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To read this
entire issue of the Quarterly News, which includes historic
photographs, you may purchase back issues by calling Longyear
Museum at 1-800-277-8943 or 1-617-278-9000.
Longyear Museum
Quarterly News
Spring 1980
Vol. 17, No. 1
NORTH GROTON - THEN AND NOW
Part I
Mary Baker
Eddy, then Mrs. Patterson, lived in what is now the Mary Baker
Eddy Historic House in North Groton, New Hampshire from 1855 to
1860.(1) The Quarterly News has previously published the reminiscences
of George J. Cummings, who lived in North Groton as a boy in the
mid-nineteenth century.(2) This present article traces local history
both prior to and subsequent to this period and provides illustrations
of the changes that have occurred.
The casual
visitor to North Groton may not appreciate the changes that have
occurred in this little community over the two hundred years since
the settling of the town of Groton in 1770. It is today a small
cluster of houses, mostly old, a few new, hidden if not isolated,
in the hills southwest of Rumney Village. Visitors to the Mary
Baker Eddy Historic House in North Groton, maintained by Longyear
Historical Society, have frequently enquired about the history
of the area and have asked what it was like when Mrs. Eddy lived
there.
North Groton
is a section of the town of Groton, about five miles from the
present center of the town in Grafton County. The original grant
for the town was made on July 8, 1761. Groton was first called
Cockermouth, after Cockermouth in northern England, until December
7, 1796 when the town was incorporated.
The terrain
is very hilly or mountainous with the highest promontory 2182
feet, close to the Dorchester town line to the west. To the north
is Bailey Hill and to the east Fletcher Mountain, also over 2000
feet high. Hall's Brook flows through the center of North Groton
where the roads from Groton center, Rumney and Cheever join. The
brook was dammed years ago to provide waterpower for mills in
the town, and a sluiceway can be found, although the exact location
of the dam, or dams, is uncertain. The remains of a water wheel
which transmitted power to one of the mills can still be located
among the rocks in what was undoubtedly the tailrace, a hundred
feet to the north of the Historic House. (Across from the Patterson
house was the sawmill in which Dr. Patterson, an itinerant dentist,
had invested.)(3) The stream, which is now undammed, flows generally
northward and empties into the Baker River in Rumney. The road
downhill beside the brook has been quoted in a nineteenth century
gazeteer as being "one of the most picturesque drives in
the county."(4) This evaluation is reasonably accurate today,
particularly in the fall color season. It was down this road that
Mrs. Patterson went in a carriage one day in March 1860 with her
sister, Abigail, to begin her stay in Rumney.(3)
The brook
itself has changed course over the years due to flooding and subsequent
erosion and also because of the removal or addition of man-made
dams and bridge abutments. For example, photographs of Hall's
Brook taken about 60 years ago show lack of serious bank erosion
near the Historic House and a course for the brook considerably
farther away from the house foundation than at present.
This section
of Grafton County was undoubtedly heavily wooded in the eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries, since lumbering was an important
industry during that time. By the 1850's when Mrs. Patterson lived
there, a neighbor later remembered that "the country was
one large farm divided into many small ones and each farm owned,
occupied and cultivated by a thrifty and intelligent farmer. Where
the land is now (1906) grown up to brush, three fourths of it
was cleared and in a high state of cultivation."5 We know
from photographs taken in the latter part of the nineteenth century
that by then much of the North Groton land was cleared land. Again
the 1886 gazeteer tells us that the principal crops at that time
were "corn, oats, potatoes and buckwheat." There has
been significant change in the town since then; most of the tilled
land has reverted to forest and undergrowth.
In 1773 there
were 107 residents of the town of Groton. By 1840 the town had
grown to 870 people, but after that there was a slow decline until,
in 1890, the population was only 464, a 47% reduction from the
peak. Records show that when Mrs. Patterson lived in North Groton
there were, in 1856, 776 people in the town. Today the permanent
population is about 200. In the summer there is some influx of
vacationers who have built cottages in the town, several along
Hall's Brook and elsewhere in North Groton. There are also a few
mobile homes used by both all-year and summer residents. In the
immediate area of the Historic House, it is fair to say that now
the summer cottages outnumber the all-year homes.
