Legendary Locals of Jamestown
By Rosemary Enright and Sue Maden
()
About this ebook
Rosemary Enright
Sue Maden is the archivist for the Jamestown Historical Society and a member of the collections committee. She is also a member of the publications committee for the Newport Historical Society. Rosemary Enright is president of the Jamestown Historical Society and the secretary for the Jamestown Planning Commission. She has served on the Jamestown Historical Society board for twelve years.
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Legendary Locals of Jamestown - Rosemary Enright
collection.
INTRODUCTION
Native Americans lived on Conanicut Island, the largest of the three islands that comprise the town of Jamestown, from at least 3000 BCE. They prospered there for over 4,500 years. Settlement of Rhode Island by refugees from the Massachusetts Bay Colony began in Providence in 1636 and quickly spread south along the bay. In 1637, the Narragansett sachems Canonicus and Miantonomi sold access to the marsh or grasse
on Conanicut Island to Newporters who brought their sheep to graze in the plentiful meadowlands here. Twenty years later, a company of 101 men signed a pact to purchase the land itself. Seven of the group—who together had agreed to contribute over 20 percent of the purchase price—were appointed trustees to make a full and firm purchase
of the island and to enforce the details of the prepurchase contract. Of the seven only two—Benedict Arnold and Caleb Carr—took serious interest in developing the island. Even they did not leave the comforts of Newport but instead settled their children on the new lands or leased to tenants.
Jamestown was incorporated as a town in 1678, and for about 100 years the town enjoyed increasing prosperity. The lighthouse at Beavertail, the third oldest on the East Coast, was built to guide sailors into Newport harbor. Ferries carried the agricultural products of the island’s farms and fisheries to Newport, and from there they reached markets as far away as the West Indies. The Jamestown seal—a shield with a green field surmounted by a silver sheep—was adopted, reflecting the importance of animal husbandry in the town’s agriculture.
With the start of the American Revolution, Jamestown’s prosperity came to an abrupt halt. On December 10, 1775, British soldiers and marines landed at the East Ferry and marched across the island to the West Ferry and back, burning all buildings within reach. The following December, British and Hessian soldiers occupied the island. Some of the farmers fought back, but most fled to the mainland. By October 25, 1779, when the British evacuated Jamestown, the island lay in ruins. The Quaker meetinghouse, which had been used as a hospital, was in rubble. The stone Beavertail lighthouse still stood, but the light had been destroyed. The trees had been cut to provide warmth for the occupying army. Any farm animals that had not been removed to the mainland had been killed for food. Brush had spread across the untended land.
Recovery after the Revolutionary War was slow. The Beavertail lighthouse was relit almost at once and was replaced in 1856. A lighthouse was erected on Dutch Island in 1827 and rebuilt in 1857. The ferries ran again, but Newport was no longer a flourishing marketplace for the island’s produce. Some old families, such as the Remingtons and Underwoods, left or died out. The Carrs and Weedens remained and were joined by the Watsons as the leading families in town. Little else changed. Jamestown remained a rural community sustained by its farmers and fishermen. A hundred years after the Revolution, its population was only 378, about two-thirds of what it had been when the war began.
The last three decades of the 19th century were among the most dramatic and exciting in the town’s history. In 1873, the Jamestown & Newport Ferry Company, a private corporation in which the Town of Jamestown was the majority stockholder, launched the Jamestown, a steam-powered ferry, on the run between Newport and Jamestown. Reliable ferry service made Jamestown accessible, and the ocean breezes and absence of industry made it a healthful alternative to city living. Jamestown’s era as a summer resort had begun.
Several large hotels were built at East Ferry. William H. Knowles’s Bay View, built in 1872, and expanded by both him and his son Adolphus, was the first. Stephen Gardner’s Gardner House was built next. By the early 1890s, hotels within easy walking distance of East Ferry could accommodate more than 1,000 guests. The hotels offered not only rooms and three meals a day, but laundering, tailoring, entertainment, and even the occasional loan of cash to visitors without local banks.
