson Leather Company sold the property at auction to
Harris S. Knight of Salem for $240.00. Registry of Deeds 2530, Page 120-121.
12. Harris S. Knight, “being unmarried,” sold the property to Charles Johnson on October 27,
1922. Registry of Deeds Book 2531, Page 575.
�13. On February 14, 1923, Charles S. Johnston of Salem sold the property to Louis K. Arth
of Salem, subject to a mortgage of $3000.00 with the Roger Conant Cooperative Bank.
Registry of Deeds Book 2541, Page 377.
14. Louis K. Arth, now of Boston, sold the house to Patrick J. and Catherine Landers on
November 25, 1924, subject to taxes and water rates for the ear 1924. Registry of Deeds
Book 2620, Page 566.
15. Katherine E. Riordan and Martin E. Landers granted the property to Martha E. Collins
and Jerome T. Riordan, Jr., Trustees of the Landers Realty Trust (see Page 91), for
$1.00. The deed refers to the estate of Patrick J. Landers, Essex Probate Docket
299384. Registry of Deeds 10286, Page 94.
16. Martha E. Collins and Jerome T. Riordan, Jr., Trustees of the Landers Realty Trust, sold
the property for $125,000.00 to Francis E. Chafe, Jr., and Elizabeth A. Chafe. Regsitry of
Deeds Book 13403, Page 557.
17. Francis E. Chafe and Elizabeth A. Chafe sold the house for $325,000.00 to Bennyi
Moreno on November 30, 2001. Registry of Deeds Book 17967, Page 196.
18. Bennyi Moreno sold the property to Lauren Fortner for “$1 and other valuable
considerations” on January 15, 2003. Registry of Deeds Book 20114, Page 77.
19. Lauren Fortner, married to Eric Donald Munson of Salem, sold the property to Megan M.
Millar and Joel Nentwich as joint tenants for $525,000.00 on October 29, 2018. Registry
of Deeds 37114, Page 131.
�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Warren Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
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Title
A name given to the resource
25 Warren Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Dennis Brady
Currier
c. 1870
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1870, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Diana Dunlap
Language
A language of the resource
English
1870
2019
25
Brady
circa
Dennis
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Warren
-
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4bb92a1f31e87c5d40e8c4a58dbb2eed
PDF Text
Text
2 Sutton Avenue
Built for
Frances Tabour
Wife of
William Tabour
Cigar Manufacturer
c. 1880
Research Provided by
Brian Hennessey & Alyssa G. A. Conary
March 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Chain of Title, 2 Sutton Avenue, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
May 31, 1877 Daniel B. Gardner of Salem
September 17, 1900 William Tabour of Lynn
June 19, 1940 Gertrude M. Graves of Salem, widow
June 19, 1940 Herbert W. Levesque of Salem
Gertrude M. Graves of Salem & Clifton H.
November 12, 1947 Graves of Dorchester
Grantee(s)
Frances Tabour, wife of William
Tabour, of Salem
February 5, 1999 Albina C. Nestor of Salem
Conveyance of
Source
"The real estate in said Salem bounded and described as
follows, viz: A lot of land, situated on Juniper Point so called, &
lying in said Salem...Being the lot numbered seven on a plan
of cottage lots on Juniper Point, Salem Neck, owned by Daniel
B. Gardner recorded in Essex Registry of Deeds South District Essex County Registry of
$325 1st Book of Plans Plan No. 30."
Deeeds
Document Book or Vol. Page Notes
Deed
977
85
"a certain parcel of land with all buildings thereon in Salem in
"one dollar and
that part called Juniper Point being lot seven on a plan
other valuable
recorded with Essex South District Deeds, Book 1 number 30,
considerations paid" bounded..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1620
"being the same conveyed by deed of Daniel B.
Gardner to Frances Tabour, wife of the grantor,
dated May 15, 1877, recorded B. 977 L. 85, and
devised to the grantor by her will duly proved and
allowed in Essex County, Probate Court, August 1,
1898, subject to the restrictions contained in said
521 deed."
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situated in
that part of SALEM called Juniper Point, and being lot seven
on a plan recorded with Essex, South District Registry of
Herbert W. Levesque of Salem "consideration paid" Deeds, Book 1 number 30, and bounded..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3221
463
Gertrude M. Graves of
Dorchester
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon in that part
of SALEM, called Juniper Point, being lot seven on a Plan
recorded with Essex, South District Registry of Deeds, Book 1,
"consideration paid" number 30, bounded..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3221
463
Joseph B. Harrington & Mary
Louise Harrington, husband
and wife of Salem
"A certain parcel of land buildings in that part of Salem called
Juniper Point, being Lot #7 on a plan recorded in Essex South
"consideration paid" District Registry of Deeds, Book 1, Plan 30 and bounded..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3575
550
"a certain parcel of land buildings in that part of Salem called
Juniper Point, being Lot #7 on a plan recorded in Essex South
"consideration paid" District Registry of Deeds, Book 1, Plan 30, and bounded..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
4142
355
Paul Nestor & Albina Nestor,
husband and wife of Salem
"the land with the buildings thereon situated on Sutton
Avenue in said Salem, being lot #7 on a plan recorded in
Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan
"consideration paid" 30, bounded and described as follows..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
4630
404
Paul Nestor of Salem
"The land with the buildings thereon situated on Sutton
Avenue in said Salem, being Lot #7 on a plan recorded in
Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan
"consideration paid" 30, bounded and described as follows..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
15455
446
"The land with the buildings thereon situated on Sutton
Avenue in said Salem, being Lot #7 on a plan recorded in
Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan
$347,000 30, bounded as follows..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
29368
361
Gertrude M. Graves, wife of
Edgar C. Graves, of Waltham
Rene P. LeBlanc & Myrtle S.
Joseph B. Harrington & Mary L. Harrington, LeBlanc, husband and wife of
February 21, 1955 husband and wife of Salem
Salem
Rene P. LeBlanc & Myrtle S. LeBlanc,
December 21, 1959 husband and wife of Salem
Consideration
Suzanne C. Melin & Claudia M. Hennessey,
Executrixes under the Will of the Estate of
Brian P. Hennessey of Salem
March 31, 2010 Paul Nestor, of Lynn & Marblehead
���1897 Salem Atlas
��������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Sutton Avenue
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
2 Sutton Avenue, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Frances Tabour
Wife of
William Tabour
Cigar Manufacturer
c. 1880
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1880, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Researched by Brian Hennessey & Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1880
2
2019
Avenue
circa
Frances
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Sutton
Tabour
William
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/9f2af44c1b3cf8cd8835ed2097302acd.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=JkLu%7ERML23zS2ayQJ4r8AaYukiEXgyiOB7EuIHWMMbV7HvNKOk5dgtdgAYC34V1Y%7EEzueQYWHL58ZbgKKngPsxkHoeJYdR8qPNSNITNPk6Q7qNNTaNj6LmI15biVzi1r4y4PayDVd5-01pQE5dBr7TdfusxVMUxQZXw8QCZeUFDg3paBtpk7%7E1w1uOqwkhaYcxGtzM26eNuliUYfCxAgTQRrh6spRShed4jDGftddnIJbTrDpgHml6%7EyxyRVIaf0gmR4nwhCjLH0bDkKSeIjYCuspeLcVaSCduoS1EJy9XHnlO-nK45G1m34BA%7EIebXz3H5VkizLPPL9-zCAJR0TvQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
dd36b74591c6d41a931c73cfc463aee3
PDF Text
Text
58 Endicott Street
Original house built for
Jesse S. Punchard
1846
Rebuilt after
the Great Salem Fire
June 1914
Researched & Written by
Amy Kellett
February 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�House History Report
58 Endicott Street
Salem, Massachusetts
Original house built for
Jesse S. Punchard
1846
Destroyed by Great Salem Fire
June 1914
by
Amy E. Kellett
February 2019
Researcher’s Note:
The contents of this report are based on research done
through the Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, the
Salem City Directory archives, Salem Street Books, Tax
Assessment Records, and other primary sources. (Where
secondary sources have been quoted or otherwise referred
to, there are corresponding citation footnotes.) This report is
completed to the best of my knowledge at the time of its
publication. However, I reserve the right to update, revise,
and otherwise edit this report if and/or when new
information is discovered.
This report is published and copyrighted by Historic Salem,
Inc., Feb. 2019.
Amy E. Kellett
Researcher & Author
�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
Part I: 1843-1851
One of Salem’s oldest families, the Pickering family, owned the land that 58 Endicott Street now
stands on, historically called the Broadfields. The home which now stands at 58 Essex Street in
Salem, Massachusetts was built as part of a development in 1925 of the even-side lots Endicott
Street by local real estate developer, Morris Gerber. The foundation on which the house at 58
Endicott now stands, however, dates to 1846, when the property was built and owned by painter
and glazier Jesse Punchard. Punchard purchased the lots from John Pickering and built a small
dwelling house that he likely lived in while building a larger two-family home at the corner of
Endicott and Winthrop Streets.
The 1840s in Salem proved to be an opportune time for a new generation of skilled and unskilled
laborers, industrial engineers, entrepreneurs, and the like. In mid-1843 one such man, Jesse S.
Punchard, a window glazier and painter, took an opportunity to purchase land from John
Pickering for $162 in the rapidly developing ‘Broadfields’ neighborhood at the corner of two
newly-named paths called Winthrop and Endicott. By 1843 John Pickering (now living in Boston)
had parceled off most of the Family’s land, including a plot sold to Jesse Smith Punchard,
recorded in the Southern Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 337, Page 242.
… unto the said Punchard a certain piece of land situate in said Salem described
as follows. Viz. Commencing at the Southwest bound and running Northerly
forty one feet by a private way forty feet wide called Winthrop Street; thence
Easterly about ninety two feet by other land of mine, thence Southerly forty feet
by land of Henry J. Lane, thence Westerly eighty three feet by a private way
forty feet wide called Endicott Street to the point commenced at.
According to contemporaneous records, Jesse Punchard began building the first of two homes
on this property — a larger two-family at 15 Winthrop Street, followed shortly thereafter in 1846
by a small single-family home intended to be a rental property. The smaller single-family home
was likely a front-gabled vernacular form of the Greek Revival style, also called the ‘National
Style’ at the time for its popularity the 1830s-1850s throughout the newly-formed United States.
The single-family foundation (originally numbered 60 Endicott) can still be found underneath
the present structure at 58 Endicott Street.
1
�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
1843 Land Deed | John Pickering to Jesse S. Punchard
Southern Essex Registry of Deeds | Book 337 Page 242
2
�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
Prior to owning the property on the corner of Winthrop and Endicott Streets, Jesse Punchard
had been a boarder at 21 Green Street before his marriage to Olive S. Lewis. The two would be
wed in January 1844, just six months after Jesse’s purchase of the land from John Pickering. The
couple likely moved into the larger two-family home on the corner of Winthrop Street while
Jesse finished building the income property dwelling house at 60 Endicott Street. The property
description is confirmed through the 1851 Salem Atlas, created from a survey published the same
year by Henry McIntyre, which shows the Punchard property on the corners of Winthrop and
Endicott Streets.
1851 Salem City Atlas | Endicott Street
Punchard & H. Lane noted in area of Winthrop Endicott Street
3
�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
The first tenants to occupy the property at 60 Endicott included the families of William Moore
and Charles Jesbro, according to the 1846 Tax Valuations of the City and the 1847 Salem Street
Book archives. Unfortunately, there is no other record in Salem of Charles Jesbro to be found.
William Moore was born in England in 1790, made his way to Salem as an adult, and earned a
living as a laborer. He was married to Hannah F. Ross on the 27th of August 1846, the same year
Moore is first recorded as living at 60 Endicott. The newlyweds made their first home at the
rental property on Endicott Street, but shortly thereafter moved to Ward 4 of the City.
1847 Salem Street Book | Endicott Street
Listed at 60 Endicott are ‘Wm. More’ and ‘Chs. Jesbro’— and their neighbor, Jesse Punchard
The 1848 Tax Valuation book for Ward 3 shows Charles F. Adams residing at 60 Endicott and
Jesse S. Punchard at 15 Winthrop, assessed for two houses each $600 value. Found in the 1848
Street book shows for 60 Endicott a young man named George Leach, and ‘gone’ penciled in
next to name (though he appears again in the 1849 Street Book archives, so it would seem that
Leach’s plans to move were postponed for another year after 1848). The 1849 Street Book shows
Chas. F. Adams, 25, and George Leach “gone” at #60. Charles F. Adams (1821-1871), died 28
Nov. 1871, was born in Salem on March 20, 1821, the son of Nathan Adams, a native of Danvers,
4
�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
and Eleanor Marshall, who had wed in Beverly in 1805. Charles had several older siblings, and
two, Lucy and George, who were younger.
1850 US Federal Census | Essex Co. | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3
Mary B. Price, et al. at 60 Endicott Street
5
�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
When he was 19, he shipped out as a seaman on board the ship Mount Wollaston, Capt. E. L
Rose (of Sag Harbor, L.I., NY), with a crew of 24 men, probably bound on a whaling cruise,
departing in June, 1840, for the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. He was then described as 5’ 6” tall,
with a fair complexion and brown hair, residing in Salem (see Mystic Seaport, Salem Crew Lists
for his seafaring career).
At 21, he sailed on a whaling voyage, departing Salem in September, 1843, on board the famous
bark Emerald, Capt. Edward F. Lakeman, 30, of Salem; first mate William B. Stanton, 30, of
New Bedford, and the other 23 crewmen residents of Salem except for one from Danvers. A book
has been published about this vessel!
At 27, now described as dark complected with brown hair, he sailed on board the brig Aerial,
Capt. William Hadley with mate John C. Luscomb, and a crew of eight more (including a black
seaman, Benjamin Peters, 22, of Salem—a native of Warren, Me.—and a black steward, George
Peckham), bound for Para (Brazil) and a market, departing in January, 1848.
Charles married c. 1845 Margaret M. Wiggin, born Sept. 12, 1827. Their first child, Eliza Ellen,
was born in 1847, followed by Lucy E. (1849), Edward (1851), and Mary P. (1854). By 1850 Charles
& family had moved to Marblehead and he was working as a machinist and residing on upper
Washington Street, near Rowlands Hill, in a house with the family of grocer and inn-holder
James A. Rix. By 1855, still in Marblehead, Charles, 34, was working as a railroad engineer, and
so he remained for the rest of his life. The family then resided on Sewall Street. Toward the end
of his life he returned to Salem, and was here in 1870. He died of heart disease on Nov. 28, 1871,
aged 50 years, and was survived by his wife and three daughters.
6
�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
By 1846 Jesse S. Punchard and his wife, Olive, are listed as living at 15 Winthrop, at which point
they had already begun renting out the smaller home at 60 Endicott. Among the earlier tenants
of 60 Endicott Street included 24 year-old George Leach (and presumably his family) who are
found in Salem’s 1848 and 1849 City Street Books.
1848 Salem City Street Book | Endicott Street
George Leach & H. J. Lane noted at 60 and 58 Endicott Street
When US Federal Census was taken in mid-1850, the lease for 60 Endicott had changed hands to
Mary B. Price, along with her three children and her mother, Lucy Doyle. The Price family is
found on the 1850 Census between the family at 15 Winthrop Street including their landlords
Jesse S. and Olive Punchard along with their three daughters, Mary (11), Rebecca (8), and Emma
(1), as well as the Punchard’s tenants in their two-family home, Joshua and Mary Jones, their two
daughters Mary (8) and Caroline (4), Joshua’s father Joseph Jones, and 19 year-old Catharine. To
the East of the Price’s lived the Lane Family; Henry, Mary, and 13 year-old Mary Eliza Lane, who
had had owned the property at 58 Endicott since Henry J. Lane purchased the land from John
Pickering in 1842, just one year before Jesse Punchard had done the same.
7
�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
Mrs. Mary B. Price began her life as Mary B. Doyle, born in Maine, born between 1805-1807. She
married New Hampshire native Ephraim S. Price, in Salem, Massachusetts on June 10, 1828 and
the couple had three children shortly thereafter: Mary Elisabeth, born in 1831, Harriet, born
1836, and Edward, the youngest and only surviving boy, born in 1839.
1837 Salem City Directory | Ephraim S. Price
Cabinet maker at 6 Charter Street; House at 6 Oliver Street
The family lived in a house at 6 Oliver Street, in the Salem Neck neighborhood of the City.
Ephraim Smith Price made his living as a cabinet maker, with a shop at 6 Charter Street, and by
1837 had partnered with James K. Averill to run a cabinet and furniture shop on Vine Street in
downtown Salem. 1
1957 | The Cabinetmakers of America
Clips pertaining to Ephraim S. Price & James K. Averill
In August 1839, Mrs. Mary B. Price became a widow after 10 years of marriage, and three
children, the youngest of which was born within the same year of his father’s death. Ephraim was
buried in Gilmanton, New Hampshire, while his widow and children remained in Salem.
As with many women of her era, it is unknown what Mary B. Price did to make a living for herself,
and local directories show the Price family living in several rental properties throughout the city;
the family likely remained among the working-class population of Salem in the late 19th and early
20th centuries.
1 Bjerkoe, E. Hall. The Cabinetmakers of America. Doubleday. New York. 1957.
8
�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
In 1850 Punchard decided it best to sell the small single family, and by doing so divide his
property. Approximately five years after the house at 60 Endicott Street was built on land that
had been purchased for $162, Jesse S. Punchard sold the house and property to Charles L.
Bradbury for $950. This deed provides a clear description of the property as it stood until the
early 20th century:
…The following described messuage 2 situate in said Salem viz. bounded
Southerly by Endicott Street twenty two feet and seven inches; easterly by land
of Henry J. Lane forty feet; Northerly by said Lane twenty two feet and seven
inches; Westerly by other land of mine forty feet.
1850 Deed | Jesse S. Punchard to Charles L. Bradbury
Southern Essex Registry of Deeds | Book 435 Page 172
2 messuage — (noun) a dwelling house with outbuildings and land assigned to its use; from the Latin word
“manere”, meaning ‘dwell'
9
�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
Charles L. Bradbury listed as a printer living at the property for only one year, in the 1851 Salem
City Directory. Shortly after purchasing the home, however, Bradbury received an employment
opportunity in Boston that he could not refuse, and he sold the property to Simon Pendar in 1851.
(It is unclear whether Bradbury was successful in Boston, as the 1855 Salem City Directory shows
him as living at 11 Rust Street with a printing shop at 191 Essex Street.)
1851 Salem City Directory
7th from the top shows Charles L. Bradbury, Printer, at 60 Endicott Street
Bradbury being listed on the 1853 Salem City Directory as a printer living at 60 Endicott
indicates provides further indication as to what the home that stood at 60 Endicott may have
looked like; with a profession listed but no business address, it can be assumed that there may
have been a space in the home for a workshop of sorts. (This is again shown through later tenants
of the property operating businesses from the same address.)
In 1851 Bradbury mortgaged the property to Simon Pendar (along with this wife, Anna), who
made his living as a horse trader and livery stable owner, for $565 cash and $450 mortgaged,
recorded in the Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds, Book 459, Page 44:
…I, Charles L. Bradbury of Boston County of Suffolk and State of
Massachusetts, Printer, in consideration of five hundred and sixty five dollars
to me paid by Simon Pendar of Salem, Essex County, State aforesaid, Trader,
and of the said Pendars, assuming a certain mortgage upon the following
10
�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
described premises of the further sum of four hundred & fifty dollars, the receipt
whereof I do hereby acknowledge, do hereby give, grant, sell and convey unto
the said Pendar a certain lot of land situated on Endicott Street in said Salem
bounded as follows, Viz. beginning at Punchards land on said Street and
running Easterly twenty two feet seven inches, thence Northerly by land of
Henry J. Lane forty feet, thence Westerly by land of said Lane twenty two feet
seven inches, thence Southerly by land of said Punchard forty feet to the point
begun at, together with the dwelling house standing thereon.
1851 Deed | Charles L. Bradbury to Simon Pendar
Southern Essex Registry of Deeds | Book 459 Page 44
11
�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
Part II: 1851-1887 — Simon Pendar, et al.
Simon Pendar (also spelled Pinder, Pindar, and Pender) was born at the turn of the 19th century
on August 1st, 1800, the son of Samuel Pindar and Mehitable “Hitty” Putnam. Hitty Pindar (née
Putnam) was the third of eight children born to Nathaniel Putnam and Mary Ober. Nathaniel
Putnam was a member of Captain Jeremiah Page’s company during the Revolutionary War, who
had marched to Lexington with the company on April 19, 1775.3 Little information can be found
about Simon Pendar’s father, Samuel, but his station in life would undoubtedly have been
improved by marrying the daughter of a Revolutionary War hero.
1829 Deed | Samuel Pinder to Simon Pinder | Danvers, Mass.
The Pendar’s were an upper-middle class working family, and as one of seven children, Simon
Pendar would have had his fair share of work to provide for himself and his family throughout his
life. At the age of 22 Simon married Almira Akerman in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, with whom
he had one son, George Luellen Pendar. By the age of 29 Simon was able to purchase property in
Danvers from his father, Samuel Pinder, the deed for which mentions Pendar’s title as
‘gentleman’, which does not describe a profession so much as indicate Pendar’s rank and
affluence in the community.
There are few records otherwise to be found regarding Simon’s professional life prior to 1842,
when he first appears in the Salem City Directory as living at 222R Essex Street, in the downtown
district of the city, where he lived with this wife and son. Just three years later on September 17th
3 Putnam, Eben. A History of the Putnam Family in England and America, Vol. II, 1908.
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1845, Simon Pendar became a widower after 23 years of marriage when his wife, Almira died at
just 43 years of age. A year later, in 1846 Simon Pendar is found renting at the ‘Mansion House’,
likely the Prince Mansion at 108-110 Federal Street in Salem. Simon was remarried in 1848 to
Ann Towle Leavitt. By 1851, Pendar had moved once again to 4 Ward Street, and is listed as the
1851 Salem City Directory | Page 164 | Business Directory
Listed under Livery Stables at 60 Washington St is Simon Pendar
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
owner of a livery stable at 60 Washington Street. Finally, by 1853 the Pendar family had settled in
to living at 60 Endicott Street, while Simon still owned the livery stable at 60 Washington and
presumably continued to enjoy success as a horse trader.
1855 Mass. State Census | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3 | Endicott & Winthrop Streets
Between Henry J. Lane and Jesse S. Punchard’s families is Simon Pendar and his family at 60
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Simon Pendar was not a young man (by 19th century standards) when he purchased the property
at 60 Endicott from C. L. Bradbury in 1851, when he would have been approximately 51 years old,
a middle-aged man of some success with an adult son living elsewhere, and a new wife, family and
home.
Anna T. Pendar (née Leavitt) born on the 4th of August 1817 in North Hampton, New
Hampshire, to Oliver R. Leavitt and Eunice Batchelder. In 1855, at the age of 38, Anna found
herself Simon’s second wife, seventeen years younger than her husband.
Simon and Anna Pendar would have five children; three girls and two boys: Almira Anna Pindar
(1849-1852), Louisa Colby Pindar (1853-1854) and Lizzie Leavitt Pendar, born just five months
before the 1855 Massachusetts State Census. In the next ten years the Pendar family would add
two sons, Simon Oliver Pendar in 1857, and Samuel Dutch Pendar in 1859. The two oldest Pendar
girls sadly did not survive childhood, for reasons yet discovered as of this publication.
1865 Mass. State Census | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3 | Endicott Street
The Pendar family at 60 Endicott, still neighbored by Henry J. & Mary Lane
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
II-A — The Surviving Pendar Family Children
Lizzie L. Pendar was born in Salem, Massachusetts in April 1855, the first and only girl in the
Pendar family. She was raised and educated in the working-class neighborhood of the
Broadfields. A map surveyed in 1861 shows the proximity of the Pendar family home to the newlyconstructed Salem High School, where all of the surviving Pendar children would have attended.
1861 Salem City Map | Endicott Street Neighborhood
On the 22nd of August 1876, at the age of 21 Lizzie L. Pendar married Joseph Monroe Parsons, a
Portsmouth, NH native that had in-migrated to Salem to made his living as a mason. The
newlyweds moved to a home on Beckford Street while Joseph M. Parsons worked as a builder and
contractor. Sadly, just after the couple celebrated their seventh anniversary in September of
1883, Lizzie L. (Pendar) Parsons succumbed to typhoid fever at only 28 years old.
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1883 September | Salem, Mass. — Death Records | Lizzie L. (Pendar) Parsons
Lizzie was the eleventh of 17 deaths in Salem, September 1883, and the only death caused by typhoid fever.
Simon Oliver Pendar, named for his father, was raised and educated in the Broadfields
neighborhood, and in his young adult life he found work in the shipyards. He eventually earned
the title of ‘Merchant’, and at the age of 27 married the daughter of Simeon & Ellen Flint, Mary
E. Flint (also 27). The marriage record indicates that Simon Oliver at some point decided to
invert his first and middle names, thus his name is recorded as Oliver S. Pendar on official
documents. The two were wed on the first day of November 1883, just a week after the passing of
his older sister, Lizzie.
1888 Salem Business Directory | S. D. Pendar
Samuel D. Pendar, youngest son of Simon and Anna
Pendar, listed as a mason and contractor with a
business at 15 Washington Street; home 5 Winthrop
Samuel Dutch Pendar, named for his paternal grandfather, was born the 25th of May 1859, and
likely worked as a child through his young adult years in his aging father’s livery stables. In his
adult life he married, decided to stay in Salem, and developed a successful business as a regional
mason and contractor. His travels took him to Peterborough, NH for the 4th of July weekend in
1931 when the 72-year-old Samuel Pendar suddenly succumbed to an embolism, causing a
cerebral hemorrhage. He was returned home to Salem and buried with the rest of his relatives at
Harmony Grove Cemetery.
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
II-B — The Pendar Family: Life at 60 Endicott in Mid-to-Late 19th Century Salem
In 1846 when Jesse S. Punchard laid the foundation at what was 60 Endicott Street (now beneath
58 Endicott) Salem was in full swing of an industrial revival of its economy. During the 1840s, as
more industrial methods and machines were introduced, new companies in new lines of business
arose in Salem. The tanning and curing of leather was very important by the mid-1800s. On and
near Boston Street, along the upper North River, there were 41 tanneries in 1844, and 85 in 1850,
employing 550 hands. The leather business would continue to grow in importance throughout
the 1800s. In 1846 the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company completed the construction at Stage
Point of the largest factory building in the United States, 60’ wide by 400’ long. It was an
immediate success, and hundreds of people found employment there, many of them living in
tenements built nearby.
Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co. & Neighborhood (Photo c.1907, Nelson Dionne Collection)
Also in the 1840s, a new method was introduced to make possible high-volume industrial shoe
production. In Lynn, the factory system was perfected, and that city became the nation’s leading
shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe workers from outlying towns
and the countryside. Even the population changed, as hundreds of Irish families, fleeing the
Famine in Ireland, settled in Salem and gave the industrialists a big pool of cheap labor.
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Built 1847, Salem City Train Depot (Photo c.1897)
The Gothic symbol of Salem’s new industrial economy was the large twin-towered granite train
station—the “stone depot”--smoking and growling with idling locomotives, standing on filled-in
land at the foot of Washington Street, where before had been the merchants’ wharves. In the face
of all this change, some members of Salem’s waning merchant class continued to pursue their
sea-borne businesses; but even the conditions of shipping changed, and Salem was left on the
ebb tide. In the late 1840s, giant clipper ships replaced the smaller vessels that Salem men had
sailed around the world; and the clippers, with their deep drafts and large holds, were usually too
large for Salem and its harbor. The town’s shipping soon consisted of little more than Zanzibartrade vessels and visits from Down East coasters with cargoes of fuel wood and building timber.
By 1850 Salem was about finished as a working port.
Salem’s growth continued through the 1850s, as business and industries expanded, the
population swelled, new churches (e.g. Immaculate Conception, 1857) were started, new
working-class neighborhoods were developed (especially in North Salem and South Salem, off
Boston Street, and along the Mill Pond behind the Broad Street graveyard), and new schools,
factories, and stores were built.
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
In 1851 when Simon Pendar purchased the property from Charles L. Bradbury, the middle-aged
man seized on the economic opportunity presenting itself in Salem; after all, horses were a major
mode of transportation locally and livery stables would have been a lucrative and steady business.
By 1866, now in his mid-sixties, Simon Pendar’s occupation is listed as ‘trader’. Presumably,
Pendar sold the livery stable that he had occupied for decades at 60 Washington, and continued
to make his living as a horse trader.
1853 Salem City Directory | Page 120
Simon Pendar listed with his livery stable at 60 Washington, and house at 60 Endicott
According to the 1870 Federal Census the Pendar family continued to live at 60 Endicott while
Simon made a living as a trader, Mrs. Pendar kept house, and the children attended school. Salem
continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leather-making business. In 1874 the
city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor earthquake. In the following year, the large
Pennsylvania Pier (site of the old coal electrical engineering plant on Salem Harbor) was
completed to begin receiving large shipments of coal. Beyond it, at Juniper Point, a new owner
began subdividing the old Allen farmlands into a new development called Salem Willows and
Juniper Point. In the U.S. centennial year, 1876, A.G. Bell of Salem announced that he had
discovered a way to transmit voices over telegraph wires.
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1874 Salem City Atlas | Endicott Street
S. Pendar noted at 60 Endicott Street (now underneath the footprint of 58 Endicott)
As Simon Pendar entered this eighties, the family decided it best to sell the property to their
long-time neighbors, Henry J. Lane and his family, under the condition that the family could
continue to live on the premises for the remainder of their lives. Deed Release is recorded in the
Southern Essex Co. Registry of Deeds, Book 1087 Page 120:
I, Anna L. Pendar, wife of Simon Pendar, of Salem in the County of Essex and
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, in consideration of one dollar and other
valuable consideration paid by Henry J. Lane of said Salem in the receipt
whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby remise, release, and forever quit
claim unto the said Henry J. Lane all my right of and both dower and
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
homestead in a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon, situate in
Salem and bounded and described as follows. Beginning at land now or
formerly of Punchard on Endicott St. and thence running Easterly twenty two
feet seven inches more or less, thence turning and running Northerly by land of
said Henry Lane forty feet more or less then turning and running Westerly by
land of said Lane twenty two feet and seven inches thence turning and running
Southerly by land of said Punchard forty feet to the point begun at…
1882 Deed Release | Simon & Anna Pendar to Henry J. Lane
This release describes the same premises referred to in the 1851 deed between Bradbury and Pendar
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Just five years after this transfer of ‘both dower and homestead’ from Anna and Simon Pendar to
1887 Massachusetts Death Records | Simon Pendar
Noted as the only death on March 30, 1887, Simon Passed away aged 86 years, 8 months, 29 days
Henry J. Lane, Simon Pendar passed away at the age of 86. His cause of death listed as ‘Softening
of the brain’; brain tissue damage due to hemorrhage or inflammation.4
Shortly after Simon’s death, Anna Pendar moved in with her youngest son, Samuel D. Pendar, at
5 Winthrop Street (just around the corner from Endicott), as indicated by the the 1888 Salem
City Directory, where she lived until her death on the 19th of November 1899, aged 82 years.
By 1887 the Lane Estate had passed from Henry J. Lane to his eldest daughter, Mary E. Jelly (née
Lane), upon Henry’s passing in January 1883. Mary, who was born and raised on the property
next to the house at 60 Endicott and the Pendar family, likely lived just a few doors down
Endicott Street with her husband, William F. Jelly, while managing the house at 60 Endicott as a
rental property.
4 Sturges, Allen F, Noah Webster, et al. Webster’s New international dictionary of the English language,
based on the International dictionary of 1890 and 1900.
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
Part III: 1887-1914 — Mary E. Jelly (née Lane) Ownership & Property Tenants
c.1890 Photograph | Salem, Mass. | On Washington Street looking down Front Street
Mary E. Jelly, born Mary Eliza Lane, spent nearly her entire life on Endicott Street, raised as the
only child of Henry J. Lane, a New Hampshire-born shoemaker, and Mary (Heard) Lane.
In the 1880s and 1890s, Salem kept building infrastructure; and new businesses arose, and
established businesses expanded. Retail stores prospered; horse-drawn trolleys ran every whichway; and machinists, carpenters, millwrights, and other specialists all thrived.
In the summer of 1886, the Knights of Labor brought a strike against the manufacturers for a tenhour day and other concessions; but the manufacturers imported labor from Maine and Canada,
and kept going. The strikers held out, and there was violence in the streets, and even rioting; but
the owners prevailed, and many of the defeated workers lost their jobs and suffered, with their
families, through a bitter winter.
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In 1887 the streets were first lit with electricity, replacing gas-light. More factories and more
people required more space for buildings, more roads, and more storage areas. This space was
created by filling in rivers, harbors, and ponds. The once-broad North River was filled from both
shores, and became a canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large and beautiful
Mill Pond, which occupied the whole area between the present Jefferson Avenue, Canal Street,
and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets, storage areas, junk-yards, rail-yards, and
parking lots.
1897 Salem City Atlas | Endicott Street
Mary E. Jelly is noted at both 58 & 60 Endicott, and her husband, W. F. Jelly at 48-50 Endicott
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
Henry J. Lane was born in June 1809 in Chichester, New Hampshire, son of Simeon Lane and
Huldah (Tilton) Lane. He grew up in the upper Merrimack region of New Hampshire until his
early twenties, when he moved to Salem and married Mary Heard in 1836 at the age of 26. Mary, a
Salem native, was born in 1817 to Daniel Heard and Mary (Tucker) Heard. The two would have
their only child, a daughter named Mary Eliza Lane, in February 1837. Six years after Henry J.
Lane and Mary Heard were wed, in 1842, Henry purchased the property at 58 Endicott Street
from John Pickering (now the location of the yard and parking spaces for 56-58 Endicott) and
built his own house for his young family.
1846 Salem City Directory | Henry J. Lane at 58 Endicott
Lane’s profession listed as ‘cordwainer’ (the traditional term for leather shoemaker) at 326 Essex
Mary Eliza Lane would have been thirteen when Simon Pendar and his family moved in to the
small single-family home that neighbored her own at 60 Endicott, and certainly have been friends
with the Pendar family, as well as the children of Jesse S. Punchard.
1850 US Federal Census | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3 | Endicott Street
The Lane, Pendar, and Punchard families listed, including their children, which by 1850 there
were a total of seven children in the three households, the oldest being Mary Lane at age 18.
