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Old
Berwick Historical Society
Counting House Museum
PO Box 296
South Berwick, ME 03908
(207) 384-0000
Inquiries:
Done by Volunteers
Webmaster:
Herbert W. Geiler
Last
Updated:
6/12/2007
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South
Berwick Maritime History
Secrets
of
Pipe Stave Landing
Not a creek but
ships are building in it;
not a river’s mouth so small, but merchants’ companies
are there in possession of ships; no situation where a mill could
stand on, on which there has not been a mill erected.
-- written by a French visitor to the Maine coast and
Berwick in the 1790s 
Low
tide at Pipe Stave Landing, with Hamilton House through the bare trees
at right. Where the evergreens are reflected is likely the spot where
tall ships were launched in the 1700s and 1800s. In November 2003, some
Old Berwick Historical Society members investigated at low tide with
maritime historian Nate Hazen.
For almost 150 years before
the construction of the Hamilton House, Salmon Falls River sawmills
processed timber for the English merchant ships and navy. One byproduct
of the mast production was large quantities of material for making
wooden barrels.
“Pipe staves,” as these wooden barrel components were
called, became one of the major exports of the South Berwick area
and the whole Piscataqua. They were the most common containers of
their day, used for liquids, for commodities like flour and sugar,
and for the wine and rum of Europe and the West Indies.
Nate Hazen, Herbie
Geiler, Norma Keim and Sally Hunter search
for traces of Pipe Stave Landing shipyards at the Hamilton
House
Between 1783
and 1839, an average of 1.5 ships per year were built in present-day
South Berwick and Rollinsford, with 4 built in 1800.
Mills
and ships
“Shipbuilding
was centered on rivers with strong currents or where water could be
caught in pools to create tide mills. The sawmills existed to cut raw
timber... so it was logical and convenient to build ships at or n ear
the same mills that produced their cargoes..” --
Lincoln P. Paine, Down East, A Maritime History of Maine
Click
on any of these maps to make larger.
1825 - Olive
& Eliza - 386 tons; length, 111.7 feet; beam, 27.7; depth, 13.9
feet. William Hanscom, builder, South Berwick. Ferguson & J ewett
and I. D. Parsons, owners. Theodore F. Jewett, Sarah Orne Jewett’s
grandfather, was master on first voyage, the Atlantic triangle trade
route and Liverpool. Later sailed throughout the Atlantic and to the
Far East. Grounded 1846 in Dry Tortugas, with 118,431 barrel staves.
Compare
the Olive & Eliza to these
two famous vessels: 
The Mayflower of 1620: 180
tons, 100 feet long
The clipper ship Nightingale, launched in south Eliot in 1851: 1066
tons, 185’ long.
One important
early merchant whose vessels loaded up with pipe staves before the Revolutionary
War was David Moore. His mansion occupied the site of the
later Hamilton House, and was said to be as fine. Moore owned a warehouse,
a shipyard, a beach for cleaning the bottom of vessels, and 266 feet
of wharves. He died in 1777 and his house burned soon after.
The Hamilton House, owned
by the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (Historic New England),
is located at historic Pipe Stave Landing
The
remains of wharves can still be seen below the Historic New England caretaker’s
house at low tide. This could be the location of David Moore’s
18th century wharves, but may have been rebuilt later.
 
Some of the
wharf timbers are massive, even after all these years submerged in
the Salmon Falls River. Here, Herbie looks at a support member that
seems to be a boulder. It is really a huge log.
Hobbs’
Hole
“In 1695, about
five years after the French and Indian attack at Salmon Falls, Captain
James Hobbs built a ship yard on the westerly bank of the Newichawannock
(Salmon Falls) River at Rollinsford. This ship yard was located on
the New Hampshire side of the river about a half a mile south of Quamphegan
or lower falls of the salt
tide waters. Above the river bank and directly overlooking the ship
yard, Captain James Hobbs built his home. For nearly one hundred years
thereafter ships were built at the Sligo district in Rollinsford...