In 1885 there
were seven schools in Groton. Today the children are all bused
to Bristol and Hebron as there are no schools open in the entire
town. The only school building still standing in North Groton
is now used as a dwelling and antique shop. It was here that Mrs.
Patterson's son, George Glover, attended school in the 1850's.
(George at this time was living with the Cheney family rather
than with his mother.)(3) Except for the schoolhouse, there is
only one other public building remaining in North Groton. It is
the Groton town hall, referred to as the Groton Town House. Construction
of the building was begun in 1796 and was completed in the early
1800's. It is still in use by the town and is located near the
North Groton crossroads, which was the original center of the
town.
In 1779 a
Congregational church was established in Groton, and Rev. Samuel
Perley, a graduate of Harvard, was its first pastor. The Union
Church in North Groton was built in 1840 by "Congregational,
Baptist, Free Will Baptist and Methodist denominations."
It was a "neat wooden structure capable of seating 200 persons
... valued, including grounds, at $2,000.(4) As chronicled in
the Spring 1970 Quarterly News, the church fell into disuse
in 1874, although infrequent services were held there until 1955.
During the late 185O's Mrs. Patterson occasionally led the congregation
in prayer there. It is for this reason that the church was maintained
by Longyear Historical Society beginning in 1966 until the destruction
of the entire structure in an unusually heavy snowstorm in 1969.
Some items
saved from the church, including its bell, are on display in the
Mary Baker Eddy Museum. A granite marker erected by Longyear later
on the site provides a brief history of the church.(6)
There is currently
no industrial activity in North Groton and little farming. This
is in contrast to the situation in the nineteenth century when
lumbering was important, maple sugar was produced from "sugar
orchards," and mica was mined. North Groton also had a store,
machine shop, lumber mill, cider mill and blacksmith shop. The
lumber mill produced shingles and clapboards and had a capacity
for cutting 5000 feet of lumber per day. It is interesting to
note that the first mill of any kind in the town was erected on
Hall's Brook in North Groton in 1771, before the Revolutionary
War, apparently quite near the Historic House.
The mills,
the store, and the shops are all gone, as are many houses. The
possibility exists for tracing the location of some of those early
buildings through county records, as a few foundations still exist.
Boundaries of properties were rather loosely defined in previous
centuries in terms of trees, fences or stone markers which no
longer exist or have subsequently been moved.
As was mentioned,
mica mining became an important industry in Groton, as well as
in other sections of New Hampshire. There has been little recorded
about mining activity in the period Mrs. Patterson lived in North
Groton, just prior to the Civil War. It would seem it was not
nearly as important then to the community and its economy as the
raising of crops, lumbering, or milling operations. The busy,
undoubtedly noisy, little town at that time is in contrast to
the slumbering but picturesque countryside one now sees.
But the sleepy
little town may change yet again. Now its natural beauty beckons
the summer visitor. Who knows what potential resources may be
developed by man which will stir Groton's past and project it
into the future- The Mary Baker Eddy Historic House by North Groton's
brook continues to be a link to the town's past but, more importantly,
it is a memorial for posterity, commemorating the footsteps of
that gallant woman who became the Discoverer and Founder of Christian
Science.
Part
II
The town
of Groton was once considered the "greatest mica producing
district in the country." For this reason it was felt a brief
description of this activity would be of interest to our readers.
Mica mining
is believed to have begun in Groton fairly early in the nineteenth
century. By the 1880's there were at least thirty named mines
in this small town, a number of them just a mile or two from the
North Groton crossroads and the Historic House. There is practically
no mining in progress now, but some of the mines were reopened
for short periods up to the 1950's.
The Palermo
Mine in Groton, which mined mica, beryl and phosphates, at one
time had 85 miners and 25-30 "trimmers." This mine had
a 400 foot shaft and a 40,000 square foot floor at the bottom.
The Valencia Mica Mining Company employed 70 men in 1886. Production
was at the rate of 1400 pounds per day.
Mica was used
for windows, in stove and furnace doors, goggles and lamp chimneys.
In the twentieth century uses for mica have developed for insulation,
measuring instruments, and electrical and electronic equipment.
Ground mica is also used in the manufacture of paints, wallpaper
and lubricants.
