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Information, Maps and Videos of Sharon's
Village Green

| Video "walking tours" of Sharon's
Historic Green |
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For additional videos of Sharon, Connecticut visit our YouTube
channel.
View our Historic
Google Map of Sharon Green for a preview of the Green's
History & Beauty. This online interactive map contains
photos, videos and documentation.
Download
PDF versions of the Sharon
Green Tour Map and Historical
Documentation of the houses & buildings. *These are
maps are designed to be printed on an 8.5 x 14 legal size
sheet of paper.
Homes and Buildings on the Sharon Green
| Sharon
United Methodist Church |
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| The first
Methodist Church in Sharon was built on the west part
of Calkinstown Road in 1808. It served the community until
the present church was built in 1835. Contemporary accounts
speak of the 1835 church as the "costliest and most tasteful
church of that denomination in Litchfield County. Alterations
to the original building include new windows and changes
in the aisles in 1882, and a chapel and Norman tower added
in 1894 and 1904. The first Methodist sermon in Sharon
was preached in 1788 by an itinerant preacher. His sermon
greatly displeased townspeople not due to its content,
but its location-in the local tavern! |
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*34 Upper Main Street (The Sedgwick Cottage)
The history of this house is closely linked to that of 42
Upper Main Street to its immediate north. Known as the "Sedgwick
Cottage" this building was part of the complex of structures
owned by Judge Cyrus Swan and later, his son-in-law, Charles
F. Sedgwick. It was sold in 1866 by Maria Sedgwick to Dr.
William Knight. The records of the time refer to number 34
as "the office," referencing a building that Judge Swan built
as his law office shortly before 1814. Although it is tempting
to date this house to an earlier period, based on land records
cited by former town historian Jeanne Majdalany, a mortgage
record on the property (cf. 34/207) indicates that the current
house was probably built between 1866 and 1867 by William
W. Knight. Records indicate that the law office was moved
by the Wike brothers to their property on East Main Street
on the southeast corner and incorporated into a house first
occupied by Emmaline Palmer. The outbuilding, now a playhouse,
is called "The Ice House" and we are currently researching
the origins of this name.

Caroline Swan Sedgwick, 6th child of General Charles F. Sedgwick
(B21,1) and Betsey (Swan) Sedgwick, was born January 22, 1839,
at Sharon, Conn., and married September 5, 1861, Dr. William
W. Knight of that place.
He was born at Granby, Mass., July 11, 1833, attended the
Berkshire Medical Institute and Lyceum of Medical History
(this from its seal), from which he received a diploma in
1855. He was First Lieutenant and Assistant Surgeon of the
3d New York Volunteer Artillery. After the Civil War they
resided at Sharon where he practiced medicine and kept the
village drugstore.
Dr. Knight was a member of a family which produced several
distinguished doctors of medicine, was a surgeon in the United
States Army during the Civil War and a brother of Dr. Henry
Knight, who founded the pioneer school for feeble-minded at
Lakeville, Conn., a nationally known institution. He was an
uncle of Dr. George Knight who carried on the school until
his death while campaigning for Congress. A nephew, Robert,
was also a physician. Dr. Knight died at Sharon February 18,
1912. Mrs. Knight died at Sharon May 1, 1917. Children, all
born at Sharon (Knight):
1. Charles Sedgwick, b. September 22, 1862. (B21,161)
2. William Henry, b. June 14, 1865. (B21,162)
3. Emma Sedgwick, b. May 21, 1870. (B21,163)
A nationally known resident of this house from 1935-c1955
was Percival Wilde, an American playwright and novelist. He
is best known for his many one-act plays. Born in NYC around
1887, he attended Horace Mann School and Columbia University.
His plays include "The Unseen Host" and "Design for Murder".
While in Sharon, he was president of the Board of Education
and many Halloween pranks were played outside his house at
34 Upper Main Street.
The Hotchkiss Library
The Hotchkiss Library was built in 1893 by Maria Bissell Hotchkiss,
the wife of the prominent local industrialist Benjamin Berkeley
Hotchkiss who died in France in 1885, leaving a considerable
fortune. The building was designed by New York city architect
Bruce Price, although Mrs. Hotchkiss herself approved many
of the final choices, including the color of the Stockbridge
marble! Paintings of Maria Hotchkiss and her husband, as well
as a bust of the great industrialist, carved by Moses Jacob
Ezekiel in 1879, are on display in the building.
