Monday, March 30, 2015

Five years out from the Floods of 2010

Parris Brook overruns Old Voluntown Rd - March 2010.
Photo: Sheila Reynolds Boothroyd

Remember scenes like this? How could we forget!

It's been 5 years since the historic Floods of 2010 inundated Exeter and all of Rhode Island. As we slowly break Winter's chill and watch 2015's record snowfall melt away, we find ourselves looking back on that record rainfall, and reminding ourselves that perhaps this year's weather phenomenon wasn't really so bad after all!

EHA Vice-President Gary Boden offers some perspective:



Remembering the Floods of 2010

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Civilian Conservation Corps in Exeter, Part II: Overlook Shelter

In April 2014, we posted an article about work buildings and encampments from the 1930's in the western half of Exeter. They were built by  the Civilian Conservation Corps, a national program aimed at bringing jobs to an economy  devastated by the Great Depression.
  
Here's another article written by Exeter Historical Association Vice President Gary Boden about one particular CCC building at Escoheag Hill: the Overlook Shelter. We're posting this piece on another snowy day of a colossally snowy winter as we anticipate a Spring day just around the bend when we can visit this structure.
 
 
 
Click on the link below to read the article
 
Overlook Shelter, circa 1935
 
 

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Of Old Stone Walls and LiDAR


"Something there is that doesn't love a wall..."


A LiDAR image showing a network of stone walls
 in the Glen Rock Road area.
So begins Robert Frost's poem about the stone walls that are all around us in Rhode Island. 

But what would Frost have thought about LiDAR? In this article by Exeter historian Gary Boden, we go back to prehistoric times to learn why the stones are here, as well as explore new technology that allows us to see lost stone walls that have been swallowed by the forest.


click the link below to read the article:

 Stone Walls of Exeter

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

The Civilian Conservation Corps in Exeter




Many of us know about the LeGrand Reynolds Horseman's Area in western Exeter, near Stepping Stone Ranch. Did you know that area was  cleared  as part of a national program designed to revitalize the U.S. economy in the midst of the Great Depression? 




Named "Beach Pond Camp" after the first buildings were constructed there in 1935, the area was a shining example of the efforts of the Civilian Conservation Corps, one of the keystones of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.

Exeter Historical Association President Sheila Reynolds Boothroyd and Vice President Gary Boden collaborated to write a fascinating article on the history of this camp. 



click the link below to read the article:




Beach Pond Mess Hall,  constructed by the
Civilian Conservation Corps,
1936
The Mess Hall is gone, but the
fireplace and chimney remain.
Reynolds Horseman's Area, 2014.



Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Historic Districts in Exeter

National Register of Historic Places sign
When you hear the words "National Register of Historic Places", you usually think of 18th century houses where famous politicians once lived, or majestic Civil War battlefields. So would it surprise you to learn that there are 9 sites in the town of Exeter that are included in the National Register?

In the late 1970's and early 1980's, just after our country's Bicentennial, the Rhode Island Historic Preservation Commission identified areas around the state of which were of historical or archaeological significance. Exeter, of course, was included. 

Each site was researched, surveyed and documented. All of this information was then typed (yes, typed! On a typewriter!) onto National Register of Historic Places nomination forms, and submitted to the National Park Service. 


waterwheel foundation
at Fisherville 




Biographies of some of the site's past owners are included too. For example, the textile mill that is the centerpiece of the Fisherville Historic District was named for its owner, a man named Schuyler Fisher.  Fisher was an unsuccessful Temperance Party candidate in the 1852 race for Lieutenant Governor. "Temperance" was a relatively new movement at that time, and came about over the growing incidence of public drunkenness in the state, especially on holidays like the Fourth of July.






The Exeter sites that were accepted to the National Register are listed below. Select each name to open a PDF that contains the nomination forms, supporting documentation, maps and acceptance letters (the "Parris Brook" document is currently unavailable). The great thing about all of this paperwork is the level of detail about the history and archaeology of each of the sites.


For a complete listing of all Rhode Island sites included in the National Register, see the Rhode Island Historic Preservation and Heritage Commission's "Rhode Island Properties" page.