Listening to the Heartbeat of an Old Chilmark House
One of the more interesting houses up-Island is 231 State Road in Chilmark. It is an unusual house for Chilmark: a Queen Anne style Victorian, painted yellow, with a turret.
I don’t know of any other such houses in Chilmark, whose charm lies in its serene and lovely rolling hills, hidden houses and beaches. It is a very common type of house elsewhere in the United States, the reflection of the prosperity of the late 19th century. Prosperity that had passed Chilmark by and which it was not to achieve until well past the midpoint of the 20th century.
Its owners and builders were Jared and Jerusha (Lottie) Mayhew. They married in 1875 and were the parents of one daughter, born in 1879 named Ethel Love and known as Lovey for her father’s aunt. They lived in the house all of their married life as did Ethel and her husband, Allen Athearn Flanders, whom she married in 1898 and their two children, Aleta and Leslie.
Jared and Jerusha were pillars of the Chilmark Methodist church, and probably the town’s most prosperous citizens. Jared had well over 100 acres of land and raised sheep. He was also deaf, one of the last to have grown up in a Chilmark family who had more deaf children than hearing ones. His parents, Benjamin and Hannah Smith Mayhew, were both deaf as was his older brother, Benjamin. His aunts and uncles Alfred, Ruby and Lovey were also deaf. Another uncle, also named Jared, was not. All of the deaf aunts and uncles as well as Jared and his brother Ben attended what is now the American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Conn.
In 1991, the folklorist Dillon Bustin composed a series of songs about Vineyard folk called Tidebook, and although they were not named, one of the songs, Lead Kindly Light was about Jared and Lottie Mayhew. It described how Lottie would sign the minister’s sermon for her husband, and then as they grew older and as Lottie’s sight began to fail, how Jared would guide her so she would not fall. They were married for over 50 years.
Lottie outlived Jared by three years. Jared died in 1927 and Lottie in 1930. The depression reduced the value of their home by half, from $5000 to $2500, but their personal property was not reduced nearly as much by the crash. One of the reasons for this was their interest in AT&T, the company begun by Alexander Graham Bell, who came to the Vineyard to investigate the phenomenon of hereditary deafness that Jared and his brother, aunts and uncles, mother and father all shared.
When I drive by, I always look at the house and remember them.

Comments
Love this house!
Susan Berger DCLove this house!
Great house history, and I
Liz Bradley EdgartownGreat house history, and I remember singing the Dillon Bustin song in theater productions- a great tune. Thanks for this nice house portrait.
I've been coming to Oak
Mary Moore Shabica 6701 Pawnee Dr Charlotte, NCI've been coming to Oak Bluffs for 25 years and no one has ever told me this story. I know the house, just not the story.
Thank you for sharing it with all of us.
Always loved this house and
Nancy Desrosiers Haydenville MAAlways loved this house and am happy to learn about it's history.
I went to the mv muesam in
Ben Biron edgartownI went to the mv muesam in edgartown when my mom and her friend was visiting to study her family's genealogy. Learned about how deafness ran among the family gene in Chilmark.
some were fishermen and it was pretty comman to be on the boat and sign language in the family was too. Check it out. Very interesting
My maternal grandmother, Mary
David SewardMy maternal grandmother, Mary (Molly) Flanders spent two summers as a companion for the widowed Aunt Ethel as we called her. Ethel was extremely frightened of lightning. In the photo lightning rods can be seen on the roof. During a thunder storm my grandmother told me she could not find Aunt Ethel anywhere in the house. She finally checked a closet upstairs and there she was. It took some time to get her out of her hiding place.
Very interesting!
Jeanne Barron West TisburyVery interesting!
i helped save this house from
Albert Fischer West Tisburyi helped save this house from a fire back in the early eighties. Mrs Holdsworth showed her gratitude by giving me a bird carving by Herbert Hancock.
Albert,
Kristen Holdsworth ChicagoAlbert,
My dad (Mrs. Holdsworth's son) told me the story about this fire. Thank you for saving this house and sharing your story, I would not have all the summer memories of this place if it were not for your help.
Albert, just like my sister
Lauren Holdsworth Kelp Chicago, ILAlbert, just like my sister Kristen (above), I too remember my father telling us the story of the fire and showing us the markings where the fire licked the walls. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts for helping save this house.
Was just going to say that I
Wm. H. Smith ChilmarkWas just going to say that I too helped put that fire out.
Great
Anthony Dohanos HawaiiGreat
After Ethel Mayhew moved to
Kim Holdsworth St. Thomas, Virgin IslandsAfter Ethel Mayhew moved to Vineyard Haven to be with her son Leslie Flanders, the house was essentially vacant for ten years. Our grandfather bought it in the late 50's from Ethel's family. Since then (for almost 60 years) it has been lived in and cared for by four generations of our Holdsworth family.
The cottage to the left side of the main house was once part of the original house. It was cut off and moved aside in the 1890's, when Jared Mayhew added the Victorian rooms and tower to the original farmhouse house at the time of his daughter Ethel's wedding to Allen Flanders. A hundred + 20 years later, in the 1970's, my parents renovated this moved-aside structure into a cottage.
Both houses were originally grey-shingled (as per photos from the 1930's). Does anyone recollect when the main house was first painted yellow, or the roof tiled in red?? I'd love to know. And will certainly welcome readers' stories about this property as it was in former times! [email protected]
Always loved this house;
Cyndi Los AngelesAlways loved this house; thank you for the amazing history.
Allen Athern Flanders. What a
Mary Etherington Marfa, TexasAllen Athern Flanders. What a great island name. Conjures family trees entwined.
This is so incredibly
Kristen Holdsworth ChicagoThis is so incredibly wonderful and valuable to my family history! My family now owns this property and it gives me great pleasure to know how the house has taken to the tides of time. I hope it continues to be a familiar place for some and a preserved part of the island's history. Thank you for sharing this story!
And thank you Kristen and
mary jane carpenter EDgartownAnd thank you Kristen and family for keeping this treasure is such good condition! It seems to be a touchstone for so many Islanders.
Last September (2015) our
~Woody & Phyllis Williams~ Vineyard HavenLast September (2014) our daughter Vanessa L. Williams (Martha's Vineyard) and her Fiancé Evan D. Smith (New York) were married there. They rented the house for a week and they had family and friends come from New York, Vermont, North Carolina and from as far away as Oregon. We just had to drive from Vineyard Haven!!
The weather was absolutely perfect every single day and we all had the greatest time of our lives!!
A lovely story, made even
Eileen Maley West TisburyA lovely story, made even better by all the accompanying remarks and memories.
I have to say I loved finding
Keepa Lowe west tisburyI have to say I loved finding out the history behind a house I have wondered about for decades since the 70's when it was a hippy house with VW buses and Union Jacks fluttering out the window. The only thing missing is the fantastic view of this house with ocean....the angle taken by this photographer did nothing to bring out this very special feeling of this historic home.
This Home, this article, the
Christopher Lyons Saratoga Springs, New YorkThis Home, this article, the Gazette, the author, the comments, and most of all you, June Manning (who posted it), are the reasons I wish I still lived on the Vineyard and why I will keep visiting!
Whenever I pass this
Kristin Zern West TisburyWhenever I pass this incredible house my heart skips a beat. Eileen Mayhew and Teddy Mayhew were our contemporaries in the 1950's. Did they live in this house then ? Albert Fisher,, than you for saving this amazing house in the eighties.
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