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Maria Bissell grew up in Salisbury and Sharon, and
was a school teacher. She married Benjamin Berkeley
Hotchkiss and lived in Sharon Valley, even after he
went to live and work in Paris, France. When her husband
died, she inherited his fortune. She was very generous
and built and endowed the Hotchkiss School in Lakeville
and the Hotchkiss Library in Sharon.
Benjamin B. Hotchkiss (1826-February 14, 1885)
was one of the leading American ordinance engineers
(gun and ammunition maker) of his day. As a young man,
he worked with his
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in Sharon Valley. He later worked in Hartford for Colt
and Winchester rifle companies. After the Civil War, he
went to Paris France to manufacture guns and ammunition
for the French government. He died in France in 1885.
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Bruce Price, born December 12, 1845 and died May 29, 1903,
was a very famous architect who designed many hotels and railroad
stations in Canada and the United States. He moved to NYC
in 1877 and married Josephine Lee. Their daughter, Emily Price,
became famous as Emily Post, the author of many books on etiquette.
Mr. Price was the architect chosen by Maria Bissell Hotchkiss
to design the Hotchkiss Library.
The Sharon Historical Society, 18 Main Street
Known as the Gay-Hoyt House, the brick building was built
in 1775-1776 by Lieutenant Colonel Ebenezer Gay of the 14th
Militia, formerly the North Trainband. As the owner of a mercantile
business and a tax collector for the town, Colonel Gay was
a well-respected citizen. Unfortunately, he was forced to
resign his commission in 1783 due to poor health and four
years later he died insolvent. In 1793 Isaac Hunt purchased
the property and it remained in the Hunt family for over 80
years. The Carter family then owned the house for 50 years,
until it was sold to Anne Sherman Hoyt in 1936.
Miss Hoyt, a past president of the Historical Society, bequeathed
the house to the museum upon her death. Miss Hoyt, from Cleveland,
Ohio, and New York City, had long summered in Sharon before
she bought "the Brick House," as she called it. She served
as president of the Sharon Historical Society from 1939-1948.
She served with the American Red Cross during World War I
at several American bases overseas. She died in 1953 and bequeathed
the house to the Historical Society for a museum.
| Christ
Church Episcopal |
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| This building,
built between 1813-1814 was the third Episcopal church
built on or near this site. In early 1811, decisions were
made to build with brick and to make the building either
40 x 45' or 30 x 50'! The first full-time minister was
hired about 1844, for $400 per year. In 1866 a meeting
was held to consider building a parsonage; the year before
a horse shed with stalls had been erected on the parsonage
lot for the use of families attending services. In 1882-1883
improvements were made, including the addition of "16
feet to the west end of the church" and "cushions for
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| pews." The organ was donated in
memory of Mrs. Eleanor Wheeler McClurg by her sisters
in 1905, and in 1908 new pews, pulpit, font and chandeliers
were added in preparation for the church's centennial
festival held on May 27, 1909. In 1929 the paint covering
the exterior of the church was removed, and in 1933 the
old overhanging church porch was replaced. The church
is noted for its stained glass windows, the earliest examples
dating c.1882. |
The Clock Tower
Built between 1885 and 1886 and designed by NY city architects
Lamb & Rich, in memory of Emily Butler Ogden Wheeler by her
daughters. Emily Butler Ogden Wheeler and her husband, Judge
Nelson Knox Wheeler had seven children. Their oldest son,
William, bought a home in Sharon and brought many members
of the family to town.

A Rare View of the Clocktower's Gearing
Charles Alonzo Rich (b. October 22, 1854, died December 3,
1943) was an American architect who practiced in New York
City from 1882 until 1933. Rich was a member of the Architectural
League of New York. Rich was born in Beverly, MA, and died
at his home in Charlottesville, VA at the age of 88. Mr. Rich
designed the Sharon clock tower.
Reed Gillette was an electrician in Sharon, and a descendant
of the Gillette Brothers who owned the store at the north
end of the green. Mr. Gillette electrified the clock tower
in 1961-the clock which had been wound by...Mr. George Marckres!