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1860 US Federal Census | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3 | Endicott Street
Henry J. Lane and his wife Mary shared their home with their daughter, Mary E. Jelly, their sonin-law William F. Jelly, and their newborn granddaughter, named Mary Jelly.
Mary Eliza Lane became a wife and a mother at age 23 in the same year, 1860, when she married a
local mariner named William F. Jelly, and their daughter Mary, born in May of the same year.
Sadly, their firstborn did not survive her childhood as there is no record of the child by the time
of the 1865 Massachusetts State Census.
1865 Massachusetts State Census | Salem | Ward 3 | Endicott Street
William F. Jelly (29), Mary E. Jelly (28), Eliza L. Jelly (4), and Hatty L. Jelly (1) neighboring
Henry J. & Mary Lane, as well as Simon & Anna Pendar and their 3 children.
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
1870 US Federal Census | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3 | Endicott Street
Just below the 11-year-old Samuel D. Pendar are the Lane’s, including Henry J. Mary, as well as
their daughter, Mary E. Jelly, son-in-law William F. Jelly, and 4 surviving Lane grandchildren.
In the following five years, the Jelly family would add two sons: Henry and Edward. The three
surviving children of William F. And Mary E. Jelly would grow up next door to the Pendar
children. When Henry J. Lane passed away in 1883, he left his estate to his only child, Mary E.
Jelly, who owned and managed the homes as income properties.
1880 US Federal Census | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3 | Endicott Street
The Jelly Family, neighbored on either side by the families of Henry J. Lane and Simon Pendar
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After the passing of Simon Pendar in 1887, the property is listed on contemporaneous street
directories to be rented by Mr. James G. Perkins from 1887 through 1890. Perkins, a Civil War
Veteran, worked in Salem’s booming shoe leather industry as a ‘shoe cutter’, according to Salem
City Directories.
1890 Veterans Schedule | Minor Civil Division: Massachusetts
James G. Perkins, listed as a Sargent, enlisted from 1861-62, and noted as living at 60 Endicott St.
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
Local painter, Wesley B. Ferguson lived at 60 Endicott from 1893-4, followed by Abner R.
Greenwood in 1895, an employee in the local shoe leather factories, Abner worked operating a
McKay stitching machine to earn his living. He was born the son of Framingham shoemaker,
Charles Greenwood, and Charlotte Beacon Rice in Westboro, Massachusetts. In his childhood
he learned his father’s trade of being a shoemaker, but time and circumstances had different
plans for Abner’s life in 1860s America.
Greenwood served in the Civil War with Company K of the 13th Massachusetts Volunteer
Infantry regiment, which saw action at Harper’s Ferry, Sharpsburg, and finally Antietam, the
bloodiest battle of the Conflict. Sargent Abner Greenwood led the rest of the 13th Mass.
Volunteer Infantry squad into a field of high corn, marching westward towards higher ground
held by the Rebels. Without any cover, the troops were decimated, and Sgt. Greenwood took a
bullet to through his chest and out his right shoulder, a grievous wound that may have added him
to the body count of the two bloodiest days in American history, but his men saved him and with
some rudimentary medical care, Abner was able to recover enough to reenlist in the 13th Veteran
Reserve Corps for the rest of the war (without being redeployed into battle).
1897 Salem City Directory
Abner Greenwood listed as an
McKay Stitcher with his home at
58 Endicott Street, as well as his
daughter, Rachel, the same year
that Abner passed away.
Following the war, Abner returned to Massachusetts, eventually making his way to Salem where
his skills as a shoemaker would earn him a living, as well as his daughter, Miss Rachel A.
Greenwood who also worked in the shoe factories. Greenwood lived the rest of his days at 60
Endicott, operating a McKay stitcher, until his passing on the 3rd of December 1897 (while living
at 60 Endicott Street) in his 57th year from “heart failure due to Rheumatism & war injuries”. He
was buried at Greenlawn Cemetery.
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Salem gardener, Stephen G. Hooper spent just one year, 1897, with his address at 60 Endicott.
By 1898, Linwood Lewis resided at the small home on Endicott Street, where he remained until
1908. In 1900 the Salem City Directory lists Linwood’s occupation as a janitor, until 1906 when
his occupation changes to a ‘Flagman’ (for the Boston & Maine Railroad) at the Washington
Street Crossing.
1897 Salem City Atlas | Endicott Street
58-60 Endicott Noted as the property of Mary E. Jelly, while directories show the property was being
rented by Stephen G Hooper at the time of this Atlas’ publication, and shortly thereafter 60 Endicott
became the residence of Linwood Lewis and his family
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
1900 US Federal Census | Massachusetts | Essex Co. | Salem | Ward 3
Linwood Lewis, along with his second wife, Cassie B Lewis, and Linwood E Lewis at 60 Endicott
During the Lewis’ tenure at 60 Endicott, a Civil War veteran and hostler 5 named Nathaniel T.
Edwards and his family also resided at 60 Endicott from 1901 through 1903. For the year
following the Lewis’ family departure from 60 Endicott, 1909, the property is listed as ‘vacant’
according to the Salem Street Directory. Renovations may have taken place during this time to
modernize the functions of the home including electricity, plumbing, and heating systems; all
parts of Salem were booming and modernizing into the 20th century, including even the most
modest of homes in Salem’s busy streets.
1903 Salem City Directory
Nathaniel T. Edwards, a hostler,
with his home listed at 60
Endicott Street; his place of
business around the corner at 191
Federal Street
By the eve of World War One, Salem was a bustling, polyglot city that supported large
department stores and large factories of every description. People from the surrounding towns,
and Marblehead in particular, came to Salem to do their shopping; and its handsome government
buildings, as befit the county seat, were busy with conveyances of land, lawsuits, and probate
proceedings. The city’s politics were lively, and its economy was strong.
5 hostler— (noun) a man employed to look after horses of people staying an an inn or hotel; from Old
French ‘“hostelier”, meaning ‘innkeeper’
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At the beginning of the 20th century’s second decade in 1910, 60 Endicott Street was occupied
by Daniel W. Howe, an elevator works machinist. Howe lived on Endicott with his wife, Lucy,
and her two children from a previous marriage, Carol M Woodward and Berleigh D Woodward.
In 1910, fifteen year-old Carol Woodward is listed on the Federal Census as being an apprentice
in the prospering millinery industry of Salem.
1910 US Federal Census | Salem, Mass. | Ward 3
at 60 Endicott are Daniel Howe, as well as Lucy Howe and her two children, Carol and Berleigh
Just two years later in 1912, the home at 60 Endicott was occupied by watchmaker Arthur A.
Barton, his wife Winnifred, and their daughter Irene. Winnifred was also part of the working
class, as her occupation on the 1910 Census is listed as ‘tailoress’, when the family was located on
Beckford Street in Ward 4 of the City. The family remained at 60 Endicott until 1913, on the eve
of a disaster that few could have predicted.
1912 Salem Business Directory
Among the some two dozen watch and
clock dealers, makers, and repairers in
Salem is Arthur A. Barton, found at 60
Endicott Street
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
1911 Salem City Atlas | Endicott Street
The final atlas drawn of the city of Salem before the disastrous fire of 1914 shows Mary E. Jelly
as the owner of 58-60 Endicott Street, though at the time of this atlas’ publication the home was
occupied by the Howe family
The final new name associated with the property at 60 Endicott is M. A. Choard, who only lived
in the home for the first six months of 1914, which appears in the Salem City Directory with an
asterisk next to the name and address— indicating that the home was lost in the Great Salem Fire
disaster.
1914 Salem City Directory
The only record of an M. A.
Choard living at 60 Endicott
Street, lost in the Great
Salem Fire of 1914
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�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street opposite Federal), a fire
started in one of Salem’s fire-prone wooden tanneries. This fire soon consumed the building and
raced out of control, for the west wind was high and the season had been dry. The next building
caught fire, and the next, and out of Blubber Hollow the fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of
flame and smoke, wiping out the houses of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street,
and then sweeping through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men
and machines could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and destroyed
the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions of Lafayette Street
itself, and raged onward into the tenement district.
1914 June 25 | Great Salem Fire
Photo captures the fire raging along New Bridge Street and the destruction that leveled Salem
Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and cities, the fire
overwhelmed everything in its path: it smashed into the large factory buildings of the Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Company (Congress Street), which exploded in an inferno; and it rolled down
Lafayette Street and across the water to Derby Street. There, just beyond Union Street, after a
13-hour rampage, the monster died, having consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses, and 41 factories,
and leaving three dead and thousands homeless. Some people had insurance, some did not; all
received much support and generous donations from all over the country and the world. It was
one of the greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States, and the people of Salem
would take years to recover from it.
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
1914 | Destruction after the Great Salem Fire
The ruins of the once-mighty Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co. at the waterfront of The Point
Endicott Street suffered total destruction; there would have been nothing remaining of the street
besides foundations, concrete steps, and the occasional surviving chimney. William and Mary
Jelly lost both their home and their income properties at 48 and 58-60 Endicott Street.
According to the record of Data on the Burned District at Salem, Mass. published by the F. W.
Dodge Co. in the aftermath of the conflagration, the assessed valuation of the land at 60 Endicott
was $200; the building: $800 — for a total valuation of $1000, with only $600 of insurance
coverage on the building. Furthermore, this record confirms that all the buildings owned by the
Jelly family were constructed of wood, and were therefore little more than tinder in the 1914 fire.
1914 | Data on the Burned District of Salem, Mass.
Clip showing the properties owned by the Jelly family, including Mary, Katherine, and
the heirs of William F. Jelly (including his wife and children)
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�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
1914 | Map of Data on the Burned District of Salem, Mass.
The bold line denotes the area which was completely destroyed by the fire, including
Endicott Street, along with 250 additional acres of the City
Now, in the 21st century, we can only begin to imagine the destruction left by the fire in 1914;
beyond the physical wreckage the conflagration left in its path, people’s entire lives and
livelihoods were utterly destroyed. Mary Jelly was born, raised, married, and widowed while
living on Endicott Street, and now everything she had ever known was gone. The insurance must
have helped some, but it seems that Mary could not bear to part with the property that her father
had purchased from John Pickering in 1842 and proceeded to build their entire family’s history
there on Endicott Street. Mary is found living with her adult daughters, Lizzie, Hattie, and
Martha Agnes in Ward 4 of the City in 1920, aged 82 years, during which time she still owned the
properties on Endicott Street. In 1925 after Mary’s passing at the age of 87, her heirs finally sold
the land to Morris Gerber.
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
1925 Deed | Mary E. Jelly Executors to Morris Gerber
Deed refers to both properties originally owned by Lane and Pendar, for which Gerber paid just
$950 in 1925 for both properties at 58 and 60 Endicott Street
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�Historic Salem, Inc. | House Report
Morris Gerber built the properties as they still stand at the corner of Winthrop and Endicott atop
the foundation that once was laid by Jesse S. Punchard after his purchase of the land from John
Pickering in 1843. The home that is now numbered 58 Endicott Street now stands partially on the
foundation of the building that stood firmly for decades as a home for dozens of men, women,
and children from a multitude of places and professions.
1925 Salem City Atlas | Endicott Street
In 1925 much of Salem had recovered post-fire; this clip shows the newly completed construction
along Endicott Street completed by Morris Gerber and others
By the 1920s, Salem was once again a thriving city; and its tercentenary in 1926 was a time of
great celebration. The Depression hit in 1929, and continued through the 1930s. Salem, the
county seat and regional retail center, gradually rebounded, and prospered after World War II
through the 1950s and into the 1960s. General Electric, Sylvania, Parker Brothers, Pequot Mills
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�58 Endicott Street | Salem, Mass.
(formerly Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.), Almy’s department store, various other large-scale
retailers, and Beverly’s United Shoe Machinery Company were all major local employers. Then
the arrival of suburban shopping malls and the relocation of manufacturing businesses took their
toll, as they have with many other cities. More than most, Salem has navigated its way forward
into the present with success, trading on its share of notoriety arising from the witch trials, but
also from its history as a great seaport and as the home of Bowditch, McIntire, Bentley, Story, and
Hawthorne. Most of all, it remains a city where the homes of the old-time merchants, mariners,
and mill-operatives are all honored as a large part of what makes Salem different from any other
place.
1926 | Salem, Mass. | City Hall | Washington Street
City Hall decorated for Salem’s Tercentenary (300th) Anniversary Celebration
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�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Endicott Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
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58 Endicott Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
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House history
Description
An account of the resource
Original house built for
Jesse S. Punchard
1846
Rebuilt after
the Great Salem Fire
June 1914
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1846, 1914, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Researched & written by Amy Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
1864
1914
2019
58
Endicott
Great Salem Fire
History
House
Jesse
Massachusetts
Punchard
Salem
Street
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03ebff4bf7a89ce499d6cb9f9e289a08
PDF Text
Text
386 Essex Street
Built for
Willard Goldthwaite
Merchant
1868
Research Provided by
Ryan Conary
February 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Chain of Title, 386 Essex Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
John M. Raymond, of Salem,
Executor of the last will of
Willard Goldthwaite, late of
May 28, 1894 Salem
Grantee(s)
William A. Dane of Hamilton
and J. Webster Dane of
Beverly
Consideration Conveyance of
"a certain parcel of land situate in said
$5,000 Salem..."
Source
Document Book or Vol. Page
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1412
392/393
Caleb J. Norwood and Martha
March 16, 1911 A. Norwood, both of Hamilton J. Webster Dane, of Salem
"in
consideration of
one dollar and
other good and
valuable
considerations "one undivided sixth part of a certain parcel
paid..."
of land situate in said Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2069 558/559/560
March 16, 1911 Ephraim A. Dane, of Salem
"in
consideration of
one dollar and
other good and
valuable
considerations "one undivided sixth part of a certain parcel
paid..."
of land situate in said Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2069
560/561
$10,000 "Land situate in said Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3694
272
"With quitclaim covenants the land in said
$52,000 Salem, together with the buildings thereon..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6177
788
Robert W. Gunn
"The land in Salem, said Essex County,
Massachusetts, together with the buildings
$83,000 thereon..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6269
618
November 15, 1978 Robert W. Gunn
George W. Bolin, Jr.
"The land in Salem, said Essex County,
together with the buildings thereon known
$85,000 and numbered as 386 Essex Street..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6539
762
September 2, 1980 George W. Bolin, Jr.
Borromee A. Dube and
Herbert B. Weston, joint
tenants
"The land in Salem, said Essex County,
together with the buildings thereon known
$94,500 and numbered as 386 Essex Street..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6733
67
"The land in Salem, said Essex County,
together with the buildings thereon known
$195,000 and numbered as 386 Essex Street..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
7510
243
"The land in Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts together with the buildings
thereon known and numbered and known as
386 Essex Street..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
36279
58
J. Webster Dane, of Salem
Naumkeag Trust Company
and Richard D. Phippen,
Executors of the Will of J.
Manuel T. Solovicos and
Webster Dane, late of Salem, Margaret Solovicos, husband
September 30, 1949 Essex County, Massachusetts and wife
James M. Solovicos, of Salem,
and Raymond T. White, of
Peabody, both in the County
of Essex and Commonwealth
of Massachusetts, Trustees
under the Will of Margaret
September 4, 1975 Solovicos, late of Salem
John J. Connelly, of Danvers
August 16, 1976 John J. Connelly
Borromee A. Dube and
Herbert B. Weston, joint
August 31, 1984 tenants
David G. Clarke, Trustee of
October 25, 2017 386 Essex Realty Trust
David G. Clarke, Trustee of
386 Essex Realty Trust
386 ESSEX STREET REALTY
LLC
"nominal
consideration
paid"
����������������������Detail from 1874 Salem Atlas showing the house listed at 388 Essex Street (later changed to 386 Essex Street)
�Willard Goldthwaite obituary from page 12 of the Boston Daily Globe, dated September 2, 1893. The
obituary states Mr. Goldthwaite’s address as 388 Essex Street, and that he built the residence in 1868.
�From the Goldthwaite genealogy, his entry (615) details his profession, and activities and interests.
�Willard Goldthwaite bequeathed a portion of his estate to Tufts College. He endowed the Martha
Goldthwaite Memorial Scholarship, and he is the namesake of the Goldthwaite Professor of Rhetoric.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Essex Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
386 Essex Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Willard Goldthwaite
Merchant
1868
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1868, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Researched by Ryan Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1868
2019
386
Essex
Goldthwaite
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Willard
-
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9051fba5eea7075694e3f53d8aef328b
PDF Text
Text
86 Federal Street
Built for
Robert Peele Jr.
Tailor
and his wife
Elizabeth Ropes
1769
Research & Writing Provided by
Robert Booth
February 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�����������������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Federal Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
86 Federal Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Robert Peele Jr.
Tailor
and his wife
Elizabeth Ropes
1769
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1769, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1769
2019
86
Elizabeth
Federal
History
House
Jr.
Massachusetts
Peele
Robert
Ropes
Salem
Street
-
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3e26d6f1258c6c6eeb678673c889dd0f
PDF Text
Text
144-146 Federal Street
Built for
Capt. Thomas Whittredge
Shipmaster
and his wife
Sarah Whittredge
c. 1802
Researched and written by
Michele Felski-Smith
January 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�The house at 144-146 Federal Street in Salem, Massachusetts was built for shipmaster
Captain Thomas Whittredge and his wife Sarah, around 1802. It is located on the northeastern
corner of Federal Street and Flint Street (originally known as Dean Street). i
The Whittredge house was built in the Federal style, which was the prevailing American
architectural style between around 1780 and 1820, particularly popular along the eastern
seaboard in port cities. The lot on which it is situated is 8,825 square feet, and the house
measures 5 X 3 bays. ii The house is a three-story wood-frame building with clapboard siding and
has a brick chimney on both the east and west sides of the house. It has a low-pitch hipped roof,
which is the subtype of Federal houses most common to New England. iiiiv Three-story hippedroof Federal houses in particular have “an unusually important concentration in the town of
Salem, Massachusetts,” and are usually “of landmark quality.” v Originally, the house had outbuildings, including a shed, and a two-story stables on the northern end of the lot. vi It has a low
foundation made of granite with three granite front steps leading directly from the sidewalk to
the front door.vii viii While almost all of the characteristics of the house match typical Federal
style elements, the low foundation with no porch is one holdover from the preceding Georgian
style.ix
The front door has six panels and is surrounded by two Doric half-round and fluted
pilasters which support a triangular denticulated broken pediment. x Above the door is an
elliptical fanlight with five segments. xixii There is a similar six-panel door on the east side of the
house with pilasters supporting a less elaborate triangular pediment. This door also has three
granite steps extending down to the walkway.
On the front façade, the windows are singly-placed, five-ranked, and balanced
symmetrically with the front door in the center. xiii The third floor is a foreshortened story, and
�thus the windows are shorter than on the first and second floors. xiv Each window has a doublehung 6/6 sash, which is a window made up of six panes separated by muntins, or thin wooden
supports, above another set of six panes. xv By the late 1990s, the house was vacant, and the
windows were empty and boarded up. xvi Since then, they have been reinstalled and restored to
their original style.
During this architectural era, according to Virginia McAlester in A Field Guide to
American Houses, “the first true architects appeared on the American scene.” xvii One of the few
most notable in the country was an architect from Salem, named Samuel McIntire. He was a
master at the Georgian and Federal style of architecture, and several of his works remain in
Salem today. According to Bryant F. Tolles, in Architecture in Salem, An Illustrated Guide, his
greatest achievements came during this mid-Federal period between 1800 and 1815. xviii He was
particularly attracted to the Federal Street area, because of its “elegant streetscape” and was hired
by merchants to build their mansions there. xix The Whittredge House is part of the McIntire
Historic District. The McIntire-designed Samuel Cook/Henry Oliver House is next door at 142
Federal Street, and features some of his famous wood carving. xx Aspects of the Whittredge
House and original stable “show close relationship with McIntire’s work,” according to Fiske
Kimball, an architectural historian, though Kimball was not able to find specific evidence of a
connection.xxi The Whittredge House, and the Federal style in general, share similarities with the
earlier Georgian style, but are a refinement of the style. Houses of the mid-Federal period, are
described as “having a lightness and delicacy in comparison with their close Georgian relatives”
and “the exteriors… have few elaborations other than the fanlight and accentuated front door,”
which fits the Whittredge House perfectly.xxii This new refined architectural development
�borrowed from European styles of the time and was first used by wealthy merchants on the New
England coast, like Thomas Whittredge himself.
Thomas Whittredge was born on May 2, 1766 in Salem, Massachusetts. xxiii Sarah Waters
was born in 1766 in Danvers, Massachusetts to Abel Waters and Lydia (Trask) Waters. xxiv Sarah
married Thomas in Danvers on November 11, 1793 when they were both 28 years old. xxv The
two lived in Danvers in the early years of their marriage, and had three children before building
and moving to their mansion on Federal Street. Henry Trask Whittredge was the first, born
December 29, 1794, followed by Eliza, born November 25, 1796, Thomas Cook, born May 27,
1799, and Edward A., born December 15, 1801.
Thomas Whittredge was a Master Mariner, or Shipmaster, and traded in the mid-Atlantic
states.xxvi He was part of Salem’s proud and important history as a seaport, participating in it
during a time when the merchant culture and rich commerce were at their prime in the town.
According to the History of Essex County, Massachusetts published in 1888, “From the close of
the War of the Revolution until the embargo in 1808, Salem was at the height of her commercial
prosperity. The white sails of Salem’s ships were unfurled in every port of the known worlds and
carried the fame and name of Salem to the uttermost parts of the earth.” xxvii While Whittredge
perhaps was not quite as rich or well-known as some of the other merchants in town, he did a
good business and was quite wealthy, owning real estate not only at the Federal Street property,
but elsewhere in Salem, and in neighboring towns such as Peabody. xxviii
Whittredge was part owner of many ships that sailed from Salem. The 1906 Ship
Registers of the District of Salem and Beverly, Massachusetts, 1789-1900 lists him as an owner
of two vessels that served as privateers in the War of 1812; the Alexander carried twenty guns
and one hundred fifty-five men before being captured on May 19, 1813, and the Buckskin, a
�schooner, carried five guns and fifty men, and was captured by the British Frigate Statira on
August 7, 1812. He was also an owner of the Andrew Jackson, after its capture in the war,
registering it as a merchant ship when the war was over. Earlier in his career, Whittredge was
also an owner of the Clarissa, registered in 1794, and the Argo, registered in 1808. Whittredge’s
will and other documents reveal interest in ships not mentioned in this register as well. xxix The
ship register shows a chart of private signals from commercial houses, which includes an image
of Whittredge’s signal, shown below. xxx
In the mid-eighteenth century, Joseph Dean owned a large piece of land in Salem, just
south of the North River. The road to the west of this land was named for him for nearly a
century. When he died, he left it to his son John Dean, who in turn sold it to Joseph Sprague on
October 25, 1774.xxxi During that time, Federal Street was laid on the southern border of this
land, named in 1792, and a bustling community of merchant families was created. Sprague, also
a merchant, sold a piece of his land which would become 144-146 Federal Street, to Thomas
Whittredge on November 30, 1799 for six hundred and twenty-five dollars.xxxii This original deed
describes the boundaries of the land, which have remained unchanged to this day. It explains that
the western edge of the land was bounded by Dean Street (later Flint Street) and ran one hundred
and fifty-one feet. The north end was bounded by a school house’s land and ran forty-six feet,
eight inches. The east end was bounded by more land that still belonged to Sprague, and ran one
�hundred and fifty-one feet, equal to the western side. The southern border was a little longer than
the northern border, spanning sixty-one feet, one inch, and was, and still is, bounded by Federal
Street. Whittredge had the mansion built soon after purchasing the land, and it was completed
around 1802.xxxiii
The image below, from an 1890 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map, shows the border of the
property, along with its original buildings, including the two-story stable on the northern border.
Behind the lot is the school house property mentioned in the deed, which had been turned into a
six-dwelling tenement house by 1859. xxxiv (The top of the image is East.)
xxxv
After moving into the new house, Thomas and Sarah Whittredge’s fourth child, Edward,
died on August 25, 1803 at only twenty months of age.xxxvi The next year, however, their
youngest, Sarah, was born on November 1, 1804. The children were all raised in the Federal
Street mansion, and Thomas Whittredge lived there with his wife until he died at age 63 on
September 16, 1829 of “mortification of toes and foot.” xxxvii
In his will, Whittredge stated, “I give and devise to my wife Sarah the mansion house,
buildings, and land under and adjoining the same where I now dwell.” Sarah Whittredge
continued to live in the house until 1841, when she transferred the deed of mortgage to her
�daughter Sarah W. Osborne, and son-in-law, George S. Osborne, a physician from Danvers. xxxviii
Sarah Whittredge then moved to Danvers, where she died on August 16, 1845 at age seventyeight after a “bowel complaint.” xxxix
Upon her death, she left the property equally to her daughter, Sarah W. Osborne, and her
granddaughter, Elizabeth Williams (the daughter of Thomas Cook Whittredge, and wife of
Henry S. Williams). xl The following year, Sarah Osborne paid her niece Elizabeth Williams two
thousand dollars to purchase her half of the property. As of March 25, 1846, the house belonged
entirely to Thomas and Sarah Whittredge’s daughter, Sarah W. Osborne, and her husband
George.xli
Though the house was in the family for four generations, Thomas and Sarah Whittredge
appear to be the only family members who actually lived in the house as adults. Beginning in the
1850s, the house was split up and rented out, first as a two-family dwelling, and later into
tenement rooms. Around this time, Salem’s booming commerce and shipping economy began to
decline a bit; fewer stately mansions were being built, those that were built were instead erected
further inland, and many existing mansions were being repurposed for other uses. In a 1914
book, Historic Homes of New England, Mary H. Northend laments the end of a romantic era of
young merchants and “jolly sailor lads… bound for Kit’s Dancing Hall,” and the long-closure of
local Inns. Further, she complains that “the large, square homes of yesterday are now
degenerated into tenement houses.” xlii
While this shift may have seemed like a negative one to some in Salem, it is likely a
major reason that some houses such as the Whittredge House remained standing for so long.
Additionally, although none so lucrative as the merchant career of Thomas Whittredge, many of
the house’s residents owned successful businesses in various trades.
�The first renters kept the merchant community alive, as they were both sea captains
themselves. By 1851, Sarah and George Osborne were renting out the house to Captain John Day
on the 144 Federal Street side, and Captain Richard Matthews at 146 Federal Street. xliii The 1851
survey map shows Day and Matthews’ names as owners of the property’s buildings (and the
existing MACRIS record cites Day as owner because of this), however the map must be referring
solely to the house’s residents at the time, as it was still owned by the Osbornes. xliv
In 1860, Xenophon Hector Shaw and his wife Eliza began renting the 144 Federal side of
the house. Xenophon was born on October 28, 1799 in Middlesex, Massachusetts, and Eliza was
born August 16, 1801 in Salem. xlv xlviThe two married on July 1, 1821. xlvii By the time they
moved to the Whittredge house, the couple was older and had three grown children, Mary Shaw,
Brown Emerson Shaw and Hannah Tappan,.xlviii Eliza died just seven years later on November
14, 1868. Eventually Xenophon’s daughter Mary Shaw moved into the house and is listed as a
boarder and housekeeper in the city directories between 1870 and 1886. xlix The two lived in the
house until Xenophon’s death on December 7, 1886. Xenophon owned a picture framing and
gilding business with his son Brown Emerson Shaw, called Xenophon H. and Son. The business
was established in 1820, when Xenophon himself was just twenty years old, so was likely
already a family business. Brown continued the family business with his sister Mary after their
father’s death until 1896, which is the last year it is listed in the directory. l They had large
advertisements placed in several of the Salem City Directories between the 1860s and 1890s.
Shown below is their ad from 1886. li
�By 1866, on the 146 Federal side, Daniel Frye Nichols had moved in with his family.
Daniel was born in 1805 and was married to Lydia F. Cheever (born 1806) on August 8, 1827 in
Salem.lii Similar to the Shaws, the couple moved into the Whittredge house as an older couple
with adult children. In this case, many of their adult children moved with them into the house,
including Randle, Lydia, Abbie, Benjamin, and Henry C. Nichols, all between the ages of twenty
and thirty-four. Daniel F. Nichols made his living as a tanner, working in the tanneries on the
North River near the house. liii In another similarity to the Shaw’s side of the building, Lydia died
only a few years after moving in, on September 1, 1872 at age sixty-six of unknown causes.
By 1880, though Daniel still lived in the house, his son Henry C. Nichols had taken over
as the head of household at 146 Federal Street, living there with his wife Mary, and young son
Edward.liv The Henry Nichols family lived in the house until 1889, following the death of Daniel
Nichols on October 8, 1888. Abby F. Nichols, Henry’s older sister, also continued to live in the
house as a boarder until 1889.
While the Nichols and Shaw families lived in the house, house owners Sarah Whittredge
Osborne died on February 17, 1883 and her husband George Osborne died on September 21,
1882. Upon their deaths, they left the property to their two children George S. Osborne, and
�Eliza D. Shepard. lv The two were “tenants in common” and continued to live elsewhere and rent
out the building until Eliza’s death in 1930.lvi
In 1890, James H. Fitzpatrick moved to 146 Federal, though only for a short time. lvii In
1895, William Sheehan, a physician, moved into the home. William married Katherine C. Anglin
in 1909. Beginning in the 1912 city directory, “K.C. Sheehan” is also listed with William, also as
a physician.lviii This is clearly referring to Katherine, who was also a doctor. In the 1924
directory, her name is listed with William’s in its entirety, both as physicians. lix In the
directories, William gives his office hours next to their address, so it seems he may have visited
patients at the home. lx The couple raised five children in the home and lived there until
William’s death in 1924. Katherine was there for two more years on her own, still practicing
medicine, before moving to another house. lxi
When she died in 1930, owner Eliza D. Shepard left the property to her two children,
Thomas O. Shepard, and Sarah W. Shepard. They never lived there, nor do they seem to have
rented it out, as during their brief ownership the city directory lists the house as vacant. lxii Neither
Thomas nor Sarah ever married or had children, living together until they died. Thus, this is
where ownership of the house left the Whittredge family line.
Thomas and Sarah sold the house to Francis J. Murphy and his wife Louise in 1931, not
long after inheriting it.lxiii Francis was a leatherworker, born July 16, 1899, who married Louise
M. Brophy in 1926.lxiv The two had a daughter, Mary, in 1929, and purchased the Federal Street
home on April 7, 1931.lxv They lived there with their daughter and a servant, eventually giving
birth to a son, Frances.lxvi It seems that they preferred to use the house for only their family
instead of renting it out to tenants, as Francis Murphy is listed as the only occupant of both 144
and 146 Federal Street on the city directories of this time. lxvii They lived in the house until about
�1945, before moving elsewhere in Salem. In 1945, the house was rented out as furnished
tenement rooms, advertised by Laura M. Smith in the city directory, who also lived in the house,
and must have managed the tenants for the owners. lxviii In 1945, there were many tenants,
including Nathan Tucker, Florence and Silvio Landry, Julia Symonds and her husband Frank, a
lathe hand, and widow Marie Maillet. lxix
The Murphys sold the house soon after turning it into tenements, on April 27, 1946 to
Joseph and Tekla Rostkowski, a couple from Poland.lxx They owned the house for just over a
year, and it doesn’t appear that they ever lived there themselves. Laura M. Smith continued to
advertise furnished rooms at the house during this time, until the next owner took over the job
herself. Esther M. and Thomas F. Henry purchased the house on June 25, 1947 and continued to
rent out furnished rooms, advertising them in the directory, while also living there themselves. lxxi
Thomas Henry was born June 5, 1920 in Peabody, and Esther Trabucco, known as Babe,
was born October 8, 1919 in Beverly. lxxii They were married in 1941 in Salem, and had four
children, Thomas, Michael, Barbara, and Patricia. Thomas was enlisted in the army as a private
on October 9, 1944 for the duration of the war; his cemetery marker shows him as a Technician
Fifth Grade. When not serving, Thomas was an engineer at New England Instruments, and
Esther started Henry Associates, a real estate business, in addition to managing tenants in her
home.lxxiii
Below is a picture of Esther and three of their children in 1944, and a picture of Thomas
in 1945.
�The Henry’s tenants listed between 1946 and 1950 are Frank and Julia Symonds;
Josephine Rostkowski, a payroll clerk at John Lynn and Sons, incorporated, and her husband
John; Clifford M. Smith, a machinist; Donald and Doris Haskell; Marie Henry; Mary McGrath;
George Angelico; Joseph Angelico; Mary Kelly; Albert and Ruth Thibodeau; Kenneth Shepard,
a cable splicer at NET&T Company; a nurse, Mrs. Ellen Linscomb; Constance “Connie” Clay, a
telephone operator at NET&T Company, and her husband Leo, a contractor; and several
employees of the Sylvania light bulb factory, Augusta V. Rostkowski, Alice M. Rostkowski,
Robert O. Westman, and Esther Crowell. lxxiv
Additionally, four members of the United States Coast Guard Air Station lived in rooms
in the house at the same time, three of them with their wives. Between 1935 and 1970, Winter
Island, off the coast of Salem, was the site of a United States Coast Guard Air Station, which
patrolled the northeastern shore by plane, “responding to emergency calls off the Atlantic Coast
�from as far south as Connecticut and as far north as Halifax… the men bravely saved dozens of
lives at sea, and risked their own,” according to Salem collector and history writer, Nelson
Dionne.lxxv The USCG Air Station aviators who lived in the Whittredge House beginning in 1949
are Wilbur Stanley, and his wife Eileen, Clarence W. Stanley, Cecil R. Furr, and his wife Jean,
and Paul H. Lavallee and his wife Beatrice. lxxvi
Owners Thomas and Esther Henry lived in the house until Thomas’ death on March 31,
1983, though it isn’t clear for how long its rooms were rented out, as the city directories stop
listing its residents in the 1950s. lxxvii By the 1990s, Esther was no longer living in the Whittredge
House, and it was no longer kept up. In 1997, when the MACRIS report was made, the house’s
windows were gone and had been boarded up.lxxviii
On March 26, 1998, current owners Michaeline D. La Roche and her husband Robert J.
Ouellette purchased the house and land from Esther Henry. Since then, its traditional windows
have been replaced, and the exterior restored, and the house at 144-146 Federal Street remains a
beautiful and historic example of Salem’s Federal architecture, a monument to the maritime
history of Salem.