Custom House records at Portsmouth (show) that there were some 43
vessels built at this ship yard after the Revolutionary War. They
consisted of 19 brigs, 17 ships, and 7 schooners varying in tonnage
from nine to 494 tons.” -- Alfred Catalfo,
History of Rollinsford
Looking
upstream at “Hobbs’ Hole,” deep water north of the
Hamilton House into which the early shipbuilders launched their vessels.
The Rollinsford, New Hampshire, shore where James Hobbs once built
his ships is in the background at left.
William
Hanscom
William
Hanscom (1783-1859 ) came by his love of shipbuilding naturally. His
ancestor, Thomas Hanscom, was here in 1683, a shipwright by trade,
in a time when, between 1673 and 1714,
Kittery
and York ". . . turned out forty-seven vessels of 30 tons burden
or more." William learned the trade in local shipyards, and about
1820, took full responsibility for the building of two vessels at
Durham.
Hanscom’s
association with the Pipe Stave Landing shipyard followed that of
Jonathan Hamilton. In the1820s and 1830s he built ships for the merchant
Theodore F. Jewett, Sarah Orne Jewett’s grandfather, and his
partners, brother Thomas Jewett and Timothy Ferguson. Hanscom built
the schooner Olive & Eliza, the bark Pactolus, and the Berwick,
a ship of 500 tons.
Detail of wharf timbers
Hanscom built
ships at other shipyards in the area, and eventually began his own
yard in Kittery (today the site of the Bahai Retreat in Eliot). His
sons would become famous shipbuilders.

Hamilton House, late
1800s, decades after the construction of the last ship -- photo from
the Counting House Museum archives
Jonathan Hamilton
Merchant of South Berwick
During the 1780s and
1790s, over half the ship tonnage produced in South Berwick were generated
by one man. Jonathan Hamilton was born in 1745 in the Pine Hill section
of present-day Berwick. Although “Hamilton sprang from humble
beginnings and had little formal education,” in the words of
local historian Marie Donahue, “he had a shrewd business head
and an eye for a sharp deal.” Starting out as a trader in salt
fish in the 1760s, soon he owned forests in Lebanon, then bought part
of the century-old Chadbourne mill operation on the Great Works River
and the shipyard and store at Pipe Stave Landing. He produced masts,
spars, planks, and shingles, built ships to carry them, and exported
them along with lumber, fish, beef, and farm products all over the
world. His Berwick store and warehouse were well stocked with tea,
sugar, coffee, molasses, rum, timber and shipbuilding tools.
In 1785, he started building the finest house in the area. The Hamilton
House today
is owned by the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities.
Though Hamilton
apparently never went to sea himself, he was very closely involved with
the management of his vessels. In the 1780s he bought a riverfront lot
in Portsmouth on Merchants Row on Fore Street, now Market Street. It
had a wharf and warehouse in the busiest section of the port, with access
for his ships. His store, Long & Hamilton, was the ship chandlery
and also stocked molasses, rum, wine, tea, other liquors.
Ship-Owner
Customs records show 104
arrivals of Hamilton vessels in the port of Portsmouth, over half
from the West Indies. Hamilton’s Polly sailed to the Orient
in 1789. His Two Sisters in 1801 went to St. Petersburg. Others sailed
for other ports in Europe, Newfoundland, and South America. Of Hamilton’s
12 ships, two were lost at sea, and three were captured and never
returned. In 1794 a brig of Hamilton’s was captured by Algerian
pirates.
The possible remains
of an ancient dock appear at low tide below the Hamilton House.
In
1763, Great Britain established a colonial administration on the island
of Tobago, and within two decades 10,000 African slaves were imported
to establish the island's sugar, cotton and indigo plantations. Between
1789 and 1801, Jonathan Hamilton's ships sailed with rum, molasses
and sugar from the Caribbean island. In the year of His death, 1802,
he imported into Portsmouth 2800 gallons molasses, 6900 pounds sugar,
5500 gallons rum, 18,000 pounds coffee, 7400 bushels salt, 11,500
gallons wine, and sail cloth. At the time he owned 6 vessels.
Privateer
of the Quasi-War
During 1790-1801,
the young United States was almost at war with France. Over 1000 merchantmen
were commissioned to carry a small crew and light armament to protect
American trade. One of them was built here in South Berwick in 1790
and owned by Jonathan Hamilton. The Cato was his first ship, and was
the first full-rigged, post-Revolutionary War ship built here. She
mounted six carriage guns with a crew of ten. 