*3 South Main Street |
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This recently
restored home was built as the parsonage for the Sharon
Congregational Church on land "conveyed" to the Committee
of the First Ecclesiastical Society at Sharon by Lemuel
W. Marchant in 1877.
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Sharon Congregational Church
This fourth building to house the First Church in Sharon was
built in 1824. The first meeting house was built of logs possibly
towards the north end of the Green in 1741. In 1742 a larger
church supplanted the log one, and stood "opposite the tavern."
A much larger meeting house was built in 1768 and that site
is marked by a boulder on the south end of the Green. The
most important person in town between 1755 and 1806 was likely
to have been the Congregational minister, Cotton Mather Smith.
In 1939 the interior of the church was restored to its original
design. The exterior remains much the same. Note the pair
of portraits inside and the reproduction weathervane, replaced
in spring, 2010.
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Mr. Pratt was the first minister called to Sharon to
preach in the Congregational Church. He was a graduate
of Yale College, class of 1736, and was called to the
town in 1740. Unfortunately, Mr. Pratt had a drinking
problem which caused trouble, and made him unable to
do his job. He was fired in 1747. He stayed in town,
but left and returned to Lebanon CT where he died.
Reverend Cotton Mather Smith was ordained pastor of
the
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| Congregational Church in Sharon in 1755
and served there until he died on Nov. 27, 1806. He took
care of people in the town during a smallpox epidemic
when 700 people had smallpox in 2 months. He was a true
patriot and was a chaplain to the army in 1775 during
the Revolutionary War. |
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*41 Main Street |
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Gilbert L. Smith sold the property
in 1891 to William C. Reed along with the Van Rensselaer
house, 49 Main Street, just to the north.
The property was divided from that
of #49 and sold to the St. Johns in 1896. The house,
like #113, was built by William Mow, known for constructing
at least 6 of the Victorian houses on and around the
Green and one on New Street. These houses were probably
designed based on architectural pattern books of the
time.
This home is missing its original
wrap-around porch.
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| Although there are conflicting dates
as to #41's construction, we can likely narrow the years
to between 1892 and 1897. |
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67 Main Street
This building was built by Mr. Mow between 1888 and 1890 for
amateur photographer George Marckres. For a number of years
beginning in 1968 the house was owned by Phillip and Maria
Reep, professional singers who founded the Singing Hollow
Operetta Company which enlisted people from the town as well
as some professional friends to put on rollicking Gilbert
& Sullivan productions. Mr. Reep opened a stationery store
in the south addition which became a gathering place for townspeople.
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Today the building is home to WHDD, Robinhood Radio.
An earlier house known as the "Vine Covered Cottage"
stood on this site until it was moved to the rear of
the property in 1888 and used as a summer cottage until
1956 when it was taken down. Originally, the Vine Covered
Cottage (c.1776) was believed to have been a part of
the King House (12 North Main Street) and moved to this
location when George King built the main house at 12
North Main in 1794.
George Marckres came to Sharon with his wife, Marie,
from Vermont in 1882. He opened a small store in the
center of Town, next to the town hall. While he worked
as a jeweler
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us today as a photographer who chronicled the history
of Sharon in pictures between 1882 and 1937 when he died.
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*109 Main Street |
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The north part of 109 Main Street
was built some time before the related house at 113
Main Street, that is, before 1896. The northern first
floor was constructed using square, handmade nails and
undressed tree trunks instead of beams. The kitchen
floor, made of very wide boards, is original from this
time. The southern addition was added in the 1920s or
1930s. It is reported that the owners of 113 Main lived
in the smaller house while the bigger house was being
built and, later when the bigger house rented out for
the summer.
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| While the small, original house may have
started as an outbuilding of 99 Main, for most of the
time it was owned as part of the 113 Main property. However,
in the 1960s, the house was sold to Rosalie Prause, who
had worked for many years at 113 for the Kraeley family.
They sold it to her for "$1, with love and affection."
The two properties were recombined in 1997. Enter through
#113 or down driveway of #113. |
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*113 Main Street
113 Main Street was built in 1896-1897. It was one
of the first of 7 infill houses constructed on and
near the Green by local builder William Mow from
about 1896 to 1915. |
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Mr. Mow lived next door at 119
Main Street, and this was one of his first houses. The
exterior and interior millwork is from Dwight Eggleston,
whose house was on Upper Main. An exception to the Eggleston
millwork is the hand-carved spindles on the front staircase,
perhaps a good example of an exuberant young builder
testing his skills. Also notable are the rounded corners
around the front entry, repeated on a number of interior
corners.
