My great-grandfather’s house
burned down recently. He had a summer camp named Camp Vision on the top of Page
Hill in Tamworth during the early decades of the 20th century. My mother used
to tell me about it when I was little.
She described the wonderful
views of the mountains, the stone porch, the spring house, and even the
outhouse! He had built the house with
his own hands, and it reflected his distinctive artistic style. He was a
painter and a professor of Art at Plymouth Normal School (now Plymouth State
University.)
Even though he died the year
before I was born, and the house was sold soon afterwards, the memories of the
place are wrapped up with my memories of my mother and grandfather. We used to
visit the place on occasion. My mother would walk me around the grounds
reciting her childhood memories. She showed me old black and white photographs
of the place in its heyday. It seemed like a magical place to me, more like
Camelot than Tamworth.
Over the years I have continued
to visit the house, even in the decade since my mother’s death. Every few years
I would drive up Page Hill Road, park at the bottom of the short driveway and
trespass onto someone’s property.
No one was ever there, and the
cabin never changed over the years. It always looked as if my great-grandfather
had just closed the door and walked away. The new owners had left the place
exactly as it was in the 1920’s and 30’s. It was a place frozen in time.
I took this pilgrimage to
Camp Vision in the Spring of 2011, shortly after returning to live in Sandwich.
I took it again this summer of 2013, only to find the house in ashes. I later learned
that it had burned down in June of 2011, one of the victims of a teenage
arsonist who torched several homes in Tamworth that year.
It is hard to describe my
feelings. It is a sort of grief. Like I have lost an old friend or a member of
the family. I wonder what will happen to
the place now. It has been over two years, and it has not been rebuilt. Will it
return completely to the forest now, like the homesteads in Sandwich Notch?
Young saplings are already growing from the ashes.
On August 28, I heard Nixon
and Saundra Bicknell give a marvelous concert at Surroundings Art Gallery in
Center Sandwich. It was the last concert of the summer, so I was already
feeling nostalgic. Nixon played “Six Woodland Sketches” by Edward MacDowell on
the piano.
One of the sketches was
entitled “A Deserted Farm.” As I closed my eyes and listened to that piece, I
saw Camp Vision. I realized that houses may burn down, but memories are burned
into our hearts forever.
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