Leaving Tobago late August
1798, the Cato was chased by the French privateer Monsieur Dolittle.
Cato’s captain swung his ship around with such bravado that
the French ship retreated. Upon the Cato’s return to Portsmouth
she saluted the town with guns as citizens lined the wharves and cheered.
In 1800 Cato was captured
by a French privateer enroute to Europe. Captain John Parker wrote
to Hamilton: “I have the misfortune to inform you, that I have
been captured by a French privateer of 14 guns and 75 men, on the
26th Nov...They came under my lee quarter and jumped on board like
so many pirates; broke open my chest and trunk, took all my papers
and cloaths from me, not leaving me a shoe to my foot; they threw
me head foremost down the gangway, and told me she was a fine prize;
they took us all out of the ship except three; they put on a prizemaster
and
15 men, & ordered her for L’Orient [France], where the privateer
belonged. 15 days we lived upon six ounces of mouldy bread and a little
raw beef, for 24 hours; but thank God, on the 29th Dec. we fell in
with his Britannic Majesty’s ship Amethy. Capt Cook who captured
and ordered us for Plymouth, and said he would take care of those
Frenchmen, for the treatment we had received from them; he likewise
informed me he had recaptured the Cato, and sent her into Cork. We
arrived in Plymouth the 7th Jan. and have got to this place [Bristol,
England] by land, to take the packet for Cork, which sails tomorrow,
to join my ship. Mr. Evans my mate is with me.”
Jewett’s
Generation Looks Back
“The last day of October in 1777, Colonel Jonathan Hamilton
came out of his high house on the river bank with a
handsome, impatient company of guests, all Berwick gentlemen. They
stood on the flagstones, watching a coming
boat that was just within sight under
the shadow of the pines of the farther shore, and eagerly passed from
hand to hand a spyglass covered with worn red morocco leather.
The sun had just gone down; the quick-gathering dusk of the short
day was already veiling the sky before they could see the steady lift
and dip of long oars, and make sure of the boat's company. ...
Nate
and Norma stand at what might have been the remains of the dock where
John Paul Jones would have come ashore in The Tory Lover to visit
Jonathan Hamilton during the Revolution -- which he never did.
“The new
flag of the Congress with its unfamiliar stripes was trailing at the
boat's stern; the officer bore himself with dignity, and made his
salutations with much politeness. All the gentlemen on the terrace
came down together to the water's edge, without haste, but with exact
deference and timeliness; the officer rose quickly in the boat, and
stepped ashore with ready foot and no undignified loss of balance.
He wore the pleased look of a willing guest, and was gayly dressed
in a bright new uniform of blue coat and breeches, with red lapels
and a red waistcoat trimmed with lace. There was a noisy cheering,
and the spectators fell back on either hand and made way for this
very elegant company to turn again and go their ways up the river
shore.

“Captain Paul Jones of the Ranger bowed as a well-practiced
sovereign might as he walked along, a little stiffly at first, being
often vexed by boat-cramp, as he now explained cheerfully to his host.
There was an eager restless look in his clear-cut sailor's face, with
quick eyes that seemed not to observe things that were near by, but
to look often and hopefully toward the horizon. He was a small man,
but already bent in the shoulders from living between decks; his sword
was long for his height and touched the ground as he walked, dragging
along a gathered handful of fallen poplar leaves with its scabbard
tip...”
-- Sarah Orne Jewett, The Tory Lover, 1901.
Sarah Orne Jewett’s fictional
description of South Berwick during the Revolution makes up in poetic
detail what it lacks in accuracy. Hamilton House, built in 1788, did
not even exist during the Revolution. John Paul Jones, said in the
book to have dined there, is not known to have ever come up the river.
When Jewett wrote The Tory Lover in 1901, few traces remained of the
shipyards where Hamilton had built his vessels in the late 1700s or
even of those of the author’s grandfather a generation later.
Yet in her words, the scenes of shipbuilding and commerce at Pipe
Stave Landing live for us still.
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