The house was built for mixed residential
and commercial use. What is currently the dining room
was the Town's barber shop. In the 1970s it was used
as a real estate office.
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| Mr. Gustav Schwab, who lived in the
house in the 1970s, was a descendant of the Wheeler family,
many of whom lived in Sharon at one time. For many years
the family owned four of the large houses on South Main
Street, including 29 Cornwall Bridge Road (close to the
clock tower), 27 South Main, 36 South Main, and 44 South
Main. |
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*125 Main Street |
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| Known as
the Abner Burnham house, this home was built between 1811
and 1813, by Burnham, a well-known clockmaker. In 1817
Burnham defaulted on his mortgage and the house, barn
& "other bldgs." were sold. Later the house became a tavern
and after that, a dame school. In 1865 it was purchased
by Redwill St. John Boughton and Jeanne Johnson who opened
what became a prosperous millinery shop. Ladies came from
as far away as Poughkeepsie to buy hats in the "latest
Parisian style." The house suffered serious damage during
the Casino fire in 1925. |
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Other Houses of Interest
on Sharon Green
141 Main Street
The Prindle House, 1810-1812
Whiting White probably built this house here between 1810-1812.
A beautiful Palladian window over the elegantly detailed and
executed entrance portico, coupled with highly decorated over-window
and door treatment of this house, are evidence of the highest
quality New England craftsmanship. The finely detailed main
cornice is also noteworthy.
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In 1817, the property with house, was sold by Charles
Platt to Charles Elliott who, in turn, sold to Samuel
Prindle in 1835 in a deed which mentions a "hat factory"
and includes all buildings "except the south barn and
all the manure."
From 1835 to 1949, 114 years, the house remained in
the Prindle family who made several additions to the
original edifice. Businesses of various kinds, including
dress-making, a millinery, a harness maker, and general
store, probably account for the northern extension.
For a short time prior to building his house at 125
Main Street, Abner Burnham made his famous
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the building served as the printing office for "The Sharon
Gazette." |
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119 Main Street
The "Academy"
Much confusion has surrounded the history of this building,
compounded by the fact that throughout early town records
there is reference to an "old Academy" and a "new Academy."
In 1800 Cotton Mather Smith, long time minister at the
Sharon Congregational Church, wrote that there was an
Academy in Sharon. |
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In 1806, when "the Academy" is mentioned in a mortgage
deed by Judson Canfield, a wealthy Sharon resident and
land owner, the building is located on the corner directly
opposite the present clock tower. Later, in 1824, a
town meeting was called to "assemble at the old Academy."
It is the belief of researchers in the 1990s that this
statement infers that there was a "new" Academy in existence
at the time. 119 Main Street is believed to be the new
Academy.
In 1823 Nathaniel Berry, Benjamin Lines and Samuel
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leased the SW corner of the Skinners garden (25'x40')
on the east side of the Town Street opposite the meeting
house "for the purpose of erecting a suitable & commodious
bldg. for an academy…to be styled the Sharon Episcopal
Academy" with the privilege of moving the building at
the end of ten years. The rent was set at $10 per annum.
(Majdalany, Title Searches, SHS.) |
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The records show
that in 1830, the above mentioned men released "all right
to a certain building known as and called by the name
of the Episcopal Academy" for the purpose of keeping &
maintaining an independent Union Academy. Shortly thereafter,
the Academy was moved onto "the land now occupied by Mr.
Bouton's cottage (125 Main Street) for the purpose of
a select school by a Rev. Close." (Mackay lectures, SHS.)
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was built as a school on the original house lot 25 near
where the present Hotchkiss Library is. It was probably
built in 1823 and moved to its present location between
1830 and 1831. William Mow, contractor in Sharon who was
responsible for many of the current Victorian houses on
the Green (including 113 and 41) owned the house between
1916 and 1951 and was probably responsible for many interior
changes during that period. |
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99 Main Street
The Nathaniel Skinner House, c.1744-1750
This house has been known throughout Sharon history as
the "Nathaniel Skinner" house, but our best research tells
us that it was probably built after Skinner divided and
sold the property in 1742 to Joshua Gibbs of Wareham,
MA. According to former town historian and researcher
Jeanne Majdalany, in Sedgwick Notes of 1839, author Charles
Sedgwick refers to "log houses in 1739" being common.