�i
Oliver, Henry K. "Reminiscences of Federal Street, Written in 1885", EIH C 82 (April 1946): 181
Essex South County Registry of Deeds (hereinafter ESCRD) Book 426, Page 1959.
iii
McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 762
iv
MACRIS SAL.1570, http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=SAL.1570
v
Virginia & Lee McAlester. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 746
vi
Oliver, Henry K. "Reminiscences of Federal Street, Written in 1885", EIH C 82 (April 1946): 181
vii
Ibid.
viii
MACRIS SAL.1570, http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=SAL.1570
ix
McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 76
x
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983, pg. 148
xi
MACRIS SAL.1570, http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=SAL.1570
xii
McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 746
xiii
McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 745
xiv
MACRIS SAL.1570, http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=SAL.1570
xv
McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 745
xvi
MACRIS SAL.1570, http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=SAL.1570
xvii
McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 799
xviii
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983, pg. xviii
xix
“The McIntire Historic District Architectural Walking Trail,” National Park Service and the Salem Partnership,
https://www.nps.gov/sama/planyourvisit/upload/McTrail.pdf
xx
Northend, Mary Harrod, Historic Homes of New England. Boston, Little, Brown, and Company, 1914., pgs. 8-9
xxi
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983, pg. 148
xxii
McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002., pg. 784
xxiii
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988., pg. 423 [database on-line]. Provo, UT,
USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
xxiv
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988., pg. 398 [database on-line]. Provo, UT,
USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
xxv
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Compiled Marriages, 1633-1850., pg. 316 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
xxvi
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983, pg. 148
xxvii
Hurd, D. Hamilton, History of Essex County, Massachusetts, with biographical sketched of many of its pioneers
and prominent men., Philadelphia, J.W. Lewis an& Co., 1888, pg. 64
xxviii
Ancestry.com. Essex, Massachusetts Probate Records, 1648-1840. [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1997.
xxix
Ibid.
xxx
Hitchins, A. Frank, Stephen Willard Phillips, Ship Registers of the District of Salem and Beverly, Massachusetts,
1789-1900, Essex Institute, 1906. Pgs. 1-12
xxxi
ESCRD Book 134, Page 54
xxxii
ESCRD Book 166, Page 154
xxxiii
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983, pg. 148
xxxiv
Sanborn Insurance Maps, 1890 [Massachusetts State Library].
xxxv
Ibid.
xxxvi
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988., pg. 331 [database on-line]. Provo, UT,
USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
xxxvii
Ibid.
xxxviii
ESCRD Book 381, Page 213
xxxix
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988., pg. 331 [database on-line]. Provo, UT,
USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
xl
ESCRD Book 381, Page 213
xli
ESCRD Book 381, Page 214
xlii
Northend, Mary Harrod, Historic Homes of New England. Boston, Little, Brown, and Company, 1914., pgs. 6-7
xliii
Salem City Directory, 1855
xliv
McIntyre, Henry, “Map of the city of Salem, Mass : from an actual survey,” Norman B. Leventhal Map Center
Collection., https://collections.leventhalmap.org/search/commonwealth:9g54xk154
ii
�xlv
Ancestry.com. U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com
Operations, Inc., 2012.
xlvi
Ibid.
xlvii
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Compiled Marriages, 1633-1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
xlviii
Ancestry.com. The Choates in America, 1643-1896, John Choat and his descendants, Chebacco, Ipswich,
Massachusetts., pg. 161 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
xlix
Salem City Directory, 1886
l
Salem City Directory, 1896
li
Salem City Directory, 1886
lii
Salem City Directory, 1866
liii
Salem City Directories, 1837-1866
liv
Ancestry.com. Census, Year: 1880; Census Place: Salem, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: 532; Page: 690A;
Enumeration District: 235
lv
ESCRD Book 1150, Page 188
lvi
ESCRD Book 2878, Page 103
lvii
Salem City Directory, 1890
lviii
Salem City Directory, 1912
lix
Salem City Directory, 1924
lx
Salem City Directory, 1895
lxi
Salem City Directory, 1926
lxii
Salem City Directory, 1931
lxiii
ESCRD Book 2878, Page 103
lxiv
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Compiled Marriages, 1633-1850., pg. 316 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.; Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Birth Index, 1860-1970 [database on-line].
Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013
lxvi
Ancestry.com. Census, Year: 1940; Census Place: Salem, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: m-t0627-01589; Page: 1A;
Enumeration District: 5-347
lxvii
Salem City Directory, 1933
lxviii
Salem City Directory, 1945
lxix
Salem City Directory, 1945
lxx
ESCRD Book 3459, Page 118
lxxi
ESCRD Book 3554, Page 565
lxxii
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Birth Index, 1860-1970 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com
Operations, Inc., 2013.
lxxiii
The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts). October 16, 2005., pg. 10,
https://www.newspapers.com/image/443766729/?terms=esther%2Bhenry
lxxiv
City directories 1946-1950
lxxv
Smith, Bonnie Hurd, Nelson Dionne, U. S. Coast Guard Air Station Salem, Massachusetts: 1935-1970: a
Pictorial and Chronological History., CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2015.
lxxvi
Salem City Directories, 1949-1950
Ancestry.com. U.S. Public Records Index, 1950-1993, Volume 1 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.
lxxviii
MACRIS SAL.1570, http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=SAL.1570
lxxvii
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Federal Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
144-146 Federal Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Capt. Thomas Whittredge
Shipmaster
and his wife
Sarah Whittredge
c. 1802
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1802, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Researched & written by Michele Felski-Smith
Language
A language of the resource
English
144
146
1802
2019
Captain
circa
Federal
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Sarah
Street
Thomas
Whittredge
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/976b69332d8034dc18f88b8c87898777.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=qZ-uXT21M8Kfx8u95vdQI8utpfUdEh1x7k31LavGHVrw6NxfGCIO9sjYVi9aiGKPVW48p3zcw7J5UFn2WX6Mjjez9gzNSDQJKxdWEqtKRE9WTWIdj9x1j33cBQFzLrN93l%7EEktcN%7EOvzrFvzq9R6puZbk57jjejasWGjevjFTSDR7NHJGieK90Y9dooFCEFlyQBI-QXl0236EEqNQJmzZeuPMX1U7sZ8sdbbYELAW4hrFcRHgI9faOBqfEM5L5I-Nu-%7ElQdqYk53SFA%7Eh3jySkozKU95J9WBcm8C7pnV4mYKZOv16ZseMhwGlnvqkDkbfg7e4zQ7nF17sVCu-%7EZWIA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
3b4b92ee42106fb382473e8a486a4cae
PDF Text
Text
14 Beach Avenue
Built for
Abel Webster
Massachusetts State Representative
from Lawrence
Iron Founder
c. 1880
Research Provided by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
January 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Chain of Title, 14 Beach Avenue, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
July 17, 1878 Daniel B. Gardner of Salem, MA
December 17, 1884 Abel Webster of Lawrence, MA
October 15, 1900 Adelaide W. Thomas of Lawrence, MA
Marcella G. Moulton of Salem, MA,
executrix of the will of Abigail W. Moulton,
September 29, 1927 late of Salem, MA
August 15, 1942 Jessie E. Timson, widow of Tampa, FL
September 20, 1946 Fred E. Strout
February 2, 1948 Earle R. Knowlton & Lillian B. Knowlton
Russell M. MacDonald & Adrienne M.
September 2, 1960 MacDonald
Gerard A. Gaffney & Jane F. Gaffney of
July 7, 1995 Salem, MA
Grantee(s)
Conveyance of
Source
Document Book or Vol. Page
Notes
Abel Webster of Lawrence, MA
"The real estate in said Salem bounded and described as
follows...Being the lot numbered thirty one (31) and thirty two (32)
on a plan of Cottage Lots on Juniper Point, Salem Neck, owned
by Daniel B. Gardner, recorded in Essex Registry of Deeds, South
$1,000 District, 1st Book of Plan, Plan No 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1001
Adelaide W. Thomas of
Lawrence, MA
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in
Salem in said County and bounded and described as follows...
Being lots numbered thirty one and thirty two on a plan of cottage
lots on Juniper Point, Salem Neck, formerly owned by Daniel B.
Gardner recorded in Essex Registry of Deeds South Dist. 1st Book
$3,000 of Plans Plan No. 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1142
First mention of "buildings"
88 on the lot.
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon situate in said
Salem, bounded and described as follows...being lot numbered
thirty one (31) and part of lot numbered thirty two (32) on a plan of
Cottage lots on Juniper Point Salem Neck, owned by Daniel B.
Gardner, recorded in Essex Registry of Deeds, South District, 1st
Book of Plans, Plan No. 30"
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1623
66
"the land in said SALEM together with the buildings thereon being
all of lot numbered thirty-one (31) and part of lot numbered thirtytwo (32) on a Plan of Houselots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck,
Salem, recorded with Essex, South District, Deeds, Book of Plans 1
$5,000 Plan 30..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2740
179
Abigail W. Moulton, wife of
John S. Moulton, of Salem
Jessie E. Timson of Salem, MA
Fred E. Strout of Keene, NH
"one dollar and
other valuable
consideration paid"
"certain land in Salem, Massachusetts together with the buildings
thereon, being all of lot numbered thirty-one (31) and part of lot
numbered thirty-two (32) on a Plan of House lots at Juniper Point,
Salem Neck, Salem, recorded with Essex, South District, Deeds,
$10 Book of Plans 1 Plan 30..."
231
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3309
46
"the land in said Salem together with the buildings thereon
bounded and described as follows...Being all of Lot 31 and a part
Earle R. Knowlton & Lillian B.
of lot 32 on a plan of House Lots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck,
Knowlton, husband and wife of
recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of
Salem, MA
"consideration paid" Plans 1, Plan 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3480
146
Russell M. MacDonald &
Adrienne M. MacDonald,
husband and wife of Salem,
MA
"the land in said Salem together with the buildings thereon
bounded and described as follows...Being all of Lot 31 and a part
of lot 32 on a plan of House Lots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck,
recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of
"consideration paid" Plans 1, Plan 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3586
68
Gerard A. Gaffney & Jane F.
Gaffney, husband and wife of
Danvers, MA
"the land in said Salem together with the buildings thereon,
bounded and described as follows...Being all of Lot 31 and a part
of Lot 32 on a plan of House Lots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck,
recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of
"consideration paid" Plans 1, Plan 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
4699
568
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows...Being all of Lot 31 and a part of Lot 32 on a
plan of House Lots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck, recorded with
$1 Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
13092
92
Gerard A. Gaffney, individually
Karen J. Beauregard of Claremore, OK;
Janet Casey of Dunbarton, NH; Ellen Chen
a/k/a Ellen Gaffney Chen of Stoneham,
MA; & Mary Elizabeth Broughton a/k/a
David Bowie & Jennifer Bowie,
November 21, 2000 Betsy Broughton of Woodbridge, VA
husband and wife of Salem
David Bowie & Jennifer Ingalls, f/k/a
November 1, 2016 Jennifer Bowie
Consideration
David W. Broughton & Mary
Elizabeth Broughton, married,
of Woodbridge, VA
"the land in said Salem, with the buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows...Being all of Lot 31 and a part of Lot 32 on a
plan of House Lots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck, recorded with
$445,000 Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
16701
"The land in said Salem, with the buildings thereon, bounded and
described as follows...Being all of Lot 31 and a part of Lot 32 on a
plan of House Lots at Juniper Point, Salem Neck, recorded with
$575,000 Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 1, Plan 30."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
35407
"For title...see Certificate
Releasing Massachusetts
Estate Tax Lien and Death
Certificate of Jane Francis
Gaffney, and Death
Certificate of Gerard A.
293 Gaffney..."
370
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Beach Avenue
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
14 Beach Avenue, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Abel Webster
Massachusetts State Representative
from Lawrence
Iron Founder
c. 1880
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1880, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Research by Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
14
1880
2019
Abel
Avenue
Beach
circa
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Webster
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05587d276d326c5f5fd58dc347e107bb
PDF Text
Text
8 Chestnut Street
Built by
Daniel Gregg
Housewright
c. 1804-1805
Expanded or rebuilt by
John Stone
Between 1825-1839
Research Provided by
Diana Dunlap
January 2019
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2019
�Built by Daniel Gregg, housewright, c.1804-1805
Expanded or rebuilt by John Stone between 1825-1839
1. March 15, 1804- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 173, Page 170: Jonathan Neal of Salem
sells property on Chestnut Street measuring 30 feet x 94 feet x 30 feet x 88 feet to
Daniel Gregg of Salem, housewright, for $561.56. The deed contains a right of way over
a passage measuring 10 feet, 6 inches over Benjamin Daland’s land to the west, so long
as it “shall be occupied as a site for a meetinghouse, but no longer” (this right of way is
included in deeds to the property into the 1920s). It includes “granted premises with the
appurtenances” but makes no mention of a dwelling house or any other buildings.
2. October 31, 1805- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 177, Page 70: Daniel Gregg
mortgages the property “together with the brick building thereon” back to Jonathan Neal
for $2,200.00
3. February 19, 1814- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 201, Page 296: Daniel Gregg, now of
Charlestown, sells the property outright of Jonathan Neal, merchant, for $1100.00. The
deed still includes “the brick building thereon” and explains that the premises are the
same that he mortgaged in 1805.
4. October 11, 1825- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 238, Page 247: Jonathan Neal sells
the property to John Stone alongside two other parcels of land on Chestnut and Summer
Streets for $6000.00. The property includes a “one story brick dwelling house and all
other buildings thereon.” It’s hard to tell if this is the current house, later expanded, or
not. When Jonathan Neal, Sr.’s estate was being settled in 1816 and land was
transferred between his sons Jonathan Jr. and Joseph, Jonathan Jr. is described as a
bricklayer (see Essex Registry of Deeds Book 210, Pages 254-255). If this is the same
person, he may have played a role in the construction. The eastern boundary is four feet
shorter, at 84 feet, in this deed than previously; the deed states a survey of all the land
sold therin was taken by Jonathan P. Saunders, Esq., on October 6, 1825.
5. April 9, 1839- Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 312, Page 170: John H. Stone of Calais,
Maine, and Lucy P. Stone of Salem sell their interest in the property, including “a brick
dwelling house,” to Henry O. Stone of Salem, Gentleman, for $1866.86, “meaning to
convey each of us one undivided third of said estate only...the said Henry O. Being
seized if one undivided part third thereof.”
6. June 1, 1850- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 429, Page 208: Henry Orne Stone of
Framingham, physician, sells the property to George C Hodgdon of Salem, currier, for
3500.00. The deed specifies that the property was owned by Stone’s father, John, and
conveyed to him by siblings John H. and Lucy P.
7. July 19, 1852- Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 464, Page 12: Henry Poor of Danvers and
Elijah A. Hawson of Salem, “Assignees of George C. Hodgdon, an insolvent debtor
under proceedings of insolvency,” release the property to Hodgdon for $4000.00.
8. July 19, 1852- Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 464, Page 13: George C. Hodgdon of
Salem, merchant, sells the property to James P. Thorndike of Boston, merchant, for
$4000.00.
�9. October 17, 1859- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 596, Page 80: James P. Thorndike
sells the property to Sarah Rea Mansfield, wife of Daniel H. Mansfield, for $3500.00 for
her “sole and separate use, free any interference or control of her present for any future
husband.”
10. April 21, 1871- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 829, Page 98: Sarah Rea and Daniel
Mansfield sell the property to E.C. Bolles of Brooklyn, New York, for $6100.00.
11. July 27, 1889- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 1254, Page 491: Edwin C. Bolles of New
York City sells the property to Jennie M. Emmerton of Salem for $1.00.
12. February 20, 1913- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 2197, Page 550: George H Shattuck
and his wife Annie B. Shattuck of Topsfield sell the property, together with parcels of
land on Turner Street and Federal Street, to Caroline O. Emmerton if Salem. Caroline
Emmerton and Annie Shattuck were daughters of Jennie Emmerton; Jennie Emmerton’s
will was probated in Essex County in 1912, according to the deed. The property is now
described as 36 feet wide rather than 30 feet wide.
13. June 2, 1923- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 2556, Page 482: Caroline O. Emmerton
sells the property to Helen J. O’Connor; grantor and grantee agree to split the taxes and
water rates for the year 1923.
14. December 18, 1972- Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 5934, Page 534: Sumner L.
Raymond and Merchants-Warren National Bank of Salem, executors of the estate of the
late Helen J. O’Connor, sell the property to the State Street Bank and Trust and Charles
Y. Wadsworth of Boston, under Declaration and Agreement of the Trust of Mary Silver
Smith (see Book 05936, Page 694, December 21, 1964), for $76,000.00. The property’s
dimensions are now larger, including land purchased by Helen J. O’Connor of the
Chestnut Street Associates on June 11, 1963 (see Book 5073, Page 311).
15. August 26, 1988- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 09682, Page 020: State Street Bank
and Trust and William A. Truslow, Trustees under Declaration of the Trust of Mary Silver
Smith, sell the property to Janice L. and Richard A. Lebel for $475,000.
16. September 1, 1988- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 09682, Page 020: Janice and
Richard Lebel mortgage the property to Eastern Bank for $275,000.00.
17. October 6, 1989- Essex Registry of Deed Book 10182, Page 028: Janice and Richard
Lebel’s petition is granted for special permission to use part of premises as an office for
the practice of psychology.
18. November 11, 1989- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 10213, Page 007: Janice and
Richard Lebel refinance their mortgage with Eastern Bank.
19. May 20, 1991- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 10799, Page 164: Richard and Janice
Lebel grant Janice Lebel the property to be held by her as a homestead “under the
provisions of M.G.L. Chapter 188.”
20. May 18, 1992- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 11305, Page 287: Janice Lebel grants the
property to Richard and Janice Lebel “as tenants by the entirety.”
21. March 22, 1996- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 13466, Page 207: Richard and Janice
Lebel sell the property to Anne L. Busteed for $393,500.00.
22. February 15, 2007- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 26568, Page 213: Anne L. Busteed of
Salem sells the property to William C Schoene, M.D., of Ipswich for $862,500.00.
�23. March 22, 2018- Essex Registry of Deeds Book 36597, Page 159: Bradford P. Smith
and Shirley B. Hubert, personal representatives under the will of William C. Schoene,
sell the property to Leo Kraunelis of Topsfield for $850,000.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Chestnut Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
8 Chestnut Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by
Daniel Gregg
Housewright
c. 1804-1805
Expanded or rebuilt by
John Stone
Between 1825-1839
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1804-1805, 2019
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Diana Dunlap
Language
A language of the resource
English
1804
1805
2019
8
Chestnut
circa
Daniel
Gregg
History
House
John
Massachusetts
Salem
Stone
Street
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84630544c168beab7f9d61fe6cc97d5a
PDF Text
Text
1 Brown Street
Bray Homestead
c. 1766
Research Provided by
David E. Hayes
April 1973
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
��������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Brown Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
1 Brown Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Bray Homestead
c. 1766
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1766, 1973
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
David E. Hayes
Language
A language of the resource
English
1
1766
1973
Bray
Brown
circa
Daniel
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
-
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12d580f75871485349cd1d2fb3351b38
PDF Text
Text
198 North Street
Built for
Henry Chew
A free man of color
Mariner
c. 1834
Research & Writing Provided by
Amy E. Kellett
October 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street | Salem, Mass.
www.historicsalem.org
House History Report for
198 North Street
c.1967 Photograph — 198 North Street
Report completed by
Amy E. Kellett
October 2018
www.amykellett.com
1
�198 North Street
Built for
Henry Chew
A free man of color
Mariner
c.1834
1867-1925 | Part of the Cressey Estate
1949-1983 | Property of Salem Housing
Authority — Veteran’s Housing
2
�1833 — Henry Chew, mariner, purchases land from the Town of Salem
Amidst the rapidly expanding neighborhoods of the prosperous seaport town of Salem, Massachusetts a
mariner named Henry Chew purchased a plot of land in ‘Northfields’ (what is now North Street) from the
Town of Salem for one-hundred dollars on the 2nd of August, 1833. As there is no buildings noted on the
deed as being part of the property, it can be assumed that shortly after the land purchase, the Greek
Revival dwelling house was built on the land where it stands to this day.
2nd August 1833 — Northfields Property sold from Town of Salem to Henry Chew
Essex County Registry of Deeds
Book 273 | Page 15
This home remains one of the best examples of vernacular Greek Revival architecture in the City of
Salem, and has remained largely unchanged on its exterior through the decades of history that have
passed by its front door. Indeed, this house is one that is passed by millions of cars every year, as North
Street is one of the main thoroughfares in and out of the ‘Witch City’, and its unassuming appearance
belies its fascinating and extensive history. The architectural history standard text, A Field Guide to
American Houses, by Virginia & Lee McAlester notes the historical significance of Greek Revival
architecture, which is often associated with government buildings and the like, but the vernacular
examples hearken to the same historic influences:
Greek revival was the dominant style of American domestic
architecture during the interval from about 1830 to 1850 […] during
which its popularity led it to be called the National Style. [It]
especially flourished in those regions that were being rapidly
settled in the decades of the 1830s, ‘40s, and ‘50s.
3
�… archaeological investigation in the early 19th century emphasized
Greece as the Mother of Rome which, in turn, shifted interest to
Grecian models. Two additional factors enhanced Greek influence
in this country. Greece’s involvement in a war for independence
(1821-30) aroused much sympathy in the newly independent United
States; at the same time, the war of 1812 diminished American
affection for British influence, including the still dominant Adam
style in domestic architecture.
An important and enduring legacy of the Greek Revival to American
domestic architecture is the front-gabled house. Popularized during
the ascendance of the Greek Revival style in the early 19th century,
this became the predominant form for detached urban houses in cities
of the Northeast…1
The purchase of this property and the subsequent building is especially significant as the home’s builder,
Henry Chew, listed in the 1833 City Directory as a mariner living on North Street, was a free black man.
Records indicate that he lived at the Greek Revival home on North Street for a number of years with his
family, including his wife Venus (married in 1801) and several children. Although the Chew family were of
a higher social status than many of their enslaved counterparts in the South, life was not easy for them, as
the couple buried several children in the time that they lived at the home on North Street, including a son
born the year that the home was built. Just fourteen months later the little boy died of an unnamed illness
in 1834. Prior to the family’s residence on North Street, they had also buried a daughter, Hannah, who
had died in 1822 from consumption, what is today called tuberculosis, at only eight years old.
Unfortunately, not much more is known about the Chew family, as records available from the time are
scarce. As a free black family, they were likely involved in the Abolitionist movement that had taken hold
in the greater Boston and North Shore region. Furthermore, this property may have been involved in the
Underground Railroad, as there is evidence that escaped slaves on the Railroad went through Essex
County, including Salem, on their route North to freedom. Maybe it is appropriate to note the
coincidence here — that Henry Chew and his family purchased land and built their home along a
farmland path that would eventually be named ‘North Street’ before the house was sold to the next
generation of owner in 1842.
1 McAlester, Virginia & Lee. A Field Guide to American Houses, Romantic Houses, Greek Revival. Pages 179-84
4
�1842 Salem City Directory — Henry Chew, Mariner, North [Street]
Following the alphabetical list of names of Salem’s white residents, the City Directory included a
separate section entitled “People of Color” — the 1842 publication of the directory notes Henry Chew as
living on North Street, and lists the places of work for the other Chew family members.
5
�1842 — Elisha Odlin purchases property from Henry Chew
According to the records found through the Essex County Registry of Deeds, Elisha Odlin purchased the
property on North Street from Henry Chew, including “a dwelling house and out buildings thereon” for
$100, plus interest. The deed also importantly notes about the North Street property, as “being the same
I (Henry Chew) purchased of the City or Town of Salem,” which refers to the earlier cited 1833 deed.
26th August 1842 —North Street Property sold from Henry Chew to Elisha Odlin
Essex County Registry of Deeds
Book 333 | Page 65
Elisha Odlin’s occupation is noted as ‘trader’ on the deed (above), which likely refers to the maritime
trade that supported Salem’s booming economy. Although there are several generations of men named
‘Elisha Odlin’ throughout the decades of the 18th and 19th centuries in Salem, the generation that aligns
with this deed suggests it was owned by Elisha Odlin, Jr. son of Samuel Odlin. Unfortunately, just five
years after Elisha Odlin Jr.’s purchase of the property on North Street, he died from consumption at only
twenty-seven years of age on November 19, 1848. Subsequently, his estate was divided among multiple
owners, until the property was procured by Pierce L. W. Gardner, and shortly thereafter sold to Caleb A.
Smith in 1855.
6
�1874 Salem City Atlas
(Top) North Salem was a rapidly-developing neighborhood from the 1830s through the early 20th
century, and these Atlas images show the great swaths of land owned by Wm A. Creesy, as well as other
prominent Salem families. The arrow indicates the property that is now 198 North Street.
(Bottom) Close-up view of the 1874 Salem City atlas that notes 148 and 146 North Street as being the
property of William A. Creesy, and contemporaneous Federal censuses city directories list David
Sinclair, carpenter, as the resident of 148 North Street.
7
�1855 — North Street property becomes part of the Estate of Caleb A. Smith
The Essex County Registry of Deeds records records multiple purchases of property by Caleb Smith in
the mid-18th century, including a “parcel of land with the buildings thereon, situated on North Street in
Salem” described as “the premises to me (Caleb A. Smith) conveyed by the heirs of Elisha Odlin, by
various deeds on record.” Mr. Smith also appears on Historic Salem, Inc. historic house report records
as being the builder in 1861 of what is now 3-5 Ridgeway Street, less than a tenth of a mile from the North
Street property. For the next twelve years the Smith family would own the property and dwelling house
across the street from their own home on North Street, during which time the home would likely have
been used as a residence for the Smith family staff, or as an income property that they could rent out.
14th March 1867 — North Street Property sold from Caleb A. Smith to Wm. A. Creesy
Essex County Registry of Deeds
Book 719 | Page 242
8
�1867 — Smith sells Estate, including North Street property, to William A. & Emily F. Creesy
Documentation shows that William A. Creesy, along with his wife Emily, purchased the estate from
Caleb A. Smith in 1867. Creesy had made his fortune, along with so many others, in Salem’s booming
maritime trade industry. According to the text entitled ‘Old Marblehead Sea Captains and Ships in
Which they Sailed” published by the Marblehead Historical Society in 1916, William Andrew Cressy
(whose name spelling seems to have varied depending on who recorded the documentation) was the
brother of Josiah P. Cressy, and was the captain for a number of Salem’s ships, including the Oneida,
Mary Whittredge, and Cohota.
1874 Salem City Directory
Captain William A. Creesy and his son and namesake, William A. Creesy Jr. are both noted as living at 145
North Street — their former home is now 3-5 Ridgeway Street, and the property at 198 North Street
belonged to part of the same Creesy Estate.
The 1867 Deed, dated March 14th, notes and references the premises as being the same that were
purchased by Smith in 1855 from Pierce L. W. Gardner:
…the real estate in said Salem which is bounded commencing at the
Southwest corner and running Northwesterly by North Street about one
hundred and forty eight feet to the land of Dearborn about four hundred
and twenty feet to land of Cross, then turning and running Southerly by
land of Cross about one hundred and thirty feet to the land of Newhall,
then turning and running Southwesterly by said Newhall’s land to North
Street and the said point begun at. […] Being the same premises conveyed
to Caleb A. Smith by Pierce L. W. Gardner by deed dated May 5, 1855,
recorded in the Registry of Deeds for Essex County in Book 513 Leaf 13.
9
�1886-1889 Massachusetts State and Federal Naturalization Records
Petition for Naturalization — David Sinclair
Volume 3 | No. 4692-ixv3
10
�Upon William A. Creesy’s passing in 1874, the Creesy Estate became the property of Mrs. Emily F.
Cressey (whose name spelling yet again changed on subsequent documentation). This is also around the
same time frame that the earliest map and atlas images appear showing the property at what is now 198
North Street. By 1872 a carpenter named David E. Sinclair and his family are listed in the City Directories
as living at 148 North Street (now 198).
1872 Salem City Map
This clip from an 1872 publication that included a map of Salem, Massachusetts Ward 6 area of North
Salem, while the arrow indicates the North Street property that is the subject of this report.
The larger historic context is important to note before recording the Sinclair’s history at 198 North
Street: as noted earlier, the neighborhood of North Salem was rapidly becoming more densely populated
throughout the 19th century, including a major renovation completed by the city around 1871 near what is
now the North Street Bridge (adjacent to the MBTA Commuter Rail station). As a result, land parcels
were subdivided as well as the numbering of the dwelling houses throughout the neighborhood,
including on North Street, where in the time period between 1870 and 1880 the address for the North
Street house that is the subject of this report changed from 148 to 198 North Street. For this reason,
11
�earlier historic records of this property proposed a feasible theory that the building had been moved from
another parcel of land to its current current location, but further research confirms that the dwelling
house at 198 North Street has been on its current foundation since the area was called ‘Northfields’ and
the path that now bears the name North Street was little more than a passageway for merchants, goods,
and travelers to and from Danvers.
1870-c.1887 — David E. Sinclair & Family live at North Street property dwelling house
Prior to living at the home that would become 198 North Street for nearly two decades, David Sinclair,
housewright, and his family lived at a number of addresses throughout Salem. Naturalization records
note David Sinclair’s immigration to Salem on the 9th of November, 1849. He and his young wife
Margaret are listed on the 1850 Federal Census as living in Ward 1 along with Catherine Humber, Ann
Garret, Rebecca Phillips, and James A. Humber. The couple soon had a family of their own, and by 1853
are listed as living at 14 Turner Street (in Ward I of Salem, Mass.), and then at 15 Mall Street by 1855.
The 1860 US Federal Census provides more detail about the Sinclair family ten years after the couple
first appeared on Federal records. The family is listed as living in Ward 3, confirmed by the 1861 Salem
City Directory which notes the family’s address as 57 Broad Street. In 1860 the family included Mr. David
Sinclair, a 35 year-old carpenter, his wife Margaret, now 27 years old attended to the house and the
children: David A., age 9; Charles H., age 6, and 2-year-old Frank.
The family of five did not remain in the Broad Street neighborhood of Ward 3 very long, however, as the
American Civil War called Mr. Sinclair to join the Union Army, the family moved once again, this time to
15 Essex Street in Salem’s Derby Street neighborhood, during the absence of David. Mr. Sinclair’s
naturalization records note his voluntary enlistment into the Army of the United States on October 3rd,
1861 until he was honorably discharged in January of 1866. This is confirmed through Salem City
directories that list David Sinclair as serving with Company B of the 24th Army Regiment. Upon the
ending of the war, David Sinclair returned to his family at 15 Essex Street where they remained until 1870,
when the US Federal Census lists the Sinclair family as living in the 6th Ward of the City: North Salem.
12
�By the 1870 recording of the US Federal Census, the Sinclair family had changed in the preceding
decade; the two oldest Sinclair boys, David and Charles Sinclair, now 19 and 16 years old, no longer are
listed as living with the family (for reasons yet discovered). David Sinclair, now 44 years old, is again
listed as a carpenter, his wife Margaret, now 37, continued to maintain the family home and raise the
younger Sinclair children: Joseph F. Sinclair, 12 (most likely the ‘F’ meaning ‘Frank’ or ‘Francis’ — the
youngest Sinclair child from the 1860 Census), a 3-year-old daughter, Annie F. Sinclair, and 7-month-old
Stephen H. Sinclair. In all, David and Margaret Sinclair would raise four boys and one girl during their
lives and time lived at 198 North Street.
1870 US Federal Census — Salem, Mass. — Ward 6
The Sinclair family, including David Sinclair with his occupation listed as ‘carpenter, Margaret E.
Sinclair as keeping house, and their 3 children, Joseph (12), Annie (3), and Stephen (7 months).
Salem City Directories during the Sinclair tenure at the North Street property show the change in
address for the home from 148 to 198 North Street between 1876 and 1878, just a few years after the
family’s first appearance at the address. Throughout their time at the residence David Sinclair is listed as
a carpenter by trade through the 1886 City Directory, after which he and his family moved to 29 Osborne
Street by 1888.
13
�1888-1925 — 198 North Street remains part of the Cressey Estate while rented by several tenants
While the estate was owned and managed by the widow of William Creesy, Emily F. Cressey, the
property at 198 North Street was home to several tenants, whose names and occupations are traceable
though the Salem City Directories:
1888-c1896 : John E. Scanlan — Morocco Dresser
“Morocco Dresser” is a specialization in leather finishing; specifically, ‘morocco’ referred to a
type of goat skin leather that is much lighter than other 19th and 20th century finished leathers,
and a ‘dresser’ tanned the leather. This type of leather work was most often used in shoe leather
applications, so Mr. Scanlan likely worked with of one of the many shoe factories in Salem and
the greater North Shore region of Boston.
1897 : Walter A. Tarr — Shoe Trimmer
1899 : Ernest A. Oliver — Electrician
1901 : George M. Sinclair — Clerk
1903-1904 : Arthur W. Stevens — Shoemaker
1905-1910 : Frank J. Verry — Brakeman for the Boston & Maine Railroad
1911-1912 : Oliver Collette — Driver
1913 : Otis H. Pickard — Plumber
1914 : Albert Dyer — Teamster
In the early 20th century, ‘teamster’ referred to a person whose occupation it was to manage and
be in charge of a team of horses, which could be used for anything from transportation to fire
brigades.
1915 : Albert Nolet — Carpenter
1916-1920 — Charles W. Chapman — Machinist
(& Martha A. Chapman)
1921-1922 — John F. Farnsworth — Bricklayer
(& Sadie J. Farnsworth)
1924-1926 — William A Walsh — Leatherworker
(& Blanche Walsh)
14
�1925 — The Heirs of Emily F. Cressy sell the property at 198 North Street to Arthur W. & Bessie M.
Dorman
The property at 198 North Street remained the property of the Cressy Family until 1925, at which time
the Essex County Registry of Deeds records indicate the land belonging to the Estate of Emily F. Cressey
on the even-numbered side of North Street was sold to Arthur W. & Bessie M. Doorman. Importantly,
this deed references an official survey plan recorded by Civil Engineer Thomas A. Appleton of the
property entitled “Land of Estate of Emily F. Cressy, Salem, Mass.” which clearly depicts the properties
at both 198 and 196 North Street.
