Orford Street Historic District

Orford Town, Grafton County, NH

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The Orford Street Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. Portions of the content on this web page were adapted from a copy of the original nomination document. [‡]

Description

The Orford Street Historic District extends for half a mile on both sides of Orford Street (Route 10) beginning on the south with a 1-1/2-story brick dwelling built in 1829 (formerly a school house, with the cupola bell tower now removed) on the southeast corner of the intersection of Route 25A and Route 10, and continuing northerly to Archertown Road which curves around the East Common and cemetery, included in the Orford Street Historic District. There are 38 buildings exclusive of barns and other outbuildings in the Orford Street Historic District, which extends about 1/10th of a mile easterly from Orford Street and about 11 rods westerly toward the Connecticut River. On the easterly side, a terrace parallels the street at approximately 20 rods east of it. Centuries ago, this terrace formed a part of the river bed. The river receded leaving the height of land now known as the Ridge to become the site of seven fine houses built in a row over a period of years from 1773 to 1839 by professional and businessmen of Orford. Professor Hugh Morrison, architectural authority and retired professor of architecture at Dartmouth College has said of the houses: "As a row and counting the setting, this is the finest group of Federal style houses in the United States."[1]

On the south end of the Ridge is an 1851 brick Academy building with square bell tower, now the Orford High School, and an 1852 clapboarded boarding house for students, now a private dwelling. In front of the boarding house is a Victorian house built in 1882. On the Ridge north of the Academy is a 1-1/2-story house built in 1824. To the north, at the foot of the Ridge and fronting on the East Common, are a 1-1/2-story house built in 1800 and a small modern dwelling built on the site of a 1799 house where Orford's native-born artist, Henry Cheever Pratt, lived as a young boy.

The East Common, approximately 6 acres in extent, starts at the north boundary of the northernmost Ridge house and extends along Route 10 to Archertown Road. The earliest portion of the East Common with its easterly extension which is the oldest part of the cemetery was deeded to the town by Israel Morey in 1773 "for the purpose and use of a Meeting House, Burying Ground, and Training Field."[2] The East Common was extended southerly in 1798 by a deed from Joseph Pratt, a retired sea captain from Salem, Massachusetts, who captained the ship "Grand Turk" during the Revolutionary War. Captain Pratt's deed to the town stipulates that the land is "to be used as a parade or Common and for no other use whatever."[3] The southernmost portion of the East Common was deeded in 1796 by William Simpson, a retired sea captain from Portsmouth, New Hampshire. His deed states that the land is "for the sole purpose and only use of a training field or Common and that no building of any kind is to be erected on the same piece of land."[4]

An unusual and admired feature of the Orford Street Historic District is the Orford Mall, publicized as early as the mid 1800's in the Boston Evening Traveller. A letter to the editor recommended a visit to Orford, "the most charming country village" the writer had ever seen, and said "...look at that mall,...level as a house floor — straight as a line, and skirted with trees on both sides. Is there a parallel to this in the whole country?"[5]

The Mall extends along the entire east side of Orford Street from 25A to Archertown Road. The two rows of trees on either side of the walk were planted about 1800 by John Mann and Samuel Morey, owners at that time of the Mall property. Later the rows of trees were continued northerly along the town land bordering the East Common, where the Mall is owned by the town.[6] The portion in front of the Academy building is owned by the Orford School District, and the remainder of the Mall adjoins privately owned property and belongs to the owners of those properties.

On the west side of Orford Street at the southern end of the Orford Street Historic District is a 1-1/2-story brick dwelling built about 1847 by Thomas Mann, a grandson of Orford's first settler, John Mann. North of this is John Mann's home. The present ell adjoining the front is the earliest part, built in 1788 to replace the log house Mr. Mann constructed when he arrived in Orford from Hebron, Connecticut, with his bride. The large square front portion of the house was added in 1809 for his second wife. In 1849, the third floor of the house was fitted out as a meeting place for the Independent Order of Odd Fellows; a letter written at that time by a granddaughter of John Mann says, "the odd fellows have got their hall finished. It is very nice indeed — the ladies sewing circle met there Tuesday and made their carpet and curtains. Little did Grandpa know what his garret would be turned into."[7] A porch has been built onto the north side of the house and an ell extension added at right angles to the earliest part of the house. The present owners have shingled over the clapboards of the two ells and have removed the paint from the clapboards of the front part of the house, treating them with linseed oil for a natural wood effect which matches the shingles of the ells.

North of the Mann house are two small frame houses set close together. On the first lot, a doctor's office was built in 1828. The following year a new owner built the present house and converted the office to a shop. Today the shop is gone and only the house remains. Next to it, a store was built in 1824 by a grandson of John Mann. The store became a shoemaker's shop whose proprietor built the present house on the property in 1844. When he sold the place four years later, he reserved the right to remove the shop. (Its present location, if it still exists, is unknown.) The house has been enlarged by an addition to the front which reputedly was a dwelling built in 1883 behind the Academy building and moved to its present site about 1903. A Victorian embellishment in the form of a square tower juts out from one side of the house. An early barn behind the house is an excellent example of a hewn beam frame and saltbox construction.

