User:Eurodog/sandbox295

Coordinates: 42°30′13″N 70°50′56″W / 42.503513°N 70.848825°W / 42.503513; -70.848825
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Herreshoff Castle
Herreshoff Castle
Herreshoff Castle
Map
General information
TypeResidential
Architectural style
Address2 Crocker Park
Marblehead, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°30′13″N 70°50′56″W / 42.503513°N 70.848825°W / 42.503513; -70.848825
CompletedJune 1927
Height
Height32 feet (9.8 m)
Architectural42 by 38 feet (13 m × 12 m)[1]
Observatory
From the flat roof, the panoramic view, in 1927, extended from Boston Light on the south, to the Magnolia shore on the north, overlooking Marblehead Neck and the entire harbor.
Technical details
Material
Built entirely of stone blasted from the ledge upon which it stands
Design and construction
Architect(s)
Waldo Peter Ballard and wife, Joan Ballard, original occupants
Main contractor
John Dilworth Regan (1879–1945), mason and general contractor
Dwight Lyman Fulton (1888–1973), carpenter
Herreshoff family of Bristol, Rhode Island
(partial chart showing selected family members only – C.F. Herreshoff and Julia Ann Lewis had nine children)
James Brown F. Herreshoff
(1834–1930)
Jane Brown
(1855–1924)
Edna May Burt
(1886–1937)
Charles Frederick Herreshoff
(1876–1954)
––––––––––––––––––––
m1. McCormick 1902–1912
m2. Burt 1912
Elizabeth Harrison McCormick
(1884–1938)
Lloyd Stowell Shapley
(1875–1959)
––––––––––––––––––––
Three marriages
m1. McCormick 1912 until her death
m2. 1943 Ida Viola Wells until her death
Ida Viola Wells
(1878–1950)
Jeannette (Jane) Brown Herreshoff
(1876–1964)
James Brown Herreshoff
(1878–1945)
Constance Spraque Mills
(1881–1966)
William Stuart Herreshoff
(1883–1969)
Anna Francis Herreshoff
(1886–1978)
Alan Shapley
(1903–1973)
Margaret Herreshoff
(born abt. 1910)
Hans Peter Luhn
(1896–1964)

Others[edit]

Charles Frederick Herreshoff (1839–1917)
Lewis Herreshoff (1844–1926) the fifth of nine siblings, despite being blind, studied music in Paris and engaged in literary work that he published in American periodicals.[2][3][4]
  • Herreshoff, Lewis (1844–1926) (August 1891). "Possibilities of the Steam Yacht". The North American Review. Vol. 153, no. 417: 172–180. ISSN 0029-2397. JSTOR 25102227. OCLC 5543846225. Retrieved February 18, 2021 – via Google Books. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (The North American Review is also accissable via the HathiTrust Digital Library).
  • Herreshoff, Lewis (1844–1926) (August 1891). "The Evolution of the Yacht". The North American Review. Vol. 153, no. 419: 432–441. ISSN 0029-2397. JSTOR 25102260. OCLC 5543841099. Retrieved February 18, 2021 – via Google Books. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (The North American Review is also accessible via the HathiTrust Digital Library).
Sally Brown Herreshoff (1845–1917), became blind at a young age.
  • Julian Herreshoff and his brother, in 1912, built the Minden in Providence at 21 Waterman Street. In 1977, The Minden was bought as a dormitory by Johnson & Wales College. When that changed hands, several surviving Minden residents moved to Wayland Manor in Providence, the only other luxury apartment building, as the Gardners had done prior to then. In 1999, Brown University acquired the building, but in the year 2000, with a new dormitory yet unfinished, Johnson & Wales rented back the building for housing for 145 of its students. Today, it is being renovated thoroughly for Brown students and is undergoing a major overhaul.

Chad Brown[edit]

By way of his mother, Sarah Brown (maiden; 1773–1846), C.F Herreshoff III was a 4th great-grandson of Rev. Chad Brown, the progenitor of the Brown family of Rhode Island.

Chad Brown (c. 1600–1650) & Elizabeth Sharparowe (1604–1672)
John Brown I (1627–1677) & Married Holmes (1635–1690) - son, et ux.
James Brown Elder (1662–1719) & Mary Tew Harris (1671–1736) - grandson, et ux.
Capt. James Brown II (1697–1739) & Hope Tillinghast Power (1702–1792) - great-grandson, et ux.
John Brown (1736–1803) & Sarah Beckworth (1738–1825) - 2nd great-grandson, et ux.
Sarah Brown (1773–1846) & Charles Frederick Herreshoff (1763–1819) - 3rd great-grandson, et ux.
Charles Frederick Herreshoff III (1809–1988) - 4th great-grandson

Nowadays, tens of millions of Americans have at least one ancestor who was in Rhode Island around 1600. But, with respect to males descending from Chad Brown, according to Galton-Watson probability, only a fraction of that number have an unbroken chain of paternal lineage maintaining the Brown surname from his line.

Algernon Sidney DeWolf Herreshoff's father-in-law, Halsey Chase (1865–1951), founded the Prudence Island-Bristol ferry in 1910 and operated it until 1929. Halsey's daughter (Algernon's wife), Rebecca "Becky" Chase (1894–1991), became the first female in New England to earn a Coast Guard pilot's license to operate and navigate passenger vessels.

Castle[edit]

Dwight Lyman Fulton, the carpenter, in his retirement, began making violins in Interlachen, Florida.

