
Historical Sketch
andy
Bay, the easternmost outpost of Cape
Ann, was the final settlement to be
developed from the original 1642 Gloucester
parish. As the number of inhabitants
grew, so did the need for meeting houses,
schools and other facilities. New parishes
had been established west of the Annisquam
River, at the Ipswich Bay port of Annisquam,
and in the area of what we know today
as Grant Circle. Probably their meeting
house was one
destination where churchgoers from Sandy
Bay made Sunday treks in good weather
prior to 1755. In 1738 the parish at
Annisquam, where they also sometimes
attended, made overtures toward building
a joint meeting house between itself
and Sandy Bay. It was said that the
beams for the framework, never to be
completed, could be seen for many years.
On the slope which fronts the present
church, the first schoolhouse in Sandy
Bay was built of logs in 1724. Religious
services were held there when bad weather
made it impossible to go elsewhere.
The fifth parish, composed of Sandy
Bay and Pigeon Cove, which earlier had
been part of the Annisquam parish, was
established in 1755. The first meeting
house was then built slightly up Cove
Hill, not far from where the Baptist
church now stands.
This was a small, two-story, squarish
building, with a balcony and galleries
extending under the side windows. There
was neither spire nor bell. Hymns were
"lined out" by the pastor or one of
the deacons, with no musical accompaniment.
This meeting house served the parish
until after the Revolutionary War, when,
in 1805, a new meeting house was built
where it stands today. It had about
twice the floor space, a steeple and
a small Paul Revere bell, but otherwise
was much like the original building,
with a balcony and galleries under the
upper level of windows. Baptists and
Universalists also used this meeting
house for a short time until their churches
were built. The log schoolhouse had
been removed in 1797, and the 1755 meeting
house was put up for sale in 1805. The
beautiful manse beside the church was
built by Pastor Jewett for his wife,
and sold when he retired in 1836.
Among interesting historical notes,
Pastor Cleveland served as a field chaplain
in the French and Indian wars, yet also
helped to found Dartmouth College, with
its emphasis on higher education for
Indians. He was a chaplain in the Continental
Army and his son was an officer in the
Sandy Bay company at Bunker Hill. In
1843, under Pastor Gale, the church
voted a strong resolution supporting
the Abolitionist movement. In 1865,
ex-president Franklin
Pierce, standing on the green in front
of the church, greeted soldiers returning
from the Civil War.
September 8, 1814, the British frigate
Nymph invaded Sandy Bay. One of her
barges surprised and captured the barracks
at the end of Bearskin Neck; when the
second was seen entering the Old Harbor,
the meeting house bell
sounded the alarm. The crew shot at
the bell to silence it and hit the steeple
instead. Firing the shot, the carronade
went through the bottom of the barge,
and the crew were captured as they swam
ashore. Their captain effected an exchange
of prisoners and promised not to bother
the town any more. The church still
has the cannonball. The wooden replica
in the steeple was probably added in
one of the later reconstructions.
When Sandy Bay became the Town of Rockport
in 1840, the meeting house was completely
redecorated and the steeple enlarged
to support a heavier bell. Probably
during the brief period between the
new meeting house with its steeple in
1805 and the Universalist church with
its steeple in 1829 the nickname of
"The Old Sloop" was conferred by the
fishermen. In 1842 the General Court
released the meeting house to the Congregational
church.
From 1855 to 1870 the Second Congregational
church was at the corner of School Street
and Broadway. After the two groups reunited,
in 1872 they cut the First Church building
in half, separated the halves by about
twenty feet and then
reconnected
them. At that time the steeple was again
enlarged and strengthened, with a new
and heavier bell and the Town clock.
The two levels of windows became the
beautiful tall windows of today. At
the bicentennial of the meeting house
in 1955, a major redecoration of the
interior was completed. A particularly
fine new Andover organ was installed
in 1975.
In only two matters does the
specter of
the old meeting house survive. When
the weathered condition of the steeple
demanded rebuilding in 1937, funds were
raised by public subscription as would
have happened in old parish days. And
a nominal "rent" is still paid for the
Town clock. Few such meeting houses
still stand that can compete with the
Old Sloop for its well-documented history
and its colonial beauty.
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