30th March 1925 — 198 North Street sold from Cressy Estate to Arthur W. & Bessie M. Dorman
Essex County Registry of Deeds
Book 2634 | Page 201
15
�After being in the Cressy family for nearly six
decades since 1867, Arthur & Bessie Dorman
purchased the property at 198 North Street and
maintained its ownership until 1949. The City
Directories give insight to the tenants of the Greek
Revival house at 198 North Street:
January 1925
Land of Emily F. Cressy — Salem, Mass.
Book of Plans 42, Plan No. 30b
With deed Josiah P. Cressy to Arthur W. Dorman
et ux. Rec.B.2634 P.201
1929 - 1935 — Charles E. Millner —Leatherworker
(& Lillian B. Millner)
1936-1939 — Robert J. Preston — Salesman
(& Rose M. Preston)
1940-1949 — John J. O’Shea — Post Office Clerk
(& Mary A. O’Shea)
16
�1949 — Salem Housing Authority issues an ‘Order of Taking’ for 198 North Street
Following the second World War, the nation’s burgeoning population, known as the ‘Baby Boom’
created a need for veteran’s housing throughout the country, including in Salem, Massachusetts. As a
result, the property that had been purchased by Arthur and Bessie Dorman in 1925 was the subject of an
official ‘Order of Taking’ by the Salem Housing Authority, by order of an official State-Aided Housing
Project. Two documents record this transaction: the Essex County Registry of Deeds Book 3662 Page
213, and the Plan of Land for the ‘State-Aided Housing Project, Salem #200-1’, which included the
dwelling houses at 198 and 196 North Street, as well as two additional parcels of land:
17
�1949-1983 — 198 North Street owned by the Salem Housing Authority
Following the government seizure of the property at 198 North Street, the property is listed as ‘Vacant’ in
the 1950 Salem City Directory. Available City Directories only give insight to tenants through 1963; the
recorded residents of 198 North Street through the early 1960s create a more detailed look into this
property’s extensive history:
1951-1953 — Ernest P. Snow — Leatherworker
(& Anna P. Snow)
1954-1962 — Emerson E. Pollock — Masonic Temple Superintendent
(& Lucy C. Pollock)
1964— Leo W. Dragon —- Leatherworker at A. C. Lawrence
The final document of this report correlates to the 1983 Deed regarding the property at 198 North Street,
by which time the property had been in the ownership and management of a trustee of Allyn Realty Trust.
Recorded in October of 1983, the deed and plan record the sale of the property from being managed as
State-Aided housing project to a private home, which it remains to this day.
18
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
North Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
198 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Henry Chew
A free man of color
Mariner
c. 1834
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1834, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Amy E. Kellett
Language
A language of the resource
English
1834
198
2018
Chew
circa
Henry
History
House
Massachusetts
North
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/1aa9d10d92d3bf934b7978db509b4932.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=jh0bVG1QJxXVM-s6AH4arsgsxtN0hE5uRrHEY0BANVcktUO8l13vFWP2HcpHPuqAnXVvjit0zPE-saVTCYxH3tNGUsiY31-XDL6PDNQo4bVwKOoXQx-8D5AOViOIex8v2yZOePxWusF89oaHCWiSzD5z1PQSSa5JNdG0DpuFGkYqeRT8jSAMst71VK9qsUMCyn78nHQSuwfAjhUMhXrL-xBjwsWTkPVXDc%7E4cbiCrfUEsZwmX0aL8laHKqecjmGrbbdHAktoveVcivcvDT9YzIQcGmt%7EvQsxBZ9qqQInRdxq6ol8DOQbA3Idv8AozLrPTS1QWPZnIQ0PXpFhzZJAKQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
abe31c479d3f355d32f8411d8be339dd
PDF Text
Text
31 Appleton Street
Built for
Laura Lamprey
& her husband
Reuben Lamprey
Heel Manufacturer
c. 1889
Research Provided by
Alyssa G. A. Conary
October 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�Chain of Title, 31 Appleton Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
November 22, 1887 The City of Salem
Grantee(s)
Reuben S. Lamprey of Salem
Consideration Conveyance of
October 13, 1888 Reuben S. Lamprey
David P. Staniford of Salem
"One dollar and
other good and
sufficient
"a certain parcel of land situate on Appleton
consideration" Street in said Salem..."
October 13, 1888 David P. Staniford
"One dollar and
other good and "that certain parcel of land situate in said
Laura Lamprey of Salem, wife sufficient
Salem, particularly described in the deed of
of Reuben S. Lamprey
consideration" said Reuben S. Lamprey to myself..."
Charles F. Lamprey, Arthur S.
Lamprey, Charles J. MacLean,
Alice Blanche MacLean, all of Francis H. Caskin Jr. of
July 7, 1914 Salem
Danvers
July 7, 1914 Francis H. Caskin Jr.
Charles F. Lamprey & Alice
Blanche MacLean, both of
Salem
Source
Document Book or Vol. Page
"a certain parcel of land situate on Appleton
St. in said Salem...reference being had to a
plan entitled 'Plan of the old gravel pit
belonging to the City of Salem, corner of
Appleton St. and Liberty Hill road, Charles A.
Putnam, C. E. October 4th 1887' The premises
above described being Lot No. 4, shown on
$107 said plan."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Notes
1212
201
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1234
216
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1234
217
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
Salem, and designated and marked as Lot
No. 4 on a 'Plan of land of the City of Salem at
"one dollar and the corner of Appleton Street and Liberty Hill
other valuable Road,' made by Charles A. Putnam, C. E.,
considerations" October 4th, 1887."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2267
"which we inherited as
heirs at law of said Laura
362 E. Lamprey, deceased."
"one dollar and "a certain parcel of land with the buildings
other valuable thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
considerations" SALEM..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2267
363
William D. Chapple of Salem,
MA, Administrator of the
Estate of Blanche L. MacLean,
otherwise known as Alice
October 6, 1926 Blanche MacLean
Laura E. Lamprey of Salem
"all the interest of the estate of said Blanche
L. MacLean in a certain parcel of land with the
buildings thereon, situated on Appleton
$2,500 Street in said SALEM..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2701
28
Naumkeag Trust Company,
holder of a mortgage from
Laura E. Lamprey & Flora N.
Lamprey of Salem, MA to
William D. Chapple et al,
Trustees under the will of
January 11, 1935 Sarah A. Silver
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
$3,000 SALEM..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3025
135
"consideration
paid"
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
SALEM..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3025
137
"consideration
paid"
"a certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
SALEM..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3219
217
George E. O'Connell, Trustee $1 "and other
George E. O'Connell & Ada C. of Appleton Street Realty
valuable
February 10, 1982 O'Connell, husband and wife Partnership
consideration"
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6907
715
George E. O'Connell, Trustee
"nominal
of the Appleton Street Realty George E. O'Connell & Ada C. consideration
February 12, 1991 Partnership
O'Connell of Salem
paid"
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
10703
407
George E. O'Connell, Trustee "nominal
George E. O'Connell & Ada C. of the Appleton Street Realty consideration
February 12, 1991 O'Connell
Partnership
paid"
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
10703
415
George E. O'Connell, Trustee
of the Appleton Street Realty Michael P. Libby & Amanda S.
July 18, 1997 Partnership
Kennedy of Salem
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
$205,000 Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
14217
407
Michael P. Libby & Amanda S. Kevin G. O'Connell & Diane
Libby f.k.a. Amanda S.
M. O'Connell, husband & wife
October 15, 2004 Kennedy
of Salem
"A certain parcel of land with the buildings
thereon, situated on Appleton Street in said
$490,000 Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
23506
524
January 11, 1935 Harold G. Macomber
June 12, 1940 Naumkeag Trust Company
Harold G. Macomber of
Marblehead
Naumkeag Trust Company
George E. & Ada C.
O'Connell, husband & wife of
Salem
��������������������1895-96 Salem City Directory
�Inventory No:
SAL.1765
Historic Name:
Lamprey, Reuben House
Common Name:
Address:
31 Appleton St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
North Salem
Local No:
27-232
Year Constructed:
c 1889
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Queen Anne
Use(s):
Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood Clapboard; Wood Shingle
Foundation: Brick
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
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records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
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This file was accessed on: Friday, September 7, 2018 at 4:15: PM
�F R B - BUILDING
OM
AREA
F R NO.
OM
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
80 BOYLSTON STREET
BOSTON, MA 02116
Salem
eSS 3 1 A p p l e t o n
Street
N m Reuben
ae
priC
Lamprey
House
Present R e s i d e n t i a 1
Original R e s i d e n t i a l
CRIPTION
c. 1 8 8 9
Ce
Directories,
e
Queen
building
permit
Anne
Architect
Sketch Map: Draw nap showing property's location
in relation to nearest cross streets and/or
geographical features. Indicate a l l buildings
between inventoried property and nearest
intersection(s).
Indicate north
N i t
Exterior Hall Fabric c l a p b o a r d
Outbuildings
Major Alterations (with dates)N
Condition
No
m
Good
Moved
o
Date
Acreage L e s s t n a n o n e
Setting B u s y
residential
Debra
area.
Hilbert and
UTM REFERENCE
Recorded by N o r t h f i e l d s P r e s e r v a t i o n
USGS QUADRANGLE_
Organization S a l e m
SCALE
Date
June,
Planning
Assoc.
Dept.
1986 a n d J u l y , 1 9 8 9
�i
S/Tu.nu>5
NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA STATEMENT ( i f applicable)
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE Describe important architectural features and evaluate in terms of
other buildings within the community.
31 A p p l e t o n S t r e e t , t h e Reuben Lamprey h o u s e , i s a
w e l l - d e t a i l e d Queen Anne v e r s i o n o f t h e f a m i l i a r g a b l e f r o n t house
t y p e a l s o common i n t h e I t a l i a n a t e s t y l e .
I t r i s e s 2 1/2 s t o r i e s
and i s two b a y s w i d e .
The e n t r y ( n o r t h ) f e a t u r e s a b r a c k e t e d ,
h i p - r o o f e d h o o d . A d j a c e n t i s a t w o - s t o r y p a n e l l e d bay w i t h
b r a c k e t e d c o r n i c e s and f i s h s c a l e s h i n g l e s b e t w e e n t h e s t o r i e s . The
g a b l e end p o s s e s s e s f i s h s c a l e s h i n g l e s , b r a c k e t s and v e r g e b o a r d s .
The window o v e r t h e e n t r y and t h o s e on t h e s o u t h e l e v a t i o n p o s s e s s
m o l d e d , peaked l i n t e l s .
Window s a s h a r e 2/2, a r r a n g e d s i n g l y and
i n p a i r s . The s o u t h e l e v a t i o n a l s o c o n t a i n s t h r e e g a b l e d d o r m e r s ;
t h e n o r t h e l e v a t i o n has a shed d o r m e r .
The f o u n d a t i o n i s b r i c k .
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE Explain the role owners played in local or state history and how the
building relates to the development of the community.
L i k e most o f N o r t h S a l e m , A p p l e t o n S t r e e t was f a r m l a n d u n t i l
the mid-19th c e n t u r y .
The l a n d upon w h i c h t h i s house s i t s was p a r t
of t h e F l i n t ' s E s t a t e a s l a t e a s 1851; A p p l e t o n S t r e e t had n o t y e t
been l a i d o u t .
By 1874 t h e s t r e e t e x i s t e d and s i x h o u s e s s t o o d on
t h e w e s t s i d e o f t h e s t r e e t e x t e n d i n g n o r t h f r o m Orne S t r e e t . An
1888 b u i l d i n g p e r m i t was i s s u e d t o Reuben L a m p r e y , a h e e l
m a u n f a c t u r e r , t o b u i l d a 2 1/2 s t o r y house w i t h a p i t c h r o o f a t 31
Appleton S t r e e t .
The a d d r e s s f i r s t a p p e a r e d i n t h e 1890 s t r e e t
d i r e c t o r y , a s t h e Lamprey r e s i d e n c e . The house r e m a i n e d i n t h e
Lamprey f a m i l y a s l a t e a s 1911, when i t a p p e a r e d on t h e a t l a s a s
t h e p r o p e r t y o f L a u r a Lamprey.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Salem C i t y D i r e c t o r i e s
Maps and A t l a s e s , 1851, 1874, 1897, and 1911
S a l e m B u i l d i n g P e r m i t s 1871-1889, on f i l e a t t h e E s s e x
Institute
8/85
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Appleton Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
31 Appleton Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Laura Lamprey
& her husband
Reuben Lamprey
Heel Manufacturer
c. 1889
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1889, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Alyssa G. A. Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
1889
2018
31
Appleton
circa
History
House
Lamprey
Laura
Massachusetts
Reuben
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/e1b0d92bde48af321b2978d69a855de5.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=ecG3OdN7z8YsjtUxXoVAaw%7EXHmsNxF-oGRyYhrUswwvIdErxR7PS1mPxJ2fZmgyuZxLfpJF749jMjR9WMyXIjdYUE6un74dWwIWKtqAWqP-dg4K5lFARejIoTvsKvy6EapQ9glI16nktT0ygzBgJb27FbrG8cyy7ZHC3Hz4ZznLIPgwVK1TuxqHIRzPp16DaZPQ6WohpNvVfqkMjEtca-Q8dGcAuupK-lG62pOoUnUIqKL8nLq81eesRnDljURpTt93Xwpf%7EnYuZTFHbPkxlmyAClDcEfHH0Roqb1izX16f8NwBH8iP-C1n2O%7EEW3DA6XKTf6BpqnoywGo3gp120qg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
2d983b9003ae8a426053227a169ba9e7
PDF Text
Text
9 Albion Street
Built by
Benjamin Voller
Laborer
1848
Research Provided by
Emily Udy
October 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�History of Ownership – 9 Albion Street Salem, MA
Ownership Transfers
Date
Book:Page
Notes
Samuel J. Trofutter to
Benjamin H. Voller
6/20/1846
372:46
“A certain lot of land situate in
Salem…beginning at the Northeasterly corner
thereof at land of Haskell and a street that I
laid out (commencing at the street leading to
the pastures, and extending southerly forty
feet wide)…”
“…maintain all the fence…and not to do
anything on said lot that will injure the
fountain on land of Samuel Noah…”
Benjamin H. Voller and
to Aziel Day
8/14/1848
401:29
No building mentioned.
Deed requires Day to maintain a fence.
Voller’s occupation is a Laborer.
Day is a Currier.
Granted a lot of land…bounded by “a street”.
Includes mentions “all the buildings theron”
Aziel Day to James
Tatton
10/6/1866
712:210
Conclusion: Built by Benjamin Voller,
Laborer, 1848
Deed requires Tatton to maintain fence on
westerly side of premises.
James Tatton is listed in the 1872 City of
Salem Directory as a Tanner by profession.
Mary Tatton to Mary
O’Connor and Thomas
O’Connor
10/17/1877
985:205
“Mary Tatton of Salem…guardian of Annie
Tatton, David Tatton and Mary Ellen Tatton
minor children of James Tatton, deceased…”
Sold via auction to Mary O’Connor, the
highest bidder at $1,000.
Mary O’Connor and
Thomas O’Connor to
Emeline Caldwell
Emeline Caldwell to
Michael and Catherine
Cronin
12/20/1878
10/19/1880
1008:242
1047:212
Thomas O’Connor is listed in the 1878 City of
Salem Directory as living at 34 Beaver Street
with profession of Currier.
Mortgage document between O’Connors and
Emeline Caldwell
Granting right to sell at auction
Sold via auction after apparent default on
mortgage.
�Dennis J. Cronin and
Catherine F. Hennessey
to Daniel F. Cronin,
All children of Michael
Cronin and Catherine
Cronin
10/9/1905
1797:328
1901/2 Directory lists Dennis Cronin as head
of household at 9 Albion Street
Dennis and Catherine are siblings to Daniel.
Land with two dwelling houses, no mention
of sewer easement.
1906 Directory shows 9 ½ Albion appearing
with D. F. Cronin living there, and Edward F.
McGlone residing at 9 Albion Street. 9 ½ is
not listed in 1901/2 Directory. 9 ½ Albion
Street is likely built between 1901 and 1905
by Dennis J. Cronin, hair dresser and pool
room (it is not clear if he owns the pool room
or just works there)
D. F. Cronin (occupation hairdresser and pool
room at 9 Prospect Street) continues to
reside at 9 ½ Albion Street in 1910 with D.J.
Ferguson (occupation: tanner) living at 9
Albion Street
Daniel F. Cronin to
James J and Hannah
(Hanna) M. Coughlin
Mortgage between
James J. and Hannah M
Coughlin and Peabody
Co-op Bank
At Hannah M.
Coughlin’s passing
power to sell was
4/20/1912
3/15/1918
2147:362
2387:480
Cronin family members owned the home for
32 years
Land description changes and sewer
easement appears. 9 Albion land subdivided
between 1905 and 1912.
D.F. Cronin continues to reside at #9 ½ after
he sells #9 to the Coughlins.
Hannah (nee Donovan) was born about
1883/4 in Ireland and emigrated in 1903. She
was married at age 25.
James J Coughlin was 27 at marriage (he
emigrated in 1902) and was a leather factory
worker. (1930 Census record). In 1930 James
and Hannah had 4 children living with them
at 9 Albion. John J was their oldest son was
born in 1910 and in 1930 (age 21) was a
bookkeeper. James was 19 and a grocer
errand boy. Mary was 17 and Andrew was
14.
Lived at 9 Albion in 1920.
Probate court dated 4/3/1958.
�conferred to John J
Coughlin.
Hannah died in 1957 and is buried in St.
Mary’s Cemetery, Salem.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/1526
75654
John J Coughlin to James
P Coughlin and Mary
Irene Coughlin
At James P. Coughlin’s
passing power to sell
was conferred to James
E. Coughlin (executor)
and Mitchell Coughlin
11/4/1958
4511:371
12/14/1993
12326:267
James E. Coughlin of
Salem and Mitchell F.
Coughlin of Beverly to
David R. Winkler and
Marina T. Winkler
David R. Winkler and
Marina T. Winkler To
William L. Lawnsby and
Donna M. Lawnsby
William L. Lawnsby and
Donna M. Walter to
Ocean City
Development, LLC
Ocean City
Development, LLC to
Jesse Chamberlain and
Kaitlin Hope Connolly
8/31/1999
15908:139
4/30/2004
22770:48
7/11/2013
32651:373
11/26/2013
32984:33
As Joint tenants with rights of survivorship.
Mary died 9/8/1978, James P died 5/9/1993
Coughlin family members owned the home
for 81 years.
See also Divorce decree in Essex County
Family and Probate Court #ES11D1656DR
����������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Albion Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
9 Albion Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by
Benjamin Voller
Laborer
1848
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1848, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Emily Udy
Language
A language of the resource
English
1848
2018
9
Albion
Benjamin
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Voller
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/edaa7bc4d3a1c31f1dce901f8db8864b.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=TofVV64JB0yglGmpxD7-GEn0VXxjyhbYr1O%7E-hv9ZoFo0jYNkeYoXsVxUhONGjIZFkHGbssAyPmCsXK2wLA1h%7EVZtUyxg0tiukql%7E9TFU2E48Rs2VTjfFyhQ2m8XMOIewiF1P0xolI4J5lfJsoxVsbgqIctZ5Ab6XlQtjMnIuA4jSlAqbQzbE2hjOkvhJNI6KX0vMaJyuZW5cIlPjN7oEqL0STzXuoBqRcsqoMOfHFljqDtNEsYjXWiEcH2t2fXHFnzoHjTq7jGp3wSXVewIZJVhSnB972oaebiOjr6vCeuLYKaIqQVtEWimaR2jov1pvfDSDx3H-M2BJHeoSs6zQQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
d0db45684983fb41aea838614d5b99fe
PDF Text
Text
18 Chestnut Street
Built for
James B. Bott
c. 1800
Home of
Nathaniel Hawthorne
1846-1847
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
�Inventory No:
SAL.1035
Historic Name:
Bott, James B. House
Common Name:
Fabens, Augustus and Benjamin House
Address:
18 Chestnut St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Central Salem
Local No:
25-424
Year Constructed:
c 1800
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Federal
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House; Single Family Dwelling
House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HJ: Chestnut Street Historic District
SAL.HU: McIntire Historic District
Designation(s):
MA Archaeo/Historic Landmark (06/22/1970); Nat'l
Register District (08/28/1973); Local Historic District
(03/03/1981)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood; Wood Clapboard
Foundation: Cobblestone; Coursed Ashlar; Granite; Stone,
Uncut
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
The MACRIS database and scanned files are highly dynamic; new information is added daily and both database
records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
note that there may be a considerable lag time between the receipt of new or updated records by MHC and the
appearance of related information in MACRIS. Users should also note that not all source materials for the MACRIS
database are made available as scanned images. Users may consult the records, files and maps available in MHC's
public research area at its offices at the State Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, open M-F, 9-5.
Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Monday, December 10, 2018 at 11:41 AM
�FORM B - BUILDING
NRDIS 1973; L H D 3/3/81
U S G S Quad
Assessor's number
25-424
Salem
Town
Area(s)
F o r m Number
HU,HJ,HK
1035
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village)
Address
Central Salem
18 Chestnut Street
Historic Name James B. Bott House
Uses: Present
Residential
Original
Residential
Date of Construction
Source
by 1800
Tolles, Wiswall
Style/Form
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation
Granite, Cobblestone
Wall/Trim
Wood Clapboard
Roof
Asphalt Shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
Major Alterations (with dates)
late 19th c. - entrance
moved from west side to south end
Condition
Moved
Acreage
Recorded by
Lisa Mausolf
Organization
Salem Planning Department
Setting
_
good
no
yes
Date
less than one acre
set on sidewalk, comer lot, area of impressive
18th and 19th century residences
B K G E R Q P Q L « y 1997
AUG
0 5
19
97
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
MASS. HIST. COMM.
(
'
' (
�c
BUILDING F O R M
A R C H I T E C T U R A L DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural
community.
features.
Evaluate the characteristics
of the building in terms of other buildings within the
Located at the northeast corner of Botts Court, the house at 18 Chestnut Street is a three-story, hip-roofed, wood-frame
residence with a foreshortened third story. It is capped by an asphalt hip roof with two large brick chimneys. The house is
oriented with its narrow three-bay end to the street. Outlining the clapboarded house are simple wooden comerboards and a
plain watertable. It rests on a coursed granite foundation with cobblestone on the side elevation. In 1888 the principal
entrance was moved from the five-bay west side to the present sidehall entrance on the south side. The six-panel door is
capped by a delicate segmental fanlight with geometric tracery which also fills the sidelights. The Doric entrance porch
consists of a flat roof with a thin projecting cornice and triglyphs, lacking an entablature. Modillions decorate the underside.
Supporting the roof are reeded side timbers supported by round columns and square attached pilasters. Above the entrance is
a flat-roofed rectangular bay window containing 1/1 windows with recessed panels below. The remaining windows contain
6/6 sash with molded surrounds and blinds.
The wooden spindle fence in front of the house displays simple posts capped by balls..
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building and
the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
According to Tplles, the Bott-Fabens House may be the oldest surviving residence on Chestnut Street and may predate 1800,
although this has not been firmly documented. The house may have been built before Chestnut Street was laid out in 1796.
The first owner was saddler, James B. Bott although it is not clear if he ever lived here. Bott emigrated from Tudbury,
England in 1768 and established a shop on Essex Street constructing fancy carriages. (About 1783 he constructed a house
nearby at 5 Botts Court for his own use). The Chestnut Street building seems to have served as a multi-family residence in its
early years. Mjss Mary Ome Pickering was bom in the house in 1805. The Prescott family lived here from about 1825 to
1JJB2 (Wiswall, p. 210). For about 16 months in 1846 and 1847, while serving as surveyor of the Port of Salem and Beverly,
Nathaniel Hawthorne occupied this house with his family (Cousins: 81). Dr. David Coggin lived in the house from 18811887. Augustus and Benjamin Fabens purchased the building in 1888 and converted it to a single-family house. They also
inoved the entrance from the west elevation to the south end. The Fabens family continued to own the property until 1905.
The Misses Lathrop occupied the house from 1924 until at least 1939 (Wiswall). Later residents included Oliver and Ann
Goodell, Mrs. Rebecca Bradley and Mrs. Lillian Phillips and Jacqueline Frederickson.
B I B L I O G R A P H Y and/or R E F E R E N C E S
Cousins, Frank and Phil M . Riley. The Colonial Architecture of Salem. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1919.
Hopkins, G . M . Atlas of Salem. Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
"House Report for 5 Botts Court, Prepared for Historic Salem, Inc. [no date].
Mclntyre, Henry C.E. Map of the City of Salem. Philadelphia: 1851.
Richards, L.J. Atlas of the City of Salem. Massachusetts.
Salem City Directories, 1836-1970.
Sanborn Insurance Maps, 1890, 1906, 1950, 1957, 1965, 1970. [Massachusetts State Library].
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company. Atlas of the Citv of Salem. Massachusetts. Boston: 1911.
Wiswall, Richard Hall and Henry W. Belknap. "Notes on the Building of Chestnut Street", EIHC 75 (July 1939): 227.
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attached a completed
Natip&alJRegister
Criteria
Statement form.
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
SALEM
18 CHESTNUT ST
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
SAL.1035
SAL.HJ, SAL.HU
Supplemental photograph by Patti Kelleher, Salem Department of Planning & Community Development, March 2017
RECEIVED
JUN 20 2017
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Continuation sheet 1
�UDT%rr
2. T o w n
SION
ston
Street
tat to:
Name
£r
/ &
'rrP™ ~
-
-X075^^
Original Use
kh the
ide)
^
.
Present Use
P r e s e n t Owner
D a t e ^ ^
ion
/ f ^ S t y l e -/JcUn
Source o f Date
leteriorated
4.
FOUNDATION/BASEMENT:
1 2(3*4
ATTACHMENTS:
L i t t l e None
S I T E endangered by_
DESCRIPTION
Material:
H i g h /Regular" L o w
B r i c k Stone
ROOF:
Center * End
CHIMNEYS/T 2 3 4
Wings E l l Shed
PORCHES:(l 2 3 4(
Cluster
Gable E n d : /'Front/Side
Grillwork
''Jlj-^
Double F e a t u r e s :
Quoins
Irregular
Recessed
Symmetrical/Asymmetrical
Windows: Spacing: ( R e g u l a r / i r r e g u l a r
Corners^^uin^-Pilasters
Elaborate
Simple/Complex
Portico";Balcony
Entrance:(^Front/Side ' Centered
Other
Dependency
Ridge G a m b r e l F l a t ( H i g ^ M a n s a r d
Tower C u p o l a D o r m e r windows
Balustrade
FACADE:
K>4
Moved A l t e r e d
W A L L COVER:fWoodT
STORTES:
?>
Architect
h/City
I M P O R T A N C E of site to a r e a f Great
c^C
<
1
Simple/Complex
Ornament
C^^e
Identical/Varied
Obscured
LANDSCAPING
OUTBUILDINGS
5. Indicate location of s t r u c t u r e on map below
6. Footage of s t r u c t u r e f r o m street
'
P r o p e r t y has 'C Q.' feet frontage on street
Recorder
*
4
It
>7lCiJ~ _5 S
For
Photo
MAY
NOTE:
1968
R e c o r d e r should obtain written p e r m i s s i o n f r o m C o m m i s s i o n o r sponsoring o r g a n i zation before using this f o r m .
(See R e v e r s e Side)
FORM - MHCB - 1 0M-6-66-94301 7
�F O R U S E W I T H I M P O R T A N T S T R U C T U R E S (Indicate any i n t e r i o r features of note)
Fireplace
Stairway
Other
G I V E A B R I E F D E S C R I P T I O N O F HISTORIC I M P O R T A N C E O F SITE (Refer and elaborate
on theme c i r c l e d on front of form)
&7&Jc
i€jDpt^y^L
f
flhJZ
R E F E R E N C E (Where was this information obtained?
S^Jkx^
-
r % a ^ c ^
What book, r e c o r d s , e t c . )
BIBLIOGRAPHY
O r i g i n a l Owner:
Deed Information:
Book N u m b e r
Page
,
R e g i s t r y of Deeds
)
�M H C INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
MHC Inventory scanning project, 2008-2010
M A C R I S No. Sftl-'
t^^~
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Chestnut Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
18 Chestnut Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
James B. Bott
c. 1800
Home of
Nathaniel Hawthorne
1846-1847
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1800, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
MACRIS, Tolles
Language
A language of the resource
English
18
1800
2018
B.
Bott
Chestnut
circa
Hawthorne
History
House
James
Massachusetts
Nathaniel
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/f03b08bb44bf2f1d191426ca02bd8abd.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=jfG7fXBKo-FZJEn8AX-rdkHD7-LBUkOuO8Y7fHHo3rZvKPDLUgnXJ-SfnReaI6ikXhheOfVcv-OhIKeMOqv58bG8Ro7MIaq2GBGEZvIuLweOOBxIhh0rS092bY4qTMqytdQ-Ani4scIDJMnNfbITZPUCVvCl9-kRdnP0ahK7r26HNxhWzK0GYWmfnw7BT5WwBfKjp0mlkDkJE-KxWaP1XhaCtmoGBBC3fy00VakCWy5EzrxhZC0ymobBvYcOJxAWvJulVJJf1CbGRbso6dVM8lp3jDSS8nUvZOGBvc-fKzWW1waI3Yc1ygNfreU6Mfm70V%7EpdXevE6UWsqvlEluBhA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
de41c809228e708b57eb0948051d987d
PDF Text
Text
112 Bay View Avenue
Built for
Fidelia & Matthew Robson
Currier
c. 1885
Research Provided by
Ryan Conary
September 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�Chain of Title, 112 Bayview Avenue, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded Grantor(s)
July 7, 1885 Seward N. Proctor of Lowell
Matthew Robson & Fidelia E.
Robson, husband & wife, of
May 4, 1909 Salem
T. Henry Gilbert & Benjamin
May 2, 1910 P. H. Gilbert
Grantee(s)
Consideration
Fidelia E. Robson, wife of
Matthew Robson of Salem
Document Book or Vol. Page
$1 Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Notes
1153
31 "lot of land" conveyed
T. Henry Gilbert & Benjamin
P. H. Gilbert of Salem
"one dollar and
other valuable
considerations paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
1962
"a certain parcel of
land with the buildings
thereon situated"
342 conveyed
Mary A. Teague of Lowell
"one dollar and
other valuable
consideration paid"
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2015
188
$5,225 Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2297
373
Charles M. Williams & James
J. Kerwin of Lowell, executors
of the last will of Mary A.
June 7, 1915 Teague late of Lowell
George W. Teague of Lowell
May 29, 1919 George W. Teague
Source
Walter J. Bagshaw of Lowell
"consideration paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2414
546
February 1, 1927 Walter J. Bagshaw
Francis I. Hardy of Salem
"consideration paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2711
201
August 14, 1928 Francis I. Hardy
Margaret E. Coffey of Salem
"consideration paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2775
229
Mary G. Coffey of Salem
"consideration paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
3159
405
Margaret F. Coffey & Mildred
A. Coffey of Salem
"consideration paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
4351
179
Edward A. Coffey of Salem
NA
1343
386 Docket #293,477
Edward A. Coffey & Margaret
H. Coffey, husband & wife, of
Salem
"consideration paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
5627
446
Carroll E. Haseltine Jr. &
Florence A. Haseltine,
husband & wife, of
Middletown, CT
"consideration paid" Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
5635
288
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6049
751
$660,000 Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
36075
213
July 1, 1930 Margaret E. Coffey, widow
March 5, 1957 Mary G. Coffey
Mildred J. Coffey a/k/a
August 22, 1967 Mildred A. Coffey
August 4, 1969 Edward A. Coffey
Edward A. Coffey & Margaret
September 5, 1969H. Coffey
Carroll E. Haseltine Jr. of
March 11, 1974 Salem
Essex Probate and Family Court Will
Carroll E. Haseltine Jr. &
Naoma H. Haseltine, husband
& wife
less than $100.00
Naoma H. Boylston & Paula L.
Howe of Salem, as devisees
under the will of Naoma
August 3, 2017 Haseltine
George H. Carey Jr.
��������Inventory No:
SAL.3487
Historic Name:
Robson House
Common Name:
Address:
112 Bay View Ave
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Salem Willows
Local No:
44-122
Year Constructed:
c 1885
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Queen Anne
Use(s):
Secondary Dwelling House; Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture; Recreation
Area(s):
SAL.GZ: Salem Neck and Winter Island
SAL.HA: Salem Willows Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (03/25/1994)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood Shingle
Foundation: Brick; Granite
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
The MACRIS database and scanned files are highly dynamic; new information is added daily and both database
records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
note that there may be a considerable lag time between the receipt of new or updated records by MHC and the
appearance of related information in MACRIS. Users should also note that not all source materials for the MACRIS
database are made available as scanned images. Users may consult the records, files and maps available in MHC's
public research area at its offices at the State Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, open M-F, 9-5.
Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Sunday, July 29, 2018 at 1:30: PM
�FORM B - BUILDING
AREA
z
1\
6 2 ,
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
8 0 BOYLSTON STREET
BOSTON, MA 02116
FORM NO,
HA
e s s l 12 Bay V i e w A v e
:oric Name R o b s o n H o u s e
Present
Residential
Original R e s i d e n t i a l
IPTION
c. 1885
Ce
Building
Permit
Queen Anne
tect
Sketch Map: Draw map showing property's location-JAHj^S^
Exterior Wall Fabric
in relation to nearest cross streets and/or
geographical features. Indicate a l l buildings
Outbuildings
between inventoried property and nearest
intersection(s).
Indicate north
wood
shingles
Major Alterations (with dates)
Condition
Excellent
Date
Moved
Acreage
L e s s t h a n one
Setting
On s h o r e l i n e
i n extremely
dense 19th c e n t u r y r e s i d e n t i a l
resort
area
UTM REFERENCE
USGS QUADRANGLE
Recorded by N o r t h f i e l d s
Associates
Organizationg
^
SCALE
Date
a 2p
m
P
May 1989
1
a
T
l
Preservation
n
g
n p
0
t
�SAi-.34.1
NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA STATEMENT ( i f applicable)
L o c a t e d w i t h i n t h e recommended Salem W i l l o w s H i s t o r i c
e l i g i b l e u n d e r C r i t e r i a A and C.
