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KingstonVillage.jpg Kingston Village picture by geraldean_2008

The Village of Kingston, before 1906.

Kingston General Merchants - Lot 2, Kingston
Original Grant-John London, 1784.
Built in 1788, Kingston General Merchants, or the Union House, has served as a hotel, a store, and apartments at various times over the years. On the Walling Map of 1862 it is listed as J. B. Lyon’s Hotel.
Union House
Kingston General Merchant's




School

Macdonald Consolidated School – Kingston
Original Grant:
Silas Raymond - July 14, 1784
Deed Transfers:
Silas Raymond to Trinity Church - 1794
Trinity Church to Justices of Kings Co. - 1833
Justices of Kings Co. to Kingston School - 1874
History and Style:
Macdonald Consolidated is the second consolidated school to sit at Kingston Corner. The original, which was built in 1904 as a result of Sir William Macdonald’s charitable efforts to improve education in rural communities, burned in 1909. The present school was opened in 1910 and has served the Peninsula well ever since. Before the consolidated school was built, residents of the Peninsula attended numerous one-room school houses. In 1904 seven smaller schools located at Kingston, Midland, Perry Point, Reed’s Point, Hammond River, Clifton and Shamper’s Bluff amalgamated into the new Macdonald school. Students from Hammond River School had to cross the Perry Point Bridge over the Kennebecasis at Jubilee to Perry Point, and travel inland to Kingston.
stairstrim




Trinity Rectory – Lot 1, Kingston
Original Grant:
Rev. James Scovil – May 4, 1798
History and Style:
The rectory was built by Rev. James Scovil and the people of Kingston in 1788. Scovil was originally from Waterbury, Connecticut and moved to Kingston in 1788 after it was voted that he should be given lot one of the Kingston grant, better known as the parsonage lot. It is built in the Georgian style with a symmetrical façade and a projecting porch. The foundation is constructed of both brick and field stone.
Rectory Window

Rectory Porchrectoryrectory sketch

Trinity Church – Kingston
History and Style:
Trinity Church is the oldest Anglican church in New Brunswick. It was funded and built in 1789 by the people of Kingston. When the original Loyalist settlers drew lots for their land, it was agreed that the first three would donate one acre at the adjoining corner of each lot next to the parsonage property for the purpose of building a church. The original structure consisted of just the nave, which was built in the Georgian style with rounded arch windows. In 1808 the octagonal steeple was added to the west end of the church and in 1811 the chancel and Venetian window were added to the east end. In the 1857 Trinity, along with New Brunswick’s other Anglican churches was Gothicized at Bishop Medley’s insistence. The Georgian windows were given Gothic arches and finials were added to the exterior corners.
ORIGINAL GRANT:
James Scovil, May 4, 1798.
John London, July 14, 1784.
Silas Raymond, July 14, 1784.
Elias Scribner, July 14, 1784.
trinitytrinitytrinitytrinitytrinity

Carter House – Lot 2, Kingston
Original Grant:
John London – July 14, 1784
Deed Transfers:
- William Pywell to William A. Carter - 1855
- William A. Carter to Annie M. C. King - 1874
- Annie King to Ella B. Carter - 1907
- Ella Carter to John D. Cosman - 1936
- John Cosman to Almina E. E. Cosman - 1943
- Almina Cosman to Emily A. Puddington - 1948
- Emily Puddington to Roy S. Palmer - 1951
- Roy Palmer to S. Roy Kelly - 1953
- Roy Kelly to Ross L. McPherson - 1955
- Ross McPherson to Ernest J. Prosser - 1963
- Ernest Prosser to Peninsula Heritage Inc. - 1964
History and Style:
This house was built by Frances Newman Perkins for his son Robert Perkins, who married Mary Lamb in 1841. Some time before 1855, William Pywell came into possession of the Carter House. Pywell was a substantial landholder, innkeeper and lumberman in Kingston who arrived in New Brunswick in 1817. He married Phoebe Perkins, a daughter of Francis Newman and Hannah Perkins. Pywell owned the Carter House, the large store and tavern across the road and the hay scales next to the old Scribner house.
William Carter, a shoemaker, and his wife Mary Jones raised a family of ten children in this small cottage. The house remained in the Carter family until it was sold to John Cosman by William S. Carter in 1936. The house is one and a half stories high with dormers added to both the façade and the rear. The floor boards, which are laid as cut, are extremely wide and were probably cut from old growth forest. Although the windows throughout have been replaced by modern framed windows, the house has been preserved in its original style and layout. There was once a summer kitchen addition to the rear of the house that opened into the small storage room between the present kitchen and bathroom. To the rear of this was a shed and an outhouse. The present kitchen was once the dining room and the two front rooms that now act as dining rooms for the tea house were parlours. The two downstairs bathrooms were probably small bedrooms at one time.