The next house on the north is a 19th century barn converted recently to a dwelling. The earliest house on the property was built in 1771 and replaced in 1807 by the home of an Orford doctor. The house burned in 1862 leaving the barn, which was probably built during the doctor's occupancy of the property.

Like many houses in the Orford Street Historic District, the next house was built at different periods. The present ell was built in 1797 by a hatter whose shop stood in the yard south of the house. Later the premises were occupied by a tailor, a storekeeper, and in 1807, by a cabinetmaker named Robert Choate. In 1862 the shop was destroyed by the same fire that burned the doctor's house south of it. The hatter's old house escaped the fire and was enlarged in about 1868. The gable end of the Victorian addition faces the road. A smaller gable has been built into the roof of the original 1-1/2-story structure.

Beyond this, a handsome Greek Revival brick house and a similar but less pretentious building beside it were built by Orford's first lawyer, Abiathar Britton, who came to town in 1799. The brick house he built in 1831 replaced a frame house on the site which burned in 1830. Tradition says that a child of Britton died in the fire and consequently he made his brick house as safe as possible by placing doors in all four outside walls. The front doorway, with side lights and a transom light above it, is sheltered by a pillared porch surmounted by decorative ironwork. The porch of the south side door has a projecting wooden arched roof. There are four chimneys, two on each side. In the gable end facing the road is a window with an arched wooden blind above the glass. In the front hallway, a hanging stairway curves gracefully to the second floor.

The similar brick building north of Britton's home was built by him in 1835 to replace his old frame office. It is somewhat narrower than his home and has no embellishments. Sold in 1854 by Britton's heirs, it became the parsonage of the Orford Congregational Church.

The little Orford Social Library beyond the parsonage was built in 1840 as a milliner's shop and was purchased in 1902 for the library building. The first Social Library in Orford was incorporated June 16, 1797.[8] The present one was incorporated in 1900. The 1-1/2-story building with gable end facing the street and roof extending over the two levels of the front porch contains historical material as well as current books.

The store on the south corner of Bridge Street has been in existence since 1804, when the earliest portion was built by Daniel Wheeler. The building was completed in 1807 by Daniel's brother, John B. Wheeler, who built the southernmost of the seven Ridge houses. The exterior of the long, 2-story structure with hipped roof and a porch on two sides has remained unchanged to this day. The second floor interior has been converted to living quarters for the present owner, who carries on the storekeeping tradition of over a century and a half in the same building.

The store on the north corner of Bridge Street is a 20th century structure built around the nucleus of a small post office building which was originally a children's playhouse of the 1890's. The little building served as a post office until 1925, after which the store enlargement was built. The first building on the site was a Tavern Stand built in 1802 by Solomon Mann, a son of John Mann. A picture of the Tavern Stand when known as the Orford Hotel in the 1870's shows a wide building with gable end facing Orford Street. There is a three-tiered porch supported by posts and protected at the two upper stories by wooden rails with nicely-turned spindles. The gable over-hang covers the top tier of the porch.[9] The building was destroyed by fire in 1875.

Beyond the hotel site is a building begun in 1804 as a law office by Orford's second lawyer, Jeduthan Wilcox. This building is now the ell of the present house, which Mr. Wilcox built in 1807 for the wife he married that year. It has a fanlighted doorway, and the gable end faces the street. In 1824, Wilcox sold the property to the Orford Congregational Church for use as a parsonage; it was sold in 1833 to the incumbent minister, the Rev. Daniel Campbell. Beside the Jeduthan Wilcox house on the north was a store built in 1802. One of the tenants, a wheelwright, lived in a house which he built in 1818 north of the store. In 1834, Mr. Campbell added this property to the Jeduthan Wilcox place. He removed the store and in 1838 he enlarged the wheelwright's house by a 2-1/2-story addition to the front. At one time the building was used as a chapel for the Orford Congregational Church. More recently a porch has been added across the front.

The next house is on a lot adjoining the southerly end of the West Common. It was built in 1918 on the site of a house built in 1799 which was the home of Sarah Mann Rogers (daughter of John Mann) until her death in 1863. A picture shows it to have been a large square house of Colonial style with pedimented front doorway, hipped roof, and twelve-over-twelve paned windows.[10] Sarah Mann moved to the house in 1806 when she married Dr. William F. Rogers. She died at the age of 86, a widow for 46 years, a wife for one. The old building was torn down to make way for the present house. At the back of the house is a small modern building formerly used as a post office, now an insurance office.