District,
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE Describe important architectural features and evaluate in terms of
other buildings within the community.
112 B a y V i e w A v e n u e i s o n e o f t h e b e t t e r d e t a i l e d a n d m o r e
s u b s t a n t i a l e x a m p l e s o f t h e Queen Anne s t y l e f o u n d i n t h e S a l e m
Willows area.
I t i s a 2 1/2 s t o r y , t w o - b a y h o u s e w i t h a f r o n t
gable.
At the f a c a d e i s a s e c o n d - s t o r y bay c o n t a i n e d b e n e a t h a
lower, bracketed gable with lunette.
The w r a p a r o u n d p o r c h
features
a c o n i c a l - r o o f e d s e c o n d - s t o r y tower (southeast c o r n e r ) , a fretwork
b a l u s t r a d e and s p i n d l e f r i e z e .
The s a s h t h r o u g h o u t t h e h o u s e
varies (20/2, 16/2, 15/1, 25/2).
Other f e a t u r e s i n c l u d e a window
w i t h a t r i a n g u l a r cap ( f a c a d e ) , a g a b l e d dormer w i t h b e v e l e d and
b r a c k e t e d c o r n e r s ( e a s t e l e v a t i o n ) , and two e y e l i d d o r m e r s
(west
elevation).
The f o u n d a t i o n i s r o u g h g r a n i t e .
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE Explain the r o l e owners played in local or state history and how the
building relates to the development of the community.
T h i s house i s c h a r a c t e r i s t i c of the development o f Salem
W i l l o w s w i t h summer c o t t a g e s d u r i n g t h e l a t e 1 9 t h a n d e a r l y 2 0 t h
centuries.
T h i s l o t was p u r c h a s e d b y F i d e l i a R o b s o n f o r $ 1 . 0 0 i n
J u l y of 1885.
I n O c t o b e r o f 1885 M a t t h e w R o b s o n r e q u e s t e d a
b u i l d i n g p e r m i t f o r a 1 1/2 s t o r y p i t c h r o o f e d d w e l l i n g o n t h i s
street.
The h o u s e was s t i l l o w n e d b y F i d e l i a R o b s o n i n 1 8 9 7 .
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Essex County R e g i s t r y
H o p k i n s , G. M. A t l a s o f S a l e m . P h i l a d e l p h i a , 1874
R i c h a r d s , A t l a s o f S a l e m , 1897
Salem B u i l d i n g P e r m i t s
8/85
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bay View Avenue
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
112 Bay View Avenue, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Fidelia & Matthew Robson
Currier
c. 1885
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1885, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Ryan Conary
Language
A language of the resource
English
112
1885
2018
Avenue
Bay
circa
Fidelia
History
House
Massachusetts
Matthew
Robson
Salem
View
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/3e6c87ae911665240aa27e2d4ad45d9f.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=uvCtybw6jUCYroz8n0uq8jpwq%7EmtcQKMv9YX61Y5YGGmV9TnW-PbUPhSHvjqybqAt%7EZ45eIyFK8pv7bMXhl1wth2VyHO9c952aucMrfsyrydIIHQQSNrMAiPQwFfCFdo21CW%7EpGGLrolepckpJBx61fN88UfvcM9Ac96GazdULco5vtmkvoFTOBG91GGkVkxqLC8A-lce7PMyGjIja%7Eos2STXGun9ek0JBD8WiZIzVz1FRzhxwS8Y7XyCwCgyFBIg5ltJC-8SjG5zfUZwwSXesPibdBY91IVOimo8guiv-u8Jqf%7ESyNFpGJmAjMqcg1KFQNFVN5XwgPbDK39Ng2GSg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
27f2426e6725c01f291bd185defb06c5
PDF Text
Text
4 Cousins Street
Built for
Mary and J. Frank Boynton
Clothier
1894
Rebuilt 1910
Researched and written by Jen Ratliff
September 2018
Historic Salem Inc,
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2018
�View of 4 Cousins Street, 2011 (Redfin)
Cousins Street
The land now known as Cousins Street was the last large plot in the Historic Derby
Street Neighborhood to be developed. The area previously housed the India Manufacturing
Company, which operated a jute mill. Jute is a fiber created from the inside bark of a plant,
native to India, that was commonly used to manufacture bags for bailing cotton.1 The jute mill,
Salem’s second, was built in 1867 on land known as the “Old English Estate,” a reference to
1
MACRIS, SAL.3347
�Phillip and Mary English, accused during the Salem Witchcraft Trials of 1692. 2 The land around
the India Manufacturing Company was sold off in plots by the estate of David Nevins in May
1892. By September 1893, the name Cousins Street appears listed in deeds for the area.3 The
name Cousins, is in homage to well-known Salemite, Frank Cousins, a local photographer and
owner of Frank Cousins Bee-Hive, a souvenir shop in Salem’s downtown.
Mary and Frank Boynton purchased the lot on Cousins Street in 1894 from George
Pitman and Charles Brown, who had acquired the land and assisted in the designation of
Cousins Street, following the plots separation from the adjacent jute mill. The Boynton’s never
lived in the home at 4 Cousins Street but resided on Lafayette Street. It is likely that the
Boynton’s purchased the property on Cousins Street as an investment. Between 1890 and 1910,
Salem’s population increased by 42%. This spike led many Salemites and local developers to
build multi-family tenement homes to accommodate the surge of immigrants settling in Salem.4
In the early 20th century, the Historic Derby Street Neighborhood was predominantly
Polish. Attracted to job opportunities in the city’s mills and factories, Polish immigrants began
arriving in Salem around 1890 and by 1911, Poles comprised about 8% of the city’s overall
population. Religion played a strong role in the Polish community and as the number of Polish
Catholics in Salem grew, the need for a permanent house of worship became apparent. Herbert
Street and Union Street became the heart of the Polish Catholic presence in the city, after the
opening of St. John the Baptist Church, a parochial school, convent, and rectory. St. John the
2
Phillip and Mary English avoided execution by escaping from jail and finding refuge in New York. They later
returned to Salem to find their estate had been pillaged by Sheriff Corwin. Phillip sought reparations but only
received £260 of the estimated £1,183 lost.
3
MACRIS, SAL.3360
4
MACRIS, SAL.3270
�Baptist’s Reverend John Czubek was a central figure in this community, marrying or baptizing
many of Salem’s Poles. The new church increased the settlement of Polish immigrants in the
neighborhood and multiple single-family homes were converted or replaced with multi-family
tenements to house the growing population. This is likely the story of 4 Cousins Street, which
appears to have been built by the Boynton’s in 1894 as a two-family home. In 1910, the home
was replaced with a three-family tenement structure, which still stands today.5 It is likely that
the 1894 foundation and materials were re-used to create the larger home. The home is a
common style of its time and has a striking similarity to a home built at 24-26 Becket Street,
which is dated to c. 1911.
The Boyntons (1894-1911)
Jacob Franklin “Frank” Boynton (1859-1929) was born in Buxton, Maine in May 1859 to
Sarah and Charles Boynton, a merchant. On September 18, 1883, he married the daughter of
Mary and Thomas Waters, Mary A. Waters (1861-unknown) of Salem, Massachusetts. In 1881,
Frank began working in Salem’s clothing industry as a manager for H.B. Wilmot’s. By 1888 he
and another former Wilmot’s manager, Emery E. Kent, owned Kent & Boynton at the previous
H.B. Wilmot’s location, 250-254 Essex Street. The partners opened a second location and
factory of Kent & Boynton in Gloucester, specializing in oil cloth. The business was later
5
This hypothesis is based on evidence exhibited in the included maps, as well as directory listings which begin
showing three families from 1910 onward. The owner of the home was consulted and did not find any evidence of
the third floor being added to the home.
�renamed Cape Ann Clothing Co. and was lost to a fire in 1899 and again in 1912. 6 It appears
that Frank and Mary briefly lived apart in 1900, as Frank is listed as married but living with his
family without Mary in Wakefield, Massachusetts. 7 This separation may have been due to
financial troubles following the Gloucester fire and the failure of a third store for Kent &
Boynton in Newburyport. In 1912, Frank filed for bankruptcy. The Salem location of Kent &
Boynton was sold and replaced with Palmer Clothing House. In 1916, Frank opened another
store in Salem, Boynton’s Clothing Store at 187 Essex Street.8 In 1911, shortly after rebuilding 4
Cousins Street, Mary and Frank sold the home to Mary Ann and John Tyburski for the
remainder of their mortgage, $1,600.9
The Tyburskis (1911-1913)
John Tyburski (1882 – Unknown) was born in Poland on December 27, 1882 to Mary
(Washlek) and Antoni Tyburski. At the age of 13, John immigrated to America, arriving in New
York City prior to Salem. In 1900, John petitioned for U.S. Citizenship citing his brother, Josef
(Joseph) Tyburski, of Herbert Street and Franciszek (Frank) Soboczinski of Webb Street as his
6
The Clothier and Furnisher, Volume 89, Pg. 98, 1916, The Boston Globe
(Boston, Massachusetts) 05 Jul 1899, Wed • Other Editions • Page 6, The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) 12
Feb 1909, Fri Page 5
7
Year: 1900; Census Place: Wakefield, Middlesex, Massachusetts; Page: 14; Enumeration District: 0972; FHL
microfilm: 1240667
8
According to Clothiers' and Haberdashers' Weekly, Volume 10, Pg. 14, 1897 - The Greenwood Street area of
Wakefield was commonly known as Boyntonville, named for Frank’s parents, considered to be pioneers of the
area.
9
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 2067:468
�witnesses.10 In 1908, John was married by Reverend John Czubek to Mary Jarocz, the daughter
of Josefa (née Lozdowska) and Mikolajah Jarocz, also from Poland.11 After living with John’s
family on Herbert Street, the couple purchased 4 Cousins Street in 1911, assuming the
remaining $1,600 mortgage of the Boyntons. When they sold the home only two years later,
they passed on a higher mortgage of $2,400.12 It is possible that this additional mortgage was
used to complete the renovation work begun by the Boyntons.
The Zbyszynskis (1913-1978)
Henryk “Henry” Zbyszynski (1882 – 1946) was born in Poland in 1882, to Petronela
(née Turowska) and Francis Zbyszynski. In 1905, he immigrated to the United States and
married Stefania Kozakiewicz (1885-1974), the daughter of Michalina (née Leczczynska) and
Michael Kozakiewicz. The couple was married at St. John the Baptist Church, in Salem, by Rev.
John Czubek on May 20, 1907.13 Together the couple had four children, Zenon (1909-1978),
Othelia “Tilly” (1911-Unknown), Theodosia (1913-1990), and Irene (1915-2009.) In 1913, Henry
and Stefania bought the home at 4 Cousins Street from the Tyburskis, assuming their $2,400
10
According to Salem Maritime National Historic Sites ethnography “In the Heart of Polish Salem,” both Josef
Tyburski and Franciszek Soboczinski were members of St. Joseph’s Polish Society.
National Archives at Boston; Waltham, Massachusetts; ARC Title: Copies of Petitions and Records of Naturalization
in New England Courts, 1939 - ca. 1942; NAI Number: 4752894; Record Group Title: Records of the Immigration
and Naturalization Service, 1787-2004; Record Group Number: RG 85
11
Reference the House History for 14 Herbert Street and In the Heart of Polish Salem for more information on
Joseph Czubek.
New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; Massachusetts Vital Records, 1911–1915
12
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 2202:57
13
New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; Massachusetts Vital Records, 1911–1915
�mortgage. 14 While living in the home, Henry worked primarily in the leather industry and later
as salesman. Around 1936, Henry opened a grocery store at 5 ½ Becket Avenue. 15 Stefania
worked in the shop with her husband, while the children began working in local factories as
teenagers. Shortly after opening the grocery store, Stefania and Henry Zbyszynski moved into
the adjoining house at 5 Becket Avenue. They continued to own and rent units in 4 Cousins
Street, moving back into the home in 1948. Their son, Zenon continuously occupied one of the
units with his wife Ann and when Henry died in 1947, Stefania moved in with them. Overall the
Zbyszynskis owned 4 Cousins Street for sixty-five years, the longest occupants in the home’s
history. In 1978, the home was sold to William Little, following the death of Zenon Zbyszynski.
After 1978, the home went through a series of owners and foreclosures, falling into
disrepair. In 2015, 4 Cousins Street was purchased by Keith Crook (b. 1984) a marketing
specialist, and Oliver Kempf (b. 1990), an engineer. The couple spent the next few years
updating and restoring the three-family home, to include adding solar panels. During this
process, they discovered shoes hidden within a wall, a traditional practice meant to bring
protection and good luck to a home.16 The couple also unearthed items from the home’s privy
pit, including tea cups, pottery fragments, and medicine bottles. 17
14
Othelia also appears as Oliya in records.
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 2202:57
15
Also listed as 74 Derby Street
16
Shoes were left undisturbed in the first floor, interior wall, next to the bathroom.
17
The privy pit dates c. 1894-1905, when Salem adopted city-wide trash pick-up.
�Buyer
Years of
Ownership
1893-1894
Number
of Years
<1
1894-1911
17
Mary Ann Tyburski
John Tyburski
1911-1913
2
Henryk and Stefania
Zbyszynski
1913-1978
65
William D. Little
John P. Keane, Jr.
Andrew T. Hingson
Eric D. Jackson
Joanne Y. Jackson
John J. Suldenski
1978
1978-1981
1981-1982
1982-1893
<1
4
<1
9
1983-1992
9
Daniel T. Curtin
Four Cousins Realty
Trust
Robert J. O’Grady
Thomas E. Lawlor
(a.k.a. Lawler)
Yvonne Greene
Federal National
Mortgage Association
Anoniou Aristides
Keith Crook
Oliver Kempf
1992-1995
3
1995-2002
2002-2011
7
9
2011-2012
2012-2015
2015-Present
(As of 2018)
George W. Pitman
Etta M. Pitman
Charles W. Brown
Mary A. Boynton
Jacob Frank Boynton
Purchase Price
“One dollar
and other
considerations”
“One dollar
and other
considerations”
“One dollar
and other
considerations”
“One dollar
and other
considerations”
$4,500
$15,000
$57,000
$40,000
$5,000
$53,582
Document
Referenced
Deed 1395:525
Deed 1407:214
Notes
1345:63 (Plan)
Owned in conjunction with land between Webb and
English streets. References Cousins Street
$2,800 mortgage with Salem Savings Bank
Never listed as occupying the home
Deed 2067:468
$1,600 previous mortgage remainder
Deed 2202:57
$2,400 previous mortgage remainder
Henryk and Stefania a.k.a. Henry and Stephanie
Deed 6445:443
Deed 6452:739
Deed 6789:574
Deed 7017:366
Deed 8414:507
Mortgaged for $30,000
Foreclosed (Deed 6999:159)
Purchased after property was foreclosed
Deed 11655:170
Assumed responsibility of previous mortgage balance of
$53,582
Foreclosed (Deed 11186:583)
Purchased after property was foreclosed
$117,500
$315,000
Deed 13194:2
Deed 19000:422
Foreclosed (Deed 29980:370)
<1
$223,119
Deed 30336:496
Foreclosure
4
3+
$300,500
$510,000
Deed 31110:526
Deed 34270:508
Purchased after the property was foreclosed.
�Resident
Henry M. Strout
Daniel M. Hersey
William H. Foye
Meader A. Buck
William H. Foye
F.H. Haines
William H. Foye
F.H. Haines
David J. Hard
C.H. Gillis
C.H. Gillis
James Curran
C.H. Gillis
P.J. Curran
Mrs. C. Clark
J. Tyburski
J. Callahan
Mrs. C. Clark
E.A. Montgomery
J. Callahan
Mrs. C. Clark
Henry C. Zbyszynski
J. Callahan
Mrs. C. Clark
Henry C. Zbyszynski
A. Danda
Mrs. C. Clark
Henry C. Zbyszynski
Mrs. C. Balcomb
Mrs. C. Clark
Henry C. Zbyszynski
Mrs. C. Balcomb
Miss F. Clark
Directory
Year
1895
Notes
1897
1899-1901
1898 directory unavailable
1903-1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
Mrs. C. Clark resides in the house until 1924. (14
years)
1911
John and Mary Tyburski
1912
1913
1914-1915
1916-1924
1926
First listing for Zbyszynski
�John J. Clark
Ellery B. Hendricks
Benjamin LeVasseur
Henry C. Zbyszynski
Dennis F. Lawlor
Frank Tobin
Henry C. Zbyszynski
Joseph Bajkiewicz
Oliver F. Davidson
Henry Zbyszynski
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Fred Harrison
Henry Zbyszynski
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Henry Zbyszynski
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
John J. Stankiewicz
Chester Kobuczwiski
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Raymond E. DesRosiers
Chester Kobuczwiski
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Vacant
Chester Kobuczwiski
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Frederick Kelliher
Ernest A. Dempsey
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Frederick Kelliher
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Frederick Kelliher
Everette E. Saunders
Zenon R. Zbyszynski
Frederick Kelliher
Anthony Lamonte
Stefania and Zenon Zbyszynski
Anthony Lamonte
Zenon and Stefania Zbyszynski
and Mrs. Victoria Kozeo
1929
1930-1932
1934
1935
Zenon’s first year appearing in the directory at
this address.
1936
1937
1939
1940
1942-1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1964
The Zbyzynskis resided in the home until 1978
�1874 Salem Atlas
�1897 Salem Atlas
�1911 Salem Atlas
�1890-1903 Salem Atlas (Plate 12)
�1906-1938 Salem Atlas
�Similar construction seen at 24 Becket Street, built c. 1911. (MACRIS: SAL 3270)
�Salem (Mass.). City Documents. 1893.
�Clothiers' and Haberdashers' Weekly, Volume 10, Pg. 14, 1897
�The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) 12 Feb 1909, Fri Page 5
�The Boston Globe
(Boston, Massachusetts)
04 Dec 1912, Wed • Main Edition • Page 8
The Clothier and Furnisher, Volume 89, Pg. 98, 1916
�Massachusetts Grand Lodge of Masons Membership Cards 1733–1990. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
�Palmer Clothing House, 250 Essex Street. c. 1912. Previously the home of Kent & Boynton.
(Salem State University Archives and Special Collections)
�The Boston Globe
(Boston, Massachusetts)
19 Feb 1929, Tue • Main Edition • Page 13
�History of 5 Becket Avenue, which housed Zbyszynski’s grocery store. (MACRIS Sal.3301)
�Find A Grave, memorial page for Henry Zbyszynski (22 Oct 1882–1946), Find A Grave Memorial no. 82112501, citing Saint Mary's Cemetery, Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by Kathy Krysiak (contributor 46917874).
�The Boston Globe
(Boston, Massachusetts)
02 Feb 1992, Sun • Page 167
�Restoration: before (2015) and after (2018) by Keith Crook and Oliver Kempf.
��������������������������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Cousins Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
4 Cousins Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Joseph “Frank” & Mary Boynton
Clothier: Kent & Boynton; Cape Ann Clothing Co.
1894; rebuilt 1910
Built on the former estate of
Philip & Mary English (née Hollingsworth)
Maritime Merchant & Salem Selectman
Accused of Witchcraft, 1692
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1894, 1910, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Jen Ratliff
Language
A language of the resource
English
1894
1910
2018
4
Boynton
Cousins
English
Frank
History
Hollingsworth
House
Joseph
Mary
Massachusetts
Philip
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/fe979683422b03bab793646a9baecd42.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=ni133Tu7OOXx13e-XnIR3I%7EQBd8gu2ksF24SCgTWL%7EU%7EDHFC8HBQB7C7SYjOlqyKUEIadMqKrGzfWsssQnDeuuuI2m9wqb0LE5MF7Gxw9CFmD2oOlDGr5TjbhrHLkA2kdV2fAQcTpv30q0Qmr%7Eedl3a90UW6LeS2zuMBWfgJLLYNZBlSqAwI4pHYbtE1-EJNXu4Wnuf8u6LkSKqe87TS2YEMN9Sl3k9PdeBoNIUfh39Y0SZkQRdWKvrwE2ErZjfOPdD-oxBawBCY1RrJE13oHQP9Ry-dp3ocDbmwx5-kO9YXoZTee2CNR0j4d-gJP8w9YugmUU4IlgU4Ry%7ERFhl7VQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
d70b303e28847c15db5d1bdedd589fc1
PDF Text
Text
11 Daniels Street
Built for
the Grafton family
before 1806
Research provided by
Diana Dunlap
September 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�11 Daniels Street, Unit 1 was sold by Christopher M. Coates and Kimberley K. Coates to Paul
Byron Massari and Sara Massari on June 29, 2007. The quitclaim deed is registered in Book
26,984, page 478, and refers to the Master Deed of the 11 Daniels Street Condominium Trust
(see below).
11 Daniels Street, Unit 2 was sold by David Ring of Swampscott to Joseph and Robyn Landry
on September 30, 2004, registered in book 23,444, page 458. The quitclaim deed referenced
the Master Deed of the 11 Daniels Street Condominium Trust.
11 Daniels Street, Unit 1 was sold by David Ring to Christopher M. and Kimberley K. Coates on
September 1, 2004, registered in book 23,340, page 314. The quitclaim deed referenced the
Master Deed of the 11 Daniels Street Condominium Trust (see below).
David Ring, Declarant, submitted the property at 11 Daniels Street under Chapter 183A of the
General Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to form the 11 Daniels Street
Condominium Trust on August 19, 2004, stipulating that the building will contain two condo
units, and registered in book 23,291, page 535. The land of said property is bounded as follows:
northerly by land of now or late of Uszynski, 98.22 feet; easterly by land of now or late of
Churchoski and Sandborn, 38.68 feet; by now or late of Pszeny, 100.67 feet; and by Daniels
Street, 37.11 feet.
Pamela A. Murphy and Erin A. Murphy sold 11 Daniels Street to David Ring on October 23,
2003, registered in book 10,376, page 394. The boundaries of the said property are the same
defined in the 11 Daniels Street Condominium Trust Master Deed. Helen Cichocki died August
20, 2002.
Helen Cichocki granted all right, title, and interest to 11 Daniels Street to Pamela A. Murphy and
Erin A. Murphy of Haverhill on March 6, 1990, “in consideration of $1 Love and Affection,” as
joint tenants with right of survivorship, but retaining full use of the property for her natural life.
The transfer was registered in book 10,376, page 394. The boundaries of the land are the same
sold by the Murphys to David Ring.
Joseph and Alice Cichocki, husband and wife, conveyed 11 Daniels Street to Joseph J. and
Helen Cichocki, husband and wife, on July 28, 1945, registered in book 3411, page 415. The
boundaries of the land are the same granted by Helen Cichocki to Pamela and Erin Murphy.
Joseph and Alice Cichocki mortgaged 11 Daniels Street to the Salem Savings Bank for $300.00
for one year on May 4, 1926, registered in book 2680, page 227.
Joseph and Alice Cichocki mortgaged the land and buildings at 11 Daniels Street to the Salem
Savings Bank for $2500.00 for one year on August 15, 1925, registered in book 2649, page
249.
�Fremont Czerniawski and Julia Czerniawski granted 11 Daniels Street to Joseph and Alice
Cichocki on August 15, 1925, registered in book 2649, page 248. The dimensions of the land
are the same as that granted to Joseph and Helen Cichocki in 1945.
Fremont and Julia Czerniawski mortgaged 11 Daniels Street to Salem Savings Bank for
$600.00 for one year on February 21, 1921, registered in book 2477, page 248.
Fremont and Julia Czerniawski mortgaged 11 Daniels Street to the Salem Savings Bank for
$1000.00 for one year on February 21, 1921, recorded in book 2477, page 247.
Wladyslaw and Josephine Uszynski granted 11 Daniels Street to Julia Czerniawski on February
21, 1921, registered in book 2477, page 246. The dimensions of the land are the same granted
to Joseph and Alice Cichocki in 1925.
Frank F. Stanley of Swampscott, Trustee of the will of the late Nathaniel F. Goldsmith of Boston,
sold 11 Daniels Street to Wladsyslaw and Josephine Uszynski on November 30, 1920,
registered in book 2469, page 365. The land is defined as bound westerly by Daniels Street 97
feet; southerly by land of L.M. Wright and M.S. Frye, 102 feet; westerly by land of Sanborn and
Rideout, 106 feet; and northerly by land of Wiggin, 95 feet.
Salem Five Cents Savings Bank sold part of the property that became 11 Daniels Street to
Nathaniel F. Goldsmith on July 9, 1885, for $675.00, after George H. Frye defaulted on his
mortgage (see below), registered in book 1154, page 79. The land is defined as bound westerly
by Daniels Street 33 feet, 6.5 inches; southerly by the land of L.M. Wright and M.S. Frye, 102
feet, 6 inches; easterly by land of Sanborn and Rideout, 34 feet, 6 inches; and by land late of
Wiggin, now Goldsmith, 102 feet. The land had been conveyed to Goldsmith by George H. Frye
and Ezra L. Woodbury, excepting the property Goldsmith sold to A, Frank Hitchings.
Salem Five Cents Savings Bank foreclosed on George H. Frye’s mortgage on the property on
June 30, 1885, registered in book 1154, page 79.
Nathaniel F. Goldsmith sold part of the property he had purchased from Ezra L. Woodbury to A.
Frank Hitchings on June 6, 1883, for $750.00, registered in book 1110, page 31. This land was
bound southerly by Goldsmith’s own land; easterly by land of Rideout, northerly by Bentley
Street, and westerly by land of Smalley. This did not become part of the 11 Daniels Street lot.
George H. Frye mortgaged his property on Daniels Street to the Salem Five Cents Savings
Bank for $500.00 on October 19, 1882, registered in book 1093, page 260.
Ezra L. Woodbury, executor of the late Margaret Wiggin, sold the property at 9 Daniels Street,
including a “brick dwelling house and other buildings thereon,” to Nathaniel F. Goldsmith on
April 9, 1881, for $2800.00, registered in book 1055, page 172. The southerly portion of this
�land became part of the 11 Daniels Street lot, as shown above through Goldsmith’s sale of the
northerly portion to A. Frank Hitchings.
John N. Frye sold the same portion of land later mortgaged to the Salem Five Cents Savings
Bank to George Henry Frye, baker, on November 20, 1863, “with the buildings thereon,” for
$900.00, registered in book 658, page 286.
William Allen, mariner, and his wife Mary sold the property to John Nutton Frye, baker, on April
25, 1820, for $400.00, registered in book 223, page 247. The property was bound 33 feet, 6
inches by Daniels Street; 102 feet, 6 inches by the land formerly of Thomas Palfrey; 34 feet, 6
inches by Nathaniel Silsbee’s, formerly the orchard; and 58 feet, 2.5 inches by Peirce Wiggins’
property. As such, it is essentially the same land John N. Frye sold to George Henry Frye in
1863.
Susanna Richardson, widow, sold the property to William Allen on June 26, 1819, for $400.00,
registered in book 223, page 246. She signed the deed with her mark. Two months earlier,
Susanna Richardson conveyed another property on Hardy Street to William Allen “in
consideration of love affection and five dollars.” The property’s boundaries are the same that
William Allen sold to John N. Frye, and the deed states that the land was “assigned and set off
to Robert and Susanna Richardson under a warrant of partition” in 1807.
A committee of Richard Manning, John Harthorn [Hathorne] and John Osgood was appointed
upon the Court of Common Pleas’ determination in September 1806 that Susanna Richardson
should receive the right to “an undivided one-sixth of a dwelling house in said Salem commonly
called Graftons, and the garden and land thereunto belonging, including the northerly part of
what was formerly an orchard belonging to Warwick Palfrey.” The property was bound by
Daniels Street and land belonging to Joseph Waters, the late Samuel Silsbee, the late Rev.
James Deiman [Diman or Diamond], and the late Thomas Palfrey. The warrant was witnessed
by Timothy Pickering, Esq., on October 6, 1806. On December 24, 1806, the court divided
one-sixth of the “lands and tenements” to “said Richardson and Susanna his wife” and
described boundaries that match Susanna Richardson’s conveyance to William Allen. The
warrant is registered in book 181, page 235.
On March 31, 1789, an indenture was formed to create a “joint property with right of
survivorship” between Susanna, Mary, and Anne Grafton, singlewomen of Salem, and Jonathan
Gardner, merchant of Salem to act as Trustee. The property was left to Susanna, Mary, and
Anne by their deceased father, Joseph Grafton. The property described was large, with two
dwelling houses, and bordered Main [Essex] Street. Susanna Grafton may or may not be the
same person as Susanna Richardson. The creation of the trust was registered in book 149,
page 231.
On August 28, 1729, Joseph Grafton sold a parcel of land in Salem to “my brother William
Grafton sailmaker” for 130 pounds in Province Bills (Massachusetts currency), registered in
�book 52, page 82. The land was bound by “the lane of highway” and by land “formerly of Walter
Palfrey,” and included a house and barn. Without further research on the Grafton family and
their neighbors in the 18th century, it is not possible to know for sure whether part of this
property came down to Susanna Richardson and thus to the 11 Daniels Street plot.
�Inventory No:
SAL.2620
Historic Name:
Common Name:
Address:
11 Daniels St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Derby Street
Local No:
35-384
Year Constructed:
r 1775
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Georgian
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture; Industry
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Aluminum Siding; Wood
Foundation: Granite; Stone, Cut
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
The MACRIS database and scanned files are highly dynamic; new information is added daily and both database
records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
note that there may be a considerable lag time between the receipt of new or updated records by MHC and the
appearance of related information in MACRIS. Users should also note that not all source materials for the MACRIS
database are made available as scanned images. Users may consult the records, files and maps available in MHC's
public research area at its offices at the State Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, open M-F, 9-5.
Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Monday, September 17, 2018 at 1:19: PM
�AREA
F R NO.
OM
35
FORM B - BUILDING -
2?<i
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION .
80 BOYLSTON STREET', • BOSTON, MA Q2116
Salem
1 Daniels Street
1
cNm
ae
resent
iginal
Residential
Residential
RIPTIOl/:
c.
ce
"KTHM P
SEC A
S o property'.s location ia relation
hw
to nearest cross streets and/or
geographical features. Indicate
all buildings between inventoried
property and nearest intersection.
Indicate north.
gSS^y
1760-90
observation.
"Sty 1 e Georgian
Architect
Exterior wall fabric Aluminum Siding
t
Outbuildings^
ST-
Major alterations (with dates)_
e a s t end a d d i t i o n s
Date
Moved
Approx. acreage Less than one acre
yA NIFJL S
STSetting
Recorded by
Debra H i l b e r t
Organization
Salejn FJ^nnlag Department
Date
Mav. 1986
Residential
.
(Staple additional sheets here)
�(
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE (Describe important architectural features and
evaluate i n terms of other buildings within the community.)
I n form and l e v e l o f d e t a i l i n g , t h i s g a m b r e l - r o o f e d s t r u c t u r e i s s i m i l a r
t o many l a t e 1 8 t h / e a r l y 1 9 t h c e n t u r y r e s i d e n c e s i n t h e Derby S t r e e t
area.
The house i s o r i e n t e d s o u t h w i t h a 3-bay s y m m e t r i c a l l y a r r a n g e d
facade and a c e n t e r e n t r y s e t w i t h i n a 2 - s t o r y pedimented p r o j e c t i o n .
Other elements i n c l u d e t h e g r a n i t e f o u n d a t i o n , V i c t o r i a n doorhood, and
massive c e n t r a l • c h i m n e y . The f l u s h r o o f eaves & placement of the second
s t o r y windows c l o s e t o t h e r o o f l i n e a r e t y p i c a l f e a t u r e s f o r a house o f
this period.
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE (Explain the role owners played i n local or state.
history and how the building relates to the development of the community.)
The e a r l y h i s t o r y o f t h i s house i s u n c l e a r .
I t may i n f a c t be a
•
d w e l l i n g r e f e r e d t o i n a 1796 deed when copper Stephen Smith s o l d t h i s
p r o p e r t y t o m a r i n e r Thomas W i l l i a m s .
A l a t e r deed, however, o f 1819
when Susannah R i c h a r d s o n s o l d the l o t t o m a r i n e r W i l l i a m A l i e n makes no
mention of a b u i l d i n g .
I n 1822, A l l e n and h i s w i f e s o l d t h e l a n d t o
baker John N . F r y e .
A mortgage deed of 1824 makes d e f i n i t e mention o f a
d w e l l i n g house, a bakehouse, and o t h e r b u i l d i n g s on t h i s s i t e .
George
• H . F r y e , a l s o a baker and perhaps J o h n ' s s o n , was l i v i n g here i n 1874.
W h i l e i t seems c e r t a i n t h a t t h i s b u i l d i n g was l o c a t e d i n i t s p r e s e n t
s i t e by .1824, i t i s unknown whether the house s t a n d s on i t s o r i g i n a l
location.
The l o t has e a r l y a s s o c i a t i o n s w i t h S a i e m ' s m a r i t i m e h i s t o r y ,
but f a r much of the 1 9 t h c e n t u r y , i t was connected w i t h the b a k i n g
trade.
L i k e many-Derby S t r e e t area' s t r u c t u r e s , 11 D a n i e l s S t r e e t s e r v e d
an elememt o f S a l e m ' s w o r k i n g - c l a s s p o p u l a t i o n .
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES (name of publication, author, date and publisher).
1837, 1851 Salem D i r e c t o r i e s
Essex County R e g i s t r y o f Deeds Book 1 6 3 / L e a f 6, Book 1 7 3 / L e a f 106, Book.
