"The Church of the Messiah, founded in 1852, is the oldest Episcopal Church on Cape Cod. "A two-storied gray clapboard building was erected on the site of the present granite stone one, which was built thirty-six years later in 1888." - “Woods Hole Reflections” edited by Mary Lou Smith, published by the Woods Hole Historical Collection, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, 1983, p. 89 See “Woods Hole Reflections” edited by Mary Lou Smith, published by the Woods Hole Historical Collection, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, 1983, p. 89-93 for more about the Church of thte Messiah and the history of Woods Hole.
Description: "The Church of the Messiah, founded in 1852, is the oldest Episcopal Church on Cape Cod. "A two-storied gray clapboard building was erected on the site of the present granite stone one, which was built thirty-six years later in 1888." - “Woods Hole Reflections” edited by Mary Lou Smith, published by the Woods Hole Historical Collection, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, 1983, p. 89 See “Woods Hole Reflections” edited by Mary Lou Smith, published by the Woods Hole Historical Collection, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, 1983, p. 89-93 for more about the Church of thte Messiah and the history of Woods Hole. [show more]
See “Woods Hole Reflections” edited by Mary Lou Smith, published by the Woods Hole Historical Collection, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, 1983, p. 142, for a photograph of the Foster's house.
Description: See “Woods Hole Reflections” edited by Mary Lou Smith, published by the Woods Hole Historical Collection, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, 1983, p. 142, for a photograph of the Foster's house.
The George B. Reed house, “one of the few remaining examples of New England continuous architecture in the town” was built on land originally owned by the Dix family. “For a number of years, many Reed reunions were there at the old Reed Homestead…” - “A History of the Houses of West Tremont, Maine” Volumes I, compiled and written by Raymond E. Robbins, Jr., s.n., 1997, p. 94-99. See these five pages for the complicated story of the chain of ownership of this property.
Description: The George B. Reed house, “one of the few remaining examples of New England continuous architecture in the town” was built on land originally owned by the Dix family. “For a number of years, many Reed reunions were there at the old Reed Homestead…” - “A History of the Houses of West Tremont, Maine” Volumes I, compiled and written by Raymond E. Robbins, Jr., s.n., 1997, p. 94-99. See these five pages for the complicated story of the chain of ownership of this property. [show more]
This house may have been built c. 1839. Wilder Blanchard Robbins bought the property in 1877 and moved the house from the shore across the road to its present location.
Description: This house may have been built c. 1839. Wilder Blanchard Robbins bought the property in 1877 and moved the house from the shore across the road to its present location.
The Cornerstone Baptist Church was founded on March 16, 1952 in a farmhouse across from Seal Cove Pond that later became Seal Cove Farm, with ten members. The pastor was Rev. George Wood. In 1953 the little congregation paid $16,000 to buy the old West Tremont Schoolhouse. They added a Sunday school wing in the 1960s.
Description: The Cornerstone Baptist Church was founded on March 16, 1952 in a farmhouse across from Seal Cove Pond that later became Seal Cove Farm, with ten members. The pastor was Rev. George Wood. In 1953 the little congregation paid $16,000 to buy the old West Tremont Schoolhouse. They added a Sunday school wing in the 1960s.