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Sayward Wheeler House York Harbor S U M M E R G U I D E 2 0 1 5 1 9 1 bodice-ripper. In the company of period antiques and incredible views of the Salmon Falls River where ships used to tie up right alongside the house features a very whimsical mu- ral in the parlor Crampton says. It was commissioned in the 1920s from artist George Porter Fernald who painted direct- ly over the existing vine-covered wallpaper. Its a colorful tour from Portsmouth New Hampshire to South Berwick Maine and includes Wentworth-Coolidge Mansion Governor John Langdon House in Ports- mouth the Sarah Orne Jewett House and the Hamilton House appears prominently. Fernald also included a gundalow the flat- bottom boats that brought goods from the open harbor in Portsmouth up the river to Hamilton House and all of South Berwick in the eighteenth century and a romantic image of Colonel Hamiltons ships unload- ing goods onto wharves. When the novel made Hamilton House famous the world came callingnot that people on the order of Gov. Langdon and John Hancock hadnt already visited. Ar- ticles about the house and garden were published in House Beautiful magazine Crampton ventures without a gratuitous twinkle. In 1929. SARAH ORNE JEWETT HOUSE 1774 In the center of South Berwick with- in pleasant walking distance of the Ham- ilton House is Sarah Orne Jewetts own house built for John Haggins in 1774 a prize among Historic New England homes. Asked if the term Boston Marriage origi- nated with the couple of Sarah Orne Jewett and Annie Fields Crampton does not elab- orate with her No. B ut shes more forthcoming about the tragic carriage accident of 1902 that Sarah Orne Jewett suffered. It brings to mind Stephen Kings horrible ac- cident. Did she have a creative dead zone af- ter this brush with death It was her birth- day Crampton says. She was thrown from the carriage and suffered a spinal injury just as The Tory Lover was vaulting to star- dom. She didnt publish a book after that date but continued to write essays articles and letters. As for traditions one that it took two men exactly 100 days to build the staircase Crampton wont bite. I have never heard this story. Even though it lives forever in Wikipedia. Weve heard it put forward that the com- paratively quiet exterior though absolutely Millwright Joseph Sayward 1684-1741 purchased this waterfront house new in 1719. It subsequently belonged to his son Jonathan a coaster and trader and erce Loyalist in the years before the Revolutionary War. The house remained in the family and in 1901 was purchased by Elizabeth Cheever Wheeler a direct de- scendent of the Tory Jonathan who kept it as her familys summer home. Wheelers heirs deeded the house to Historic New England in 1977 and it became the Say- ward-Wheeler House museum.