1 7 7 / L e a f 252, Book 1 8 1 / L e a f 234, Book "223/Leaf 2 4 6 - 7 , Book 2 3 4 / L e a f
1MQ-
7/82
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Daniels Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
11 Daniels Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
the Grafton family
before 1806
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
before 1806, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Diana Dunlap
Language
A language of the resource
English
11
1806
2018
before
Daniels
Grafton
History
House
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/c11eca7031d82be9563e75031a0ed1ea.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=Q8oQpmC6Wr3cdpm8s8sd9kZlmNAPj38UHZhlJE0uo61SPvRFSU-bEAXM1lz3ogWbnABqdeDL8sYP7EdNz1A0VdYHjlN%7E7oK3hHtKMn24Y0d-hZcEKSrA8GRWrZgh-56vWeZSGGMVBEiu0If5gDjRiCpPt9NKMQJEGE69IRMB4D6eHZQP6tO-IN9YhP9HAATJ%7EyZp6cTEEQqDXX7A6bhXNU%7EGnVXHGqZJ-KvEyg1zko%7Ea8eGuKrVpPgrK00cTT4ZEerONpQPwDSW4w%7E23jdjMGCaRaR235U1Sb2UQ90Iw16UVOq6sSYMcRA3Es4e-q8oNou%7EqWPzSwE3TBzp8MzAsDw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
7dc914e3ebe4164750cbdf52913866f5
PDF Text
Text
166-168 Bridge Street
Built for
Ezra Woodbury
Carpenter
& his wife Mary Knight
1877
Research & Writing Provided by
Robert Booth
September 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
����������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Bridge Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
166-168 Bridge Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Ezra Woodbury
Carpenter
& his wife Mary Knight
1877
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1877, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
166
168
1877
2018
Bridge
Ezra
History
House
Knight
Mary
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
Woodbury
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/9bbe99f97c0a1650c24c8ecb2e5c8bd9.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=WNSPflfvZaDH0Ihc-8n71Wmm1T0EVvLD%7Ehj%7EjTc1B9C59uKSi4h1PbCteNUjgsBgUkl2cyh54nMbW-TIvIFRvjsSJwDwhFi2BAWZHTO4cU%7EyjPoSBBfoMKulhjJfEAwA6RKVF%7EwelhbV66EIXoaSaWFcveyB78eNR7AuBOngVjNOrTSJZBUcQbr1Ul4QL1k1GkvlQ-R9y0mObeecXIorZTQbcGlljuAD5qMGMLpQ-oLOXrYR0zSj2Wp9kIIZq3APZymE87jh7qWd6ZrHGVrg4%7E2db9r2wJViGF2OYhhPi15%7EARXMRJnJMwHAV%7E636p6LGYpOplXyAWE-3648iv1p8g__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
196aefafdb7080233168db4748ebf387
PDF Text
Text
17 ½ River Street
Built for
Ann McMahon
Widow
of County Clare Ireland
1884
August 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�From HSI House History for 17 River Street by Joyce King, 1983
1858 Sept. 1 - The heirs of Susan Marston sold the dwelling house
and land to Thomas Perkins.
Mr. Perkins was a wealthy merchant
having his residence at 124 Federal St.
The real estate assessed
to_ Mr . Perkins was: 124 Federal St. valued at $3,000; Brick store
house $400; 7 Ash st. $2,000; 10 Lynn st. $1,000; 17 River St. $600;
21 North st. and a lot of land on Walter St. no value given.
1860 census
James Lawrence
II
Hannah
II
John
2nd family
James Shortell
II
Mary
II
Anna
II
Ellen
"
Thomas
age 25 currier
II
24
II
1
II
II
II
II
II
29 currier
28
5
4
2
1866 tax
Occupant
Michael Kenney
born Ire.
II
II
II
Mass.
II
Mass.
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Owner
Thomas Perkins
house $350
land
35 0
1869 July 6 - Thomas Perkins sold the dwelline; house and land to
Ann McMahon.
"The same purchased by Perkins except a jog piece
15 1 X 25 1 sold to Mary Jackson et al."
�From HSI House History for 17 River Street by Joyce King, 1983
h
'
(book 776 page 162)
1870 census
Michael McMahon
II
John
II
Bridget
II
Ann
2nd family
Henry McGee
Margaret II
II
William
Margaret II
Mary Ann 11
age 35 laborer
II
25 currier
'
II
20
II
66 keeps house
II
II
II
II
11
30 butcher
28
9 months
2
4
born Ire •. (County Clare:
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Mass.
11
II
II
II
1872 tax
Occupant
Michael McMahon
Patrick Sullivan
John Mct-iabo n
•
Owner
Ann McMahon
house $900
land
600
�From HSI House History for 17 River Street by Joyce King, 1983
1880 census
Michael Boyle
II
Anna
II
Bessie
II
Charles
II
Louisa
2nd family
John McCabe
II
Anne
William 11
1884 August 4 - John
age 40 currier
II
25 keeps house
II
4 daughter
II
3 son
II
1 daughter
II
II
II
11
24 plumber
22 keeps house
4 son
McMeahon" was
born Ire.
II
Nova Scotia
II
Mass.
II
II
II
II
II
II
N.H.
Mass.
II
II
granted a building permit to
build an "addition" to the dwelling house at 17 River St.
This
then became 17t River St. (Building Permits at the Essex Institute)
1886 tax
Occupants
John McMaho:i
1887 tax
#17 John J. McMahon
Patrick Lynch
Owner
Ann McMahon
house 1tr ,100
land
400
addition
200
Ann McMahon
house $1,300
land
400
#17t James Landers
John Doyle
1890 tax
#17 John J. McMahon
#17t James Landers
Edward Morris
John J. O'Keefe
Ann McMahon
house $1,300
land
400
�From HSI House History for 17 River Street by Joyce King, 1983
1892 March 5
90 years.
·~Ann
McMahon, the widow of John, died at the age of
John J. McMahon and Mrs. Jarries Landers then became the
owners of 17-17~ River st.
1900 census
#17 Amos Sullivan
John Whiting
(illegible)
Delia Leahey
#17~ John McMahon
Katherine II
II
John
II
Patrick
II
Annie
II
Mary
Katherine II
ii
Margaret
2nd family
James Landers
II
Bridget
II
James
II
Ellen
Minnie
"
I
1905 tax
#17
#17~
age 77
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Occupant
Robert Carson
Thomas Carson
Charles Carson
John J. McMahon
James Landers
John J. McMahon Jr.
Patrick Landers
born Ire.
II
Eng.
25
17
43
52
42
15
14
11
8
10
6
grandson
grand daughter
laundress
city worker
44
48
20
17
13
currier
variety store
nephew, general labor
niece, shoemaker
niece, at school
II
II
II
Ire.
II
II
II
II
II
Came to
1860
1884
1873
1864
1874.
Mass.
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Ire.
II
II
11
II
II
II
II
1882
1868
1895
II
Qwner
Mrs. James Landers
John J. McMahon
house ~n ,300
land
500
u.s.,
�From HSI House History for 17 River Street by Joyce King, 1983
1910 census
#17 Edward Jacobs
age 28 teamster
II
II
Mary
27
II
II
Sara
2
daughter no name - new born
Kathleen Connelly 11 15 sister-in-law
2nd family
II
John- Robinson
42 blacksmith
II
II
Anna
30
II
II
Earl
7
II
#17t James Landers
55 grocer (own shop)
II
II
Bridget
53
II
John J. McMahon
66
II
II
John
26 city worker
II
II
Patrick
24 fireman shoe fact.
II
II
Annie
22
II
Katherine 11
20 stenographer
II
II
Mary
18 stenographer
II
Margaret II
16
1917 May 13 - James Landers died.
born Mass.
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Canada
II
II
II
II
II
Ire.
II
II
II
II
II
Mass.
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
This obituary notice appeared
in the local papers:
''J2mes Landers died at his home, 17t River St. this morning.
He
was the son of Patrick and Ellen (Donnelly) Landers, and for years
conducted a erocery store (10 River St.)."
He was born in Ireland and served, as a member of the constabalary
in his native land.
and its history.
He was a thorough student of the Emerald Isle
He leaves a widow , Bridget (McMahon) Landers.
�From HSI House History for 17 River Street by Joyce King, 1983
1972 July 26 - The property passed from the McMahon family when
Rita McMahon sold the land and buildings (12 Lynn st. and 17-17t
River St.) to Laurence
of $20,000.
c.
Post Jr. and Donald Koleman for the sum
(book 5880 page 170)
1975 Aug. 26 - Laurence c. Post Jr. and Donald Koleman sold the
land and buildings at 17-17t River St. to Nancy Witham.
(book 6175
page 624)
1976 August 12 - Nancy L. Witham trustee of 17-17t River St. Trust
sold the land and buildings to Robert
Trust.
c.
Bramble of Allyn Realty
(book 6268 page 557)
Reference to book and page are deed books at the Registry of Deeds.
Probate numbers are cases at Probate Court. Both offices are
located in the same building on Federal st. All maps in this report
are not meant to be exact, just for illustration purposes.
���Inventory No:
SAL.3834
Historic Name:
McMahon, John House
Common Name:
Address:
17 1/2 River St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Central Salem
Local No:
26-647
Year Constructed:
1882
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
No style
Use(s):
Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HD: Federal Street
SAL.HL: Chestnut Street Historic District Enlarged
SAL.HU: McIntire Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (10/04/1978); Local Historic District
(03/03/1981)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Asphalt Shingle
Wall: Wood; Wood Clapboard
Foundation: Random Laid Rubble; Stone, Uncut
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
The MACRIS database and scanned files are highly dynamic; new information is added daily and both database
records and related scanned files may be updated as new information is incorporated into MHC files. Users should
note that there may be a considerable lag time between the receipt of new or updated records by MHC and the
appearance of related information in MACRIS. Users should also note that not all source materials for the MACRIS
database are made available as scanned images. Users may consult the records, files and maps available in MHC's
public research area at its offices at the State Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, open M-F, 9-5.
Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Wednesday, August 29, 2018 at 11:20 AM
�FORM B - BUILDING
NRDIS 1973; LHD 3/3/81
USGS Quad
Assessor's number
26-647
Town
Area(s)
Form Number
HD,HU,HR,HL
Salem
3834
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village) Central Salem
Address 17 1/2 River Street
Historic Name McMahon House
Uses: Present
Residential
Original Residential
Date of Construction
Source
1882
Building Permit
Style/Form —
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation Stone
Wall/Trim
Wood Clapboard
Roof
Asphalt Shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
Major Alterations (with dates)
Condition
good
Moved I ] no
X
Acreage
Recorded by
Lisa Mausolf
Organization
Salem Planning Department
Setting
[J yes
Date
less than one acre
set on sidewalk on narrow street of late 18th and
early 19th century dwellings near water
Date (mpnth/yejirfjjJanuary 1997
AUG
0 5
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
MASS. HIST. COMM.
�BUILDING FORM
(
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the
community.
17 1/2 River Street is a narrow 2 1/2-story, gablefront building which is built right up to the sidewalk, adjacent to and to the
west of 17 River Street. The simple, clapboarded building rests on a high, mortared stone foundation. The gable roof is
covered with asphalt shingles; a brick chimney rises from just off the ridge. The recessed sidehall entry is framed by a plain
surround, rising from a masonry step and flight of wooden stairs. Adjacent to the entrance there are two somewhat higher 6/6
windows with molded surrounds. Two additional windows are in alignment on the second floor; there is no window on the
second floor over the entrance. A single three-light window punctuates the stone foundation. The 6/6 window in the attic is
framed by cornice returns.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building and
the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
This building was constructed for John McMahon, who was granted a building permit in 1882 to build an addition to his
property at 17 River Street. The adjacent property at 17 River Street was acquired by his mother, Ami McMahon, in 1869
from wealthy merchant Thomas Perkins. Mrs. McMahon was born in County Clare, Ireland, as were her three children,
John, Michael and Bridget. The family apparently came to this country in the 1860s. After the construction of 17 1/2 River
Street, both John and Bridget's families moved into the building; the family continued to rent out 17 River Street to a variety
of tenants. After Ann McMahon's death in 1892 the property passed to her children, John McMahon and Mrs. James
(Bridget) Landers. James Landers (c. 1917) operated a grocery store at 10 River Street. The property remained in the
McMahon family until 1972 (King 1983).
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Hopkins, G.M. Atlas of Salem. Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
King, Joyce. "17 River Street, House Report". Prepared for Historic Salem, Inc., 1983.
Mclntyre, Henry C.E. Map of the City of Salem. Philadelphia: 1851.
Richards, L.J. Atlas of the Citv of Salem. Massachusetts. 1897.
Salem City Directories, 1836-1970.
Sanborn Insurance Maps, 1890, 1906, 1950, 1957, 1965, 1970. [Massachusetts State Library].
Tolles, Bryant F., Jr. Architecture in Salem: an Illustrated Guide. Salem: Essex Institute, 1983.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company. Atlas of the Citv of Salem. Massachusetts. Boston: 1911.
—
i
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attach a completed National
Register Criteria Statement form.
�INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
17½ RIVER ST
SALEM
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
SAL.3834
SAL.HD, SAL.HL, SAL.HU
Supplemental photograph by Patti Kelleher, Salem Department of Planning & Community Development, March 2017
RECEIVED
JUN 20 2017
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Continuation sheet 1
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
River Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
17.5 River Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Ann McMahon
Widow
of County Clare Ireland
1884
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1884, 1983, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
17.5
1884
1983
2018
Ann
History
House
John
Massachusetts
McMahon
River
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/cf5d0a14fb3f009fbdebe8071cc8ed7b.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=I%7E0AVRbT7qyZXpFNJ3njaJiQy0D7rxnbdWR0lwLMuIUMyQncpr8fR%7EmHmvtuRYnwTRLU2w4raiuZtRVnkYWQB8q1gciowrMB3IMhT0yXUfuL%7E9zx92wiXFLkrBvaF2KRcgqDInNB36MN7OMf6PJmTAd37-fJvFq68Jf%7ERnlJltdZcexPg35R5s-B6kuHbeMeh6f6f40F0lh3KjN55aQW7wGybZZbwBR9eV1uFZEZ5KuM9cNI59so4%7E91QZocZhh3N7HjAaMPx2waXeqDTz6lSqPv5P39Gt%7EaCvctHcb6mjh8jsJs4dTmkT7NWsKbhjV9sIVprFdUIirJJqMazSms3g__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
fb1060c7c78ddd1d971ae291562b6916
PDF Text
Text
4 Andrew Street
Built as a stable for
Isabella C. Miller
1877
Converted to dwelling
after Great Salem Fire
1914
Research Provided by
Michael Redfern
August 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�Chain of Title, 4 Andrew Street, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
Date Recorded
Grantor(s)
Nathaniel Silsbee of Salem,
November 28, 1832 Merchant
April 6, 1859 Nathaniel Silsbee Jr.
Grantee(s)
Source
Document Book or Vol. Page
$1,000 "A lot of land situated in Salem aforesaid..."
Isabella C. Miller, wife of Charles
H. Miller of Salem, Merchant
"a certain parcel of land situate on the corner
of Pleasant and Andrew Streets in said
$1,000 Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Caroline L. Brown, wife of Frank
March 3, 1891 Isabella C. Miller of Salem, widow A. Brown of Salem
Frank A. Brown & Caroline L.
May 6, 1926 Brown, his wife
Consideration Conveyance of
Nathaniel Silsbee Jr. of Salem,
Merchant
"one dollar and
other valuable
considerations
paid"
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
268
43
585
"as her sole and separate
property free from all
interference or control by
90 her said husband..."
1303
63
"Being a portion of the
premises conveyed to
said Caroline L. Brown by
43 Isabella C Miller..."
"the land in said Salem, together with the
buildings thereon..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2679
October 15, 1929 Francis Brown
Florence A. Woodbury, Annie E.
Woodbury, & Grace A. Woodbury, "consideration
all unmarried, of Salem
paid"
"the land in said SALEM, together with the
buildings thereon..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
2825
424
October 10, 1960 Annie Endicott Woodbury
William J. Toomey & Emma G.
Toomey, husband & wife, of
Salem
"consideration
paid"
"the land in said Salem, together with the
buildings thereon..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
4710
405
Lucille S. Almquist of Salem
"consideration
paid"
"the land in said Salem, Essex County,
Massachusetts together with the buildings
thereon..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
5194
62
Claud W. Ashcraft & Phyllis G.
Ashcraft, husband & wife, of
Salem
"consideration
paid"
"the land with the buildings thereon, situated
on Andrew Street in said Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
5275
342
Robert L. Scagliotti & Nackey
Scagliotti, husband & wife
"the land with buildings thereon situated at 4
Andrew Street, Essex County, Salem,
$24,000 Massachusetts..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
5711
263
Jacqueline Nangle
"the land with buildings thereon situated at 4
Andrew Street, Essex County, Salem,
$45,300 Massachusetts..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6228
667
Judith E. Whitney & Barbara E.
Harrison
"the land in Salem, Essex County,
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, with the
buildings thereon situated at 4 Andrew
$56,000 Street..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6549
370
"the land in Salem, Essex County,
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, with the
buildings thereon situated at 4 Andrew
$21,955 Street..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
6829
428
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
9811
162
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
9842
14
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
10935
361
William J. Toomey & Emma G.
August 3, 1964 Toomey
June 10, 1965 Lucille S. Almquist
Claud W. Ashcraft & Phyllis G.
September 11, 1970 Ashcraft
Robert L. Scagliotti & Nackey
April 1, 1976 Scagliotti
December 15, 1978 Jacqueline Nangle
Francis Brown of Salem
Barbara E. Harrison, AKA Barbara
E. Whitney & Judith E. Hanson,
Wayne D. Hanson & Judith E.
formerly Judith E. Whitney, of
Hanson, husband & wife, of
June 12, 1981 Nahant
Nahant
"consideration
paid"
a "parcel of land, with all buildings thereon,
situated in said Salem..."
Essex County Registry of Deeds Deed
Notes
Wayne D. Hanson & Judith E.
December 8, 1988 Hanson
Mortgage Corporation of New
England
"the land in Salem, Essex County,
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, with the
buildings thereon situated at 4 Andrew
$395,000 Street..."
Mortgage Corporation of New
December 30, 1988 England
Robert W. Dick, Trustee of the
Acquisition and Holding Trust
"4 Andrew Street, Salem, MA, bounded and
$250,000 described as follows..."
John J. Heaney, Trustee of the
September 6, 1991 Acquisition and Holding Trust
Fred Whitney & Carol Whitney,
husband & wife
"the following described premises known as
4 Andrew Street, Salem, Essex County,
$147,000 Massachusetts..."
�Inventory No:
SAL.2751
Historic Name:
Miller, Charles Stable
Common Name:
Brown, C. L. - Sweetser, Abbie and Mary House
Address:
4 Andrew St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Salem Common
Local No:
35-534
Year Constructed:
1877
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
Second Empire
Use(s):
Out Building; Single Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Agriculture; Architecture
Area(s):
SAL.HW: Salem Common Historic District
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (05/12/1976)
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Slate
Wall: Vinyl Siding; Wood
Foundation: Granite; Stone, Uncut
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
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Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
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REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Tuesday, August 7, 2018 at 10:07 AM
�FORM B - BUILDING
N R D I S 5/12/76
Assessor's number
USGS Quad
35-534
Town
Form Number
Area(s)
Salem
2751
HW
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village) Salem Common
Address
4 Andrew Street
Historic Name
Misses Sweetser House
(Charles Miller Stable)
Uses: Present
Residential
Original
Stable
Date of Construction
Source
1877
Building permits
Style/Form
Second Empire
Architect/Builder
unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation
Stone
Wall/Trim
V i n y l Siding
Roof
Slate
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
M a j o r Alterations (with dates) 1914 - carriage house
converted to residential use; c. 1980 - vinyl siding
Condition
good
Moved
no
Acreage
Setting
R e c o r d e d by
Lisa Mausolf
Organization
Salem Planning Department
Date (month/year) M a r c h 1998
R E C E I V E D
Follow Massachusetts Histo,r^^lo^i^s^/t^irvey
O
yes
Date
3684 S F
densely built-up residential neighborhood of
19th -20th century buildings, east o f Washington
Common
Manual instructions for completing this form.
MASS. HIST. C M
OM
�B U I L D I N G F O R M (4 Andrew Street)
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the
community.
Functioning as a stable until the early 20th century, 4 Andrew Street is a single-story dwelling capped b y a mansard roof with
a bellcast profile, sheathed in slate fishscale shingles. The building rests on foundation o f uncut mortared stone and is
sheathed i n vinyl siding. The projecting eaves display a wide frieze and are adorned by paired scroll brackets. The main
entrance is located at the northeast corner o f the house and is sheltered by a recessed porch supported by a single Roman
Doric column resting on a wooden deck. The wooden door has 3 x 3 lights in the upper half and is fitted with a wooden
storm door. Adjacent to the entrance is a pair of 6/6 windows with a molded surround and shutters. The shed dormer on the
front roof slope has a set o f three windows consisting of two 6/6 sash with a narrow 4/4 window in the center. The remaining
windows on the building include individual 6/6 sash as well as sets o f three, a l l o f which are framed b y shutters. The dormers
similarly display a variety o f types and include two pedimented dormers with 6/6 and a central gable dormer with an 8/8
window on the west elevation. A n additional shed dormer is located on the east elevation.
The house is set directly on the sidewalk with a driveway extending to the west o f the house. A stockade fence encloses the
modest yard.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building and
the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
Originally a stable for the adjacent property at what is now 96 Washington Square East, this building was constructed for
Charles M i l l e r i n 1877. According to building permits, M i l l e r was granted a permit for a 1 1/2-story building with a "French
r o o f , measuring 24 x 44 feet. M i l l e r was a merchant with a store at 170 1/2 Essex Street. B y 1897 the Washington Square
East property was owned by C . L . B r o w n and occupied by Frank A . Brown. It appears that the building was renovated for
residential use at the time o f the Salem 1914 fire. In 1914 the adjacent property at 96 Washington Square East, including this
building, was owned by Frank Brown, assistant manager of the National Lead Company. H e apparently renovated his barn
for Misses Abbie and M a r y Sweetser, who formerly lived at 185 Lafayette Street but were left homeless by the fire. The
1914 directory shows the sisters to be living at 30 Pleasant Street, apparently awaiting the completion o f 4 Andrew Street.
After M a r y Sweetser passed away in 1919, Abbie Sweetser continued to live here until her death i n 1922. Soon thereafter the
property was occupied by several people until 1930 when it was acquired by Florence Woodbury who continued to live here
into the 1950s. Annie Woodbury was in residence in the 1960s.
B I B L I O G R A P H Y and/or R E F E R E N C E S
City o f Salem, Building Permits, 1871-1889.
Hopkins, G . M . Atlas o f Salem. Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
Mclntyre, Henry C . E . M a p o f the C i t y o f Salem. Philadelphia: 1851.
Richards, L . J . Atlas o f the C i t y o f Salem. Massachusetts. 1897.
Salem C i t y Directories, 1836-1970.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company. Atlas o f the City o f Salem. Massachusetts. Boston: 1911.
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attached a completed
National Register Criteria Statement form.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Andrew Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
4 Andrew Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built as a stable for
Isabella C. Miller
1877
Converted to dwelling
after Great Salem Fire
1914
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1877, 1914, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Michael Redfern
Language
A language of the resource
English
1877
1914
2018
4
Andrew
Great Salem Fire
Isabella
Massachusetts
Miller
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/fcd0777b8e47f48d2696065b053edce6.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=ATrbCvLN4bGo1f%7EscoiSnY%7En%7ELEtiljED5fYY78u5ikdrtPGLAMlB-X81gB3Yx55dLOnZoGoPZAkeHK4Q8xgVUmDlOQG%7E0iPv-oi1NE8LZhYbYgYHc7P%7E3rQ6ethnxBu5d141tv4T2eHrZno--FlCV-ttIy1UfFWbYoALklHCq-mwGLxmH1ADdnLZofVNFOy6obwxlEmGyBZ5TsakZ-eT5JN0dCgvF7ewtA7rdT6atmM2D-61HeHNy0pVFp39LpM0YdH0ftrgCBniWSiGmT3qNMc7ltPl06ccPkT6YNiEr9AvdA%7EDwAIlKt22OwD46QiodQux2cRpX5szjQXqJDB9w__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e19d4ae99b4310df636e8beb54a4e7fa
PDF Text
Text
7 Prescott Street
Built by
Giuseppe Giunta
Gardener
1916
July 2018
Historic Salem, Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
978.745.0799 | HistoricSalem.org
© 2018
�Here’s a bit of the history of the house through word and deeds:
I have an original Warranty Deed that indicates there was a house on this parcel of land that was sold on
December 19, 1910 by Lewis H Richards of Lynn, Ira G Taylor and his wife Sarah E Taylor of Salem and
E Osgood Richards, also of Salem, to Paul N Chaput of Salem for "one dollar and other valuable
considerations."
Then I have original mortgage papers showing that my maternal grandfather, Giuseppe Giunta
(misspelled as Guinta on most documents), took out a $2,600 loan from Salem Co-operative Bank for that
house on April 15, 1911.
I have another $600 mortgage between my grandfather and Paul N Chaput dated July 18, 1911 that
indicates there were actually two mortgages from Salem Co-op totaling $3,200. This mortgage is stamped
July 18, 1911 by the registry of Deeds and again on June 16, 1914 which is probably when it was paid off
because the Salem Co-Op mortgage shows that theirs was discharged on June 13, 1914.
Unfortunately, the Great Salem Fire destroyed that house just days after my grandfather paid off the
mortgage.
That takes us to this present house. We were always told that “your grandfather built the house". Whether
that means he literally built it or had it built for him, I do not know. I assume it was a bit of both since he
didn't have a load of money and probably worked on it to keep costs down. He may have employed
friends and family from the old country. The present house has interior details like many houses in the
area – I’m assuming some materials were supplied to people after the fire.
My grandfather was a gardener in Sicily who came here and worked as a caretaker for homes in
Marblehead. He made wine in the cellar wine press which is literally built into the foundation of this
house. Many other houses here have wine presses. During Prohibition the Salem Police looked away
while wine was being produced by the many Italian families here, and then often came calling for a bottle
or two.
I have original papers from Salem Five for a $3,500 mortgage dated Nov 25, 1916. That was paid off on
May 25, 1927 and I have papers for another $3,500 mortgage taken out on June 25, 1927 that was
discharged on October 2, 1985.
Long before 1985, in May of 1918, shortly after his new house was built, my grandfather was riding his
bike up Lafayette. At the corner of Ocean, he was struck by a motorcyclist, smacked his head on a trolley
rail and died on site. So, after struggling to get to America, buy a house, get his family over here and build
a new house – he had but a couple years to enjoy it.
My grandmother was left with seven children. She spoke no English and was pregnant with my Mom at
the time, who was subsequently born in the house in July of 1918. That whole clan grew up in this present
house, mostly on the first floor, with occasional boarders on the second. Various other relatives and
friends lived here when they came over from the old country or just needed a temporary stay. It was a
crowded, lively and loving home for generations.
�When my Mom got married, she and my Dad moved upstairs in the house where they raised my brother,
sister and me. In 2006, when her sister Katherine died at 100 years old, she and my Dad moved
downstairs. After returning from 30 years in New York City I moved in upstairs in 2017.
In 2016, my Mom died - in the same room she was born. She was the last of that Giunta generation.
Joe Cultrera
June 12, 2018
��������������������Salem State University
Digital Commons at Salem State University
Books, Pamphlets, and Documents
Great Salem Fire of 1914
1914
Data on Burned District at Salem, Mass.
F. W. Dodge Company
Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.salemstate.edu/fire_documents
Recommended Citation
F. W. Dodge Company, "Data on Burned District at Salem, Mass." (1914). Books, Pamphlets, and Documents. 2.
http://digitalcommons.salemstate.edu/fire_documents/2
This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Great Salem Fire of 1914 at Digital Commons at Salem State University. It has been
accepted for inclusion in Books, Pamphlets, and Documents by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons at Salem State University.
�DATA
ON
BURNED DISTRICT
AT
SALEM, MASS.
Nature of Buildings Burned—Materials of Original Construction — Assessed
Valuation on Land and Buildings— also Insurance on
Buildings and Contents, where obtainable
Arranged according to Names of Owners, Street Location
and Classes of Buildings
This data is incomplete as some of the records from which the
information was taken were not complete at time of publication.
Corrections ivill be gratefully received by the publishers.
Copyright 1914
BY
T H E F. W. DODGE COMPANY
114 FEDERAL STREET, BOSTON
~ --f&
�MAP OF THE BURNED DISTRICT
Heavy line denotes boundary of fire
* Star denotes where fire started
1 Plant of Salem Electric Light Company, still standing
2 Storehouse of Naumkeag Mills, still standing
(Courtesy) of Standard Publishing
Company)
�LIST OF OWNERS ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY
Abbreviations:—A. L. Assessed Valuation on Land; A. B. Assessed Valuation on Building; I. B. Insurance on Building 1 ;
I. C. Insurance on Contents; Apts. Apartments; Res. Residence; R. Rear; Tr. Trustee; (W) Wood; (B) Brick; (W & B) Wood
& Brick.
Abbott, Geo. F . Res. (W), 40 Hathorne,
A. L. $1500, A. B. $2100.
Abbott, Sarah E. Res. (W), 21 Cedar,
A. L. $700, A. B. $1500, I. B. $1000.
Abbott, Sarah E. Double House (W),
129-131 Lafayette, A. L. $500, A. B.
$2400, I. B. $1500.
Abbott, Sarah E. Res. (W), 24 P r e s cott, A. L. $700, A. B. $1300, I. B.
$1500, I. C. $500.
Abel I, Anna. Store & Apt. (W), 3
Dodge, A. L. $1200, A. B. $3000, I. B.
$4000, I. C. $900.
Adams, Harrison S. Res. (W), 6 Piedmont, A. L. $900, A. B. $1500, I. B.
$2000.
Adams, Ida S. Res. (W), 2 Roslyn, A.
L. $900, A. B. $3800, I. B. $4000, I. C.
$1500.
Ahern, Elizabeth & Mary E. Stores &
Apts. (W), 207 Derby, A. L. $500, A.
B. $900, I. B. $800.
Ahern, Elizabeth & Mary E. 2 Apts
(W), 203 Derby, A. L. $500, A. B.
$1400, I. B. $1000.
Almy, Big;elow & W a s h b u r n . Storage
Bldg. (W), 267-271 Derby, A. L. $2300,
A. B. $4600, I. B. $3200, I. C. $1000.
Andrews, Joseph A., et al. Res. (W),
14 Vale, A. L. $200, A. B. $600, I. C.
$400.
Ankcles, Isaac & Dora. Apts. (W), 24
Boston, A. L. $1200, A. B. $6000, I. B.
$7000, I. C. $500.
Ankeles, Isaac & Dora. Apts. (W), 26
Boston, A. L. $1200, A. B. $13,000, 1.
B. $13,500, I. C. $1400.
Appleton, Joseph F . Apts. (W), 265273 Washington, A. L. $3400, A. B.
$10,000, I. B. $7947.75.
Aronson, Nathan. Apts. (W), 18-20
Prescott, A. L. $1100, A. B. $1700, I. B.
$5000, I. C. $500.
Arin^ton, Deborah R. Res. (W), 19 Hathorne, A. L. $900, A. B. $2400, I. B.
$2500.
Arinsston, Deborah R.
2-2
Family
Houses (W), 26-28 Hathorne, A. L.
$1000, A. B. $4200, I. B. $4000.
Arrisigton, Joseph, Heirs. Stores (W),
3 Pond, A. L. $400, A. B. $1100.
Arrington, Joseph, Heirs. Res. (W), 147
Lafayette, A. L. $4100, A. B. $2500.
Arrington, Joseph, Heirs. 2 Apts. &
Store (W), 256-258-260 Washington,
A. L. $2200, A. B. $1900, I. B. $3300.
Arrington, Rosabell L. Res. (W), 16
Cherry, A. B. $1500, I. B. $4000.
Arrington, Rosabell L. Res. (W), 18
Cherry, A. L. $2000, A. B. $1800, I. B.
$9000.
Arthur, Inez G. Res. (W), 25 Winthrop,
A. L. $600, A. B. $1400, I. B. $1500.
Audet, Alfred. 2 Res. (W), 42-42i/2 Congress, A. L. $1200, A. B. $6000, I. B.
$7700.
Audet, Alfred. 2 Res. (W), 46-46^ Con^
gress, A. L. $800, A. B. $3500, I. B.
$3 500.
Audet, Alfred. Apts & Stores (W), 98
to IO41/2 Lafayette, A. L. $3800, A. B.
$15,500, I. B. $13,500.
Audet, Alfred, 2-2 Family Houses (W),
10n-110Dafayette, A. L. $3700, A. B.
$4300, I. B. $5500.
Audet, Alfred. Res. (W), 35 Leach, A.
L. $3000, A. B. $3800, I. B. $6000.
Audet, Alfred. Res. (W), 38 Naumkeag, A. L. $700, A. B. $2000, I. B. $500.
Audet, Alfred. Apts. (W), 55 Palmer,
A. L. $1100, A. B. $6500, I. B. $6000,
I. C. $500.
Audet, Alfred.
Apts.
(W),
65-67
Palmer, A. L. $1200, A. B. $5500, I.
B. $2500, I. C. $1400.
Audet, Alfred. Apts. (W), 38 Prince,
A. L. $800, A. B. $6500, I. B. $4000.
Audet, Demerise. Apts. (W), 51 Salem,
A. L. $800, A. B. $10,000, I. B. $8000,
. I. C. $5400.
Audet, Louis. 2 Family House (W), 18
Pingree, A. L. $800, A. B. $1400, I. B.
$3300.
Austin, Joseph L. Res. (W), 419 Essex,
A. L. $600, A. B. $3200, I. B. $3500, I.
C. $1500.
Averill, Geo. H., Heirs. Res. (W), 31
Cabot, A. D. $800, A. B. $1600, I. B.
$2000,
Vverill, Martha J. Res. (W), 1 Gardner. A. L. $1000, A. B. $3500, I. B.
$3500, I. C. $800.
Axelrod, Louis & Leon Handish.
3
Stores (W), 9-11 Dodge St. Ct., A.
B. $5500, I. B. $2000.
Axelrod, Louis & Leon Handish. Block
(W), 10 Dodge St. Ct., A. B. $1000,
I. B. $7000.
Ayers, Melissa. Res. (W), 14 Eden,
A. L. $700, A. B. $900, I. B. $1000, I.
C. $500.
Ilabbidse, B. P a r k e r . Res. (W), 14
Fairfield, A. L. $2400, A. B. $3300, I.
B. $5000, I. C. $500.
Babbidge, Francis A. Res. & Stable
(W), 43 Broad, A. L. $600, A. B. $900.
Baker, Abraham M. Apts. (W), 59
Broad, A. L. $500, A. B. $3000.
Baker, Mary A. Res. (W), 8 Mt. Vernon, A. L. $1000, A. B. $2200, I. B.
$2000, I. C. $800.
Baker, Wilfred J. J. 2 Family Res.
(W), 12 Prince, A. L. $400, A. B.
$1600, I. B. $1800.
