The Harrison House on Chapman Street as it looks today. |
Anyone who lives in an old house can tell you that there are
stories in every corner of that home. We are simply caretakers of old homes –
owning them within a long line of homeowners both in the past and the future.
For a family that really never had their own home, the
Harrisons would spend years dreaming of the perfect home. Fosdick Beach
Harrison came from a long and prestigious line of Harrisons that dated back to
Thomas Harrison a settler of Branford, Connecticut from 1645. The men in the
family had a history of being in the clergy, and when Fosdick Harrison was born
in 1862 he would be destined to follow.
Born in Bethlehem, Connecticut, Harrison Attended preparatory
school at the Williston Seminary in Easthampton, Mass, and later attended
nearby Amherst College. His early life was spent in the pursuit of knowledge.
At Amherst, Harrison distinguished himself and excelled in sports and religious
studies. Fellow classmates remarked “that he took a vigorous part in the
scrimmages.” One story tells of a broken leg caused by a frivolous jump “out of
the chapel window.” Completing his educational pursuits at Yale Divinity School,
he was ordained a Congregational minister in 1894.
The life of a young minister is built around service. And,
during Harrison’s life he would move dozens of times. In 1904, marrying Estelle
Potter of Worcester, Massachusetts they began to build a family. Potter, the
daughter of a wealthy lawyer and prominent politician was well established in
the community. The life that she embarked on with Fosdick would be without any
roots or place to truly call home. In fact, their first child (also named
Fosdick) was born in Brantford, Ontario while his father was serving a ministry
there.
The family would grow, but always in another town in
Connecticut or Massachusetts. Places like Palmer, East Bridgewater, Townsend,
Somers, Southington, Woodstock, and New Haven were part of a long line of
places the Harrisons lived over the years. Finally in 1935, at age 73, completing
a stint in nearby Dover, Mass., Fosdick Harrison decided to settle down in
Canton. Along with his wife and four children, the Harrisons would build an
ideal place to call home.
The story goes that Estelle had inherited some money and
with that small purse they could find a site for a dream home. Caroline
Harrison, one of the daughters was a newspaper editor and writer, and she
shared the story with American Home Magazine in 1937. “We felt a tragic
insecurity in moving from one parish to the another, no home of our own, no
improvements we might make lasting,” writes young Caroline. And so in the
spring of 1935 they found an old barn at 145 Chapman Street into which they
would pour their dreams.
Photo from American Home Magazine, 1937, featuring an interior view of the Harrison House. |
The barn sat in a meadow on the Southerly side of the road
and was a rambling building that included the small addition of an ell that
folklore suggests was the schoolroom that Henry David Thoreau taught in when he
was in Canton in 1835 – 1836. The story is that the Sumner family acquired
portions of the old schoolhouse and added the room onto the barn out of
nostalgia. Measuring 58’ by 38’ feet the building had seen better days. Built
in 1862, it was equipped with “ample horse stalls, carriage rooms, and a hay
loft.”
The barn had something that only the Harrisons could see – a
future as their new home. Massive grey oak beams from trees that grew in Canton
several hundred years ago made for strong bones. The patina of age was a found
object, and the Harrisons began work on July 4, 1935.
Estelle asked her brother for assistance and Lincoln Potter
travelled up from Chevy Chase, Maryland to supervise the project. Potter had a
head for these things and quickly established a plan that called for the
complete dismantling of the barn and transforming the parts into a stunning new
home. On the existing foundation of the barn, Potter – along with the entire
Harrison family completely dismantled the building and rebuilt it entirely.
Serving as architect, contractor, and builder, Potter would recycle the old
building to be reborn as a spacious country manse.
