When you tell a story, you spark a connection.
Enjoy these stories of Strafford’s people, places and past.
The Robinson District
Once upon a time in one of the farthest reaches of Strafford, a meetinghouse to rival the Strafford Town House once stood. It had seating for 200 and a gilded dome on its steeple. Anyone traveling a little more than a century ago along Brook Road in Strafford (Faye Brook Road in Sharon), could not have missed it. It was the Robinson Meetinghouse in what is now known as the Robinson District adjacent to the four corners of Strafford, Sharon, Tunbridge, and Royalton.
Eight generations of Robinsons have lived and farmed there. Willard Robinson, (5th Generation) expanded the farm’s acreage and operations and commissioned the construction of the famously photogenic “Round Barn,” which was completed in 1917. Recently, the Robinson District has been in the news. Donald Hall, a wealthy businessman from Utah, purchased nearly 1,500 acres in the 4-Corners vicinity of Royalton, Sharon, Tunbridge and Strafford and proposed the construction of a 20,000-person, gated community, to be called NewVistas. The proposed site for the community was chosen because of its proximity to Joseph Smith’s birthplace and memorial, just two miles from the Robinson Farm.
A letter sent 27 years ago… finally answered
In 1998 Strafford Historian Gwenda Smith wrote a letter to Eilzabeth Markin of The Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford Connecticut. Markin had published an article in the November 1976 issue of The Magazine Antiques on the early 19th century portrait painter Zedekiah Belknap.Smith was writing in regards to the portraits of Jedediah Harris and his wife Judith Harris which hang in the Morrill Memorial Library. Smith felt they might well be among the over 200 hundred portraits done by Belknap. Harris was the mentor and business partner of Senator Justin Morrill, and Morrill gave the first library to his hometown and named it the Harris Library.
The history of Strafford’s stores
As two of Strafford‘s store buildings merit special mention this year —Coburns’ Store building having reached its 100th birthday in I985, and the old White Store in the upper village having been extensively restored —it seems fitting to present here a brief history of our main commercial structures.
Maybe Samuel Pennock knew his time was growing short
This document in our archives is the deed of sale for a 125 acres of land sold by Samuel Pennock to Titus Goodall of Lyme for twelve pounds, in September, 1775. By this time, Pennock was already identified on a list of suspected Tory sympathizers in what was then Gloucester County, New York. He and his brothers and fellow Loyalists, James Jr. and Aaron, would have property in Strafford confiscated in the 1780s. Selling the land was perhaps a stopgap measure on Pennock’s part to gain some sort of income on the property before it could be seized. Read more about the Pennocks and this property here.