Carter House garden 2008
August Garden by Darlene Love, Gardener for season.

Maggie Paddock’s House – Lot 3, Kingston
Original Grant:
John Hendricks - July 14, 1784
Deed Transfers:
- Azariah Perkins to Eliakim Perkins - 1823
- Eliakim Perkins to Moses M. Perkins - 1840
- Moses M. Perkins to William H. Perkins - 1864
- William H. Perkins to Odbur D. Perkins - 1878
- Odbur D. Perkins to John G. Paddock - 1917
- John G. Paddock to W. Herbert Paddock
History and Style:
This house was built by Azariah Perkins between 1784 and 1789. Perkins was a loyalist from Connecticut who arrived in New Brunswick in 1783. There are reputed to have been twenty seven babies born in this house, and it has remained in the possession of Perkins’ descendants to the present day. The house is a small one and a half story cottage typical of the small homes that would have been built by New Brunswick’s early settlers.
Scan10595.jpg Maggie Paddock's picture by geraldean_2008
Maggie Paddock's then and now.
100_8116.jpg maggie paddocks picture by geraldean_2008

maggie and herb paddocklily Scribner louise northrup maggie paddock

Herb and Maggie Paddock , Miss Louise Northrup, Lily Scribner and Maggie Paddock.

Baxter House, Kingston, Lost to fire.
Baxter 5Baxter 4Baxter 3Baxter 2Baxter house 1

Scribner Hose, Kingston, Lost to Fire.
kingstonschool.jpg Scribners and school picture by geraldean_2008


Scan100203.jpg scribners and thompsons on corner picture by geraldean_2008Scan10059.jpg kingston picture by geraldean_2008
Scan10438.jpg scribner fire picture by geraldean_2008

drkeithkingston.jpg dr keith kingston picture by geraldean_2008
This was Cosman's where Dr. Keith rented his rooms, once located across from Old Market, now lost to fire.

P61-184.jpg Lower Kingston picture by geraldean_2008

Lower Kingston.
Scan10152.jpg Raymond House picture by geraldean_2008
Raymond House, built about 1784, by Silas raymond, was located on Love's property, Maplewood Farm.

Playing Sarah RaymondDarlene Love playing sarah Raymond, Summer 2008

Old Sunday School, now torn down.
SundaySchool.jpg Sunday School picture by geraldean_2008

OldSundaySchool.jpg Old Sunday School picture by geraldean_2008


YoungPeoples.jpg Painting old sunday school, back wall picture by geraldean_2008

Scan10089.jpg Young Peoples paint Sundayschool picture by geraldean_2008

The Maples Hotel, now burned down.
100_6624.jpg maples hotel picture by geraldean_2008

Davey Thompson's store was originally The Cosman Brothers Place ( Mill Owners).Now torn down.
DavyThompsonStoreoldCosmanplace.jpg Pipers picture by geraldean_2008

100_6622.jpg tommy thompson picture by geraldean_2008

New Heritage, Stone Haven.

100_8149.jpg stone haven picture by geraldean_2008
stonehaven poppiesstone havenstone havendarlene stonehaven
Maplewood Farm

Farmaerial.jpg maplewood picture by geraldean_2008

maplewood pantrymaplewood art studiomaplewood




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