Cellar Holes

New England is full of ghosts.  A walk in the woods will bring you across old stone walls by the mile.  In places that you feel like you’re the first person to ever walk in a place, you’ll come across hard evidence to the contrary.  Settlers and the farmers who came after them cleared this land, raised crops and the next season did it all over again.  New England’s gift to these farmers were the stones that would come up with the frost, which the farmer would toss drag to the edge of the field to build stone fences to mark the property line, or the line between crops and grazing fields for livestock.  It was a hard life, compounded by hard winters, disease, wars with the native population, and a whole host of other things.

These early residents lived in modest houses built over stone cellars.  The houses are mostly long gone now, and many of the cellar holes are too.  But many remain to tell their story.  Coming across an old cellar hole in the woods is like a telegram from the people who once lived in the house it sat on.  Cellar holes and the stone walls are often the only thing left to mark the existence of these people.

This cellar hole in Hampstead, NH was once the foundation of the house that Job Kent lived in.  Job was born in 1743, bought land from his father to farm, and built a house on this site around 1770.  Job fought in the Revolutionary War as a Sergeant in the Northern Army, and he died in 1837.  He’s buried in the Town Cemetery in Hampstead, making his stay in town permanent.  Today his farmland is conservation land, hopefully making the land a permanent monument to what once was; forest and, for a time, farmland.  The stone walls criss-cross the land marking the fields that sustained Job and his family at a significant time in our nations history.  The walls and his cellar hole marks where he lived his life.  Quiet now, this cellar hole was once the foundation of a busy family enduring the struggle of living off the cold, unforgiving New Hampshire land.  Job Kent didn’t make a large dent in the universe, but he lived a life of significance, fought for our nation’s independence, and returned to his farm afterwards to work it season after season.

I spent a little time inside this cellar hole and walking around the woods in November 2016.  I didn’t hear ghosts calling out to me at the time, but this hole and the man who built it still stay with me 17 months later.  Almost 52 and I’m still building my stone walls.  I’ve got a good foundation beneath me, and hope to make my own dent in the universe, however modest that dent might be.


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Comments

4 responses to “Cellar Holes”

  1. Michelle Sweeney Avatar
    Michelle Sweeney

    Where is this cellar hole located exactly? Somewhere on Kent Farm road in Hampstead? Thank you

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    1. nhcarmichael Avatar
      nhcarmichael

      It’s the 1750 cellar hole off West Road. You can see it on the purple-blazed trail on this trail map: https://www.hampsteadnh.us/conservation-commission/files/trail-map-western-complete

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  2. Emily Hannay Avatar
    Emily Hannay

    Hello! I came across your blog well searching my ancestor Job Kent, although extensive research has been done leading us to join the daughters of the revolution, we never knew this existed!! I joined this platform just to contact you! I know this was awhile ago but would love to connect as you seem to have had a connection to Job while in the cellar!

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    1. nhcarmichael Avatar
      nhcarmichael

      Thank you for reaching out! I no longer have the source material that indicated this as his cellar hole, but there’s a map that puts it in approximately the same location. You can see the name noting his home between the town names Hampstead and Atkinson.
      https://www.etsy.com/listing/761058793/hampstead-1857-old-town-map-with

      I try to research fascinating discoveries like Job’s cellar hole to know more about them and to get a better sense of place. In this case, I may not have a bloodline to him as you do, but I’ve stood in the cellar hole he probably dug and have felt the stones he stacked into walls.

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