History by the Foot in South Berwick
A new self-guided walking tour brochure leads
The public is invited to a free reception celebrating the release of the brochure at the Counting House Museum on Sunday, April 20, at 3:00 p.m. Garden historian Nancy Wetzel will read from Jewett’s “Looking Back on Girlhood,” an account of life in
Written by the Jewett-Eastman Memorial Committee, a citizens’ group that maintains and manages Jewett’s 1854 home as the South Berwick Public Library, the brochure welcomes and informs visitors and seeks to draw local citizens downtown. It is available free at local businesses and municipal buildings.
“The tour invites visitors to stroll through this river town, as Jewett beckoned readers up its elm-lined streets in her fiction. We wanted to encourage walking traffic in the historic center at a time when
Illustrated with historic photos and a newly drawn map, the brochure leads strollers to 17 sites in a mile-long course through the center of town. Sites include the house where the author was born in 1849, along with places where she lived, wrote, shopped, studied, worshipped, gardened, rowed on the river, visited relatives, and was finally laid to rest in 1909. The tour can be walked in about an hour.
Much of
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The brochure includes brief histories of the Jewetts and
The walking tour project was supported by donations from Julia’s Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, Kennebunk Savings Bank, Lassel Architects, Historic New England, and the Old Berwick Historical Society.
JEM Committee members Margaret Brentano and Nina Maurer compiled the text using historical information from the Old Berwick Historical Society, Historic New England, and the Sarah Orne Jewett Text Project.
Tags: downtown, history, things to do