At the corner of Burrows Hill Road and Schoolhouse Road in Hebron is the Burrows Hill School. Thought to have been erected between 1725 and 1735, it is the oldest of nine former one-room school houses that remain standing in town. After opening, the school remained in operation until a period circa 1834-1860, when the number of children in the Burrows Hill area declined and the school in the Hope Valley area was growing instead. The Burrows Hill School was again flourishing in 1870 but experienced a decline by the early 1900s, closing for good in about 1911. In 1969, the Hebron Historical Society acquired the building and its furnishings from the Town of Hebron and it is now used it as a museum. In 1993, to protect the old school house from oncoming traffic, the structure was moved to a new foundation, forty feet from its original corner location.
(more…)House at 233 Millstream Road, Hebron (1845)
At 233 Millstream Road in Hebron is a distinctive Greek Revival-style house that was erected circa 1845. The house features a ground-floor verandah that is inset under part of the second floor and there are matching ells that extend on the north and south sides. The facade has square columns and matching pilasters. A notable feature of the home are three triangular windows that radiate in a sunburst pattern and are surrounded by clapboards applied on a diagonal cap with an elaborate keystone. These are located in the building’s triangular front-facing gable and in the gables of the north and south ells. The house was built on a property that was once the site of a gristmill built in 1735 and operated by Godfrey Tarbox and Son. The property was eventually acquired by the Crouch family and was later owned by the Strong and Rathbone families.
Samuel Fielding House (1750)
The gambrel-roofed colonial cape-style house at 25 Marjorie Circle in Hebron was built c. 1745-1750 by Samuel Feilding. Soon after construction it was owned by Rev. Benjamin Pomeroy (1735-1784), a congregational minister who was influenced by the First Great Awakening. In 1791 the house was acquired by Amasa Gillett, whose widow later married Benjamin Phelps (the house was later called the Widow Polly Phelps Place). Gillett’s daughter Sibyl, who lived in the house until her death at the age of 95, made bonnets and had her shop in the house in the 1850s. Earlier, in 1835 the largest room in the house was used for Miss Bradford’s school for select young ladies. There is also a gambrel-roofed barn on the property.
Rev. Amos Bassett House (1806)
The house at 18 Church Street in Hebron was built in 1806 for Reverend Amos Bassett (1764-1828), who was pastor of the Hebron Congregational Church from 1794 to 1824. The Missionary Society of Connecticut was founded in a previous home of Rev. Bassett. The Bassett House is also known as the Kellogg-White House.
St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Hebron (1826)
Today, St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in Hebron has a brick Federal style appearance, but when it was erected in 1826, it was more extravagantly Gothic, with numerous turrets and pinnacles. It was thought to have been modeled on a church that Rev. Samuel F. Jarvis had seen in Italy (and was even referred to as “Jarvis’ Folly”). At the time, Bishop Brownell said that it was the second most beautiful church in the diocese after Trinity Church in New Haven. An unusual feature of the design is that the tower is located at the rear of the building rather than the front. The building has had a number of alterations and renovations over the years. The parish was established in 1734, when the controversial Congregational minister Rev. John Bliss and his followers declared themselves for the Church of England and formed the sixth Episcopal church in Connecticut.
(more…)Porter Gristmill House (1790)
The historic Porter Gristmill, which started operation in 1740 under the original mill operator Ebenezer Fuller, is located along Jeremy Brook at the west end of the Hebron Center Historic District. The original millworks were later moved to Old Sturbridge Village, where the millstones and other parts are now located in the village‘s 1938 Gristmill building. One of the surviving mill buildings, at 55 West Main Street in Hebron, is the miller’s house (pictured above), which was erected in 1790. The house’s front façade is one story, while the rear is three stories.
Gov. Samuel S. Peters House (1806)
The house at 22 Church Street in Hebron was built in 1806 for John Samuel Peters (1772-1858). A nephew of Rev. Samuel Peters, John S. Peters served as governor of Connecticut from 1831 to 1833.
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