Barker, Anna C. Res. (W), 9-11 Hancock, A. L. $1200, A. B. $4800, I. B.
$4000.
Barker, Annie C. 2 Family Res. (W),
3 Piedmont, A. L. $700, A. B. $4000, I.
B. $3000.
Barry, Catherine. Res. (W), 9 Ward,
A. L. $500, A. B. $600, I. B. $800.
Barry, Mary G., Heirs. 2 Family Res.
(W), 5 Buffum, A. L. $1500, A. B.
$4100, I. B. $4500, I. C. $1000.
Barry, Sarah L. & Francis J. Res. (W),
27 Gardner, A. L. $900, A. B. $1200,
I. B. & I. C. $1000.
Bartlett, Mary. Apts. & Stable (W), 26
Ward, A. L. $800, A. B. $2100, I. B.
$2000.
Batchelder, Henry C. Res. (W), 4
Cabot, A. L. $400, A. B. $1200, I. B.
$1800, I. C. $500.
Batchelder, Henry C. Res. (W), 3
Gardner, A. L. $1900, A. B. $3000, I.
B. $3200, I. C. $800.
Batchelder, Henry M. 2 Res. (W), 5-7
Cedar, A. L. $1700, A. B. $4700, I. B.
$5500.
Batcheliler, Henry M. Res. & Stable
(W). 17 Cedar. A. L. $1000, A. B.
$2800, I. B. $3000, I. C. $2600.
Batchelder, Henry M. 2 Res. (W), 1115 Piedmont, A. L. $1500, A. B. $5600,
I. B. $6000.
Batchelder, Henry M. Res. (W), 204
Lafayette, A. L. $2600, A. B. $5100, I.
B. $6500, I. C. $3500.
Battis, Eelw. C. Store (W), 221 Derby,
A. L. $900, A. B. $1000, I. B. $1000.
Battis, Edw. C. & Martha O. Batchelder.
2 Family Res. (B), 200-02 Lafavette,
A. L. $3200, A. B. $5000, I. B. $5400,
I. C. $3000.
Beaudet, Thomas. Res. (W), 44 E a s t
Gardner, A. L. $500, A. B. $700, I. B.
$1000.
Beaudry, Mrs. Emma D. Apts. (W), 1416 West Place. A. L. $2100, A. B.
$5000, I. B. $3000.
Beaudry, Mrs. Emma D. 3 Apt. Houses
(W), 20-24-26 West Place, A. L. $900,
A. B. $5000 Each, I. B. $8000.
Beaudry, Emma D. Apts. (W), 26 Roslyn, A. L. $600, A. B. $5000.
Beaudry, Emma D., et al. 2 Familv
Res. (W). 39 Roslyn, A. L. $500, A. B.
$5000, I. C. $1000.
Belan^er, Elizabeth. Apts. (W), 37
Salem, A. L. $700, A. B. $900, I. B.
$2000.
Belanger, Elizabeth. .Res. & Garage
(W), 41 Salem, A. L. $700, A. B. $1300,
T. B. $2000.
Belansrer, Elizabeth. Apts. (W), 40
Park. A. B. $5500, I. B. $4000.
Bent, Mary A., Heirs. Apts. (W), 268268Vo Washington, A. L. $1200, A. B.
$2600, I. B. $3000.
Bernson, Gus. 2 Familv Res. (W), 3
Dodge St. Ct., A. L. $500, A. B. $2000,
I. B. $1500.
Bertuccio, Mrs. Bigrerzia M. 2 Stores &
Apts. (W). 34 & 34R Mill, A. L. $600,
A. B. $fi200, I. B. $7700, I. C. $500.
Berube, Claire. Res., Garage & Storehouse (W)\ 61 Congress, A. L. $800,
A. B. $1500, I. B. $3300, I. C. $500,
Besse, Arsene. Apts. (W), 56% Congress, A. L. $600, A. B. $5000, I. B.
$2000.
Besse, Arsene. Apts. & Res. (W), 5858y2-60 Congress/ A. L. $1900, A. B.
$5800, I. B. $5600.
Bickford, John M. 2 Family Res. &
Stable (W), 14 Hathorne, A. L. $700.
A. B. $1000.
Biselow, Adelina Y. Res. & Stable (W),
220 Lafayette, A. L. $3700, A. B. $6000,
I. B. $11,000, I. C. $3500.
Bik, Annie. 2 Family Res. (W), 36
Pingree, A. L. $800, A. B. $2000, I.
B. $2500.
Birmingham, Mary E. Res. & Stable
(W), 13 Pingree, A. L. $900, A. B.
$500.
Blais, Joseph. Stable & Shed (W), 28
Prince, A. L. $800, A. B. $600, I. B.
$500, I. C. $400.
Blais, Josephine. Res. & Stable (W), 35
Park, A. B. $5500, I. B. $4500.
Blanchette, Joseph. Apts. (W), 23 Park,
A. L. $400, A. B. $1000, I. B. $2000.
Blanchette, Joseph. Res. (W), 42 Pingree, A. L. $400, A. B. $1500, I. B.
$1500.
Blunt, Elizabeth M. Res. & Stable (W),
10 Flint, A. L. $600, A. B. $2400, I. B.
$4000, I. C. $1000.
Bosquet, Marie. Res. & Stable (W), 20
Park, A. L. $500, A. B. $800.
Bosquet, Marie L. Apts. & Stable (W),
20 Perkins, A. L. $900, A. B. $3300,
I. B. $1500.
Bosquet, Marie L. Stores & Apts. (W),
27-27i/2-29 Palmer, A. L. $1000, A. B.
$6000, I. B. $2000, I. C. $500.
Bouchard, Francois. Apts
(W), 32
Park, A. L. $300, A. B. $3500, I. B.
$5000, I. C. $500.
Bouchard, Joseph. Apts. (W), 14-16
Park, A. L. $600, A. B. $2000, I. B.
$4500, I. C. $500.
Bouchard, Ovide. 3 Apt. Houses (W),
39-41-43 Congress, A. L. $900, A. B.
$12,000, I. B. & I. C. $14,500.
Bouchard, Ovide. Apts. (W), 45 Congress, A. L. $900, A. B. $4500, I. B.
$2500.
Bouchard, Ovide. Stores (W), 219 to
231 Washington, A. L. $2000, A. B.
$11,000, I. B. $6000, I. C. $1300.
Bouchard, Ovide. 3 Stores
(W), 8
Dodge St. Ct., A. B. $5000, I. B. $2000.
Bouchard, Wilfred. Apts. (W), 6 West
Place, A. L. $600, A. B. $5000, I. C.
$700.
Boucher, Adelaide. 3 Apt. Houses (W),
29-29i/2 & 29R Harbor, A. L. $1300,
A. B. $10,100, I. B. $11,000, I. C. $500.
Boucher, Mrs. Grace. Apts. (W), 73
Leach, A. L. $800, A. B. $2700, I. C.
$500.
Boulanser, Melvina. Res (W), 9 Congress, A. L. $700, A. B. $5200, I. B.
$6000.
BoiilaiiRer, Melvina. Apts. (W>, 11
Congress, A. L. $700, A. B. $5200.
Boursault, Gilbert.
Apts.
(W), 26
F a s t Gardner, A. L. $700, A. B. $5500,
I. B. $2000, I. C. $500.
Boursrault, Joseph L. Apts (W), 1818i/> Porter, A. L. $600, A. B. $2500, I.
B. $4000, I. C. $800.
Bourgeois, Louis R., et al.
Res. &
Stable, (W), 57 Leach. A. L. $2000, A.
B. $3400, I. B. $5000, I. C. $1000,
Iloursreois, Louis R. Apts. (W), fil
Leach, A. L. $600, A. B. $5500, I. B.
$3000.
Iloweii, Job 1 L„ ( E s t a t e of Mary Man1
ning) Stores (W), 217-2171/2 Washington, A. B. $2000.
Bowen, John L., Admr., E s t a t e ©* Mary
Manning) Mfg. Bldg. (W), 213-215
Washington, A. L. $1900, A. B. $2000.
Boyd, H u s h C. Res. & Shop CW), 6
Margin. A. L. $1500, A. B. $3400, I. B.
$3500.
Bradley, Margaret M. Res. (W), 50
Leach, A. L. $500, A. B. $2000, I. B.
$3000.
�LIST OF OWNERS ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY
Guilmette, Arthur. 2-Family Res. (W),
19 Harbor, A. L. $1200, A. B. $1800, I.
B. $2500.
Guiuta, Guiseppe. Apts. (W), 7 Prescott, A. L. $500, A. B. $3000, I. B. $4000.
Hale, James F. Double Res. (W), 3133 Winthrop, A. L. $900, A. B. $3900,
I. B. $2000.
Hale, James F. Apts. (W), 17 Mt. Vernon, A. L. $1100, A. B. $1200, I. B.
$3800, I. C. $1000.
Hale, James F. Res. (W), 13 Winthrop,
A. L. $1000, A. B. $2800, I. B. $1500.
Haley, Humphrey. Res. (W), 4 P r a t t ,
A. L. $200, A. B. $900, I. B. $1400, I.
C. $1000.
Haley, Humphrey. Res. & Stable (W),
7 & 11 Pratt, A. L. $700, A. B. $1600,
I. B. $3000.
Hall, Mary L. Res. (W), 75 Proctor,
A. L. $300, A. B. $2800.
Hallahau, Timothy. Res. (W), 9 High,
A. L. $200, A. B. $700, I. B. $800.
Hamilton, Claude M. 2 Family Res.
(W), 34 Hathorne, A. L. $300, A. B.
$1800, I. B. $3000.
Hamilton, Elizabeth M. Apts. & Stable
(W), 9 Eden St., A. L. $700, A. B.
$2000, I. B. $1500.
Hamilton, Elizabeth M. Res. & Stable
(W), 38 Leach, A. L. $800, A. B. $1300,
I. B. $1000, I. C. $500.
Hamilton, Ethel M. Double Res. (W),
1 & 1A Hathorne Place, A. L. $400,
A. B. $1800.
Hamilton, Thomas H. Apts. (W), 11
Eden, A. L. $700, A. B. $800, I. B.
$2000.
Hamlin, Gustavus A. Stores & Theatre
(W), 124-132 Lafayette, A. L. $2300,
A. B. $7500, I. B. $6000.
Hamlin, Hattie flf. Apts. & Stable (W),
5 Roslyn, A. L. $1500, A. B. $3900, 1.
B. $3000, I. C. $1000.
Hamlin, Mary E. Res. & Stable (W), 7
Roslyn, A. L. $1400, A. B. $2700, I. B.
$3000, 1. C. $2000.
Hamlin, Ruth R. Apts. (W), 12 Fowler,
A. L. $700, A. B. $2800, I. B. $2000.
Hamlin, Ruth R. Res. & 2 Family
House (W), 12y2 & 14 Fowler, A. L.
$1100, A. B. $3200, I. B. $4000.
Hanrahan, Timothy. Res. & Shop (W),
4y2 & 6 Flint, A. L. $300, A. B. $1300,
I. B. $200.
Harford, Julietta E. P. Shop (W), 414
Essex, A. L. $800, A. B. $500.
Harlow, Mary P. Res. (W), 210 Lafayette, A. L. $3100, A. B. $5800, I. B.
$7500, I. C. $7000.
Harney, T. J. Apts. (W), 79 Proctor,
A. L. $300, A. B. $2500.
Harpel, Morris & Jacob Maehnotsky.
3 Res. (W), 23-25-25r Phelps, A. L.
$700, A. B. $5600, I. B. $4250.
Harrington, Margaret, Heirs. Res. &
Store (W), 4-41/2 Prince, A. L. $500,
A. B. $700, I. B. $1000.
Harris, Dora Clark, Heirs. Res. & 2
Garages (W), 150 Lafayette, A. L.
$1500, A. B. $5100.
Harris, Fanny. 4 Res. (W), 53-53y 2 -5555r Warren, A. L. $1900, A. B. $7000,
I. B. $7700.
Harris, Herman. Stores (W), 79 Harbor, A. L. $500, A. B. $1000, I. B. $1600,
I. C. $6000.
Harris, Rachael. Stores & Apt. (W),
5 Holly, A. L. $900, A. B. $4600, I. B.
$6000.
Hartigau, Elisabeth J. Apts. (W), 4
Boston, A. L. $1800, A. B. $1600, I. B.
$4000.
Hartigan, Elizabeth J. 3 Apt. Houses
(W), 406-408-410 Essex, A. L. $2500,
A. B. $2500, I. B. $7000, I. C. $1000.
Hartt, Millicent H. Res. & Stable (B),
41 Warren, A. L. $4300, A. B. $8200,
I. B. $133,700, I. C. $5300.
Haskell, Florence D. & Lucy A. Oilman.
Res. (W), 9 Margin, A. L. $800, A. B.
$2300, I. B. $2500, I. C. $600.
Haskell, George. 2 Apt. Houses (W),
21-23 Harbor, A. L. $1200, A. B. $3700,
I. B. $3500.
Hathorne Bids. Asso., J. Fred Hussey,
et al, Tr. Business Block (W), 197
to 211 Washington & Shop (W), 16
Dodge, A. L. $11,000, A. B. $12,800, I.
B. $21,000.
Hawkins, Mary R. & Martha C. Jones.
Apts. & Stable (W), 7 Green, A. L.
$700, A. B. $5000, I. B. $4000.
Hawkins, Mary R. 2 Apt. Houses (W),
11-13 Green, A. L. $1400, A. B. $7300,
I. B. $5000.
Hayes, Mary E. Res. (W), 16 Winthrop,
A. L. $800, A. B. $2300, I. C. $3500.
Henderson, Mary. Res. (W), 8 Eden,
A. L. $700, A. B. $900, I. B. $1000.
Henneberry, Mary. 2 Family Res. (W),
5 Fowler, A. L. $400, A. B. $1900, I.
B. $1800.
Henneberry, Thomas. Apts. & Stable
(W), 9 Phelps, A. L. $700, A. B. $1700,
I. B. $2000..
Hennessey, Abbie R. 2 Apt. Plouses
(W), 14-16 Salem, A. L. $900, A. B.
$5800, I. B. $4800.
Henuessy, Abbie H. 2 Family Res. (W),
402 Essex, A. L. $2100, A. B. $2000, I.
B. $2000, I. C. $800.
Hennessy, John. Apts. (W), 15 Pond,
A. L. $300, A. B. $1000, I. B. $1000.
Herlihy, Wm. F. Apts. (W), 39 Ward,
A. L. $300, A. B. $1000, I. B. $1200.
Herlihy, Wm. F. Res. (VV), 38 Peabody,
A. L. $300, A. B. $700, I. B. $1000.
Hever, Anna. Res. (W), 10 Boston, A.
L. $1500, A. B. $2300, I. B. $3000.
Higbee, Edward F. Res. (W), 405 Essex, A. L. $1000, A. B. $3000, I. B. $3500,
I. C. $1500.
HlKKlna, Annie. 2 Family Res. (W),
5 Boston, A. L. $600, A. B. $800, I. B.
. $1000, I. C. $200.
HiKgins, Annie. Res. (W), 17 Boston,
A. L. $1500, A. B. $1500, I. B. $1900.
Hi&gins, Margaret M. Res. (W), 17
Fowler, A. L. $400, A. B. $1200.
Higgins, Mary G. Apts. (W), 22 Phelps,
A. L. $300, A. B. $1200, I. B. $1000.
Hill, Emily F. Res. (W), 8 Margin, A.
L. $800, A. B. $2400, I. B. $3500.
Hill, James L„ Rev. Res. (W), 225 Lafayette, A. L. $3800, A. B. $7800, I. B.
$3000, I. C. $7000.
ilines, Mary & Catherine Phelan. Res.
(W), 30 Mill, A. L. $500, A. B. $900.
Hines, Mary *c Catherine Phelan. Res.
f
(W), 1 High, A. L. $500, A. B. $1600.
Hines, Richard, Heirs. Res. (W), 8
High, A. L. $600, A. B. $1000.
llodKkins, Mary W. Apts. (W), 275
Washington, A. L. $1200, A. B. $2500,
I. B. $3500.
Holmes, Phillip T. Apts. (W), 3 Margin, A. L. $800, A. B. $1900, I. B. et
I. C. $4000.
Hooper, Geo. L., et al. 2 Family Res.
(W), 9-11 Fairfield, A. L. $2700, A.
B. $7000, I. B. $9000, I. C. $5000.
Horton, Hertha M. Res. (W), 46 Leach,
A. L. $800, A. B. $2000, I. B. $3000.
Howe, Ellie L. M. Res. (W), 12 Flint,
A. L. $800, A. B. $1500.
Howe, Grace T. 2 Res. (W), 24-24%
Ward, A. L. $700, A. B. $1400.
Howes, Martha H. C. «fe J. Chisholm.
Res. & 2 Garages (W), 7 Pond, A. L.
$1000, A. B. $900.
Hndon, Joseph F. Apts. (W), 2-4 West
Place, A. L. $1400, A. B. $9000, I. B.
$7500.
Hndon, Joseph F. Double Res. (W),
197 & 199 Lafayette, A. L. $4000, A. B.
$7000, I. B. $8000.
Hnrd, Caroline S. Res. & Shop (W), 27
& 29 Winthrop, A. L. $800, A. B. $1100,
I. B. $1800.
Hnrd, Joseph A. Res. (W), 78 Summer,
A. L. $800, A. B. $3500.
Hurd, Joseph A. Storage Bldg. (W),
5 Prescott, A. L. $800, A. B. $400.
Hnrd Joseph A. Apts. (W), 17 Perkins,
A. L. $800, A. B. $1000, I. B. $1500.
Hurley, Rridget, Mrs., Heirs. 3 Apts.
(W), 23 Liberty, A. L. $2500.
Hurley. H. Maria. 2 Family Res. (W),
4 Lagrange, A. L. $1200, A. B. $2800,
I. B. $3000.
Hurley, H. Maria. Res. (W>, 3 West
Place, A. B. $3000, I. B. $3000 I. C.
$2500.
Hurley, John F. Res. (W), 175 Lafayette, A. L. $3200, A. B. $5700, I. B.
$2000.
*
Hyde, Jennie K. 2 Res. & Garage (W),
10-12 Fairfield, A. L. $2000, A. B. $5200,
I. B. $8000, I. C. $2500.
In^alls, Chas. H., Heirs. Apts. (W),
21 Prescott, A. L. $400, A. B. $2800,
I. B. $2500.
Israel, Jesse. Apts. (W), 10 Margin,
A. L. $800, A. B. $1500, I. B. $2500, I.
C. $500.
Jackson, Eben.
Apts.
(W),
10-12
Palmer, A. L. $700, A. B. $1500, I. B.
$2500.
Jackson, Eben. Apts. (W), 10 Congress,
A. L. $200, A. B. $1900, I. B. $4500.
Jackson, Eben. Apts. & Stable (W), 1618 Congress, A. L. $1300, A. B. $5000,
I. B. $5500.
Jackson, John, Heirs. 2-2 Family Res.
(W), 71-73 Summer, A. L. $2500, A.
B. $6900.
Jackson, John J., Estate of. Res. (W),
38 Endicott, A. B. $2400, I. B. $2500.
Jackson, Mary E. Pies. (W), 55%
Broad, A. L. $300, A. B. $700, I. B.
$1000.
James, Jacob. Res. (W), 8 Warren Ct.,
A. B. $2000.
J a r n e s , Jacob. 2 Res. & Barns (W),
18-20 Laurel, A. L. $500, A. B. $2200.
Jarnes, Lizzie. 2 Apts. (W), 10-12 May,
A. L. $800, A. B. $2000, I. B. $2800.
Jeffrey, Alice M. Apts (W), 104 Proctor, A. L. $400, A. B. $4500.
Jelly, Katherine E. Res. & Store House
(W), 5 Gardner, A. L. $2400, A. B.
$5100, I. B. $5000, I. C. $2000.
Jelly, Mary C. Res. (W), 58 Endicott,
A. L. $800, A. B. $1300, I. B. $1000.
Jelly, Mary C. Res. fW), 60 Endicott,
A. L, $200, A. B. $800, I. B. $600.
Jelly, Wm. F., Heirs. Res. (W), 48 Endicott, A. L, $1000, A. B. $2600, I. C.
$1600.
Jenkins, J. R. Res & Stable (W), 27
Leach, A. L. $2000, A. B. $4000, I. B.
$4500.
Jennings, Wm. J. Apts. (W), 12 Boston, A. L. $2000, A. B. $3200, I. B.
$2500.
Jodoin, Anestase. Stores & Apts (W),
34-36 East Gardner, A. L. $600, A. B.
$5500, I. B. $3000.
Jodoin, Aurelia. Res. (W), 6 Glover,
A. L. $400, A. B. $900, I. B. $2000, I. C.
$800.
Jodoin, Jean R. Apts. (W), 29 Pingree,
A. L. $800, A. B. $5000, I. B. $4000, I.
C. $500.
Johnson, Chas. S, Apts. (W), 68-70
Broad, A. L. $700, A. B. $8000, I. B.
$8000.
Johnson, Mary E. Apts. (W), 35 Hathorne, A. L. $400, A. B. $2300, I. B.
$2000.
Johnston, Margaret. Res. & Shed (W),
282 Washington, A. L. $1300, A. B.
$1600, I. B. $3600.
Johnstone, Jonas. 2-2 Family Res. (W),
5 & 5R Vale, A. L. $700, A. B. $1400,
I. B. $2300.
Johnstone, Jonas. Res. (W), 7 Vale,
A. L. $400, A. B. $1200, I. B. $3200.
Joly, Alphonse M. Apts. & Garage
(W), 8 West Place, A. L. $1500, A.
B. $7100, I. B. $7000.
Joly, Alphonse M. Apts. (B), 7-9 Harbor, A. L. $2100, A. B. $5000.
Joly, Alphonse M. Store & Apts. (W),
Leach St. Court, I. B. $4000.
Joyce, David. 2 Family Res. & Stable
(W), 24 Liberty, A. L. $500, A. B.
$1300, I. B. $1500, I. C. $1000.
Joyce, Mary C. Apts. (W), 13 Margin,
A. L. $900, A. B. $1800, I. B. $2000.
Jwonicki, Wajciech. Apts. (W), 88
Union, A. L. $600, A. B. $3000, I. C.
$1000.
Kane, Catherine. 2 Family Res. (W),
35 Proctor, A. L. $200, A. B. $2000.
Karanicolas, James. Stores & Apts.
(W), 266 Washington, A. L. $1900, A.
B. $800, I. B. $4000.
Karanicolas, John. Apts. & Store (W),
264y2-266R Washington, A. B. $4300.
Keefe, Chas. H. Double Res. & Stable
(W), 46-48 Boston, A. L. $3800, A. B.
$8900.
Keegan, Francis, Heirs. 2 Res. (W),
19 & 19y2 Warren, A. L. $400, A. B.
$3000, I. B. $2700.
Kecnan, Chester F. Apts. (W), 36 Gardner.
Kehew-Rradley Co. Mill Bldgs. (W &
B) East Gardner, A. L. $2300, A. B.
$10,700, I. B. & I. C. $31,200.
Kehew, Mary A., Heirs. Res. (W), 12
Holly A. L. $2800, A. B. $3200, I. B.
$3500.
Kelleher, Thomas. Apts. (W), 21 Laurel, A. L. $500, A. B. $1700.
K el ley, James, Heirs. Res. (W), 7 Barr,
A. L. $600, A. B. $2100.
Kelliher, Ellen J. Res. (W), 2 Flint, A.
L. $500, A. B. $1500, I. B. $4500.
Kelly, Mary A. Res. (W), 1 West Place,
A. B. $2000, I. B. $3000, I. C. $1000.
Kelly, Mary A. Res. (W), 2y2 Lagrange, A. L. $1100, A. B. $2400, I. C.
$500.
�LIST BY STREETS AND NUMBERS
For detailed information as to value of land and buildings, insurance, etc., see List of Owners Arranged Alphabetically
Barr:
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
M o n r o e & A r n o l d E x p r e s s Co.
M o n r o e & A r n o l d E x p r e s s Co.
Saunders, Fred
H e i r s of J a m e s K e l l y
C a r t e r , M a r y J.
Webber, Sarah E.
R e d m o n d , J o h a n n a J.
Boston:
4. H a r t i g a n , E l i z a b e t h J .
5. H i g g i n s , A n n i e
6. M u r p h y , C a t h e r i n e & S a r a h
7 & 7A. W i n b u r y , E l l e n J .
9. G r a n t , C a r o l i n e L.
10. H e v e r , A n n i e
11. M o r r o w , H e l e n
12. J e n n i n g s , W i l l i a m J .
13. H e i r s of M a r i a H . N e w h a l l
16. H e i r s of E d w a r d
&
Samuel
Southwick
17. H i g g i n s , A n n i e
20. C o h a n e , A l i c e
22. M a g u i r e , A l m i r a
24. A n k e l e s , I s a a c & D o r a
2 4 ^ . Flynn, Michael
26. A n k e l e s , I s a a c & D o r a
27. W o o d b u r y , A b b i e K., T r u s t e e
29. C o u g h l i n , J o h n
30 & 32. F i s k , N a t h a n i e l B .
31. W i l c o x , G e o r g e
'Siy2.
D a n e , J. W e b s t e r
34 & 38. T u t t l e , E m m a A.
35. R o b s o n , M a r g a r e t
37. R o b s o n , M a r g a r e t
39. R o b s o n , R o b e r t H .
40 & 41. H e i r s of M a r k J . S m i t h
43. F a r r e l l , O l i v i a & M a r y A.
44. S y m o n d s , L i z z i e & J o h n A.
46 & 48. K e e f e , C h a s . I I .
51. Q u i n n , M a r y
53. Creedon, Mary M.
57. Korn Leather Co., Inc., Max
59. Creedon, P. & Co., Inc.
61 & 63.
Creedon Bldg. Assn.
Broad:
34. T h a y e r , M a r y J .
36. H e i r s of M a r y E . K n i g h t
38. T e m p l e , L u c y F .
40. F l a n i g a n , E l i z a A.
43. D o n a v a n , J a m e s F .
43. B a b b i d g e , F r a n c i s A.
44. D o l a n , S u s a n E .
45. D o y l e , A l l a n
46. M u l l i g a n , M a r y A.
47. L i t t l e , T h o m a s F .
49. C a s s e l l , R o b e r t S.
50. C o h a n e , N e l l i e L.
51. C r o n a n , J o s e p h
52 & 52y 2 . L o o n e y , E l l e n D.
53. S t a n t o n , M r s . T h o m a s
54 & 54R. L o o n e y , E l l e n D.
55. C o h a n e , J o h n
5 5 ^ . J a c k s o n , M a r y E.
56. L u n d r e g a n , N e l l i e E .
5 6 % . F l y n n , D a n i e l J., T r u s t e e
57. S y r e k , A n d r e z e y
58. F l y n n , D a n i e l J .
59. B a k e r , A b r a h a m M.
60. G l o v s k y , S a d i e
61 & 6 1 % . B r a w d e r s , J a m e s
62. P r e s t o n , M a r y E .
63. S u l l i v a n , T h e r e s a B.
65 & 67. M o o n e y , J a m e s J .
66. R u s s e l l , M a r y
68 & 70. J o h n s o n , C h a s . S.
nullum:
3 % . S y m o n d s , E l i z a b e t h C.
5. H e i r s of M a r y G. B a r r y
Cabot:
4. B a t c h e l d e r , H e n r y C.
6. L e B l a n c , J o s e p h i n e & J o s e p h
15. R i n k s , S a r a h A.
23. G o d s l a n d , E l i z a b e t h
24. P o l l o c k , J o h n
29. B r o w n , E d i t h M.
31. H e i r s of G e o r g e H . A v e r i l l
3 5. C h o u i n a r d , E x i l i a
36. S h a w , M r s . J. G l o v e r
37. F i t z s i m m o n s , W i l l i a m H .
38. D o l l i v e r , E d w i n C.
39. C a m p b e l l , R o b e r t
40. T h i b e a u l t , Z e p h e r i n
_. t
41.
42.
43.
Tracey, Mary
L e m a y , J o s e p h Y.
Miller, C h a r l e s H.
Canal:
6 t o 14. D e v l i n B r o s .
17. E a g l e I r o n F o u n d r y , I n c .
47. S t r a w , L u t h e r G .
51. W o o d b u r y , E d w i n S. Co.
Cedar:
1. C u r t i s , M a r t h a H .
2. D r i v e r , M i s s S. E .
3. N e w c o m b , E s t h e r M.
6 & 7. B a t c h e l d e r , H e n r y M.
6-8 & 8 % . P e r k i n s , J a m e s W .
9. F i t z , S u s a n J.
10-10%. P e r k i n s , J a m e s W.
11-11%. Talbot, Auguste
12-12y2-14. P e r k i n s , J a m e s W.
13. D e m e u l e , V i t a l
15. E l w e l l , H a n n a h D.
16. P e r k i n s , J a m e s W .
17. B a t c h e l d e r , H e n r y M.
21. A b b o t t , S a r a h E .
22-24. H e i r s of M r s . W m . G. W e b b e r
23. N e i z e r , Geo. F . & H a n n a h
25. F o n t a i n e , I s a b e l l a L. B .
26. C a s s e l l , H a r r i e t L.
27-27y2-29-31. Giguere, J o s e p h
28. P a r c e l l o , C a r m e n o
Cedar St. Court:
2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 7 - 9 . W e b b e r , W m . G., H e i r s
Central:
57. P a r s o n s , M r s . E m e l i n e A.
Charter:
Caron, Magloire.
2-4-6-!
Cherry:
7-9. B u f f u m , C h a r l e s S.
8-10. R o b b i n s , E l i z a b e t h G.
12. N o r t o n , L a F o r e s t
14. N o r t o n , K i t t y E s t e l l a
15. S a u n d e r s , F l o r e n c e S.
16-18. A r r i n g t o n , R o s a b e l l L.
19-24. P e r k i n s , J a m e s W .
Congress:
1-3. C a n a v a n , W i l l i a m
6. M c G i n l e y , S a r a h
7. L e b o u f , A l f r e d T.
9-11. B o u l a n g e r , M e l v i n a
10. J a c k s o n , E b e n
13-15-17. C h a p u t , J o s e p h i n e
16-18. J a c k s o n , E b e n
19-21-23-25-29-31-33. D a i l e y
Jeremiah F.
20-22-24. G a g n o n , P a l m i r a
28-30-32. G u i l m e t , A r t h u r
35-37. W h i t e , M a r y A.
36-38. G a u t h i e r , C a r o l i n e
39-41-43-45. B o u c h a r d , O v i d e
42-42y2-46-46y2. Audet, Alfred
47-49. M i c h a u d , E l z e a r
48-50. R y a n , G a r r e t
51. M i c h a u d , I s a i e
52-56. F o r t i e r , E r n e s t
55-57. O ' C o n n o r , T i m o t h y , e t a l
56%. Besse, Arsene
58 & 58y 2 & 60. B e s s e , A r s e n e
61. B e r u b e , C l a i r e
62-64-66. L e d o u x , J o s e p h
6 5. F u g e r e , J o s e p h & E u c l i d e
67-71-73. C o t e , E u g e n e
70-72. F u g e r e , E u c l i d
74-76. M i c h a u d , M a r t i a l
75. T h e r i a u l t , S e v e r i n e
79. C h o u i n a r d , M r s . E x i l i a
Cypress:
2. D a n c o s e ,
Epiphane
Derhy
188. M c N u l t y , M i c h a e l
191. L a n e , Geo. W.
197. P i c k e r i n g , Geo. Wr.
201. O'Neil, W m . H., T r u s t e e
202-206-208-212. W i l s o n , C a r o l i n e G.
203-207. A h e r n , E l i z a b e t h & M a r y
E.
209-211-213. R o b a z z o w s k i , P e t e r
214-216-218-220. C h a m b e r s ,
Elizabeth
215-217. R y a n , G a r r e t t
221. B a t t i s , E d w . C.
222-224. E i s m o n d , S t a n i s l a u s
226. F r o d y m a , J a n & J a d u r i g a n
230. Z i e l i n s k i , F r a n c i s z e k
231-233. R o c k , A n n a
237. S a l e m I r o n F o u n d r y
249 t o 261. P i t m a n & B r o w n Co.
254 S a l e m H o s p i t a l
267-271. A l m y , B i g e l o w & W a s h b u r n
275. S a l e m H o s p i t a l .
(Lessee Merr o w M a c h i n e Co.)
277. S a l e m H o s p i t a l . ( L e s s e e M o o r e
Bros.)
285 t o 291. R o b b i n s , N. C. e s t a t e .
( L e s s e e E . L. B a l d w i n )
295 t o 313. L a n g m a i d , F . A., e t a l .
(Lessee J. P. L a n g m a i d & Son)
298. L a n g m a i d , F . A. e t a l
306. P a r s o n s , E m e l i n e A.
Dodge:
1. S h a p i r o , L e i l a
3. A b e l l , A n n a
5. D e v l i n B r o s . Bid. Co.
6. G o o d e l l , Z i n a
7. P i n n o c k , T h o m a s 'G.
8. S a l e m C o u n t e r Co. e t a l
Sy2.
S a l e m P l a t i n g & P o l i s h i n g Co.
10. S h o r t e n , M. & Son, e t a l
13. C e n t r a l I r o n F o u n d r y Co.
16. H a t h o r n e , B l d g . A s s o c .
20. C a r t e r , J. H .
D o d g e St. Court:
2. S u l d r z e n s k a , A g a t h a
3. B e r n s o n , G u s
5-7. P a g e , F r a n k A. & F . A.
8. B o u c h a r d , O v i d e
9-10-11. A x e l r o d , L o u i s & H o u d i s h ,
Leon
Downing:
1-3. T o d d , J a m e s A.
2-4-6. G a r d n e r , 'Wm. D.
8. N e v i n s , M a r y E .
B a s t Gardner:
1. K e h e w B r a d l e y Co.
N a u m k e a g S t e a m C o t t o n Co.
16. M a d o r e , J o s e p h
18-20-22-24. P e l l e t i e r , D e l i m a
26. B o u r g a u l t , G i l b e r t
34-36. J o d o i n , A n e s t a s e
40. G a g n o n , J o s e p h A.
44. B e a u d e t , T h o m a s
46. S i m a r d , J o s e p h
52. R i l e y , J o h n
56. M c D o n a l d , E l l e n J.
Eden:
5-5%. Theriault, Orner P.
