Mill House Teardown Puts Spotlight on Historic Preservation

<p>Nearly four months after it was razed, the historic Mill House came before the Martha&rsquo;s Vineyard Commission for review late last week.</p>

Nearly four months after it was razed, the historic Mill House came before the Martha’s Vineyard Commission for review late last week.

At a tense public hearing Thursday, commissioners, neighbors and one former resident continued to express confusion about the circumstances under which the Vineyard Haven harborfront residence became a gaping hole in the ground this spring.

Attorney Sean Murphy, builder Peter Rosbeck and architect Patrick Ahearn blamed the pre-emptive demolition on what they called a flawed review process.

“Some people have mentioned that the builder should have known better,” Mr. Murphy said. “I’m here a lot. I couldn’t tell you a third of the checklist items on your list . . . It was basically a failure of the process. It was not an attempt to subvert the process.”

The house, which was believed to be one of the oldest houses in Vineyard Haven, is owned by Lise Revers of Weston who bought it in 2017 for $3.8 million.

The demolition took place sometime in mid-April, sparking an outcry among preservationists and neighbors and consternation among land use boards including the commission, which subsequently beefed up its own process for historic preservation reviews.

According to Christine Mankowski, a new hire at the commission charged with reviewing projects for historic preservation, parts of the home date to as early as the 18th century and were thought to have housed Revolutionary War soldiers. Although the eponymous mill portion of the home remains standing, all of the other sections of the home were demolished in the spring, including the historic Cape Cod-style midsection.

On Thursday, Mr. Murphy began by running through a reconstructed timeline of events, beginning with a permit application in September 2018 to renovate and lift the middle section of the house, as well as demolish interior portions. “That is the first time it should have been referred [to the MVC],” Mr. Murphy said.

Despite the historic features of the home, it was not referred to commission for review as a development of regional impact (DRI). Referral is required for the demolition of any building more than 100 years old.

After construction began in March, Mr. Murphy said the builder determined from unsafe conditions that he no longer wanted to lift the middle section of the home but wished to demolish it entirely. According to Mr. Murphy’s timeline, Tisbury building inspector Ken Barwick granted verbal permission to demolish the middle section of the home as long as the mill portion was saved.

“Mr. Barwick never went to the site. He just said, take it down,” Mr. Murphy said. “That’s the second time it should have been referred.”

Builders demolished the home. Three weeks later, Mr. Barwick issued a verbal work stop order, and informed the commission of the demolition.

Mr. Barwick later apologized for his role in the misstep, and has recently retired from his position.

Meanwhile, after consulting with the historic district commission, the MVC decided to review the project retroactively, analyzing the benefits and detriments of the demolition as if it had not yet happened. Commissioners requested plans, photographs and site maps of the home before and after the teardown, and received testimony from historic district commission chairman Harold Chapdelaine.

By the end of the process, the home scored a 12 out of 13 on the commission’s new scale for proposed demolitions of historic structures, meaning it held “great significant value.”

Mr. Ahearn said a three-hour meeting with the Tisbury historic district commission led to substantial improvements in the plans for the remodeled home. Architects have decided to retain the gabled structure of the original portion of the home, the historic triple-bay window style and restored gray shingling.

“It was a productive, positive meeting,” Mr. Ahearn said. “Think Shaker, think simple, think period. Make the columns simpler, make the windows simpler.”

Mr. Chapdelaine said his commission unanimously approved the project, despite not getting the chance to look at the home before it was taken down.

“There’s no question we would have appreciated the opportunity to have reviewed this prior to, but everyone knows there was a breakdown in the process,” he said told commissioners Thursday. “One benefit is that we all get to work together in the solution.”

Along with the historically faithful redesign, applicants will pay $25,000 to create a database of all 200 or so historic homes in Vineyard Haven. They also will pay to rewrite the demolition permit application so the date of the home is clear. Even with the mitigation efforts, concerns lingered.

“I think the process you have gone through with the historic commission was admirable,” commissioner Ben Robinson said. “But the drawings look like nothing from the middle section was ever going to be saved. That confounds me a bit.” Later, in a sharp exchange with the applicants, Mr. Robinson pressed further. “We should be honest about this. There was no intent to save any of the middle section,” he said.

Mr. Rosbeck disagreed, saying the original intent was to lift the middle section of the house to re-pour a foundation.

Members of the public were more adamant in their dismay. Margi Snow, a former resident of the home, recalled carvings in the home’s windowsills that dated to the 18th century.

“On one of these very old windows there was an incision that said, Joseph and Mary, 1764. So that got destroyed,” Ms. Snow said. “I don’t know what went wrong, but something obviously went wrong . . . There was stuff that could have been saved in that house and it wasn’t saved. It’s a loss of history.”

