This
spot so sacred to a name so great
After
ten years serving his country as Secretary of War, Henry Knox began
to long for the life of a gentleman farmer, like the lives his friends
George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were living on their country
estates. Fortunately for him, his wife Lucy had inherited a vast tract
of land in the District of Maine through her mother, the daughter
of Brigadier Samuel Waldo. In 1795, newly retired, Knox bade farewell
to Philadelphia and moved his family to the newly built Montpelier
in Thomaston, Maine, to dedicate his "all to the development
of the District of Maine." There he had a hand in many of the
emerging businesses in midcoast Maine: He shipped timber, quarried
lime, made bricks, experimented with agriculture, built a lock and
canal system, built many roads, and got involved with land speculation.
The elegant house he built at the head of the St. Georges River epitomized
the dreams of the young republic. It compared favorably with George
Washington's Mount Vernon and Jefferson's Monticello, and Knox made
it the center of many enterprises in midcoast Maine, employing many
citizens.
Knox employed the Boston housewright Ebenezer Dunton to build his
grand mansion, and may have derived inspiration from the designs of
Charles Bulfinch. Montpelier has a classic oval-on-axis design, and
the contract for the house specified many details, including "that
there shall be two stair cases in the rear of the oval room lighted
by two large sky lights from the top of the house that the
steps of the stairs shall be six inches high one foot wide & three
feet eight inches long." Knox's correspondence with Dunton indicates
that Knox also wanted the windows on the front of the house to go
down to the floor, allowing an adult to step from the inside of the
house onto the porch when the windows were open. Much work was done
in Dunton's Boston shop and shipped to the Thomaston site. Originally
conceived as a summer home, Knox and his family lived there year round
by the time of his death in 1806.
So
soon after its grand beginnings the Knox estate went into decline.
After Knox's death Lucy was obliged to slowly sell off much of the
land in order to support herself and became increasingly reclusive
at Montpelier. Henry and Lucy's only living son, Henry Jackson Knox,
proved to be irresponsible, and unequal to the task of running his
father's enterprises. Their oldest daughter, Lucy Flucker Knox, was
happily settled with a judge, Ebenezer Thatcher, and raising a large
family. Thus upon Lucy's death in 1824, their youngest daughter Caroline,
who had lived at Montpelier since she was very young, took over the
mansion. She lived there until her death in 1851, surviving two husbands
and forced to live with increasing economy, but unable to give up
her father's mansion. Upon her death, the widowed Lucy Flucker Thatcher
moved into the family home. She was the last Knox to live there. When
she died in 1854, her oldest son, Henry Knox Thatcher, had no desire
or means to keep the decaying mansion. The property was divided up
and sold, the mansion's beautiful furnishings dispersed among the
descendants or auctioned. After years of standing nearly empty and
vacant, Montpelier was razed in 1871. The site was used for the Knox
and Lincoln Railroad, with one of the outbuildings serving as a train
station.
For most that would be the end of the story, but not so for Henry
Knox and Montpelier. Many in Thomaston mourned the loss of the last
local remnant of a national hero. The General Knox chapter of the
Daughters of the American Revolution in Thomaston celebrated the General's
birthday every year and began agitating for a suitable memorial to
Knox. By the 1920s the effort had grown into the formation of the
Knox Memorial Association, and a national fundraising campaign. They
enlisted the support of Henry Thatcher Fowler, Knox's great, great
grandson and one of only a few living descendants. In 1929, thanks
to the financial support of publishing magnate Cyrus H. K. Curtis,
the Knox Memorial Association broke ground on the new Montpelier,
a replica of Knox's mansion built a short distance from the original
site. Donations to the memorial came thick and fast. Fowler willed
his family relics to Montpelier and local people that had purchased
furnishings at the auction returned them to the mansion. Even parts
of the building that had been taken as souvenirs just before it was
razed found their way into the hands of the Knox Memorial Association.
Until its waning years the Association ran the museum, then the State
of Maine's Bureau of Parks and Lands took over in 1965. However, the
dedication of the local community remained, and eventually the desire
for a return to local control led to the formation of the Friends
of Montpelier. A new chapter for the museum began in 1999 when the
Friends successfully negotiated with the state for the ownership of
Montpelier. Today, Montpelier stands as a living memorial to Henry
Knox, filled with many of the beautiful objects he purchased for the
original mansion; a space that invites visitors to learn about the
life and times of this great Patriot.