A store building built by Nathan Webster in 1798 on a site fronting on the West Common was bought by Dr. Rogers and operated as a store in partnership with John Doubleday. The building ceased to exist shortly after 1885. Today the site is occupied by a garage whose owner lives with his family in the house north of it, also fronting on the West Common. The house was built in 1854 and improved in 1859. A dormer window cuts into the front roof and an attached barn which stood at right angles to the house has been removed. The house stands on the site of the first law office in town, built in 1799 by Abiathar Britton. In front and slightly north of the small office building was Orford's first Academy, built on the West Common in 1796. It was destroyed about 1850 by a fire.

A third building fronting on the West Common is a modern house standing on the site of a beaver hat factory built in 1799 by William Howard who, 26 years later, built the northernmost house on the Ridge. His original shop grew into a cluster of buildings, including a dwelling house. He retired from the business in 1838 and his son, Henry, took over management of the hat factory until it burned in 1852.

The Orford Congregational Church is Gothic in style with an arched window over the double front door and arched side windows. A frieze ornaments the balustraded clock tower and the recessed eaves of the facade. It was designed by M.S. Wood, in 1850. His drawings of the exterior, signed and dated, are in the possession of the Church. The building was completed in 1854 and a small portion of it stands on the site of an earlier meetinghouse built in 1797 on the West Common. Whereas the present church faces east toward Orford Street, the old meetinghouse faced south[11] and had a steeple "of cupola form," 47 square box pews on the floor and 18 in the gallery. The church bell was transferred to the present church where it was in use until 1862 when it cracked from being rung too vigorously on a Fourth of July eve.[12] In 1850 the old meetinghouse was moved to a lot at the north end of Orford Street where it was put up on blocks. It remained there until about 1870 when it was floated by river to Norwich, Vermont, and used as an Episcopal Church until it burned sometime after 1915.

The brick post office north of the church was built in 1962. When plans were being made for this building, a problem arose as to the ownership of a portion of the West Common on which it was to stand. Belatedly, the town voted to have the East and West Commons surveyed and granite markers erected on them stating the extent of the Commons, the restrictions for their use, the dates they were granted and by whom. One granite monument stands on the West Common and two stand on the East Common.[13]

The two-story ell of the present Elm House with a shed at right angles to it having three arched openings was built in 1798 by Samuel Morey. He rented it to a tenant who operated it as a public house for entertainment. From 1810 until 1833 the property was the home of Orford's minister, the Rev. Mr. Sylvester Dana. Dana sold his Orford home in 1841, after his retirement to Concord, New Hampshire, and in 1849 the new owner added the present Greek Revival front with columns supporting a gabled pediment. In 1875, after the old Tavern Stand (Orford Hotel) burned, the house was fitted out as a hotel and became known as the Elm House. Today its exterior has remained unchanged, but the interior has been divided into apartments.

North of the Elm House is a new building (c.1955) housing the offices of the Equity Publishing Corporation. In 1800 a store was built just north of this site.

The next northerly lot was the homestead site of Israel Morey who came to Orford from Hebron, Connecticut, in the winter of 1766, travelling by ox sled and using the frozen Connecticut River as a roadway from Charlestown to Orford. With him were his wife and three sons. He operated Orford's first store and blacksmith shop on his homestead lot, and built the first mills on the nearby brook. His home was Orford's first tavern and town meeting place. It stood until shortly before 1865. Its fate is not known, nor is that of Orford's first meetinghouse and schoolhouse, a small barn given by Israel Morey to the town in 1770. During the Revolution, the building became a guardhouse for scouts patrolling the river for enemies from Canada. It stood behind the present brick building which was built in 1840 as a Universalist Church, causing dissension among Orford residents. The Universalist Church was active for twenty-five years, after which services became irregular and finally ceased. In 1878 the building was bought by a group of residents who remodelled it into "Union Hall," a place for public entertainment. In 1904 Union Hall was sold to become the Masonic Hall as it is today. The exterior of the building remains as built with its two front doors, its domed cupola, and windows topped by lancet-arched blinds.

The next house, a 2-1/2-story gabled structure, was built in 1851 by a harnessmaker whose shop, now gone, stood just south of his home. Today a workshop is located behind the dwelling. The last house in the Orford Street Historic District, west of Orford Street is a 1-1/2-story home built in 1850. On this lot, where the ground slopes gently to the river, Israel Morey in 1775 established a ferry service which transported passengers until the first bridge was built in 1802 on the site of the present Samuel Morey Memorial Bridge.