Neighbor Chuck Parrish concurred and said further that it was the commission’s duty to ensure that a preemptive demolition doesn’t happen again.

“The age of the building was common knowledge. It should not have been destroyed,” Mr. Parrish said. “Going forward, it is important for projects to be considered in their entirety.”

The hearing was closed, with a vote tentatively scheduled for mid-September.

Commissioner Linda Sibley noted afterward that it is the responsibility of applicants to know the DRI checklist.

“It is in the best interest of any developer to make sure that they know the checklist,” she said. “It’s not an excuse.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/26/2019 - 12:09

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Dave Leopold Truro

No one wants to preserve history anymore. Out with the old...in with the new

shame..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/26/2019 - 22:00

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Steve F Chilmark

Where is the home owner in all of this? Didn’t she know, or care to learn about the history of what she bought? It all seems so arrogant and careless.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/27/2019 - 06:12

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Islander Too

How can an Island architect of Mr. Ahearn's tenure be so clueless about a historic structure? It beggars belief.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/27/2019 - 08:08

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an island resident west tisbury

Developers and builders in cooperation with private property owners are not upholding their responsibility to protect the historic character and low density of this island. Money, profit and individual self-interest prevails over community interest. I see this every day.
I am distressed at what I perceive as a general lack of control and supervision of local government bodies and agents here on island. This is just one more example.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/27/2019 - 08:20

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john parker willis vineyard haven

Given the fact that the owner is an attorney and the architectural firm has extensive experience in historic preservation, the outcome here seems especially hard to understand.

Islander Too

My comment in the same vein has been suppressed. As was a comment on an earlier thread concerning this situation.

The earlier comment was: Didn't the prospective buyer have an inspection done? That should have revealed the basic status of the different parts of the structure. I am mystified as to why such a question would have been suppressed by the Gazette's moderators.

Mike WT

Not really, lawyers and builders do this kind of shenanigan all the time. Fine the group the value of the purchase of the property, divided evenly among the three culprits. That will make them think twice before attempting this again. Heavy fines for heavy BS.

Alexander Watson Edgartown

Do really think the architectural firm in question has extensive experience in historic preservation? That's not what I would call it. The buildings have no soul, and everybody, except for the clueless new owners apparently, knows it.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/27/2019 - 08:50

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ECS edgartown

Rosbeck should have known enough [lets face it he knew what he should have done] to put a hold on the project until all the 'i's were dotted and the 't's crossed. I believe he is the same builder who built that monstrosity at the south end [edgartown end] of Sengi. Who ever did it obviously has only one concern and it isn't about preserving the Vineyard. Shame on the purchasers. Too bad Mr. Berwick retired; no opportunity to fire him.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/27/2019 - 15:10

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Dave Achelis NYC

It seem Vineyarders are trapped into the ugly world of real estate, where cash is king. The destruction of the Captain Norton House in Edgartown is another, brutal example...

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/28/2019 - 09:41

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William Cohen Edgartown

we're all gabled and mcmansioned out over here in Edgartown. Isn't anyone going to learn from this? Or are we going to keep hiring the wrong people and destroying what's left of the islands character?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/28/2019 - 12:31

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Jane Chittick Edgartown

As a point of reference: the oldest known extant house on the Vineyard is the Vincent House (1672) donated to the Historic Preservation Trust in 1977. It sits on the lawns of the Dr.Daniel lFishier House, 99 Main Street, Edgartown. I was the Trust's first Executive Director (1980-92).

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/29/2019 - 09:14

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Margi Snow West Tisbury

Just to clarify, the incision on the window which I found was Joseph Merry 1764. He was the person who probably built the Cape which explains his signature. His wife was the renowned Molly Merry who hosted soldiers and hid her money behind the fireplace. Over the years there were many additions and changes made to the house but a large portion of these were made in the late 19th early 20th century. Would these also not be considered historic and worthy of being kept?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/12/2020 - 10:42

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laura luckey Salem, MA

The Mill House (as it was known) belonged first to our great grandfather, Asa Bacon Cary who moved the Mill from elsewhere
in the Town and attached it to the house. As a little girl my bedroom was in the top of the Mill when it was owned by my
grandparents, Gen. and Mrs. ML Walker . My grandmother was the daughter of A. B. Cary. She sold the House to Lillian Hellman
before it was bought by Margi Snow.
Laura C. Luckey

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/12/2020 - 11:34

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laura luckey Salem, MA

Let me add that there were a great many historic Millstones that were moved with the Mill
and which were set in place by Asa B. Carey to make a walkway to and around the house. These stones have
importance, are rare, and hopefully have been saved. It is incredible that so much has been destroyed by
carelessness and bad communication and irresponsibility.
LCLuckey

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