Gablehurst, Stable and Water Tower

20502801057.jpg

Dublin Core

Title

Gablehurst, Stable and Water Tower

Description

Gablehurst, view of stable and water tower on left, granite stone dwelling on right. Gablehurst was built ca 1859 by Rev. E. Edwin Hall for his wife, a native of Switzerland. Subsequent owners added modern amenities as they were available. In 1906 it was purchased by Edward C. Seward. "It had a great big stable with a tower on it. We had four straight stalls and two box stalls, a harness room, a carriage room with a number of carriages in it. There was originally a water tank in the tower but we got hitched up to city water pretty soon." (from the oral history with grandson W. Saxton Seward, 1981) At the time it was destroyed by fire in June, 1925, it was owned by Mrs. E. C. Seward, and was leased to the Cameron School. The School had been at Pipe Bay (Indian Cove) at the camp of Mrs. Theodora Hooker until Mary Beattie secured Gablehurst. The carriage house was renovated in 1998 and the entrance moved from York Street (Boston Post Road) to 303 North River Street.

Source

Edith B. Nettleton Historical Room Collection

Publisher

Guilford Free Library

Date

circa 1900

Rights

Digital image © Guilford Free Library. All rights reserved. Image may be used for personal research or educational uses without prior permission. For requests or exhibits, see Guilford Free Library.

Citation

“Gablehurst, Stable and Water Tower,” Guilford Free Library Archives, accessed November 22, 2024, https://guilfordfreelibrary.org/gflarchives/items/show/147.