Of the 38 buildings in the Orford Street Historic District, exclusive of barns and other outbuildings, only seven are 20th century structures. All are in excellent condition. Eight are constructed of brick made at the Orford Brickyard, which was started about 1770. The new post office is of modern brick. The two northernmost Ridge houses were the first brick buildings in town. Today, one is painted white; the other is yellow. All the other buildings are frame structures painted white, except for the John Mann house, now natural-wood colored. A few of the buildings might be considered intrusions — the store on the north corner of Bridge Street, the insurance office (originally a post office), the garage fronting on the West Common, the Equity Publishing office, and also, the small workshop behind the house north of the Masonic Hall. However, since the Orford Street Historic District has been a mixture of commercial and residential buildings from the beginning of its history, these present day business structures, which are not unsightly, are, in effect, additions rather than intrusions.

The buildings are concentrated along a half-mile section of Orford Street which has always been the center of the town's business and residential district. During the height of its prosperity there were four general stores in the District, a milliner's shop, shoemakers' shops, a hotel, a hat factory, two churches, two schools, a private Academy, and, on the east side of the street, the seven architecturally impressive Ridge houses unequalled in the beauty of their setting. On the west side of the street, the building facades are lined up closer to the street than on the east side, and being more numerous, the buildings are set closer together. There are 24 on the west side and 14 on the east side of the street. The East and West Commons at the north end of the street and the Mall extending the entire length of the Orford Street Historic District on the east side of the street, provide carefully-tended open spaces of green lawns and a tree-lined walk of unique distinction.

Significance

One of the most significant features of the Orford Street Historic District is its row of seven Ridge houses. A state historical marker honoring them reads as follows:

The Ridge

Orford's seven Ridge houses were built over a period of time from 1773 to 1839 by professional and business men of the town. The Bulfinch-style house of John B. Wheeler, built 1814-1816, was designed by a Boston architect, probably Asher Benjamin, an associate at that time of Charles Bulfinch. Other Ridge houses also display the influence of Asher Benjamin.

As has already been stated above, the row of Ridge houses has been cited as "...the finest group of Federal-style houses in the United States." (see Endnotes No. 1)

The significance of the Orford Street Historic District is emphasized by the setting of the seven houses, well back from the road on the eminence of the Ridge, and by the tree-shaded Mall extending along the street the entire half mile of the District with buildings on both sides of the street. The beauty of Orford Street has merited and continues to merit the praise and admiration of visitors. Washington Irving, after a visit to Orford, wrote: "In all my travels in this country and Europe, I have seen no village more beautiful. It is a charming place. Nature has done her utmost here."[14] Elihu Burritt, the Learned Blacksmith, while travelling one time by train, became ill and left the tram in Fairlee, Vermont. He crossed the river to Orford, intending to stay for only a brief visit, but "he became charmed with the place and extended his stay."[15]

Authors and musicians have received inspiration from the peaceful beauty of the place. William Taylor Adams (Oliver Optic) wrote some of his children's books in Orford.[16] More recently, Charles Jackson, after the success of his book The Lost Weekend, bought the northernmost Ridge house and lived there with his family until selling it in 1954. George W. Chadwick "heard here the music of nature,"[17] which may have inspired him to compose one of his symphonies. A significant musical event of the 1890's was a visit by the members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra to the owner of the yellow brick house on the Ridge (second from the northern end). Her talented guests "nightly charmed the music lovers assembled on the lawn about the house."[18]

Among the renowned visitors to Orford were Presidents Taft and Wilson for brief stays, and Daniel Webster for a longer visit.[19] In October of 1840 Webster came to Orford campaigning for the presidential election of William Henry Harrison. On the West Common near the meetinghouse, a platform was erected from which Webster made one of his memorable addresses. He was not feeling well and remained in Orford for two nights as a guest at the yellow brick house on the Ridge, then the home of Edward Bissell. Webster, in a letter to his wife, praised Mr. and Mrs. Bissell as the kindest people in the world, saying they gave him every attention. He concluded his letter: "Yours truly, Dan'l Webster, in bed."[20]

Art

Henry Cheever Pratt, born in Orford in 1803, was a boy of 15 living on Orford Street when Samuel F.B. Morse discovered him and undertook his training as an artist. A fine oil painting attributed to Pratt hangs in the Wheeler house on the Ridge and depicts Orford Street c.1832 from the cliff across the river in Fairlee. Today Pratt's paintings of the American West which were the result of his appointment as the official artist for the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 1851-53, are his principal claim to fame, although the portraits by which he earned his living, and his paintings of the White Mountains are skillfully done.

Commerce

At the height of the town's prosperity, there were four general stores in the Historic District. Three were owned and operated by owners of Ridge houses: Mr. Wheeler, Mr. Hinckley (whose partner was Edward Bissell, the subsequent owner of Hinckley's Ridge house), and Mr. Stedman Willard. After Hinckley's death, his store was bought by William Howard, Jr., son of the owner of the Howard Ridge house. The fourth store, located in the present brick parsonage, was operated by the firm of Tillotson & Cushman, the proprietor being Hartwell Cushman who lived in the Rogers Ridge house next to Mr. Wheeler's home. Town assessment records show that all the store owners had stock in trade valued at several thousand dollars. Their prosperity was increased beyond the profits of their store sales by investments made in mortgages.

