BULLETIN CHITTENDEN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY. New Historical Marker Dedicated in Hinesburg

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CHITTENDEN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN Fall 2010 Vol. 41, No. 4 New Historical Marker Dedicated in Hinesburg On Sunday, September 26, 2010 a new historic marker was unveiled in Chittenden County. It is dedicated to early black settlers who came to Hinesburg in the 1790s from Connecticut and Massachusetts. About the dedication. Elise Guyette, president of the Chittenden County Historical Society and author of Discovering Black Vermont: African American Farmers in Hinesburgh, 1790-1870, gave a brief speech. She outlined the joys and hardships of the Clarks and Peters, who eventually became eight extended families with successful farms, middle class status, and church membership in the local Baptist church. Along with many townspeople, descendants from Vermont and Massachusetts attended. Several spoke movingly about their ancestors and their pride in these early pioneers who overcame hardships on the hill, became voting members of the Hinesburg community, and sheltered people who had abandoned black cemetery at the top of the hill.

Richmond s Checkered House by J. Brooks Buxton Courtesy UVM Special Collections. house has been known variously for nearly 200 years as the Checkered Brick House, the Chequered House, and today simply as the Checkered House. two main arterial roads that have linked the towns of Jericho, Williston was utilized until a wooden covered bridge was built around the 1820s. structure built slightly downstream in 1928 1929. in the southern part of the town of Jericho, but on October 27, 1794, CCHS Bulletin Page 2

Checkered House Bridges, circa November 1929. Courtesy UVM Special Collections. the General Assembly of the State of Vermont established a new town on which the Checkered House would be built was originally owned of the farm on which I now live, to Martin Chittenden of Jericho on as governor of Vermont for 19 terms from 1778 until his death in 1797. After his marriage in 1749 to Elizabeth Meigs, he moved to Salisbury, Connecticut where his father had purchased a small farm for the new couple. He soon prospered, becoming one of the largest land holders in Salisbury and active in town affairs. In keeping with his position, he built an imposing brick manse for his large family which is still standing today in remarkable condition in Salisbury. According to a story handed down in the Chittenden family, during the 1760s Colonel Chittenden, as head of a Connecticut militia regiment, led an expedition to rescue several captured residents who CCHS Bulletin Page 3

had been taken north to Canada. After freeing the captives, the men my house and settle it with my sons around me. Chittendens decided to move their family north, where land was Thomas Chittenden: Vermont s First Statesman, on May 17, 1773, he and his two colleagues signed a bond binding them to with Jonathan Spafford and Abijah Pratt, his two Salisbury friends as original partners, holding a few hundred acres. Sadly for posterity, his brick house burned down in 1926, but its his younger brother, Martin, who was given his newly built splendid Martin Chittenden was elected governor of Vermont in 1813 and again obviously living in his splendid manse in Jericho when he purchased while he was serving in Congress, he could still focus on more land holdings in Jericho, and yet perhaps another brick house. large commodious brick house with an upstairs ballroom by his father; it was located above the Gov. Chittenden home farm in Williston on Chittenden, their fourth son, had to settle for a lovely large wooden those forgetful Brownson and Spafford folks and their descendants whose deeds, land records, letters, journals or diaries, or oral family CCHS Bulletin Page 4

to Martin Chittenden in 1810? Martin and his wife would have had children old enough to live in and to manage the Spafford property by could perhaps be an obvious reason for his desire to purchase the subject house. Of course its convenient neighborhood location, just another strong reason for Martin to acquire the Checkered House in Could Martin Chittenden have possibly cased an originally framed house, newly purchased from Spafford, in brick patterned after his own and its builders, carpenters and master masons may have died off or moved to another town. with perhaps the most noted example being its neighbor on the Onion examples in Arlington, Middlebury, and the Gen. John Strong Mansion Valley. brick houses, though generally on a larger scale, are found also in the However, architectural historians and preservationists now apparently agree that in Vermont the bricks were made locally in an onsite kiln. If some of the headers were selected from bricks whose ends were blackened or glazed in the kiln, then the pattern became much more striking. Herbert Wheaton Congdon in the late 1930 1940s, an outgrowth of the CCHS Bulletin

brick houses were, Congdon wrote, a practical desire for permanence sometimes entered in to these matters, although permanence is a quality book, Old Vermont Houses house in Jericho, but unfortunately does not mention the Checkered Vermont Historic Sites and Structures Survey. Martin Chittenden sold the Checkered House property to Joshua at an early age and it appears that she opened a small hotel or a stage coach stop and tavern with a ballroom upstairs with her daughter and sold to Giles Howe in 1876 and four generations of the Howe family cabins were built on the property by Harry and Caroline Howe in 1932; and split up the property. Secondly was the construction of the 11 on October 30, 1964 which further bypassed the property. stand in her handsome front doorway and watch the oxen pulling wagons or teams of horses with their dust passing by on the Onion they drove up the long drive to the house. Would she have heard from CCHS Bulletin Page 6

local oral tradition, from her father or her grandfather, the names of masons who built these Chittenden houses, several large enough to have an upstairs ballroom. Surely the sites of the clay banks and the brick kilns for the Checkered House would still have been known even in the 1840s. One oral tradition concerning the Checkered House can be Richmond, Vermont, A History of More Than 200 Years, concluded after with the Checkered House. Speculation whether in historical coincidences or in land is a constant theme of this paper. It has been a challenge to research and to attempt to determine accurately which member of the Brownson or Spafford families, father or son, actually built the Checkered House and its exact year of construction. It would appear likely that Martin Chittenden, the owner of the house from 1810 1830, was not the stands today as a living testament of the vision of the early settlers. highway system in their respective centuries, the Checkered House continues to serve and to delight the many new settlers who live and still farm some for many generations in these towns through which Acknowledgments: J. Brooks Buxton of Jericho would like to thank the Sources: Please contact the Bulletin editor if you would like a list of the sources consulted. CCHS Bulletin Page 7

