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Form No. 10-300 REV. (9/77) NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM I NAME SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOW TO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS TYPE ALL ENTRIES -- COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS HISTORIC AND/OR COMMON LOCATION STREET & NUMBER CITY, TOWN Jabez Smith/House Smith Homestead North Road Groton 0260 CT 09 HCLASSIFICATION _ VICINITY OF CODE 2nd New -NOT FOR PUBLICATION CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT COUNTY London 01 1 CODE CATEGORY OWNERSHIP _^' STATUS - DISTRICT XPUBLIC CX^y/V -OCCUPIED jt isjulsqm**" ^_ BUILDING(S) ) PRIVAJE,,. _ UNOCCUPIED Town -STRUCTURE V ^BOTH*^*6* to!!** WORK IN PROGRESS SITE PUin.TCACQurSI"flO N^^1116 A C CE SS 1 B LE OBJECT _IN PROCESS BEING CONSIDERED OWNER OF PROPERTY NAME STREET & NUMBER CITY. TOWN Tovn of Proton J!p<iuonock..Road YES: RESTRICTED YES: UNRESTRICTED _NO Groton VICINITY OF LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION PRESENT USE _ AGRICULTURE MUSEUM COMMERCIAL PARK EDUCATIONAL PRIVATE RESIDENCE ENTERTAINMENT RELIGIOUS GOVERNMENT SCIENTIFIC INDUSTRIAL TRANSPORTATION MILITARY OTHER: COURTHOUSE. REGISTRY OF DEEDS.ETC. STREET & NUMBER CITY, TOWN Poquonock Road Qffice, TOWH Hall I REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS DATE DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS CITY, TOWN State Register of Historic Places FEDERAL.J COUNTY LOCAL 1981 Connecticut Historical Commission, 59 South Prospect St. Hartford CT

DESCRIPTION CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE X X EXCELLENT DETERIORATED UNALTERED ORIGINAL SITE _GOOD _RUINS "^.ALTERED _MOVED DATE. FAIR UNEXPOSED DESCRIBE THE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL (IF KNOWN) PHYSICAL APPEARANCE The Jabez Smith House, a well-maintained 1-$~story center-chimney cape with a pitched roof and shallow end-gable overhang, sits well back from North Road (Connecticut Route 117) in Groton, on a large open field, part of what is often termed the Smith Homestead. The present house, c. 1783, stands on the foundations of an earlier house, believed to have been built c. 1663 by Nehemiah Smith, the only son of one 1 of (Jro ton's original landholders, the Reverend Nehemiah Smith. The original house burned about the time of the Revolutionary War and was rebuilt, in all probability, by the greatgrandson of Nehemiahp, Jabez Smith. Situated opposite Poquonock Lake (once known as Smith Lake), the house is one of three modest 18thcentury houses in the Poquonock Bridge section of Groton. A cluster of 1960s single-family houses lies south of the house while hilly land rising north and east of the house is undeveloped. Interstate 95 is located three-quarters of a mile north of the Smith House. The earthen cellar, excavated only at the west end of the house, has sloping walls of small flat fieldstones, roughly laid. The chimney foundations also are of small, flat fieldstones. If the account of the house's construction on the foundations of an earlier house is accurate, then the cellarhole, cellar and chimney foundations may date as early as 1663, when Nehemiah Smithp arrived to farm his father's land. The generally rough finish of the cellar, not squaredoff, though possibly due to erosion, tends to support an earlier construction date than the late 18th-century date suggested by the remaining structural and stylistic evidence. Although the cellar is excavated only under half of the house, the exterior foundations, f carefully-laid granite blocks, are continuous and unbroken, circling the entire perimeter of the house. The house is sheathed with clapboards on the north and west walls and with shingles on the south and east walls, perhaps in consideration of rough weather coming off the coast to the south. The roof is finished with wood shingles and the chimney, placed forward of the ridge, appears to have been rebuilt. The fireplaces throughout the house have 20th-century bricks indicating that at some point in this century, much of the masonry above the cellar was rebuilt. A leanto originally used as a woodshed occupies the center third of the north wall. It is now the back entry to the house with a door on the east side. Just north of the house stands a frame garage, built c. 1960, which is not unsympathetic to the design of the house though it is a sa3.tbox type with a Georgian cupola* Approximately 100 yards east of the house is an outhouse, also of modern c onstruction but which stands on 18th- or 19th-century foundations. Farther east, at the base of Hazelnut Hill, are the fieldstone foundations, approximately 20' by 30', of a barn, probably built during the 19th century. Several fieldstone walls crisscross the surrounding acreage.