Foreclosures were frequent. They acquired land and farms as well as interest on their money. This partly answers the question constantly asked by visitors to Orford: Where did the money come from to build the Ridge houses? Three were built by store owners. Two were built by successful lawyers (the Rogers house and the front of the Wilcox house). Mr. Rogers' law practice was mainly concerned with the settlement of debts. Another Ridge house was built by a prosperous beaver hat manufacturer, William Howard. The front and rear of the middle house on the Ridge was built by Orford's inventor, Samuel Morey, who earned his living from mills and lumbering.

Conservation

The Orford Conservation Commission is undertaking a project to plant young maple trees along Orford's mile Mall extending the entire length of the Orford Street Historic District on the east side of Orford Street. Two rows of trees were originally planted on either side of the Mall by John Mann and Samuel Morey in about 1800. Later the rows were continued where the Mall adjoins the East Common. The trees grew tall and arched out over the Mall, providing a shaded walk admired by all who see it and cherished by Orford residents. Owners of the Mall, whose property adjoins it, have tended it carefully throughout the years and are cooperating with the Conservation Commission in granting permission for new trees to be planted where old ones have died and been removed. It is hoped that another project to conserve and beautify the Mall will be possible in time. Over the years, the dirt walk has been allowed to grow to grass. A brick walk has been laid in place of the dirt walk on the Morey (Hodgson) property and, if funds can be raised, the brick walk could be extended the entire length of the Mall.

Conservation of the Orford Mall was begun at an early date with the enactment of a law prohibiting riding or driving on the Mall. Three of the four iron signs stating the prohibition are still in place today. Granite posts were set up at intervals on either side of the walk and others barred the way in the middle of the walk. Most of them have disappeared, but the enactment against riding or driving on the Mall continues to be enforced.

The East and West Commons are kept mowed and trimmed by the town. Three granite markers, as previously stated, are placed on the Commons to ensure preservation of their history and the restrictions for their use.

Education

John B. Wheeler, builder of the southernmost Ridge house, was instrumental in saving Dartmouth College from becoming a state university. While attending the graduation of his son, John, at Dartmouth in 1816, he became interested in the controversy between the state and the college trustees. As a result, he gave the college $1,000 which secured the services of Daniel Webster who represented the college trustees in the Dartmouth College case. It was tried in the U.S. Supreme Court and, with the help of Webster's eloquence, was decided in favor of Dartmouth College by John Marshall's celebrated decision establishing the inviolability of contracts and decreeing that the College Charter from George the Third was a contract and that a state could pass no laws impairing a contract. Dartmouth's Wheeler Hall, named in John B. Wheeler's honor, commemorates his generous aid in winning the Dartmouth College Case. His son, Dr. John Wheeler, was president of the University of Vermont from 1833-1848.

Richardson Hall at Dartmouth College is named for another Orford man, James B. Richardson, a lawyer who owned the Abiathar Britton brick house on Orford Street in the Historic District. Judge Richardson was graduated from Dartmouth College in 1857, was appointed to the Bench of the Superior Court of Massachusetts in 1892, and was for many years a trustee of Dartmouth College.

The Orford Street Historic District was the site of Orford's first schoolhouse (1770), and two later schoolhouses (1785 & 1829, the latter being the only one of the three remaining, and now converted to a dwelling). Orford's first Academy building (built 1796, burned about 1850) stood on the West Common. Unsuccessful as an Academy, it became a grade school where students as young as seven or eight wrestled with problems of Colburn's Mental Arithmetic. A second Academy building (1851) is now the Orford High School. In 1898 the building was sold to the town and fitted out for a grammar school. It became the Orford High School in 1926. It stands on the southern end of the Ridge in the Historic District.

Engineering

Samuel Morey, whose house is the middle one of Orford's seven Ridge houses in the Orford Street Historic District, was a self-taught engineer. A pamphlet published in Albany, New York, in 1819 and written by William Alexander Duer, Esq., entitled "A Reply to Mr. Colden's Vindication of the Steam-Boat Monopoly," contains a footnote, p.55, referring to Morey and stating: "This gentleman has obtained much celebrity as a Civil Engineer, by his planning and execution of the canals, locks, inclined planes, etc. at Bellows Falls, on the Connecticut River." The Bellows Falls Canal was one of the first commercial canals to be built in this country.

It was opened for business in 1802. Samuel Morey also constructed a canal and locks in Fairlee, Vermont, to float his logs down river from his lumbering operations on the slopes around Fairlee Pond, now called Lake Morey in his honor.

In 1826, Morey was consulted about a plan to build a canal from the Connecticut River across the state to the Pemigewasset or upper Merrimack River by way of Oliverian and Baker's Rivers. He advised against the canal, predicting that the use of canals would soon be replaced by carriages on railroads. The canal was never built.