6. S h e p a r d , L i z z i e C.
7. N o r t o n , A l f r e d R.
8. H e n d e r s o n , M a r y
9. H a m i l t o n , E l i z a b e t h M.
10. St. P i e r r e , A m a n d a
11. H a m i l t o n , T h o m a s H.
12. G r a n t , M a r g a r e t
13. P o i t r a s , J o s e p h i n e
14. A y e r s , M e l i s a
16. P o l l o c k , I s a b e l l e
17. W a l k e r , C a r r i e C.
18. C h o u i n a r d , P i e r r e
19. N a d e a u , F r e d C.
20. C r e a n , C a t h e r i n e , T r u s t e e
Endieott:
12. G a r n e y , J o h n
14-16-18. W i n e a p p l e , A l i c e
20. M i l l e r , A b r a h a m
22 M e l l a , A n t o n i o
23-25. N e w c o m b , D a v i d B .
24. F o i s e y , J o s e p h G.
26. G a n e y , J o h n
27. M a h o n e y , M a r g a r e t M.
28. F i l o c c e a , L u i g i & R a f f a e l a
29. M a h o n e y , F r a n c i s J .
30. M c E l r o y , P e t e r J .
31-33-35. P e a b o d y , M. L i z z i e
34. P e a s e , C h a s . H . E s t a t e
36. M i r a n d i , G u i s s e p p e n a
37. M a n n i n g , M a r y E s t a t e
�LIST BY STREETS AND NUMBERS
16
Pope:
2. W i l l i s , E l i z a b e t h S.
8. C a r r L e a t h e r Co.
9-11. L o o n e y , M i c h a e l
15. L o o n e y , E l l e n M.
54. T r e m b l a y , E d m o n d
55. T u r c o t t e , J o s . A.
58. D e s j a r d i n e s , T h o m a s
59-61. G u a y , M a g o r i q u e
60-64. F o i s e y , L e o n i d e
Phelps:
1. H e i r s of J o h n L i t t l e
2. F u r e y , C a t h e r i n e E .
3. G i l g a n , M a r y E .
4. F u r e y , C a t h e r i n e E .
4%-6. Turbett, John
5. T h o r n t o n , E l l e n
7. H e i r s of S a r a h E . G i l b e r t
8-8R. Bowling-, B r i d g e t
9. H e n n e b e r r y , T h o m a s
10. H e i r s of F r a n c i s C u r r i n
11. M a h o n e y , D a n i e l J .
13. G a l l a g h e r , M a r g a r e t J.
14. B u r k e , W i n i f r e d
15. C a s s i d y , M a r g a r e t E .
17. H e i r s of R o b e r t L. C a s s e l l
18. M a r o n e y , J a m e s J.
19-19%. Gannon, Ellen
20. M u l l i g a n , M a l a c h y
21. M u l l i g a n , M a r y H .
2 1 R - 2 1 R R . H e i r s of R. D a n i e l M c Kinnon
22. H i g g i n s , M a r y G.
23R. H e i r s of P a t r i c k M c C o r m i c k
23-25-25R. H a r p e l , M o r r i s & M a c h notsky, Jacob
24. H e i r s of A n d r e w O ' L e a r y
26. O ' L e a r y , E d w a r d J.
28. W e l c h , J a m e s
Piedmont:
2. F i e l d , M r s . J e s s e A.
3. B a r k e r , A n n i e C.
4. R o a c h , J o s e p h P .
5. S m i t h , S a b r i n a S.
6. A d a m s , H a r r i s o n S.
7-9. S m i t h , S. F r e d e r i c k
8. C o w d r e y , N e l l i e
10. K i n n e a r , M a r y L.
11-15. B a t c h e l d e r , H e n r y M.
12. K l i p p e l , J. M a r k
Pingree:
3. N e a r y , T h o m a s
8-10. M i l l e r , M i n n i e
9. L e o n a r d , F r a n c i s H . & F o y e , A n n i e C.
12-14. M a r c a u r e l l e , M a r i e J .
13. B i r m i n g h a m , M a r y E .
17-19. L u s s i e r , A r t h u r
18 A u d e t , L o u i s
21-23-25. D ' A r m o u r , M a r i e A n n a
22-24. M c D o n a l d , B r i d g e t
29. J o d o i n , J e a n B .
30-32-34. L e w a s k i , B r i d g e t
31-33-37. H e i r s of E d m o n d T r e m b l a y
36. B i k , A n n i e
40. G a r v e y , C a t h e r i n e
41-43. L a m o n t a g u e , F r a n c o i s & M e l vina
42. B l a n c h e t t e , J o s e p h
49-51. P o u s s a r d , J o s e p h
52. D u b e , J o s e p h
53-55. F u g e r e , J o s e p h & E u c l i d
Pond:
3. H e i r s of J o s e p h A r r i n g t o n
5. R i v e r s , F r a n k
4-6. C o n d o n , C a t h e r i n e A.
7. H o w e s , M a r t h a H . C. &
o l m , J.
9. S t r a w , J e n n i e M.
11. L ' H e u r e u x , M e l v i n a
13. R o u l e a u , A n n i e C.
15. H e n n e s s y , J o h n
17. S t r a w , J e n n i e M.
Porter:
4. L e w i s , G e o r g i a n n a
7 - 7 ^ . Wineapple, Ray
9. Buffum, F l o r e n c e P .
10. H e i r s of J o h n C. R o p e s
11-13-15. P e r k i n s , J a m e s W.
14. H e i r s of D a v i d F u l l e r
18-18y 2 . B o u r g a u l t , J o s e p h L.
20. P e r k i n s , J a m e s W .
22. C h a p u t , P a u l N.
30. C h a p u t , P a u l N.
Porter
3.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
St. Court:
D e s c h a m p s , M. E u g e n i e
Ledoux, Joseph
H e i r s of J o h n C. R o p e s
G a r d n e r , W m . D.
B r o w n i n g , E t h e l L.
M a n s f i e l d , H a r r i e t L.
Chis-
22. T o n d r e a u l t , W i l f r e d
23. C h e n e y , A r t h e m i s e
26. B e a u d r y , E m m a D.
28-30-32-32^-34. Ouellette, Emile
37. G a u d e t t e , G e l a s
38 L e v e s q u e , E m i l e
39. B e a u d r y , E m m a D., e t a l
41. N i c h o l s , W m . S.
43. McNiff, M a r g a r e t
44 t o 58. C l a v e a u , H e r m e m e g e l d
47. T r e m b l a y , M a r i e A.
P o w e r s Court:
2-3-4. P r e s t o n , M a r y E .
P r a t t S t r e e t Court:
1. D o g g e t t , J a n e
3-5. C a n t y , C h a s . F .
4. H a l e y , H u m p h r e y
6-8. M a h o n e y , M a r g a r e t
7-11. H a l e y , H u m p h r e y
10-12. H e i r s of H e n r y J . P r a t t
15. F i l o c c e a , L u i g i
18. S h a p i r o , J o s e p h
Rofllyn St. C o u r t :
3. H e i r s of J o h n N e i z e r
5. D o i r o n , O v i d e
9. B r e n t n a l l , E l l a F .
Prescott:
4-6. N e w h a l l , E l i z a b e t h D.
5. H u r d , J o s e p h A.
7. G u i n t a , G u i s e p p e
8-10. R i c h , N e l l i e K.
12. S o u t h a r d , F r e d E.15. B u r k e , A n n i e M.
16. W h i t e , C a t h e r i n e
17. N e v i n s , M a r y E .
18-20. A r o n s o n , N a t h a n
21. H e i r s of C h a s . H . I n g a l l s
22. R o b b l e e , A n n i e
23. M c S w i g g i n , J o s e p h F .
24. A b b o t t , S a r a h E .
26. H e i r s of W m . F . G a r d n e r
28. W i t h e y , A n n a M.
Prince:
3-5. N a u m k e a g S t e a m C o t t o n Co.
4-4 1 / £. H e i r s of M a r g a r e t H a r r i n g ton
6. T o n d r e a u l t , W i l f r e d
7. D e n n i s , P i e r r e
8. D u m a s , C a t h e r i n e
9-11. N a u m k e a g S t e a m C o t t o n Co.
10. G a g n o n , A d d i e
12. B a k e r , W i l f r e d J. J .
14. F i t z g e r a l d , M a r y T.
17-19-21. N a u m k e a g
Steam
Cotton
Co.
18-20. L e v e s q u e , E m i l e
22-24. L e v e s q u e , N a p o l e o n
26. M o r i n , A d e l a r d
28. B l a i s , J o s e p h
30-32. D e m e u l e , M a r k
34-36. L e v e s q u e , D e l i m a
35-37. L e v e s q u e , D e l i m a
38. A u d e t , A l f r e d
39-41. M a r t e l , E l z e a
42. P l o u r d e , J o s e p h P .
42R. P l o u r d e , J o s e p h P .
43. D e s c h a m p s , C y r i l l e
45-47. T r e m b l a y , I s a i e
46. M e r r i c k , S a m u e l J., e t a l
Proctor:
21. B r o p h y , M i c h a e l J .
23. B r o p h y , M a r y E .
23. R e y n o l d s , E l i z a b e t h G.
35. K a n e , C a t h e r i n e
75. H a l l , M a r y L.
79. H a r n e y , T. J.
8l-81 1 / 2. C l a n c e y , J a m e s J .
83-831/2- L o o n e y , M i c h a e l J.
85-85y2-87-87y2. Campbell, M a r y
89. B u t l e r , A t t a l i n e
91 t o 101. C u n n e y , J e n n i e M.
104. J e f f r e y , A l i c e M.
Salem:
5-7. M a d d e n , H a n n a h
9. O u e l l e t t e , O t a v e
11. V i e l , A l b e r t
14-16. H e n n e s s e y , A b b i e B.
15. L i n e h a n , A n n i e C.
17-19. B u r n e t t , C h a s .
21. D e s c h a m p s , C y r i l l e
23. D e s c h a m p s , C y r i l l e
26-28. C h o u i n a r d , M r s . E x i l i a
27-29. M a c D o n a l d , A l e x a n d e r
32. L a v e r t y , E d w a r d M.
33. L a v e r t y , M a r g a r e t
34. K e n n e d y , L a w r e n c e F . ,
35. C h o u i n a r d , A u g u s t i n
36. F u g e r e , J o s e p h
37 B e l a n g e r , E l i z a b e t h
38-38R-4.0-40R. C h o u i n a r d ,
Augustin
41. B e l a n g e r , E l i z a b e t h
45-49. R o u i l l a r d , A d e l a r d
51. A u d e t , D e m e r i s e
54-56. St. A r m o u r , O r n e r
55. U r a n n , F r a n k
58. H e i r s of M r s . H e n r y A. C h a p m a n
59. F e l t , H a t t i e C.
60. C r o n a n , T h o m a s F .
63-65. P l o u r d e , J o s e p h P .
64. G a g n o n , R o s a n n a
66. N e w h a l l , J o h n F . , H e i r s
Summer:
59-59R. F l y n n , J o h n J .
61-61R. W a r d w e l l , A l b e r t F .
62. M a g o o n , Geo. M.
64. F i s h , E d w a r d A.
65. F u l l e r , H a r r i e t A. M.
67. C o n a n t , H e n r y
69 F u l l e r , H a r r i e t A. M.
70-72. F a x o n , C l a r a M.
71-73. H e i r s of J o h n J a c k s o n
75. S u l l i v a n , J o h n
76. S t e v e n s , A b b i e R.
77. U p h a m , C y n t h i a B., T r u s t e e
78 H u r d , J o s e p h A.
79-79R. B u f f u m , C h a s . S.
80. L o r i n g , A n n i e D.
81. S o u t h a r d , F r e d E .
82 G i l l i g a n , M a r g a r e t
Summit Ave.:
1. F o r d , C l a r a N.
Z. L u s s i e r , A r t h u r
3. G l o v e r , I s a b e l l a
4. Gaffey, J o s e p h M.
5. H e i r s of J a n e D. l ^ a r n h a m
Ropes:
1. Heir's of H a n n a h M a d d e n
2. P e r k i n s , C h a s . C.
2 R - 2 ^ - 4 . Cassidy, P a t r i c k
3. K n i g h t , H o w a r d A.
5. S a l e m , C i t y of
6. C a s s e l l , P M w a r d P .
7-9. R o n a n , E l l e n
8. D e a n , H o n o r a
10-10 y 2 . T h e r i a u l t , J o s e p h
11-15. D e s c h e n e s , A d e l e
12. C a n t y , C h a s . F .
18. S t r a w , J e n n i e M.
Union:
37. H e i r s of T h o m a s O ' H a r a
38. Coffey, M r s . M a r g a r e t
39. R o c h e , S u s a n A.
42. C h a m b e r s , E l i z a b e t h
43. R o c k , A n n a
45-47-51. W i l s o n , C a r o l i n e G.
56. R y a n , G a r r e t
57. H e i r s of E d w a r d L a n e
58. S m i t h , K o n e g o n d a
59. b o r a n , R i c h a r d
bb-68. R o s e n b l o o m , L e n a
69. H e i r s of E d w a r d B . L a n e
77-79. H e i r s of E d w a r d B . L a n e
80-82. C r o n a n , T h o m a s F .
83 H e i r s of E d w a r d B . L a n e
87. P i c k e r i n g , G e o r g e W .
88. J w a n i c k i , W o j c i e c h
N a u m k e a g S t e a m C o t t o n Co.
Roslyn:
2. A d a m s , I d a S.
5. H a m l i n , H a t t i e M.
6. G a r d n e r , W m . D.
7. H a m l i n , M a r y E .
9. H e i r s of L u c i u s P . N o y e s
11. M c C u s k e r , R o s e
13. M c G i n l e y , S a r a h
1 5 - 1 5 % . S u l l i v a n , M a r y A.
16-18. W h e a r t y , E l l a F .
17. L a n d r y , D a n i e l F .
19-19y 2 . S u l l i v a n , M a r y A.
21. H e i r s of P a u l B . P a t t e n
Vale
1. C o n n o l l y , M a r g a r e t M.
4. C u r r i n , F r a n c i s
5 & 5R. J o h n s t o n e , J o n a s
6. F o g g , B r i d g e t
7. J o h n s t o n e , J o n a s
8. H e i r s of R o b e r t L. C a s s e l l
9. H e i r s of F r a n c i s C u r r i n
lO- 10^>. S y r e k , A n d r e z e y
l l . Currin, W i l l i a m J.
12. H e i r s of F r a n c i s C u r r i n
13- 15. McNiff, M i c h a e l
14. A n d r e w s , J o s e p h A., e t a l
17. L i t t l e , T h o m a s F .
C.
�1914
��1917
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Prescott Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
7 Prescott Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by
Giuseppe Giunta
Gardener
1916
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
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Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
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1916, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joe Cultrera
Language
A language of the resource
English
1916
2018
7
Giunta
Giuseppe
History
House
Massachusetts
Prescott
Salem
Street
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/28828/archive/files/9664663df45fa33e50e8fd6194adf3e4.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=BGkzYQN3c-gIJMfQeaMMAn8iBC5I3vCGaEC8kOFaYtjZVv1jn6bkXQbIzTXwYZh%7E8NYOmtAaVpBKdCofGYM1Jt5I8qk6WCUUNezki1MPaC8GlfE8j70aT43igf3Sx7CvkXVr%7E17pSoOrnRdPs73nl41kRyIG4aABK4sDCWoVCY4uKkSd9cDN19WxrodXPTv%7EhQ4Sxv8II28382eF1QJ296o6PyEW8e3rC5YR6prSH8zrO1pvCMKhMxY9qi6OSt8KFAPQHbDCa5Mn6RStebGmvOTXXfDjd-l6VMV2hPOizxpH8Kk2cLIWNU2zYyxlHwjFBijRGEfb7ra6VDCk5BttjQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
c8e3d5a85ce2c9e1a43428632faee15f
PDF Text
Text
14 Herbert Street
Built for
Antonina and John Boltrukiewicz
Machine Painter
1912
Researched and written by Jen Ratliff
July 2018
Historic Salem Inc,
The Bowditch House
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | HistoricSalem.org
©2018
�View of 14 Herbert Street, 1998 (MACRIS SAL.3865)
14 Herbert Street is a two-family, flat-roofed home built about 1912 by John S.
Boltrukiewicz and his family. The home replaced a circa 1874 single-family home that belonged
to Hannah Brick. The previous home was very similar to the adjacent 16 Herbert Street and was
likely built around the same time, possibly by the Brick family, who owned both plots of land.
In the early 20th century, the Historic Derby Street Neighborhood was predominantly
Polish. Attracted to job opportunities in the city’s mills and factories, Polish immigrants began
arriving in Salem around 1890 and by 1911, Poles comprised about 8% of the city’s overall
population. Religion played a strong role in the Polish community and as the number of Polish
Catholics in Salem grew, the need for a permanent house of worship became apparent. Herbert
Street and Union Street became the heart of the Polish Catholic presence in the city, housing St.
John the Baptist Church, a parochial school, convent, and rectory.
�View of the previous building at 14 Herbert Street and the Manning House at 10 ½ Herbert Street. c. 1890-1910.
(Phillips Library)
Reverend Joseph J. Czubek (1908-1910)
Joseph J. Czubek (1874-1940), was born on August 8, 1874 in Toledo, Ohio, one of five
children belonging to James and Mary (Nowak) Czubek. His parents immigrated to America from
the Province of Posen, an area of Prussia that became part of the German Empire in 1871.1 At
the age of 24, Joseph was ordained at a Polish Seminary in Detroit, Michigan.2
In 1901, Reverend Czubek was beckoned to Salem by Father Chmielewski of Boston, to
conduct mass in Polish. These services were given in the basement of an Irish parish, the Church
1
Year: 1920; Census Place: Salem Ward 2, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: T625_696; Page: 6A; Enumeration District:
259
Year: 1937; Arrival: New York, New York; Microfilm Serial: T715, 1897-1957; Microfilm Roll: Roll 6006; Line: 1; Page
Number: 136
2
Polish American Liturgical Center, History of St. John the Baptist, Salem MA, Diamond Jubilee (1903-1978)
�of Immaculate Conception on Hawthorne Boulevard, (then Walnut Street.) Czubek was quickly
welcomed by Salem’s parishioners due to his support of the need to erect a Polish Catholic
church in the city. Reverend Czubek created and tasked a committee with raising over $2,000
needed to purchase and convert a dwelling into a new parish. Following the building’s
completion, Czubek was appointed the pastor of St. John the Baptist Polish Roman Catholic
Church, which held its first mass at 18-20 Herbert Street on July 3, 1903.3
Reverend Czubek continued expanding church, purchasing additional buildings on
Herbert Street and the surrounding area to house a school, rectory, and a convent.4 After only
three short years, the church building on Herbert Street had already become inadequate for the
growing number of parishioners. Czubek purchased a vacant, former Baptist Church on St. Peter
Street and assigned a committee to oversee the building’s restoration. The new church was
completed in 1909 and the former Herbert Street church was converted into additional
classrooms for the Polish parochial school, which had previously occupied the basement.
One of Czubek’s many purchases was 14 and 16 Herbert Street in 1908, at the cost of
$2,900. The two dwellings were sold to Czubek by Ellen Fitzgerald of Boston.5 The land and two
homes previously belonged to Hannah Brick, who likely built them.6 Czubek used the properties
to house the Felician Sisters, nuns who operated the church’s parochial school, until a convent
could be built on Union Street. 7
Reverend Czubek’s legacy was cemented on June 25, 1914 when the Great Salem Fire
destroyed 1,600 buildings over 250 acres. More than 14,000 Salemites were displaced from their
homes including many from the Derby Street area. After hours of devastation to the city, the fire
stopped at the foot of Herbert Street and Central Wharf. Many Poles have credited this to
Reverend Czubek. Local lore states that Czubek stood in the middle of Derby Street with holy
water and a crucifix, praying for the fire’s end. Another story credits Clara Kotarski, whose
3
Polish American Liturgical Center, History of St. John the Baptist, Salem MA, Diamond Jubilee (1903-1978) and
Salem City Directory, Salem Massachusetts, 1904.
4
Polish American Liturgical Center, History of St. John the Baptist, Salem MA, Diamond Jubilee (1903-1978)
5
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1918:393
6
Atlas of the City of Salem, Massachusetts." Map. 11. Philadelphia, PA: C.M. Hopkins & Co., 1874.
7
Salem City Directory, Salem Massachusetts, George Whipple Co., 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911
�husband owned a row of buildings at the head of Derby Wharf. It is said that she placed a crucifix
on their house to halt the blaze.
In the Heart of Polish Salem, National Park Service
The Boltrukiewicz Family (1910-1996)
John Stanislaw Boltrukiewicz (1886-1954) was born in Poland on June 24, 1886. In 1907
he immigrated to the United States along with his wife Antonina “Annie” (Sigyjy) Boltrukiewicz
(1886-1963) whom he married that same year. 8 The couple rented a home at 43 Union Street,
that they shared with John’s older brother Lucas, and multiple boarders. John worked at United
8
Year: 1910; Census Place: Salem Ward 1, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: T624_587; Page: 13B; Enumeration District:
0455; FHL microfilm: 1374600
�Shoe Company in Beverly painting machines used in the manufacturing of shoes. In 1909 they
welcomed their daughter Bronislawa “Bertha” Boltrukiewicz. (1909-1967) The couple had three
more children, Wladislawa “Alice” (1910-1993), Stanislaw “Stanley” (1912-1965), and Jane
(1914-1996.) It appears that they also had multiple children die in infancy including John Jr. born
on May 4, 1908 and Wclaw, who was born in 1909 and died of pneumonia a few weeks later.9
In August 1910, John S. Boltrukiewicz purchased 14 and 16 Herbert Street from Joseph
Czubek for “one dollar and other considerations paid.”10 Their mortgage however reflects $2,400
which may have been used to construct a new dwelling at #14.11 The family moved into 16
Herbert Street and based on directories, around 1912, constructed a new two-family house at
#14 using the former single-family home’s foundation.12 The previous home looked very similar
to #16 but may have been replaced with a two-family as an investment property.13
During the Boltrukiewicz’s ownership, 14 Herbert Street had multiple tenants, primarily
Polish. The two-family home had a quick turn-over, with most tenants only listed living in the
home for a year. This however was not uncommon, as property ownership was a great source of
pride to the Polish, who would have rented only until they could have afforded a home.
Reverend Czubek was celebrated for assisting over 100 newly married couples purchase their
first homes.14
The Boltrukiewicz children continued to live at home at #16 into adulthood. Jane worked
in the mill of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company and Alice worked downtown as a
saleswoman at Amy, Bigelow & Washburn. Their brother Stanley worked as an auto mechanic at
Colonial Garage and Bertha Boltrukiewicz worked as a full-time stenographer. Around 1941,
Bertha began working at the Hygrade Sylvania Corporation in Salem, assembling lamps. 15 That
9
Wclaw is also listed as Wclaf and William, born September 28, 1909 and died October 11, 1909. John Jr. was born
May 4, 1908, no information on his death was found.
10
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1918:393
11
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 1918:394
12
Both the Phillips Library (Peabody Essex Museum) and City of Salem were contacted to request the building
permits from 1912. Both organizations were not able to locate these records. The use of these records could better
substantiate the home’s construction date.
13
Foundation appears similar to previous foundation based on turn-of-the-century photograph from the Phillips
Library, included in this research.
14
The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) · 22 Aug 1910, Mon · Main Edition · Page 3
15
Salem City Directory, Salem Massachusetts, R.L Polk & Co., 1941
�same year she married Henry Panek, a machinist. By 1942 the couple had moved into 14 Herbert
Street and the following year they had a son, Henry Jr. The Paneks remained in the home for
over 20 years, the longest of any tenant.
Both homes remained in the Boltrukiewicz family for a total of 86 years. They passed
down from John and Antonina, in 1953, to their children and in 1996, following the death of
Jane, the homes were sold separately for the first time. Henry Panek Jr., Jane’s nephew, who by
that time was living in Pennsylvania, sold 16 Herbert Street to Lorinda and Michael Matter for
$121,000 and 14 Herbert Street to Aaron and Kenneth Dibello for $105,000 16
14 Herbert Street sold again, three years later, to James and Christina Ayube for
180,000.17 The two-family home was rezoned into condo units in 2004 when the Ayube’s sold
the home to Timothy J. Hallinan, III for $285,000.18 Since 2004, the two units have been owned
separately.
16
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 13886:526, 4008:247 and 12610:31
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 15774:382
18
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Deed 20369:437 and Deed 22337:177
17
�Buyer
Ellen Fitzgerald
Years of
Ownership
1898-1908
Number
of Years
12
Purchase Price
$1,760
Document
Referenced
Deed 1538:550
Joseph J. Czubek
1908-1910
3
$2,900
Deed 1918:393
Deed 1918:394
John S. Boltrukiewicz
1910-1953
43
$2,900
Deed 2036:109
Jane D. Boltrukiewicz,
et al.
Aaron DiBella
Kenneth F. DiBella
1953-1996
43
1996-1999
3
> $100
$1.00
$105,000
Deed 4008:247
Deed 12610:31
Deed 13887:208
James A. Ayube
Christina M. Ayube
Timothy J. Hallinan, III
1999-2003
4
$180,000
Deed 15774:382
2003-2004
<1
$285,000
Deed 20369:437
Cynthia A. Clark
2004-2011
7
$180,000
Rebecca Mackenzie
2011-2017
6
$143,000
Deed 22349:39
Deed 22337:177
Deed 35543:378
Deed 35543:378
Nicholas L. Montefort
Allyson N. Chapman
2017Present
1+
$255,000
Deed 36196:360
Notes
14 and 16 Herbert Street
Authorized by William M. Hill, Probate Commissioner on
behalf of Daniel T. Brick, George J. Brick, Ellen Foley,
Johanna Madden.
Hannah Brick seems to be a maiden name or mother of
Hannah Fitzgerald, which Ellen Fitzgerald may be
relation of.
14 and 16 Herbert Street
Sold for “one dollar and valuable consideration paid”
Mortgaged from Ellen Fitzgerald and paid off in 1911
(Deed 2109:330)
14 and 16 Herbert Street
Sold for “one dollar and valuable consideration paid”
Mortgage states $2,400
14 and 16 Herbert Street
Inherited from her parents along with her siblings.
14 Herbert Street
1996 is the first year 14 & 16 Herbert Street are owned
by separate parties.
14 Herbert Street
14 Herbert Street
Condo association formed January 2004
(Deed 22337:177)
14 Herbert Street Unit 2
14 Herbert Street Unit 2
Rebecca married Jonathan Peros
(Deed 35543:378)
Unit 2
�Resident
F.W Preston
Directory Year
1907-1908
Vacant
1909
Felician Sisters
1910
F. Sentkowski
1911
John Krulski
1912
L. Ossolinska
A. Koscieniski
J. Filikiak
M. Darun
A. Kopuszcz
B. Napierski
H. Pouiz
P. Dombroski
J. Rhuber
I. Andros
A. Lardowski
J. Androskiewicz
1913-1914
R.S. Shaluk
R.S. Shaluk
H. Dragon
H. Dragon
N. Kaplon
1922
1924
1915
1916
1917
1918
1920
1921
1926
Notes
(Listed at 16 Herbert Street in 1909 and later
31 Union Street)
�Mrs. Mabel Fountaine
Michael Szymanski
1929- 1935
Michael switches from being listed at 14 and 15
Herbert. (When listed at #14, no #15 is listed)
Stanley Burba
(2 occupants)
Joseph Palamara Jr.
(4 occupants)
Henry Panek
(2-3 Occupants)
Joseph Palamara Jr.
(4 Occupants)
Henry Panek
(3 Occupants)
Joseph Wojtowicz
(2 Occupants)
Maciej Burak
(2-3 Occupants)
Henry Panek
(3 Occupants)
Sarah Griffin
(1 Occupants)
Henry Panek
(3 Occupants)
Vernon H. Howard
(2 Occupants)
Henry Panek
(3 Occupants)
1936-1940/1
Joseph owns a car in 1936
1941 Directory was unavailable
1942-1947
Panek household has 3 occupants starting in 1944
Henry Panek is Jane D. Boltrukiewicz’s nephew.
1948-1952
Wojtowicz houshold listed as having a telephone in
1950
1953-1954
The Burak household has 3 occupants beginning in
1954
1955-1956/7
1957-1960
�Salem Atlas, 1874 (Plate A)
�Salem Atlas, 1890-1903
�Salem Atlas 1897 (Plate 3)
�Salem Atlas 1906-1938 (Plate 15)
�Salem Atlas, 1911 (Plate 5)
����(View of the previous building at 14 Herbert Street and the Manning House at 10 ½ Herbert Street. c. 1890-1910. Phillips Library)
��������(Polish American Liturgical Center)
������(Stanton, Cathy. In the Heart of Polish Salem: An Ethnohistorical Study of St. Joseph Hall and Its Neighborhood.
Boston, MA: Northeast Region Ethnography Program, National Park Service, 2009)
�Article celebrating Reverand Czubek.
��(Stanton, Cathy. In the Heart of Polish Salem: An Ethnohistorical Study of St. Joseph Hall and Its Neighborhood.
Boston, MA: Northeast Region Ethnography Program, National Park Service, 2009)
�(Stanton, Cathy. In the Heart of Polish Salem: An Ethnohistorical Study of St. Joseph Hall and Its Neighborhood.
Boston, MA: Northeast Region Ethnography Program, National Park Service, 2009)
�(St. Mary’s Cemetery, Salem Massachusetts. Findagrave.com Memorial ID: 146951826)
146951826
���Death certificate for Wclaw Boltrukiewicz, who died in infancy in 1909 due to pneumonia.
(Massachusetts Vital Records, 1840–1911. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.)
�(St. Mary’s Cemetery, Salem Massachusetts. Findagrave.com Memorial ID: 181042919)
�(Boltrukiewicz Family Plot, Saint Mary’s Cemetery, Salem, Massachusetts. Findagrave.com Memorial ID: 180272170)
�(Boltrukiewicz Family Plot, Saint Mary’s Cemetery, Salem, Massachusetts. Findagrave.com Memorial ID: 180272170)
�����������������������������������������������������Inventory No:
SAL.3865
Historic Name:
Czubeck, John House
Common Name:
Address:
14 Herbert St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Derby Street
Local No:
35-295
Year Constructed:
1912
Architect(s):
Architectural Style(s):
No style
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House
Significance:
Architecture; Ethnic Heritage
Area(s):
Designation(s):
Building Materials(s):
Roof: Tar, Built-up
Wall: Vinyl Siding; Wood
Foundation: Concrete Unspecified
The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing
projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic
Places nominations for Massachusetts. Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to
this resource may be available in digital format at this time.
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Users of this digital material acknowledge that they have read and understood the MACRIS Information and Disclaimer
(http://mhc-macris.net/macrisdisclaimer.htm)
Data available via the MACRIS web interface, and associated scanned files are for information purposes only. THE ACT OF CHECKING THIS
DATABASE AND ASSOCIATED SCANNED FILES DOES NOT SUBSTITUTE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE OR
FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Thursday, July 19, 2018 at 4:15: PM
�USGS Quad
Assessor's number
Area(s)
Form Number
Salem
35-295
Town
Salem
Place (neighborhood or village) Derby Street
Address 14 Herbert Street
Historic Name Czubeck Building
Uses: Present
Residential
Original Residential
Date of Construction
Source
1912
maps, directories
Style/Form
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation Concrete-faced
Wall/Trim
Vinyl Siding
Roof
Tar
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
none
Major Alterations (with dates) c. 1980 - vinyl siding
Condition
good
Moved [Xj no
Acreage
Setting
Recorded by
Lisa Mausolf
Organization
Salem Planning Department
\Z\ yes
Date
1127SF
densely built-up 19th century residential
neighborhood between Essex Street and the waterfront
RECEIVED
Date (month/year) April 1998
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commissioi^^^>ey^v^nt^i^^structions for completing this form.
(
M A S S . HIST. C O M M
�BUILDING FORM (14 Herbert Street)
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the
community.
14 Herbert Street is a turn-of-the-century two-story,flat-roofed,two-family block which is sheathed in vinyl siding and rests
on a foundation which has been faced with concrete. The projecting eaves are encased in siding. The southeast comer of the
building is dominated by a recessed two-story porch which is three bays wide and supported by turned posts which are
spanned by an "x" railing. There are two bays of windows on the east side facing Herbert Street. Like most of the other
windows on the building they contain 2/2 sash with exterior storm windows and shutters; their surrounds are not visible due
to the siding. Centered on each level under the porch is a modem door. An additional entrance containing an original glassand-panel door is located on the west end of the south elevation. Fenestration on the north side consists of three irregularly
spaced bays of both small and large windows.
The building is set directly on the sidewalk. Opposite the building is a parking lot.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building and
the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
The present 14 Herbert Street replaced an earlier dwelling which was owned in 1874 by Hannah Brick. The heirs of Hannah
Fitzgerald owned this building and that to the south in 1897. By 1911 the property had been acquired by John Czubeck. It
appears that the present building was constructed shortly thereafter. The 1912 directory is the last to show the building as a
single-family residence; from 1913 on the property is a two-family dwelling. There is no listing for John Czubeck in the
Salem directories although Rev. Joseph Czubeck was appointed pastor of the St. John Baptist (Polish Catholic) Church in
1901 (the building was located at 18-20 Herbert Street) and lived at 31 Union Street.
The building has had a variety of tenants, many of Polish descent, over the years.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Arrington, Benjarnin F. Municipal History of Essex County in Massachusetts. Volumes I and II. New York: Lewis
Historical Publishing Company, 1922.
Hopkins, G.M. Atlas of Salem. Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
Mclntyre, Henry C.E. Map of the City of Salem. Philadelphia: 1851.
Richards, L.J. Atlas of the Citv of Salem. Massachusetts, 1897.
Salem City Directories, 1836-1970.
Walker Lithograph and Publishing Company. Atlas of the Citv of Salem. Massachusetts. Boston: 1911.
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attached a completed
National Register Criteria Statement form.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Herbert Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
14 Herbert Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for
Antonina and John Boltrukiewicz
Machine Painter
1912
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1912, 2018
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Jen Ratliff
Language
A language of the resource
English
14
1912
2018
Antonina
Boltrukiewicz
Herbert
History
House
John
Massachusetts
Salem
Street