FHR-8-300A (11/78) HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM Jabez Smith House Groton CT CONTINUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 1 North and south of the house are overgrown fields. Only 2.4 acres of land immediately 3 Surrounding the house are landscaped; this portion alone, referred to in the deed as the Homestead Lot, comprises the nominated area. The remaining property on the east side of North Road consists of open land, once cultivated fields but nowgrown over with scrub. The once-cultivated fields were part of the Smith farm and, before much of the land was inundated in 1916 by the public watershed, extended across North Road, including extensive acreage there. The facade of the Smith House, the south wall, is simple and undistinguished; four windows with 6-over-6 sash, flank a plain, 19th-century door with a 2-light transom. Above he door is a metal chimney for the central heating system. Elsewhere on the f irst floor the original fenestration, with 6-over-6 double-hung sash, remains, though at the northwest corner, a 20th-century window has been added. Two 4-over-4 sash windows occupy the center portions of the end gables; on the west wall these are flanked by two, small, square, 4-paned windows. The interior of the Smith House follows the traditional central chimney floor plan. The interior detailing is simple and modest. Though the brickwork in the fireplace has been replaced, much of the interior finishing is intact. In the kitchen, wide, horizontal boarding sheaths the north wall, while the other walls are horizontally boarded to the chair-rail and finished above with plaster, which, by its texture, appears old and may be original. The plaster on the ceilings too appears to be old. The hearth mantel is a simple shelf molding. To the east of the kitchen is a small bedroom, while the buttery, to the west, has been divided with a modern bath (entered from the parlor) to the south and a modern kitchen to the north. There is a box staircase in the kitchen. In the parlor, the fireplace wall is finished with simple panelling and cupboards. Ther, and in the hall, the posts are cased and beaded: they are only shallowly flared. Plaster on the walls and ceiling of the parlor is of the same texture as that in the kitchen, and undoubtedly dates from the same time. As expected in a house of the late 18th century, there is no indication of summer beams. The attic is partitioned off into two finished rooms, with plastered walls and ceilings, in the center section. These rooms are lit by the two center windows of each gable (those windows on the oast wall remain but are boarded over). Both rooms have fireplaces. The

FHR-8-300A (11/78) HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM Jabez Smith House Groton CT CONTINUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER PAGE remainder of the attic is crawlspace except for a small room under the eaves at the northwest corner. It is unplastered, leaving the rough planks exposed. Narrow strips of bark form battens between the vertical planking. The rafters, which are crudely chamfered, are also exposed and a notch chamfered into one allows the door to swing freely into the tiny room. The chamfered notch indicates that the space was always a separate room,while its roughness suggets it may have been a servant's or hired man's quarters. There are several batten doors which have a primitive appearance and may have been salvaged from the old house when it burned. The doors on the box staircase, one to the cellar and one to the attic are both two boards wide with horizontal battens. The door from the kitchen to the woodshed is formed by one wide and one narrow board, joined with battens. All the others are 4-panel, 19th-century doors.

1 SIGNIFICANCE PERIOD PREHISTORIC 1400-1499 1500-1599 1600-1699 1700-1799 1800-1899 1900- AREAS OF SIGNIFICANCE - CHECK AND JUSTIFY BELOW _ARCHEOLOGY-PREHISTORIC _ARCHEOLOGY-HISTORIC ^AGRICULTURE X_ARCHITECTURE _ART COMMERCE COMMUNICATIONS COMMUNITY PLANNING CONSERVATION ECONOMICS EDUCATION ENGINEERING A_EXPLORATION/SETTLEMENT INDUSTRY INVENTION LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE LAW LITERATURE MILITARY MUSIC PHILOSOPHY POLITICS/GOVERNMENT _RELIGION SCIENCE SCULPTURE _SOCIAL/HUMANITARIAN THEATER TRANSPORTATION OTHER (SPECIFY) Family History SPECIFIC DATES C.1783 BUILDER/ARCHITECT MENT OF SIGNIFICANCE The Smith House is significant because it is the only 18th-century farmhouse remaining in the Poquonock Bridge section, once Groton's major farming area. (Agriculture) Despite 19th- and 20th-century development to the south, the open, rural setting of the Smith House is retained in large measure. Architecturally, the house is a wellmaintained and -preserved example of the simple, 1-$ story cottages of the late 18th century. (Architecture, Criterion C) Historically, the house is important because it is on the site of one of Groton's earliest settlements and because the land, and later, the house, have been held continuously in the same family since 1652. (Exploration/ Settlement, Family History) Further, the Smith family have been active and important citizens in Groton throughout its history. (Criterion B) The progenitor of the Smith family in Connecticut, the Reverend Nehemiah Smith, arrived in Plymouth in 1638, migrated to Stratford, Connecticut by 1644 f and later to New Haven, in 1646. There, in 1646, his only son, Nehemiah, was born, baptized by New Haven's prominent theocrat, John Davenport. In 1652, the Reverend Nehemiah, then lining in New London, was granted the land at Poquonock, the Smith Homestead. Though the family genealogy states that the first house was built then (1652), this is contradicted later in the same genealogy when Nehemiahp is said to have been the first to live at the family farm, to which he moved in 1663 at the age of 17. At that point, his father was living at Bean Hill in Norwich, where he remained until his death in 1686. Thus, the first house on the Poquonock site was probably built by the son, Nehemiah Smith, either soon after his arrival in 1663 or at some later date. The house passed to Nehemiah 1 s son, also Nehemiah,and then to his son, Nathan Smith, born in 1702. While Nathan lived there, "about the time of the Revolutionary War, his house was burned down." An exact date is not mentioned, but the fire must have occurred at some point between 1775-and 1785* In any case, by that time, Nathan Smith was in his seventies and in all likelihood would have been too old to have built the present house. Further, in 1783, Jabez Smith, Nathan's son, born in 1748, received title to the Homestead Farm; this suggests that Jabez may have built the present house, c. 1783, receiving title as compensation* The house has remained in the Smith family ever since. In 1974, the present owner deeded the house and

