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1695 William Donton House: a Lost Architectural Treasure

January 4, 2025January 12, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment

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.

Posted in HousesTagged Farley, First Period, jetties, North Main Street, photography, post-medieval, William Dunton

Hammatt Street, Brown Square and Farley Brook

January 2, 2025January 6, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Burke Shoe Factory Ipswich Ma

Until the second half of the 19th Century, much of the area bounded by Central Street, Washington Street, Mineral Street and Market Street was a wetland with an open sewer known as Farley Brook running through it.

Posted in Environment, RoadsTagged 1885, mill, neighborhood

Haunted Houses of Ipswich

December 26, 2024January 2, 2026 Gordon Harris6 Comments

Old Ipswich tales, and some stories shared on social media.

Posted in Houses, LegendsTagged fixed, haunted

The Bones of Masconomet

December 26, 2024January 2, 2026 Gordon Harris6 Comments

On March 6, 1659 a young man named Robert Cross dug up the remains of the Agawam chief Masconomet, and carried his skull on a pole through Ipswich streets, an act for which Cross was imprisoned, sent to the stocks, then returned to prison until a fine was paid.

Posted in Legends, People, StoriesTagged 1659, Agawam, Court, EDITED, Hamilton, Ipswich, Masconomet, Native Americans, Sagamore

A Very Old Pear Tree Grows in Danvers

December 24, 2024November 14, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Endicott Pear Tree, Danvers MA

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.

42.575001 -70.932122
Posted in Places, StoriesTagged 1632, Danvers

Wind Power From the Berkshires Lights Ipswich Homes

December 20, 2024November 14, 2025 Gordon Harris2 Comments

The Town of Ipswich is an investor in Berkshire Wind, an array of wind turbines on Brodie Mountain in the Berkshires. Two turbines added this summer increased the generating capacity to 19.6 megawatts, enough for almost 9000 homes.

Posted in EnvironmentTagged Electricity, Environment

Prosecution of Loyalists in Essex County

December 9, 2024November 13, 2025 Gordon Harris3 Comments
Stamp Act protest in New Hampshire

An angry mob surrounded the Haverhill home of Col. Richard Saltonstall, a Loyalist, who opened his door and stated that that he was bound to discharge the duties of the office.

Posted in Revolutionary WarTagged 1775, Haverhill, Revolutionary War, Saltonstall

Hurricanes and Winter Storms

December 8, 2024December 8, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Hurricane Carol Union Street Ipswich MA

Massachusetts has the highest probability of all of the states to be hit by an ocean storm, which includes hurricanes and nor'easters.

Posted in History, Shipwrecks, Storms, winterTagged hurricane

A Photographic and Chronological History of the Ipswich Schools

December 8, 2024January 31, 2026 Gordon Harris7 Comments
Manning School Ipswich MA

In 1652, the Town of Ipswich voted "For the better aiding of the school and the affairs thereof," building a grammar school and paying the schoolmaster. By the 19th Century there were 10 grammar schools spread throughout the town, and a high school.

Posted in HistoryTagged 1640, Ipswich Neighbors, Photos, schools

Murderer in Rockport

December 5, 2024February 24, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Rockport

On May 21, 1932, Rudolph Oker went to his father's Rockport shop and found him on the floor in a pool of blood with his skull cracked open. Arthur Oker's safe and his pockets had been emptied.

Posted in Rockport, StoriesTagged Rockport

King’s Rook and the Stonehenge Club, when Ipswich Rocked!

December 3, 2024January 4, 2026 Gordon Harris59 Comments

In the 1960s, music could be heard in Ipswich at the King's Rook. In 1969, Phil Cole purchased the business and renamed it Stonehenge, Tom Rush, Judy Collins. the Paul Butterfield Band. Bo Didley, Al Kooper, Bonnie Rait and many other famous musicians played there before it closed in 1972.

Posted in Places, Stories, VideoTagged 1960

The Green Street Dam

December 3, 2024December 3, 2024 Gordon Harris2 Comments
Green Street dam, Ipswich ma

"It was a poor time in which to build a dam. The winter was very severe and at times the temperature was below zero. The center of the dam was soon washed away, and by spring the new structure had almost disappeared."

Posted in HistoryTagged 1934, Harold Bowen, Ipswich River

The “Hum”

December 2, 2024January 29, 2026 Gordon Harris89 Comments
Frequency of the world wide hum

The Hum is an unexplained low frequency rumbling sound heard by about 2% of the population from inside their homes during the late evening hours. I began noticing the Hum when I moved to Ipswich. Do you hear it?

Posted in Commentary, MysteriesTagged The Hum

Col. Nathaniel Shatswell and the Battle of Harris Farm

November 26, 2024November 14, 2025 Gordon Harris2 Comments

At Harris Farm the First Massachusetts Heavy Artillery Regiment, assembled with Ipswich soldiers, drove the Confederates into the cover of the woods, eventually ending with a Northern victory. The battle claimed over 2000 lives.

Posted in People, warTagged Civil War, Shatswell

Traditional American Thanksgiving in Art and Song

November 23, 2024October 20, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Norman Rockwell Thanksgiving

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

Posted in HistoryTagged Helen Breen

The Trolley Comes to Ipswich, June 26, 1896

November 23, 2024November 14, 2025 Gordon HarrisLeave a comment
Georgetown-Ipswich trolley

In 1896, the first trolley from Beverly arrived in Ipswich, and a year later, the Georgetown, Rowley and Ipswich Street Railway opened. By 1919, Mr. Ford's Model T ended the brief era of the street railway.

Posted in History, Roads, StoriesTagged 1896, Essex, June, streetcar

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