William Donton, a mariner bought the lot on the corner of North Main and Summer Streets in 1695 and constructed a picturesque post-medieval-style house, a landmark whose disappearance we still regret today.
Hammatt Street, Brown Square and Farley Brook
Haunted Houses of Ipswich
The Bones of Masconomet
A Very Old Pear Tree Grows in Danvers
A pear tree in Danvers was planted before 1640 by the Massachusetts governor John Endicott. President John Adams enjoyed the flavor of its fruit, and Longfellow admired its longevity. The tree has survived hurricanes, earthquakes, cows, development and vandalism but continues to thrive and bear fruit.
Wind Power From the Berkshires Lights Ipswich Homes
Prosecution of Loyalists in Essex County
Hurricanes and Winter Storms
A Photographic and Chronological History of the Ipswich Schools
Murderer in Rockport
King’s Rook and the Stonehenge Club, when Ipswich Rocked!
The Green Street Dam
The “Hum”
Col. Nathaniel Shatswell and the Battle of Harris Farm
Traditional American Thanksgiving in Art and Song
Among America’s most beloved 19th century renderings of Thanksgiving Day are Currier & Ives lithographs, Grandma Moses’s paintings, and Lydia Marie Child’s famous poem/song “Over the River and Through the Wood.” In the 20th Century, Norman Rockwell depicted an idealized version of American Thanksgiving. By Helen Breen