Conanicut Park, the summer colony at the northern end of the island, had its own dock and direct steamboat access up the bay. It attracted prominent Rhode Islanders, such as Gov. Henry Lippitt and his family and wool magnate Charles Fletcher. At the opposite end of the island near what is now Fort Wetherill, artist William Trost Richards, industrialist Joseph Wharton, and other wealthy Philadelphians built summer homes on the high rocky outcroppings along the scenic coast. Nearer the village, James Taussig and his colleagues from St. Louis established the private community of Shoreby Hill. Narragansett Bay was home to portions of the US Atlantic Fleet, and many of the officers who served in the fleet or trained at the Naval War College in Newport spent their summers in or retired to Jamestown.
The town’s population grew. The summer families brought their own servants, often Irish or African American, some of whom remained as year-round residents. Newcomers appeared to build the homes and care for the properties of the summer residents. Immigrants from the British Isles and northern Europe came before the end of the 19th century. Early in the 20th century, immigrants from the Portuguese Azores—among them the Neronhas, Andrades, and Tiexieras—began to arrive. By 1930, about 20 percent of the households were presided over by immigrants or children of immigrants. The town’s pool of political leaders expanded with the increased population. Town leaders still often carried the surnames of the original proprietors, for example, Charles E. Weeden and George C. Carr. Newcomers from England and northern Europe, such as Samuel Smith and Ferdinand Armbrust, gained political strength and served as councilmen and state representatives. The Portuguese immigrants did not integrate as easily. The first person of Portuguese descent to serve on the town council was Frank E. Furtado, who was elected in 1929.
The Great Depression ended the prosperity of the resort era. Throughout the 1930s, the town struggled to keep its residents employed. At the end of the decade, it faced a tragedy of a different kind. In September 1938, a hurricane barreled up the East Coast. The tidal wave it created slammed into Jamestown just as a school bus carrying eight children, all of whom lived on Beavertail, was trying to cross the road between Mackerel and Sheffield Coves. Only the driver and 12-year-old Clayton Chellis survived. It was a dismal end to a dismal decade.
Over the next few years, as the war in Europe escalated into World War II, Jamestown entered a new phase. The Army had maintained three forts in the town since before World War I: Fort Greble on Dutch Island, Fort Getty south of Dutch Island Harbor, and Fort Wetherill in the Dumplings. A torpedo and naval air test facility had been built on Gould Island in the 1920s. A new Army-Navy outpost was established at Beavertail, and the observation posts on Prospect Hill above the 1776 Conanicut Battery were reactivated. The Torpedo Station on Goat Island in Newport, which employed many Jamestown residents, increased production. The war effort and the 1938 Hurricane that had temporarily destroyed the ferry system on the West Passage and interrupted communication between the island and the rest of the world, both contributed to an awareness of the need for a less vulnerable way to get to and from the island.
Construction of the Jamestown Bridge between Conanicut Island and the western mainland was begun in November 1938 and completed in July 1940. The cost of the bridge was shared almost equally between the federal government’s Public Works Administration (PWA), which financed and oversaw large projects between 1933 and 1943, and the Town of Jamestown. As with the ferry, the people of Jamestown were responsible for creating their own transportation system.
For Jamestown, the immediate effects of the bridge were indistinguishable from the effects of the war and, for the length of the war, the town flourished. With the removal of the military after the war, the economy shrank. The return of the men who had fought in the war further stretched the town’s shrinking resources. The bridge and the depressed economy of the town, however, made Jamestown for the first time attractive to industry. In 1956, Commerce Oil, backed by Gulf Oil, proposed building a refinery at the North End. Many residents, including the town council president Dr. Albert Gobeille, welcomed the proposal. Others, especially the farmers in the area of the proposed refinery and those who had experience with refineries in other states, such as Dr. William W. Miner, opposed it. Tensions ran high for four years as each