[46]
And now a movie theatre covers the site of the ancient house. Koen Brothers
bought two or three estates for this purpose, and if no purchaser had been
found the Old Bakery would have been taken down. But the Society for the Preservation
of New England Antiquities heard of the danger and found a purchaser.
I bought it for the House of Seven Gables Settlement in June,
1911, and moved it to the grounds of the House of Seven Gables in July. The
City Council were reluctant to give permission for the moving, and experts
had to be brought to testify that the old house was worth preserving. It
was moved by a roundabout way to its present location, through Bridge, Webb
and Derby Streets in three sections, and when each section of the house arrived
it looked like Birnam 'Woods, having torn off a great deal of foliage from
the overarching elms on the way down.
Immediately after the purchase of the house its new owner received
a letter from a well-known antiquarian, setting forth the theory of the origin
of its posts and beams. To feel the force of the argument the house itself
should be studied, and this can be easay done, as it is open to visitors
every summer. During the winter the house is used for the clubs and classes
of the Settlement.
Although the ovens were left on the 'Washington Street site,
our visitors demanded to see them as long as the house was known as the Old
Bakery. It was decided to change the name, and that of Hathaway naturally
suggested itself as associated in the minds of Salemites with the Old Bakery.
Unfortunately the name has another significance to the general public. They
call the house the Anne Hathaway House.
[47]
Salem In 1700
No. 14
Benjamin Hooper
House
21/3 Washington St.
A short way south of the head of Washington St. lay what was called Gov. Endicott's field which he owned in 1665. He died that year leaving his estate to his wife Elizabeth and at her death their son Zerubabel came into possession. He sold it to Benjamin Hooper in 1682, who, at once, built a house. Hooper died about 1693 and his widow, in 1702, his son Benjamin also died in 1718 and the other children released it to their brother James that same year. James died in 1783 and in a division the next year the west end came to the daughter Elizabeth and the east to the heirs of James, who had died after his father. James' part was assigned in a division in 1785 to his son James who died before 1795 when his administrators sold it to Henry Rust Jr. Elizabeth's end was sold by Samuel Symonds and John Leach to Jacob Very in 1792. The latter sold it to Henry Rust in 1797. Hence he owned the whole. He died in 1820 and his executor sold it to Elizabeth Rowell in 1822. She married John Gardner and died in 1862. Her two children inherited the estate and the daughter Clara C., wife of Louis Thies sold her half to Eliza J., wife of Eleezer Hathaway, baker, in 1865 leaving two children who, through their guardian, sold their half to Mrs Hathaway in 1865. She died a widow in 1884 and her son continued the bakery there. In 1909 Miss Caroline Emerton removed it to the rear of 54 Turner street, where after extensive repairs, it became 'Hathaway House' of the House of the Seven Gables Settlement.
ESSEX INSTITUTE
JAMES DUNCAN PHILLIPS LIBRARY
Continued on Page 4 of Hathaway House.
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Information on Hathaway, etc.:
Loring L. Bigelow
386 G Avenida Castilla
Laguna Woods, CA 92653-3777
Information on Arbella pages provided by:
Gerald G. Johnson, Ph.D.
648 Salem Heights Avenue, So.
Salem, OR 97302-5613