The main building, features, on the ground floor, a cook room, eating room, and pantry. The main room is above it, on the second floor, 34 by 26 feet (10.4 m × 7.9 m), with a massive fireplace, with an entrance from Crocker Park, named after Uriel Crocker (1796–1887), who donated a large portion of the land. The park was originally known as Bartol's Head. Stairs of oaken planks bolted onto a chain lead to another room of an entirely different period of architecture, 34 by 16 feet (10.4 m × 4.9 m), with a high domed ceiling – also with a large fireplace, slightly smaller than the one in the main room.

The so-called Tower Building is two stories. The lower floor is for social purposes, the upper, for a painting studio. The ceiling of the upper is open, to the apex of the copper roof, with oak beams exposed. The ceiling is 21 feet (6.4 m) high. Within the walls is a secret stairway. There is also a small dungeon.

A stone stairway on the exterior leads to the main room. The windows are Gothic, small, but provide ample light. The doors are of solid oak planks, bolted together with half-inch steel rods.


Pronunciation[edit]

L. Francis Herreshoff[edit]

(1973) – McGraw-Hill Trade. LCCN 73-88019. ISBN 08-774-2035-1. ISBN 978-0-8774-2035-4
(1991) – Camden, Maine: International Marine Publishing Company. OCLC 23526824 (all editions). ISBN 0-8774-2298-2. ISBN 978-0-8774-2298-3
International Marine Publishing Company, founded in 1969 in Camden, Maine by:
  1. Russell Wing Brace (born 1933)
  2. Roger Conant Taylor (born 1931)
→ acquired in 1987 by Highmark Publishing Ltd. of Camden, New Jersey → acquired in 1988 by TAB Books, Inc. → acquired in 1990 by McGraw-Hill.
published posthumously with the help of Stuart James at Rudder magazine
Shrewsbury, United Kingdom: Airlife Publishing Ltd. (imprint of McGraw-Hill)
The Rudder – The Magazine for Yachtsmen

Norman Herreshoff[edit]

Around 1948, Becky Herreshoff (née Rebecca Chase; 1894–1991) was instrumental in enlisting the support then Governor John Pastore, and galvanized Prudence Island landowners, led by her own family, in a campaign to block a hoof-in-mouth research laboratory for diseased cattle. In 1950, they rejected a purchase option extension to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Navy, who had been considering the site for building a $24.5 million (equivalent to $310.27 million in 2023) research laboratory for hoof-in-mouth disease. The laboratory, in 1956, was established on Plum Island in Long Island Sound. In 1959, they sold the acreage to the Rhode Island Heritage Foundation, now managed by the Narragansett Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve and now under the purview of Homeland Security.


A grandson of John Brown Francis Herreshoff (1850–1932), Norman Herreshoff (1903–1990), on June 8, 1926, graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a Bachelor of Science in Architecture.

Norman and his second cousin,

A grandson of Caroline "Carrie" Louisa Herreshoff (1837–1908), Westcote Herreshoff Chesebrough (1908–1979), a lawyer,

Norman and Westcote jointly owned 450 acres on Prudence Island, comprising the abandoned Baker Farm.

Farms of Prudence Island
  • Baker Farm site,[5] colonial era farm. But even before the American Revolutionary War was over, Prudence was being rebuilt. Providence businessman John Brown (1836–1803) acquired about a third of the island in compensation for his financial support for the war, and had three large homes built there. One of them, at Baker Farm, was later the site of the Prudence Inn. Brown's land on Prudence Island was later purchased by John Dennis of Caleb Hill?
  • They were operated by tenant farmers and were called the Baker, Bacon, and Potter’s Cove Farms. Before they were known by these names they were the Wanton Farm, the North Allen (or Chase) Farm and the North End (or Cove) Farm.



Keepers
  1. 1852: Pelig Sherman
  2. 1886–1887: John Thomas Clark (1851–1887)[8]
  3. Thomas J. Corey (1807–1887)
  4. c. 1925: Martin Thompson


  • Newport Mercury, The (October 8, 1887). "Obituary" (Capt. "Thomas J. Corey ... " – died October 2, 1887). Vol. Vol. 130, no. 17. p. 4 (column 3). Retrieved February 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com Re: Thomas J. Corey (1807–1887). {{cite news}}: |volume= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)


  • Meg (11th grader) (April 2013). "John Brown on Prudence Island" (PDF). Prudence Wave. no. 18. Prudence Island, Rhode Island: Prudence Island School Foundation: 1, 3. Retrieved February 22, 2021 In 2014, Meg (Margaret Bearse) became Prudence Island School Foundation's first to graduate 12th grade. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)

Bibliography[edit]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

News media



Books


    1. Volume 1: 1636–1700 (reprint)
    2. Volume 2: 1701–1790


    1. Volume 1: 1636–1700
    2. Volume 2: 1701–1790


    1. Volume 1
    2. Volume 2
    3. Volume 3
    4. Volume 4: Biographical ← "Herreshoff"
    5. Volume 5: Biographical
    6. Volume 6: Biographical


  • Koorey, Stefani Ruth "Kat", PhD (born 1959) (February–March 2006). "Looking for Emma". The Hatchet – A Journal of Lizzie Borden & Victorian Studies (sources provided). Vol. 3, no. 1. Orlando, Florida: Pear Tree Press. ISSN 1547-3937. OCLC 53345469. Retrieved February 18, 2021 "The Minden was built in 1912 by Julian Lewis Herreshoff and his brother". (the author, Stefani Koorey, a professor in higher education, is a self-proclaimed Borden-phile) {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)



Re:

  1. Nicholas Stoner
  2. Nathaniel Foster
    1. 1850. LCCN 06-4479. OCLC 8118690.
    2. 1851; 2nd ed. LCCN 38-34433. LCCN 06-4480. LCCN 06-4480
    3. 1857; 3rd ed.
    4. 1960; 3rd ed.
    5. 1871; 3rd ed. LCCN 08-7785.


Genealogy