IMAJOR BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES Grroton Land -ttecords, Town Clerk's Office, Grroton Town Hall, Groton CT Smith, H. Alien, A GENEALOGICAL HISTORY OP THE DESCENDANTS OP THE REVEREND NEHEMIAH SMITH OP NEW LONDON COUMT, CONNECTICUT, Albany, Joel Munsell's Sons, 1889. 3GEOGRAPHICAL DATA ACREAGE OF NOMINATED PROPERTY * QUADRANG UTM REFEiRENCES A 1,8l ZONE cl. I El _ I LENAME 7 Ufi ISilO EASTING 1,1,, 1. i,, 1 1 I, 1 Eew London Quadrangle A,«5fe»2lO. 10 t B, I NORT HING ZONE I 1 _J_, 1,, 1 D, I, i 1 f\, 1 MM! hi i i QUADRANGLE S 1, 1,, EASTING 1, 1., 1 1,!,, 1 1, 1,, 1 CALE t: 24000,1,1.. NORTHING,1,1,,,, 1.,, I,, 1,, 1 LIST ALL S AND COUNTIES FOR PROPERTIES OVERLAPPING OR COUNTY BOUNDARIES CODE COUNTY CODE CODE COUNTY CODE FORM PREPARED BY NAME/TITLE Sarah Zimmerman. Consultant ORGANIZATION Connecticut Historical Commission STREET& NUMBER DATE August 1979 TELEPHONE 39 South Prospect Street 203 566-3005 CITY OR TOWN Hartford HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICER CERTIFICATION CT THE EVALUATED SIGNIFICANCE OF THIS PROPERTY WITHIN THE IS: NATIONAL LOCAL * As the designated State Historic Preservation Officer for the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 (Public Law 89-665), I hereby nominate this property for inclusion in the National Register and certify that it has been evaluated according to the criteria and procedures set forth by the National Park Service. HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICER SIGNATURE TITLE Director, Connecticut Historical Commission DATE April 13, 1981

FHR-8-300A (11/78) HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES mmm INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM * Jabez Smith House Groton, CT CONTINUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER $ PAGE ^ the 2.4 acre Homestead Lot to the Town of Groton, with the provision that the house, lot, grounds, trees, and walls be maintained and preserved in perpetuity as a historic site* The owner retains life use of the property. Architecturally, the house is significant as one of the few 18th century houses left in the Poquonock Bridge section of Groton. South of the Smith House on the Post Road are two similar, 1 -story, 18thcentury cottages but they are surrounded by 20th-century commercial structures (convenience food stores and the like), while the integrity of the Smith House is unimpaired. The exterior of the house is little altered and many interior details, such as the panelling and plasterwork are preserved. The attic story, with the tiny unfinished northwest corner room, appears to retain its original finish intact. The corner room is in itself an interesting document of the hired man's place in the 18th-century household. If the cellar hole and foundations do date from the 17th century (and their primitive condition suggests they may), then they provide a strong historical link of the house to its site. Historically, the Homestead is one of Groton's earliest settlements. The granting of the Homestead land to Uehemiah Smith in 1653 predates by two years the first permanent settlement in Groton by Gary Latham, a Thames River ferryman at Groton Bank in 1655» Groton has always had several nodes of settlement rather than a single cohesive center and oquon6ck Bridge and the area extending northward were important agricultural areas for the town; within that area, the Smith Farm was one of the most extensive holdings and remained so until the 20th century. Members of the Smith family were not just farmers; many of them were prominent and active in Groton's history while other descendants of the Reverend Nehemiah Smith assumed important roles elsewhere in southeastern Connecticut. Both Nehemiah^ and Nehemiah.* held many public offices in Groton as did Nathan Smith. Jabez, probable builder of the present house, was'for many years a Deacon of the Second Baptist Church of Groton and, in 1800, a Representative to the General Assembly. His only child, Waity, married a cousin, Denison Smith, and they ran a thriving store at ^oquonock Bridge during the 19th century; Denison also ran a linen manufactury. Many of the Smiths are buried at the Smith Lake Csmetery, once located on North Road from the house and moved farther east, above Route 1, when Smith Lake bacame part of the Groton Sesevoir. 1. Smith, H. Alien, A GENEALOGICAL HISTORY OF THE DESCENDANTS OF THE REVEREND NEHEMIAH SMITH OF NEW LONDON COUNTY, CONNECTICUT, Albany, Joel Hunsell's Sons, 1889, p. 74.

FHR-8-300A (11/78) HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM Jabez Smith House Groton CT CONTINUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 8 PAGE 2 2. Ibid., p. 76. 3. Groton Land Records, Volume 285, page 459, Groton Town Hall.

1 I T 1si Floor Ron I -«i- 2nd Floor Plan Smith House "**/ (Proton not to scale MAY 151981