Later, Lawrence Van Alstyne states that Nathaniel Skinner
"probably lived near where Mrs. Patchen now lives (99
Main St.). Since both Nathaniel and his son Thomas sold
their "houses" in 1742 for very little money, it's probable
that both buildings were torn down and a new house (99
Main) was built either by John Sprague or by Zebulon Badcock
between 1744 and 1750. |
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In spite of this confusion, the house remains one of
the oldest in Sharon. Its wide, flush boarding on the
Main Street façade, topped by the cornice containing
a triglyph-meope motif reminiscent of classical Greece,
exemplified the Neo-Classic period. As do many of Sharon's
houses, its dormer (possibly later) shows the Palladian
influence. The transom over the front door is fan-like.
The porches are later additions.
The land and the structures on the property play an
interesting and significant part of Sharon history.
An excerpt
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from the Sharon Town Records states:
"Capt. Dunham was mad Choice of…and having obtained
the Desiar of the town he being ordered by the Assembly
to Warn the Inhabitance in order to Chuse town officers
which Being Dune the Inhabitance being met on the 11
day of December In ye yeare 1739 at the house of Nath'll
Skinner in Sharon.[sic]"
Nathaniel Skinner drew the 26th
Home Lot, and was first on the List of the proprietors
of the common and undivided land, first magistrate,
first town clerk, and first Deacon in the Church. In
1741 he sold "The Home Lot on which my dwelling house
stands", and by 1783 the south half of the property,
with house, had been bought by Abel Patchin. Here he
ran a "Publik House" until his death in 1805. The house
remained in his family through his daughter, Betsy Patchin
Chase, for 122 years until it became the home of Dr.
Jerome Chaffee, founder of Sharon Hospital, in 1905.
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91 Main Street
Dakin or Westsmith House, 1862
This house was probably built by Edward Gillette between 1862
and 1863. Charles Sears sold the property to Gillette in 1862,
and the record states, "with buildings thereon standing."
A later sale to famous Sharon contractor I.N. Bartram indicates
that the land "containing about one acre, house, barn and
gardens." The 1869 sale price was $5000. Isaac Newton Bartram,
builder of the Sharon Town Hall and many structures in the
region, may have purchased the property because it adjoined
property he already owned to the west (on West Main Street.)
Alas, he mortgaged the house to the Falls Village Savings
bank shortly after the purchase of the property. The bank
foreclosed on the property less than a month later. The bank
owned the property until 1882 when it was purchased by Sarah
C. Hamlin. She owned the house until 1897 when the property
was sold to Hattie E. Dakin. It remained in the Dakin family,
being transferred to Charles B. Dakin, until 1968. Interestingly,
the property at 16 West Main Street (Sharon Package Store
and florist, directly behind 91 Main Street) had also been
held by I.N. Bartram, foreclosed on, and then sold to Sarah
C. Hamlin in 1882, then to Hattie E. Dakin in 1897. The Dakin
family operated a dry goods store in the building until c1969.
16 West Main Street was originally a full three-story building
until a fire destroyed part of the building in 1899.
49 Main Street
Captain Benjamin Lines, c1803
This house stands on property that was the western half of
Ebenezer Mudge's Home Lot, number 25. Mudge began to sell
off pieces of the lot, including "52 acres including common
land to the W excepting the SE corner on which my dwelling
house stands" for 340 pounds sterling in 1742.
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In 1743 it was sold again to Capt. Samuel Hurlbutt,
the first merchant in the town, "with all buildings
standing thereon", including the "Potash House". Hurlbutt
was a large land holder but died in poverty, a victim
of the harsh post-Revolutionary era.
The land was sold off in pieces to pay for taxes and
debts, and in 1803 four acres became the property of
Capt. Benjamin Lines. On them he built this beautiful
example of colonial architecture, with fan windows on
the gable ends and a Palladian window over the fan-lighted
doorway. Underneath the kitchen is a cistern, the walls
of which are built of hewn stone.