CCHS Bulletin Page 8 Report to the Taxpayer by Stephen Hitchcock Stephen Hitchcock, a Burlington High School graduate, wrote this article after he attended his 1946 class reunion around 1986. It was among papers saved by Steve s track coach, Holland Dutch Smith. Thanks to Nancy Tracy for sending it to us. Any resident of Burlington who is 70 years of age or more has been paying school taxes for a long, long time. Was all this money held a reunion and surveyed the comings, goings and doings of their classmates over the past several years. Of the more than 180 graduating seniors, 17 had died, including number of these expatriates are now starting to drift back to Vermont, anyone who has been away for four decades. World War II. Its downtown was perhaps in retrospect a bit shabby, but it was the only shopping area we knew except for a small cluster consternation of the neighbors. It was a safe town. Children rode their bicycles all over the winter and numerous lots were available for football or basketball with nary a thought to injuries, lawsuits or dangerous strangers. Warm

under the street lights until one by one the players were called in by their parents. shop, and in high school you walked with your date on Saturday night. A young man from the north side walked two miles to the south side to pick up his date and together they walked a mile back to town to attend desperate, a B movie from Monogram pictures at the State. Afterwards, the young man would loose his nerve and not try to kiss her. She, disappointed, would go inside and he, berating himself for a coward, would walk two miles back home. With all this walking, no wonder we were state track champions in the spring of 1946. Burlington High School track team in 1946. Coach Smith is in the back row on the far right. Can anyone identify Steve Hitchcock and the other team members? CCHS Bulletin Page 9

At some point, we must have overcome these social inadequacies for our class has some 3.23 children per graduate. Considering our age, perhaps that would be better expressed as averaging about three per person. Already 268 grandchildren have checked in. It must be the good Vermont air. holding their last jobs, it falls out like this: or administrators; those that stayed did well as merchants, doctors, politicians, teachers, and workers. If looked at in the broader context of providing an educated and socially aware citizenry, then it was well done indeed. It was not until we began to earn our way in a world far removed from that small city on a lovely lake up near the Canadian border that we realized what our high school and indeed the town had given us. course, A common delusion of mankind that the times that were, are better than the times that are. An yet, even though ugly urban sprawl reaches out almost to Shelburne, Church Street is still alive. And in spirit, the new Church Street is perhaps closer to the Burlington we once knew on any Saturday shopping night than the young people in jeans and running shoes will ever guess. Burlington, ave atque vale! CCHS Bulletin Page 10

Champlain s Dream: A Review by Sylvia Bugbee Some historians are born to write blockbusters, if I may use such Champlain s Dream, calling it one of the greatest biographical works of all time. How can we of the Champlain Valley, for whom Champlain is a comfortable icon who Vermont, assess this work from the perspective of our own relationship in shaping the history of the Champlain Valley. After reading this book, I realized that I did not; but now I think I do. portrait almost from the inside looking out. One reviewer characterized report back on what he sees. Champlain was a far more complex personage than mere his cause in the midst of changing regimes and administrators in the vision, drawing upon the cultural strengths of his native Brouage in CCHS Bulletin Page 11

may come as close as anyone can to illuminating the person of Samuel de Champlain. refuses to identify with either the traditional view of Champlain as the heroic explorer who brought religion to the Indians, or with the sees Champlain as a seeker of harmony and mutual respect: neither a great white man nor an early modern revolutionary/free thinker, but American tribes had to include a religious unity that would bind the two allies together and allow the latter full membership in the European peaceful and honorable ally. Albion s Seed: Four Folkways in America England from which settlers came. Perhaps Champlain s Dream will do the same for the study of the early history of European settlement in the CCHS Bulletin Page 12

New Titles on the Book Shelf The History of Shelburne Farms: A Changing Landscape, an Evolving Vision. Vermont Historical Society, 2010. The History of Shelburne Farms much slimmer Shelburne Farms: The History of an Agricultural Estate will be of particular interest to anyone who has visited the spectacular lakefront property and wondered how it came to be. Discovering Black Vermont: African American Farmers in Hinesburgh, 1790-1890 Discovering Black Vermont joins Mr. and Mrs. Prince The Blind African Slave CCHS Bulletin Page 13

understand the complex story of African Americans living in Vermont during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. While Holbrook Gerzina focused on a small rural community of black families who were linked to other blacks throughout central and northwestern Vermont. In the in Hinesburg in the decades before the Civil War. Sunsets Over Lake Champlain: The Good Old Days in the Queen City of Burlington, Vermont In Sunsets Over Lake Champlain us back to the city of Burlington as she experienced it growing up with the city where she grew up. CCHS Bulletin Page 14

CHITTENDEN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY P. O. Box 1576 Burlington, Vermont 05402-1576 cchsvt@gmail.com CCHS Board Ann Arms Sylvia Bugbee Carol Casey, Vice President Sarah Gustafson, Secretary Elise Guyette, President Jeff Hindes For information about programs, contact: Elise Guyette at cchsvt@gmail.com To become a CCHS member, contact: Jeffrey Hindes at jhindes@cssu.org. For story ideas, suggestions and questions about the CCHS Bulletin, contact the editor at: cchsvt@gmail.com. CCHS Bulletin

Historical Society Organization BULLETIN U.S. Postage Paid P.O Box 1576 Burlington, VT Burlington, Vt. 05402-1576 Permit No. 100