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Preserving the History & Heritage of Lake Winnipesaukee & Vicinity

 

“Big Bar! Much Bar!”
 

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AN EARLY HISTORY OF BEAR ISLAND



Artist's Rendition of Early Settlers Facing Danger on Bear Island.

Continued from page 4

In those days, basic household staples included rum and ci­der. Sometimes after rowing her boat to The Weirs, Dolly would load a barrel of cider or rum into her skiff by herself. When she arrived home, she would lift the keg overhead and drink from the bung hole. But, in spite of her toughness. Dolly had a compas­sionate side: on stormy nights, she placed candles in her win­dows to serve as beacons in case a fisherman lost his bearings. Other times, she gave up her own bed to lost hunters, while she slept in the open loft of her shack.

Another example of her compassionate nature is the tale of Charles Prescott's and William Neal's trip to the island one win­ter to check on some woodchoppers, who had been hired to cut wood on the island, as told in Hanaford's Meredith Genealogy:

Their spry stepper horse was transporting them over the ice, via Stonedam Island when suddenly both horse and sleigh went through the ice. The horse gave a spring and landed on a rock and the men climbed out on it, pulled the sleigh out, started out again and landed on Bear Island. They went to Aunt Dolly Nichols' for shelter, feeling pretty chilly after their dip. She at once came to their rescue, took the men and wet horse into her kitchen, helped dry the horse and then made some hot drinks for the men. All came out none the worse for their scare, so the story goes.

Eventually, Dolly grew too feeble to stay on the island and moved to live with her relatives, the Clarks, on Meredith Neck and then to the Hiram Plummer house. Finally, in the mid-1860s, Dolly was forced to go to the Meredith Town Poor Farm, where she died at the age of 79. Her grave is an unmarked spot near the Winnipesaukee Colony Club off the Meredith Neck Road.

South of the landing at Dolly Point are remnants of the pound where she kept sheep, and later, cattle, waiting for the owners to claim them. Until a few years ago, her well with the original well-sweep, a long pole on a pivot with a bucket at one end for raising the water, also stood on her land. Northwest of Dolly Point, about 100 feet from the shore in a pine grove, is a cemetery with nine graves of settlers of Bear Island, marked only by small fieldstones with no lettering.

Continuing northward from the graveyard, one reaches the narrow "waist" of the island called The Carry. Indians carried their canoes across this spot to avoid the long paddle around East Bear, and if they arrived late, they camped at The Carry for the night.


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