This p roperty’s former residents
played an important role in Stonington’s earlier heydays.
Captain George Robbins built this home in
the late 1800s, early 1900's. He captained a schooner called “The Clinton”,
and tied up this vessel along the shorefront across from the
property. “The Clinton” was used to carry freight up and down
the
eastern seaboard, including large chunks of ice that were
harvested from area lakes and transported south for use in
refrigeration. When first built, the home had no electricity.
A hand pump was used in the kitchen, and a cistern were used to
collect and store rainwater. Only the kitchen and upstairs
bedroom above the kitchen (accessed by back stairway off the
kitchen) were utilized in the cold winter months, heated by a
coal fired cooking stove, with the remaining rooms closed off.
When warmer weather arrived, the doors were opened up and the
remaining rooms were utilized. The cistern was in use up
until the 1990s when a city wide water system was put in and now
town water supplies the home. In
the back of the home is a structure that was built to house the
crew of “The Clinton”, yet never fully completed.
In 1927, “Grandpa”, Mr Ben Sturdee,
purchased this home for $500! Mr. Sturdee’s employment with
seafaring was short lived. While working on a wind jammer,
transporting granite to New York for construction of the George
Washington Bridge, the heavily laden ship had water breaking
over her deck.
This experience influenced Mr. Sturdee that maybe opening a
grocery store was the way to go!! Mr. Sturdee opened Sturdee &
Co, a grocery store located in
downtown Stonington, which
serviced the vibrant quarrying and fishing community of
Stonington for over 30 years.
The Sturdees raised their
family in this home, and later welcomed their grandchildren and
great grandchildren each summer, who all cherished their time
with family and exploring the magic of this area!! |