Artist's Rendition of Early Settlers Facing Danger on Bear
Island.
Continued
from page 5
Here,
behind Rollie Smith's camp, are the steps to what was the
Bear Island School House, which according to Meredith Town
Reports existed from 1858 to 1866. Centrally located and
accessible to both East and West Bear families, school house
attendance reached as many as 17 pupils for a short winter
term. The teacher's salary was $9.00 to $10.00 per term.
When Meredith Neck School was established, the children
attended it instead. That school closed in 1910 and is now
a residence, situated directly across from the Meredith
Neck Meeting House.
Travel across the lake in winter could be hazardous. In
December, 1879, Waldo Maloon's son, David, was escorting
school children from Lovejoy Sands across the ice, carrying
window glass and nails he had bought in the village. Near
the big wharf, the ice broke through but he managed to get
his arms across firm ice and hold on while the children
ran for help. Weighted down by the nails in his pockets,
he finally sank into the freezing water before help arrived.
Buried in the Maloon section of the Meeting House Cemetery,
his tombstone reads, "David S. Maloon, December 26,
1879, 41 years. Gone But Not Forgotten." Near David's
grave are two more tombstones; one is inscribed "Fido,
age 15 — He mourneth the loss of his Master."
Fido, David's dog, apparently died of a broken heart. The
other headstone reads, "Susan, widow of David S. Maloon,
wife of Stephen B. April 17,1906, 65 years."
Along a path which leads from The Carry toward Jerry Point
are two cellar holes where the Bickford homes were located,
an area known as the Deserted Village. Here James Bickford
lived, with his four sons, James Jr., Alonzo, Moses and
Oliver. This house, located near the power lines on the
Point, actually had two cellar holes, one reached from above,
the other through an outside door. One of the cellar
holes was a place of refuge when officers hunted Oliver
as a deserter during the Civil War. While the inner cellar
was searched, Oliver hid in the outer one, which he had
reached by a little passage known only to him.
William L. Putter purchased Jerry Point in 1913 from the
estate of James Bickford. Born on the island in 1805, James,
who died in 1888, is buried in the Meeting House Cemetery
as is his brother, Jonathan, who owned a large tract of
East Bear. Jonathan's son, Charles, sold this acreage to
Camp Lawrence in 1921. The cellar hole of Jonathan's original
house may still be seen at the camp.
The only building that remains of these earliest settlers
is a barn in Stephen Maloon's pasture in The Gulf, a deep
cove north of Jerry Point. Around 1880, the Maloon property
was sold to Professor Silas W. Holman of Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, who converted the barn into a house.
In 1922, the property was sold to Dr. Chester Brown and
is now owned by his daughter, Betty Brown Boyd, and
son-in-law, James W. Boyd.
The fate of the other settlers' homes is not known except
for three that were moved across the ice to Meredith, including
one at #7 Lake Street, where additions have been made to
the center back portion, which came from Bear Island. The
present owner, Mrs. Carl Colby, said of the early settlers,
"Many left the island to seek fortunes out West where
farm life was less arduous."
Fields have reverted to forest, and cellar holes have filled
in. Yet memories of these early settlers live on along the
paths and stone walls. They are stark reminders of the strenuous
times of our island forebears, and familiar landmarks to
those who traverse Bear Island today, more than 200
years after it was settled by Robert Bryant and his family.
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