(This story was made possible by research conducted by Christopher Challender Child and Marblehead historian Bob Booth.) In 1764, Marblehead's Second Congregational Church's minister, Simon Bradstreet, moved into a new mansion house with his wife Mary (nรฉe Strahan) Bradstreet, whom he had married in 1738. They were accompanied by an African American enslaved woman called… Continue reading Chance Bradstreet, a “Negro boy” enslaved in Ipswich.
Author: Gordon Harris
Boston Irish Long Remembered the 1834 Charlestown Convent Fire
Featured image: Woodcut image of the 1834 burning of the Ursuline Convent in Charlestown, Massachusetts. Catholics and fair-minded Bostonians were dismayed by the tragedy. by Helen Breen This week marks the anniversary of the burning and ransacking of the Ursuline Convent in Charlestown, Massachusetts on August 11, 1834. The outrage would smolder in the memories of… Continue reading Boston Irish Long Remembered the 1834 Charlestown Convent Fire
The Cape Ann Sea Serpent
“The Hobby Horse of Popularity”
Alexander Hamilton Alexander Hamilton wrote these words in a letter to George Washington on August 18, 1792. Political divisions between the Federalist Party (led by Hamilton) and the Democratic-Republican Party led by Thomas Jefferson were deepening. Jeffersonโs adoring supporters organized large, well-attended events where they praised him in speeches and songs, while his political opponents portrayed him as… Continue reading “The Hobby Horse of Popularity”
The Ipswich Town Flag
Daniel Lowโs Silver โWitch Spoonsโ among Salemโs First Souvenirs
By Helen Breen Daniel Low & Co. started on the bottom floor of the First Church, Unitarian, 231 Essex Street at the corner of Washington Street in Salem. The jewelry company purchased the church in 1923, elegantly refitting the structure as an appropriate setting for its luxurious merchandise. THE BUSINESS Daniel Low & Co. jewelry… Continue reading Daniel Lowโs Silver โWitch Spoonsโ among Salemโs First Souvenirs
Ipswich Manning House at the MFA
The Ipswich Revolt of 1687
Description of Ipswich in the 1797 American Gazetteer
Narrative of the Wreck of the Dorchester, November 1844
Three Old Houses at the Intersection of Poplar St. and Turkey Shore
High Spirits on Town Hill
Born in a Refuge Camp
By Ingrid Miles, Ipswich I was born in a refugee camp, and I feel as if I am reliving my parents' nightmare after World War II, when my dad had to modify his name and identify himself as Christian; my mother was Catholic in order to come to this country as displaced persons aka DP's.… Continue reading Born in a Refuge Camp















