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Brothers Nathan and Azariah Gillet
lived in Granby on North Granby Road
since before the Revolutionary War,
making their living as farmers in a
partnership that lasted until Azariah’s
death in the early 1800s. Nathan
married Dorcas Holcomb, and they had
several children, one of which was
their son Truman, who was born on July
29, 1783. By 1790 they had eight
children and were living in a small
house on the south corner of Creamery
Hill Road and North Granby Road. By
1800 Truman began to take up his own
farmstead and in February, 1805 Truman
acquired from his uncle the
three-and-one-half acre lot on which
he built the house that now stands at
151 North Granby Road.
Most of the architectural material
in the house is from the period
between 1820 and 1850. The boards
covering the corner posts, the
6-over-6 sash in the downstairs
windows, the interior door handles and
latches, the manner in which the
interior doors are made and the use of
the eyebrow windows on the front
elevation are all evidence of work
done in that period. Other features,
such as the loose-laid fieldstone
foundation, the round floor joists and
roof rafters (some with the bark still
on them), the machine-made nails, the
bolection molding around the interior
of the south and east entranceways,
the 12-pane upstairs windows, the
hand-hewn timbers, the use of yellow
pine for flooring upstairs, the
story-and-a-half framing and the
V-shaped ridge pole, are all fairly
generic to the first half of the 19th
century.
Two features do place the house
prior to 1820: the woodwork
surrounding the fireplace, is a
Federal Era (1780-1820) design; and
the orientation of the house, with the
eaves parallel to the street (rather
than the gable end) was more popular
prior to 1820. Combined with land,
town and U. S. Census documents, the
architectural evidence seems to
confirm that Truman Gillet constructed
this small, center-chimney,
story-and-a-half saltbox house in
1805.
Truman married his first wife Sally
around 1805 and had two daughters and
a son by 1811. He made his living as a
farmer and worked as cooper on the
side. The bank panic of 1819 did not
prevent Truman from purchasing
approximately 31 acres along Salmon
Brook on the north side of
Mechanicsville Road and by 1822 he had
purchased another 25 acres. He was
married again in 1827 to Sophia
Spring. Truman lived in the current
home, which stands as a fine example
of the sort of dwelling occupied by
most people of the early 1800s. until
his death in 1873 at the age of 90 and
is buried in the Granby Center
Cemetery.
This is just the start, there is
plenty more history to read while
you're
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