Industry

Industries represented in the Orford Street Historic District include an early goldsmith, tailors, shoemakers, blacksmiths, a wheelwright, a harnessmaker, and two hatters, one of whom was William Howard whose prosperity enabled him to build the northernmost Ridge house.

Invention

The Smithsonian Institution at Washington, D.C., has on exhibit a model of Samuel Morey's gas engine, the first internal combustion engine ever constructed. Morey lived on Orford's Ridge in the Historic District and conducted his experiments in a workshop behind his house, now the site of a barn built by Stedman Willard about 1840. Morey patented his gas, or vapour, engine in 1826, more than half a century before the first commercially successful automobile was produced by Charles E. Duryea in 1891-1892. Morey's engine operated on the same principle as today's automobiles. His carburetor, which he appropriately called his preparing box, mixed his vaporized fuel with air and prepared it for ignition. Morey himself foresaw the value of his invention, though he could not convince others of its worth. The engine, he stated, could advantageously draw carriages on good roads and railways and give much wanted direction and velocity to balloons. In his words, "The discovery will, in good measure, greatly change the commercial and personal intercourse of the Country...if it should be thought most prudent to continue their intercourse on the earth's surface, yet I think there will be little use of horses for that purpose."[21]

In 1817, Morey patented his American Water Burner, a device for making and burning water gas. Thus his house on the Ridge was heated and lighted by water gas half a century before this gas was successfully employed in America in 1875 for heating and illuminating purposes. Morey foretold the use of central heating by suggesting that heat from his gas stoves might be led by pipes or furnaces wherever wanted.[22]

Morey patented twenty inventions over a period of forty years. Although the internal combustion engine was his most extraordinary achievement, he is better known for the first paddle wheel steamboat. In 1793 Morey was the first to demonstrate the use of a paddle wheel to propel a steamboat which he operated on the Connecticut River at Orford. In 1797 he built a steamboat at Bordentown, New Jersey, using two side paddle wheels, a method of propulsion that proved to be the answer to successful steamboat navigation. Morey exhibited this boat at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Chancellor Livingston of New York had been a passenger on a stern paddle wheel steamboat Morey built and operated on the Hudson River at New York in 1796 and had known of Morey's subsequent side paddle wheel steamboat. However, when Fulton, backed by Livingston, built his steamboat in 1807, he patented the side paddle wheels as his own invention. In 1811, having been told that the application of two wheels to a steamboat was Morey's invention, Fulton took out another patent. Morey, in his patent of 1795 for a steam engine whose force could be communicated "either by a crank, or chain and wheels to propel boats," neglected to protect his steam powered paddle wheels adequately.

Military

Israel Morey, whose homestead was at the north end of the Orford Street Historic District and who later built the earliest part of the Wilcox Ridge house, was Colonel of the 12th N.H. Regiment of Foot, also paymaster and mustermaster of the Regiment during the Revolutionary War.[23] His recruits mustered and trained on Orford's East Common and marched from there to fight in Canada and at Ticonderoga. He was one of three colonels commanding the N.H. Militia at Saratoga Creek where Burgoyne surrendered on October 7, 1777.

Morey is buried in the cemetery of the Orford Street Historic District where there is also a monument honoring Capt. Jeremiah Post who died August 26, 1777, of wounds received at the battle of Bennington. The inscription on the monument reads: "Brave Capt. Post who once did die, For to Defend our Liberty."

Politics

Israel Morey, a resident of the Historic District, was several times a representative to the Provencal Congress of the Colony of N.H. at Exeter during the Revolutionary War years. He helped such men as Meshech Weare and Matthew Thornton frame the first civil constitution for N.H. He was appointed Judge of Probate, Associate Justice of the Court of Common Pleas[24], and Justice of the Peace[25] for Grafton County. He served Orford in the capacity of selectman and assessor. His home on the north end of the Orford Street Historic District was the scene of early town meetings at which he was moderator.

Jeduthan Wilcox, a resident of the Historic District, was a member of the U.S. Congress from N.H. from 1813-1817. His son, Leonard Wilcox, owner of a Ridge house, was elected in June, 1842, by the New Hampshire Legislature to serve out the unexpired term of Franklin Pierce as U.S. Senator.

Religion

Orford's first meetinghouse of 1770, now gone, was at the north end of the Historic District on Israel Morey's homestead land. The second church building (1797) was on the West Common and was moved when the present church was built in 1854. The earliest ministers were Presbyterian until 1801 when Rev. Sylvester Dana became Orford's first Congregational minister.

A Universalist Church was established in 1840 and was active for about 25 years. The brick church building is now the Masonic Hall at the north end of the Orford Street Historic District.

Science

Samuel Morey, owner of a Ridge house in the Historic District, wrote articles about his inventions and discoveries which were published by Prof. Benjamin Silliman of Yale University in his American Journal of Science and Arts and in The Journal of the Franklin Institute, as follows:

"On Heat and Light." American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. II, pp.118-129, 1820.

