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LIVE UPDATE

Finally got my 2012
lecture list updated.
About a dozen more
appearances this
year as seen on
ROBINSON LIVE


SHIPYARD FIRE 1936

CLICK HERE

HISTORY REPEATS:
The worlds biggest 
wooden building burns
in Kittery Yard in 1936

STOBART DOES SHOALS

Maritime painter
John Stobart created
new works just for
Portsmouth! That is
a very big deal
READ MORE

 

SLAVE OWNING GUV?

Don't miss this debate
-- Did Gov. John Langdon
own slaves? Historians
say signs point to NO.
CLICK HERE


 

SHOW IS OPEN!

Six months of work
and the doors are
finally open free
so get on down to
UNDER THE ISLES
OF SHOALS


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Home Places & Events Historic Portsmouth Isles of Shoals Famous Faces
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Isles of Shoals Famous Faces Print E-mail
Written by Seacoast NH ARchive   

Rosamond Thaxter detailSeacoastNH.com Presents  
Historic Portsmouth #354

Spring is the time to plan your annual visit to the Isles of Shoals, so let’s spend the next few weeks digging deeply into Shoals history in this photo column. Here are two frequent island visitors. Unitarian minister John Weiss (1818-1879) was a close friend and Harvard classmate of Levi Thaxter. Poet James Russell Lowell called Weiss “the most comical of persons.”  (Continued below)

 

 

Often sickly, Weiss was an early visitor to the Mid-Ocean House hotel on Smuttynose where he first met the Laighton family. Weiss assisted at the marriage of Celia Laighton (age 16) to Levi Thaxter (age 27) in the south parlor of Appledore House in 1851. Licensed only to marry in Massachusetts, Weiss had to bring in a Maine minister from Kittery, Maine to complete the final vows.

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Celia and Levi had three sons – Karl, John, and Roland. Rosamond Thaxter (1895 – 1989), see here as a young woman, was John’s daughter. Although she wrote a popular biography of poet Celia Thaxter entitled Sandpiper, Rosamond never met her famous grandmother. “Aunt Rozzie” lived and died in Kittery Point, traveled widely, never married, and became a well-known local philanthropist and Girl Scout leader. She was an early supporter of Strawbery Banke Museum. Today a parcel of ocean-front land near Sea Point Beach is preserved in her honor by the Hubbard Family. Rosamond’s unadorned rustic “Gull Cottage” (also called “Rozzie’s Cottage”) is one of only two surviving structures on Smuttynose Island. (Photos courtesy Star Island Collection at the Portsmouth Athenaeum.)

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