Cohasset’s Earliest Homes
David Wadsworth
From Savor of Salt: An Anthology of Cohasset
History, edited by Jacqueline M. Dormitzer (Town of Cohasset, MA, 2006),
pp. 64-66.
People often ask where the first house in Cohasset was built. Here
David Wadsworth describes the location of the earliest homes. Interestingly,
Lily Pond was the preferred site for some of the pioneers—perhaps
because it was a source of fresh water (and also useful for washing
sheep) and the land was suitable for farming.
Cohasset’s earliest homes were built shortly after the 1670
land division of the Conahasset uplands. In that year the vacant pastureland
of Hingham’s eastern part had been surveyed and parceled out to
qualified Hingham property owners. Previously uninhabited land became
the site of the first farms and homesteads for second-generation Hingham
families.
Of the very first homes in Cohasset, none remain today. Clement Bates’s
small house of about 1676 near Lily Pond has vanished, as has Cornelius
Canterbury’s. No trace remains of Daniel Lincoln’s 1685
home near the “Plain,” or Common, nor of Israel Nichols’s
near Straits Pond—the one moved across the ice of Straits Pond
from Green Hill, Nantasket.
Likewise, John Jacob’s first house near the meadow named for
him has long since disappeared, as have those of Aaron Pratt and Hezekiah
Tower near Lily Pond. The old well of Hezekiah’s father, Ibrook
Tower, lies beneath a paved parking area near the junction of Sohier
Street and old King Street, and the foundation stones of his home have
long since been dispersed.
Cohasset houses from 1700 or earlier [and still existing] number but
two. The earliest and best documented is the one built by Joshua Bates
in 1695 at [179] South Main Street. From the same period, at least within
a few years, is the Richard Tower House, originally located at the west
side of the Common but moved to [51] Elm Street in the mid-1800s. Both
these early dwellings were built as Colonial farmhouses. By the third
decade of the 1700s, larger houses of the half-Colonial and full-Colonial
style were being constructed to accommodate growing families.
Thomas James’s 1704 farmhouse “near the brook” may
have been the first substantial structure at the site of today’s
village center. That early farmhouse remains as a part of the large
inn [Red Lion] first operated on the stagecoach line by Thomas’s
grandson Christopher. In 1712 Hezekiah Lincoln, Jr., built a home on
the highway leading from Hingham to Scituate west of the Common [at
170 North Main Street], just across the street from today’s Little
League baseball field. The following year, Joseph Bates constructed
a Colonial farmhouse at the north end of the Common [67 North Main Street]
where Deer Hill Lane (today’s Sohier Street) joined that early
highway.
Within the next fifteen years, homesteads were seen along the several
original highways, from Israel Nichols’s on the north [near Straits
Pond], to Rev. Nehemiah Hobart’s 1722 house at the Common [19
North Main Street], to those lining King Street, and Prince Joy’s
house near the distant part of the road leading to the Beech Woods [389
Beechwood Street].
Conahasset’s earliest highways were those planned by Lieutenant
Joshua Fisher in the survey of the uplands made in 1670, plus several
preexisting cart paths that became traveled ways. Fisher’s proposed
highways included today’s King Street, intended to be the main
thoroughfare, and today’s Sohier Street, Pond Street, and the
east part of Beechwood Street, called Wood Street. These highways linked
together the farms and homesteads of Conahasset and led to the parish
and precinct meetinghouse on the Common.
Before 1730 Joshua Burr, Samuel Cushing, and Thomas James, Jr., had
built houses at [27, 130, and 250, respectively] King Street; Elisha
Lincoln midway at Deer Hill Lane [155 Sohier Street]; Captain John Jacob
near Jacob’s Meadow [98 South Main Street]; and John Stephenson
and Samuel Orcutt on South Main Street at the beginning of Wood Street
[266 and 285 South Main Street, respectively]. With the exception of
the house built by Cushing, all these early homes still exist.
By the mid-1700s a number of newer connecting roads . . . had become
populated with the same types of sturdy, functional, but esthetically
pleasing houses as could be found on the earlier ways. The strong post-and-beam
frames of these early homes were destined to last for centuries, barring
accident or purposeful destruction. The earliest homes of Cohasset form
a unique and valuable part of the historical heritage of our town. They
deserve our continued efforts to preserve them.
From David Wadsworth, “Cohasset’s Early
Homes: Part of Our Unique Heritage,” Cohasset Historical
Society pamphlet. Reprinted by permission of the author.