"Bubbles Blown in Melted Rosin." American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. II, p.179, 1820.

"On Artificial Mineral Waters, with Some Remarks on Artificial Light," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. III, p.94, 1821.

"On Fetid Crystallized Limestone." American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. III, p.324, 1821.

"An Account of a new Explosive Engine, Generating a Power that May be substituted for that of the Steam Engine." American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. XI, pp.104-108, 1826. Journal of the Franklin Institute, Vol. II, p.115, 1826.

Other articles on Morey's inventions written by John Sullivan were published in Silliman's Journal as follows:

"On the Revolving Steam-Engine, Recently Invented by Samuel Morey, and Patented to him on the 14th July, 1815, with four Engravings," Vol. IV, pp.157-165, 1820.

"Mr. Sullivan on the Revolving Engine, in Reply to Mr. Doolittle." Vol. IV, 1820.

"On a new Means of Producing Heat and Light, with an Engraving." Vol. I, pp.91-94, 1819.

Transportation

The Tavern Stand (Orford Hotel) on the north corner of Bridge & Orford Streets in the Historic District was a stage stop in the early days. In 1845 a meeting was held there to determine which side of the Connecticut River would be the site for a proposed railroad. Fortunately, for the preservation of Orford's rural beauty, the decision was made in favor of Vermont. Two years later, the railroad was opened through Fairlee as far as Bradford, Vermont, and the charm of Orford Street remained untouched for all to admire today.

Endnotes

  1. Hodgson, Alice Doan. Thanks to the Past, Orford, N.H.: Historical Fact Publication, 1965. Quoted from dust jacket.

  2. Silver, Lewis Mann, M.D. Orford, N.H. Historical Reminiscent, 1927, Manuscript at Orford Social Library.

  3. Grafton County Land Deed Office, Book 29, Page 396, Woodsville, N.H.

  4. Ibid, Book 22, Page 228.

  5. Mann, Joel, Orford Centennial Celebration, 1865. Address, p. 24.

  6. Ibid, Page 23.

  7. Silver, Lewis Mann, M.D. Orford N.H. Historical Reminiscent, 1927, Manuscript at Orford Social Library.

  8. N.H. Town Papers 1690-1800. Vol. XIII. Concord: Published by authority of Legislature. Isaac W. Hammond, Editor.

  9. Hodgson, Alice Doan. Thanks to the Past, Orford, N.H.: Historical Fact Publications, 1965. Page 125.

  10. Ibid, Page 160.

  11. Ibid, Illustration of painting, Page VII.

  12. Conant, William R. Historical Record, pp. 33 & 38, Report of the Celebration of the Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Settlement of Orford, N.H. 1915.

  13. Hodgson, Alice Doan. Record of Orford, N.H., Town Owned Lands, 1974, Deposited with the Orford Conservation Commission & at the Selectmen's Office.

  14. Conant, William R. Historical Record, p.68, Report of the Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Settlement of Orford, N.H., 1915.

  15. Ibid.

  16. Ibid.

  17. Ibid.

  18. Ibid.

  19. Ibid.

  20. Hodgson, Alice Doan. Thanks to the Past, Orford, N.H.: Historical Fact Publications, 1965. p.69.

  21. Hodgson, Alice Doan. Samuel Morey, Inventor Extraordinary, Orford, N.H.: Historical Fact Publications. Quoted from Morey manuscript at Baker Library, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., entitled, "Papers prepared for publication but not sent."

  22. Morey, Samuel. "On Heat and Light," American Journal of Science and Arts, published by Prof. Benjamin Silliman of Yale University, 1820, Vol.II, pp.118-129.

  23. N.H. State Papers, Concord, N.H., 1874. Compiled & Edited by Nathaniel Bouton, D.D. Vol. VIII, 1776-1783, p.47.

  24. N.H. State Papers, Concord, N.H., 1874. Compiled & Edited by Nathaniel Bouton, D.D. Vol. VIII, 1776-1783, p.13.

  25. Ibid, p. 19.

References

Benjamin, Asher, letter to Rev. Sylvester Dana, copy in possession of Mrs. John H. Hodgson, Orford, N.H.

Blossom, Deborah, "Orford's Seven Stately Ridge Houses," New Hampshire Profiles, Vol. IX No. 6, June, 1960, pp. 36-41. (Dates on Morey house incorrect.)

Bittinger, Rev. J. Q., History of Haverhill, N.H., pp. 407-409. Haverhill, N.H. Cohos Steam Press, 1888.

Conant, William R., Historical Record, Report of the 150th Anniversary of Orford, N.H. Hanover, N.H.: The Dartmouth Press, 1915. (Reprinted in Report of the Bicentennial Celebration of Orford, N.H., with corrections.)