-
Liz and George Parker are fixtures in Canton, but moving to
Canton in 1979 from the upper west side of New York City was more than a shock
to their system. George had taken a position in Boston with Merideth & Grew
and a family member suggested he look at a house at 203 Chapman Street. The
world between New York City and Canton could not have been more foreign, but
soon, Canton would be their true home. “We loved that first house, but it
abutted seven neighbors,” explained Parker. The names of the abutters flow fast
from Parker’s tongue, “Lesieur, Nolan, Coady, Ladow, and Seaman, all connected
to our lot– it was a funny little property.” The Parkers decided they might
move. In 1991, Liz and George were walking their dog through their neighborhood
on Chapman Street and they saw the ghost of the Harrison house.
As Liz explains it, the old Harrison House was “a little
creepy.” After the last Harrison moved out, the property – all 14 acres of it
went to a developer who eventually declared bankruptcy and the abandoned house
became owned by Workingman’s Bank. The slate roof had leaks and the house had
been quite damaged. The ivy was growing into the house. The Parker’s envisioned
its greatness. Within months the wreck was theirs and they began the process of
bringing it back to life. Unknowingly, the Parkers had purchased a most amazing
home.
In the weeks and months that followed that July 4th
in 1936, the first owners, the Harrisons recycled that old barn and built an
amazingly comfortable modern building that was years ahead of its time. Almost
all of the building was recycled. Every harness peg, manger rail, post and beam
– all reused in the Harrison’s first true home. The interior hardware was
fashioned from old tools that once hung in the barn. A clevis from a plow and
sections of a harrow become hinges and handles. The bricks for the exterior
came from an old car barn, every door had been hanging somewhere else in some
other home that was demolished but salvaged by the Harrisons.
The centerpiece of the house was the hearth. As Caroline
writes, “for a family twenty-two years without a hearth fire, this huge
fireplace is a constant delight. Uncle Lincoln found in New Hampshire an old
chimney from a house built before 1776, and he faced the fireplace with its
bricks. He built the fireplace and chimney himself, making a shelf for a coffee
pot, and an oven fed from underneath in which roast beef and baked beans have
been successfully cooked. The barn’s trap door is the source of the handle on
the oven’s lid, and a wagon supplied the hinges on the slanted tobacco cupboard
cut in the paneling above the mantel.”
That fireplace is where the Harrison’s would gather every
New Years Eve and build a roaring blaze, the next morning the hot embers would
be swept into a small firebox heating an oven where the First Day stew would be
heated. A tradition that meant so much to a family that had never had a real
home.
There were many joys in the home of the retired minister.
Soon after completion, in 1937, the elder retired minister officiated at the
marriage of his son, Fosdick, who became a prominent Boston real-estate
attorney. Moving out of the new house,
the young attorney started his family in the adjacent farmhouse that abuts the
homestead. Fosdick P. Harrison would serve Canton as an auxiliary firefighter
during World War II.
The clergyman would only enjoy his home for four years, four
months and eighteen days. On February 29, 1940 Reverend Fosdick Harrison died in
the house that he loved so much and was buried back in Connecticut. Less than
four months later his grandchild was born with a congenital heart defect and
was buried with him in June.
Estelle died four years later in 1945 leaving her children
to grow up in the house that they had built. As each child moved on, the lines
began to fade and time took its toll. If Liz and George Parker had failed to
see the history in the crumbling plaster and the vine covered bedrooms it was
likely that the story would have ended in a teardown.
Take heart though, for folks that have a passion for old
homes can hear the history and the stories in the walls. Passed to the next
generation the Harrison House is an amazing gift for future homeowners. Liz
loves this house, there was that one defining glorious day, when she awoke
early and the sun blazed into the living room and the color from the autumn
maple leaves cast a brilliant blaze of gold across the oak floors that once
were walked upon by Henry David Thoreau himself, and it took her breath away. Now this is a home.
When asked whether she ever thinks of leaving the house, Liz
gets a bit misty during her answer, “sometimes we wonder, neither of us want to
leave this house… as long as we have our health and our faculties we stay. But
in the end we are just caretakers.” And, they have taken good care of the
Harrison House.
1 comment:
My daughters great great great grandfather was fosdick beach Harrison, we enjoyed reading this together. We would like to find out if she has any living relatives. Thank you
Post a Comment