Welcome to our news and history blog!

Welcome to our news and history blog!

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Time's Toll Takes Mead Homestead: Old House at Turnpike in Cos Cob Replaced by Handsome School Building

 Source: Greenwich News and Graphic: April 20, 1915. Page 1. 






The Mead homestead on the old Boston turnpike at Cos Cob is another of the monuments to old Greenwich days which are fast demolished to make room for more modern and pretentious structures. Although the old weather-beaten landmarks ugly and ______ out of place in this supposedly harmonious age they still hold a dear and cherished place in the hearts of the old residents of Greenwich who look back into the dim past with straining eyes, seeking to bring back to memory the scene of "yesterday's year." But with the list of the old familiar landmarks, yearly, growing smaller it will, not be long before they will, like the age they dated for, become also a thing of the past.

The old Mead homestead was situated on the land with was sold to the town for a school site and which to-day contain the Cos Cob public school, in a practically finished state. When the new school house began to assume proportion, it was only natural to have the old house torn down.

For more than one hundred and fifty years it had been a landmark and was one to the pretentious houses on the Post Road many years, always attracting attention from the traveler ___ ____ as they passed by on their journeys.

For upward of seventy-five years, it was the home of William Mead, who died over twenty-five years ago. He was a prosperous farmer and owned a large tract of land surrounding house. ___ all the houses built in the _____, the timbers were large, and as the _____ boards were torn away the ____ out, timbers are revealed to view. But what attracts the most attention are the old stone and cement chimneys with the large open fireplaces, which were the only source of heating the spacious house for many years.

Some fifteen years ago, the house was the home of Mr. James Beecher, the wife of one fo the members of the famous Beecher family, who kept a young ladies school there for some time. 



The house was made notable by a large oak tree which stood just in front ____. The tree had been _____ , _____ the normal prehistoric, the old resident said. It measured thirty or forty feet around and its large branches spread over a wide area. In ____ _______ ____ many branches, been ---- the trunk, which was ____ ___ the base and so was the _____ . It was known ____ _______, far and wide, and was _______  ________ with wonder and ______.

In a very few years ago, the trunk ________ fell over, ____ ______ of the great old tree _____ in the ground under which the roots probably remain. 













ANNOUNCEMENT: Historic Mead Burying Grounds, Inc. Founded & Established

 

Mead Family Cemetery, 2 Taconic Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. 


We are pleased to announce that Historic Mead Burying Grounds, Inc., has been founded and established. 

It succeeds the Historic Mead Family Burying Grounds Association, Inc., that was founded in 1989. 

Historic Mead Burying Grounds, Inc., was established to act as an educational and cemetery association dedicated to the preservation, stewardship, perpetual care, collection and dissemination of information of three Mead Family burying grounds and cemeteries in the Town of Greenwich, Fairfield County, Connecticut. 

In addition, the Association collects and disseminates information on the burials of Mead Family ancestors interred in other cemeteries and burying grounds in the Town of Greenwich, Fairfield County, Connecticut. 

Contact: MeadBuryingGrounds@gmail.com. 

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 184, Greenwich CT 06836.



Tuesday, March 5, 2024

The Beecher Family School for Young Girls, Cos Cob at William H. Mead House, Cos Cob.

 


It turns out that William H. Mead's house -where Cos Cob Elementary School is located today- was the home of a school for girls. The house was rented out by Caroline Smith Mead to the school for dormitory space and classrooms.



The school was operated by members of the famous Beecher family -as in Henry Ward Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe. 

The list of references is impressive. Names include Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher; Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe; Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain); Rev. Yarrington of Christ Episcopal Church, Greenwich, and so on. (See the third page in the link below). 

Above is an image of the cover page of a brochure promoting the school. To see more visit this link to Harvard Library. 


Cos Cob Elementary School.