Duer, William Alexander, Esq., Reply to Mr. Colden's Vindication of the Steam-boat Monopoly. Albany, N.H.: E.&E. Hosford, 1819.

Duryea, Charles E. & Goodwin, Katherine R., Captain Samuel Morey, the Edison of his Day. White River Junction, Vt.,: The Vermonter Press, 1930.

Ford Times, Vol. 68, No. 6. June, 1975, "An Architectural Treasure in New Hampshire," * pp. 24-27.

Getman, Frederick H., "Samuel Morey, a pioneer of Science in America." Osiris, Vol. I, January, 1936. Bruges, Belgium: The Saint Catherine Press, Ltd., 51, rue du Tram. (Copy available at the Orford Social Library.)

Grafton County Gazetteer, compiled by Hamilton Child. Syracuse, N.Y.: The Syracuse Journal Company, Printers and Binders, June, 1886.

Grafton County Register of Deeds & Probate Records, Woodsville, N.H.

Mann, Joel, "Address," Centennial Celebration of Orford, N.H. Manchester, N.H.: Henry A. Gage, Printer, 1865.

Morey, Samuel, "On Heat and Light," American Journal of Science and Arts,Vol. II, p.118, 1820.New Haven, Conn.: Prof. Benjamin Silliman, Yale University, Editor. "Bubbles Blown in Melted Rosin," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol.II, p.179, 1820. "On Artificial Mineral Waters, with some remarks on Artificial Light," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. III, p.94, 1821. "On Fetid Crystallized Limestone," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol, III, p.324, 1821. "An Account of a new explosive engine, generating a power that may be substituted for that of the steam engine," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. XI, p.104, 1826, and Journal of the Franklin Institute, Vol. **, p.115, 1826, Philadelphia, Pa. Unpublished letters, patents and notes at Baker Library Archives, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H. Letter to William A. Duer, October 31, 1818, published in appendix of Reply to Mr. Colden's Vindication of the Steam-boat Monopoly, p.XVI. N.Y.: E.&E. ** Hosford, 1819.

Orford Hotel Register, June, 1773-June, 1774. Available at the Orford Social Library.

Silver, Lewis Mann, M.D., Orford, New Hampshire, Historical Reminiscent, 1927. Manuscript at the Orford Social Library.

Silver, Lewis Mann, M.D., Orford, New Hampshire, Historical Reminiscent, 1927. Manuscript at the Orford Social Library.

Sullivan, John L., "On the Revolving Steam-Engine, recently invented by Samuel Morey, and Patented to him on 14th July, 1815, with four Engravings," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. IV, p.157, 1820. New Haven, Conn.: Prof. Benjamin Silliman, Yale University, Editor. "On a new Means of producing Heat and Light, with an Engraving," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. I, p.91, 1819. "Mr. Sullivan on the Revolving Engine, in reply to Mr. Doolittle," American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol II, 1820. (Isaac Doolittle's letter, written from Paris, France, was published in the same volume of the Journal, pp.101-105.)

Taylor, Robert, "On Orford's Great Houses," Boston Globe, Sunday Magazine, March 9, 1969.

Town Assessment Records, Orford, New Hampshire.

Treasures of America, pp. 77~79. Pleasantville, N.Y.: Reader's Digest, 1974.

*Hodgson, Alice Doan, Thanks to the Past, Orford, N.H.: Historical Fact Publications, 1965. Samuel Morey, Inventor Extraordinary. Orford, N.H.: Historical Fact Publications, 1961. "The New Hampshire Home of Mr. and Mrs, John Hodgson," The Magazine Antiques, Vol. XCII, No. 2, August, 1967, pp.182-186. "Henry Cheever Pratt, (1803-1880)," The Magazine Antiques, Vol. CII, No. 5, November, 1972, pp.842-847. "Samuel Morey House on Orford Ridge," N.H. Echoes, Vol. 3, No. 2, May-June, 1972, pp.24-26. History of Orford Mall, 1975, available at the Orford Conservation Commission and Selectmen's office.

Howard, Henry, Speech, "Centennial Celebration of Orford, N.H.": Manchester, N.H.: Henry A. Gage, Printer, 1865.

**N.H. Provincial Papers. 1764-1776, Vol VII, edited by Nathaniel Bouton, D.D., Nashua, N.H.: O.C. Moore, State Printer, 1867-1873. N.H. State Papers, 1776-1783, Vol VIII, edited by Nathaniel Bouton, D.D. Concord, N.H. Edward A. Jenks, State Printer, 1874.

‡ Alice Doan Hodgson, Orford Town Historian, Orford Street Historic District, Grafton County, New Hampshire, nomination document, 1977, National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places, Washington, D.C.

Street Names
Archertown Road • Bridge Street • Dartmouth College Highway • Route 10 • Route 25A


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