The two most
common forms of mica are muscovite (light colored), so named because
it was used extensively in Russia for windows, and biotite (dark
colored). Semi-precious stones are frequently found along with
the mica, such as garnet, quartz, beryl and lazulite. Most of
the mines are named after their owners or discoverers. Two large
companies even show up on the list: General Electric and Eastman.
The former had a processing plant not far from the cemetery on
the road to Cheever.
For those
interested in seeing a mica mine, the Ruggles Mine in Grafton,
near Groton, is open to the public daily between June and October.
Commercial production of mica is believed to have begun in this
mine in 1803. Sam Ruggles was said to have originally kept his
mining operations a secret, taking the mica at night by horse
and buggy, or horse-drawn sleigh in the winter, to Portsmouth,
where it was shipped to England and sold by relatives there. It
is estimated that since 1803, thirty million dollars worth of
feldspar, mica, beryl and other minerals have been taken from
this mine alone.
Mary Beecher
Longyear herself took some interest in the North Groton mines,
principally because her husband, John, was a mining engineer and
had been instrumental in the development of mines in the Upper
Peninsula of Michigan. In August 1926 Mrs. Longyear and her twin
sister, Abby Beecher Abbott, spent a week living in the North
Groton Historic House, which Mrs. Longyear had had restored. While
there they visited one of the local mica mines. Mrs. Longyear
has left us a delightful account of this excursion, and excerpts
of her rather flowery prose are entertaining and descriptive.
Her article
is entitled, "Why Go Abroad?" and the introduction reads
like a brochure from the New Hampshire Chamber of Commerce.(7)
"Many
Americans pine to travel abroad and see the wonders and beauties
of foreign places, and yet a thrill can be received and a lasting
impression made even in this country by an automobile ride through
the sparsely settled northern parts of New Hampshire and Vermont
of our own country. To visit the mica mines of New Hampshire between
Rumney and Groton is an experience long to be remembered."
To reach the
mine, the two women were driven along a wood road as far as possible,
where they left the car and chauffeur and continued on up the
hill on foot. Their way was suddenly blocked by a team of horses
pulling a "rattling wagon containing a big load of diamond
sparkling rocks of mica and feldspar." The teamster advised
them they were on the right road. As they neared the summit they
were surprised to see "a good-looking young man standing
in the door of a small building from which issued the roar of
machinery." Apparently the young man was equally surprised
to see the ladies. Far down below in the mine the miners were
"chopping out big chunks of luminous silvery rocks."
Inside, reflections
from the glistening mica caused such a silvery light as to make
one of the visitors ask under her breath, "Where are the
angels-" They sat down while the, more practical" one
read a definition of mica and an explanation of its uses. The
foreman appeared, and very courteously expanded on the description
of the minerals and the mining process.
By this time
they were joined by the chauffeur, who apparently felt uneasy
with them out of sight. The visitors were led into the depths
of the mine and then onto the hilltop overlooking the mine. While
this was done with some trepidation, they had trust in the foreman
"who had spent his many, many years on the dizzy verge of
tin mines, zinc mines abroad, and copper mines in Calumet, (and)
to think of falling was an insult. . . ."
"Laden
with specimens of mica, feldspar and rose quartz as evidences
of their adventure, the tourists reechoed their appreciation for
the gentle courtesy of the American miner, and hoped the United
States would protect and use home products and not send to India
for the mica for their coal stoves and electrical supplies.
"It is
well to remember as some unknown writer has said:
'The beauty which old Greece or Rome
Sang, painted, wrought, lies close at home.' "
Richard C.
Molloy
1. "The North Groton Period," Five Historic Houses,"
Longyear Historical
Society, 1974.
2.Quarterly News, Autumn 1973, Vol. 10, No. 3.
3. Robert Peel, Mary Baker Eddy - The Years of Discovery.
4. Gazeteer of Grafton County, N.H. 1709 1886.
5. Account of conversation with Daniel H. Kidder of North Groton,
N.H.
6. Quarterly News, Autumn 1971, Vol. 8, No. 3.
7. Mrs. Longyear's article was printed in the September 16,1926
Boston Herald, entitled "Visit to a Mica Mine."
© Longyear
Foundation 1980 Vol. 17 No. 1
To read this
entire issue of the Quarterly News, which includes historic
photographs, you may purchase back issues by calling Longyear
Museum at 1-800-277 8943.

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