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96 Upper Main
Street
The Gager House, c1801 |
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| Dr. Samuel Gager
purchased the five acres where he built this home in 1801
from James Pardee, son of John Pardee who had purchased
the land, approximately 49 acres, from John Bonton of
Stamford, CT in 1741. Dr. Gager was born at Norwich, Connecticut,
May 23, 1763, and was an assistant surgeon in the navy
during the Revolutionary War. He established himself as
a surgeon in Sharon in 1788. Long celebrated in his profession
and as a leading citizen, he represented the town in the
Assembly in the years 1821, 1822 and 1829. He also served
as a justice of the peace. He died on August 4, 1835,
bequeathing his property to his wife and son, George.
Although unsubstantiated by research at this time, tradition
has it that it was George Gager who planted the first
elms on the Sharon Green. The Gager family lived in this
house for 120 years. |
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In 1910, Mrs. Wiley ran a tea room from the house which at
the time had a wide front porch.
74 Upper Main Street
The Bartram Inn c1772-1784
The earliest mention of this property in the land records
records the sale of 2 ½ acres and 32 rods from James Pardee
to John Penoyer, Jr., on December 2, 1771. There is no mention
of any structure on the property. In the 1784 transfer of
the property from John Penoyer to John McKinstrie of Hudson,
NY, the record cites "2 ¾ acres with brick house, barn,
& horse house" all sold for 450 pounds sterling. Research
by former town historian Jeanne Majdalany indicate that Penoyer
opened a tavern in the house, and once met with strong town
opposition when he allowed a Methodist preacher to preach
there. Charles Sedgwick's A General History of the Town of
Sharon states that John Penoyer Jr, "built the brick hosue,
known as the Taylor House, and also the one formerly owned
by Dr. John W. Smith, in which latter place he kept a tavern."
By 1806, the property is sold from Philo Gould to Joel T.
Pettit, At that time, it is interesting to note that for $1200,
the sale included "2 ½ acres, 80 rods N of the meeting
house, with house, shop, 2 barns, & horseshed, …with grains,
cranes, boxes, shelves, & window blinds in shop."
When Isaac N. and Helen D. Bartram bought the property in
1879, it had changed hands 14 times and saw the coming and
going of several important owners. As noted above, Philo Gould
established a shop. Next, Joel T. Pettit, a young lawyer of
great promise, bought the house from Gould and died a year
later at age 27. Dr. John W. Smith owned it for more than
thirty years. He rented the attorney's office (later an apothecary's
store) attached to the southwest corner of his house to a
lady named "Paulina." She had permission to use the building
as a schoolhouse for three years, and then move it if she
so desired.
Tradition says that when the Bartrams bought the place, they
had the house moved back from near the road to its present
position. As I.N. Bartram was a builder, was he the owner
who removed the brick? In any case, the building was considerably
altered by additions both front and back. In 1910, the house
- named "The Bartram" - was defined as a large dwelling or
boarding house. The two cottages and barn behind it are also
mentioned.
62 Upper Main Street
The Brownell House, after 1791
Joseph Gallow sold a half acre to Joshua Bassett in 1791,
but then re-sold it "as purchased of Bassett" in 1796
to David Parsons of Vermont. It was described as being a few
rods north of the meeting house with a house and a stable.
This house was bought in 1827 by Charles F. Sedgwick, who
lived there until he moved next door after his father-in-law's
(Cyrus Swan) death in 1835.
The Reverend Grove L. Brownell, a Congregational minister,
next occupied the house (1841-1857) and established his "select"
school there. It accepted students from as far away as New
Haven and charged $2/week for room and laundry. The Sharon
Historic District Study Report in 1975 stated that a letter
exists from the parent of a student, writing to complain of
the cost of the room and board. A letter in response is quoted
as follows: "considering the maternal care Mrs. Camp [the
landlady] will have with regard to your daughter" the
price was not excessive. Reverend Brownell was the pastor
of the Congregational Church from 1840-1848, he died in 1855.
Early 19th century photographs show the home much as it looks
today, although graced with an elaborate front porch, with
a gambrel rood and attractive window detail. It is highly
likely that the house is very much changed from the original
building that Bassett built, especially since both Sedgwick
and Brownell were men of considerable standing in Sharon.
This property has changed hands many, many times throughout
its history.
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