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Do-It-Yourself Walking Tour
by Doris Sherrow, July, 2000
The new road went through the smaller parcel of the
Wangunk reservation, which was used for ceremonial functions, the
residential area being on the larger parcel near Penny Corner Road.
Toward the west end near the river was the Hot House--the sweat lodge.
There had been burials in that area, as well.
Shipbuilding began here in the 1750s under the
direction of George Lewis, and continued under his sons until Sylvester
Gildersleeve bought the shipyard lot in 1828. Gildersleeve also set up
several other businesses on the street, including a carriage factory, a
mattress shop, and an ice house.
Here is a list of the properties as you will
encounter them walking from Main Street toward the river:
644 & 646 Main -- Samuel Buckingham’s &
Gildersleeve Stores, both general stores built in the 1850s. An earlier
wooden store building occupied the site of 646, and a house was built in
the 1740s on the site of 644. From 1872 to 1952 the Gildersleeve Post
Office occupied part of the Gildersleeve Store.
3 Indian Hill -- the Job Bates house, a
single-story colonial, built about 1747. Bates was a squatter on the
Wangunk reservation, coming here from Wareham, Massachusetts. In a 1760
petition to the General Assembly to buy the reservation from the Wangunk,
he wrote "through mistake, I have set my house on the same…"
5 Indian Hill -- the David Bates house, a
two-story colonial built in 1779 for Job’s oldest son. It was raised
about 1850 to accommodate the barroom of the Union Hotel in the
basement. This tavern continued more or less uninterrupted until shut
down by Prohibition in 1920. A bottling plant stood on the hill west of
this house in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Left, opposite 5 -- Airex Rubber Products
Corporation. This was a 3-story tobacco warehouse until 1943, when James
Hetrick bought it, took off the top two stories, and began using it for
the war effort, creating rubber parts for aircraft.
Left, opposite 15 -- the former FCV Tool &
Engineering, now part of Airex.
15 Indian Hill -- the John Button house, a
two-story colonial, built 1796. Button worked in the nearby shipyards,
and, with Sylvester Gildersleeve’s father, was nearly drowned on the
river in 1801. (see Carved in Stone, April, 2000).
21 Indian Hill -- the "Swede Tenement,"
built in 1871 by Sylvester Gildersleeve to accommodate the Swedish
immigrants he employed in his shipyard and factories.
Right, opposite 32 -- the Lewis
Shipyard,1750-1828, then Gildersleeve Shipyard, 1828 to 1932, and since
1945, Petzold’s Marina. George Lewis built boats here in the 1750s,
followed by his grandson Abel, who sold the lot to Sylvester
Gildersleeve in 1828. Gildersleeve also built a large ice house on the
hill overlooking the boat yard for the storage of ice chopped from the
river to be shipped to New York hotels. The Gildersleeve yard closed in
1932 and remained closed until it was bought by William Petzold in 1945.
32 Indian Hill -- the Elijah Shepard house, built
in 1799. Shepard also worked in the shipyard, alternating between here
and Middle Haddam. In the late 1800s, Gildersleeve used this house as an
office for his saw mill.
36 Indian Hill -- Theodore F. Lewis’s tailor
shop, built 1851. Lewis was descended from the Lewis family who had
operated the shipyard, though he chose tailoring over shipbuilding.
40 Indian Hill -- the Theodore F. Lewis house,
built 1846.
42 Indian Hill -- the John Lewis house, built
1889. Lewis found so many Indian bones while attempting to dig a cellar
that he decided he didn’t need a cellar!
41 Indian Hill -- this house has the corner posts
of a late 1700s or early 1800s building. There were two old houses in
the area which disappeared, one to the west of #15 built about 1807 by
Samuel Bartlet, and another, west of that, built in 1771 by James Witon.
Perhaps this house is one of those two, moved to this location.
46 Indian Hill -- the Abiel Cheney Jr. house,
built 1796.
Formerly on the right opposite 46 -- the Deacon
David Sage house, built about 1770 on land bought from the Wangunk.
About 1975, the house was taken down. It was later reassembled in Story
City, Iowa. Not long after, developers tried to create a 58-unit
condominium complex on this side of the road, wrapping around the Greek
Revival-style house at #57, but the land was eventually sold for single
family houses, numbers 43, 49, 51, 55, 59, 63, and 67.
52 Indian Hill -- the William Dixon house, a
Greek Revival style house built 1849. Dixon was a master carpenter at
the shipyards.
57 Indian Hill -- the Richard Concklin house,
Greek Revival style, built in 1849. Concklin was David Sage’s great
grandson.
58 Indian Hill -- the Philip Gildersleeve house,
a two-story colonial built in 1787, 11 years after Gildersleeve and his
family had escaped the British attack on Long Island. Gildersleeve was a
master carpenter and architect. Sylvester Gildersleeve was born in this
house in 1795.
64 Indian Hill -- the John Pelton Jr. house, a
two-story colonial built in 1796. However, at the time it was built, it
was a single-story gambrel-roofed house like #76.
Right, formerly opposite Taylor Drive -- the
Henry Concklin house, a Greek Revival house similar to #57, built by
Richard’s brother Henry around 1850, and torn down in anticipation of
the condominium complex in 1980.
70 Indian Hill -- the Sarah (Norcott) Lincoln
house, Victorian domestic style built in 1870. Sarah was the daughter of
Elijah Norcott who bought #64 in 1833.
Right opposite 70 & 74 -- open field; the Hot
House lot probably lay along the riverbank here, or possibly to the east
under the hill; shipbuilding probably took place here as well--notice
the built-up spot which could have supported a dock.
76 Indian Hill -- Thomas Stevenson, 1766.
Stevenson had a wharf on the river. This house was later the home of the
William Norcott who ran the ferry here in the early 1800s.
Beyond the barrier -- the Wangunk reservation
land stopped about where the barrier is. On the site of the Firemen’s
Picnic grounds, George Ranney built a house in 1720. It burned in 1910.
During the early 20th
century, a rowdy dance hall occupied this site. In the 1950s, plans
arose to create a fish cannery here, and alarmed Indian Hill and Main
Street residents took up a collection and bought it for the firemen to
establish the Fireman’s Picnic Grounds.
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