Moses Knowlton House, LSPA; 63 Main Street
Introduction
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The lovely Queen Anne style house sitting prominently above the Harbor is the second house to be built here. It was the home of Moses Knowlton, a philanthropic, civic minded selectman and state representative for Sunapee. It has been a home, a farm, a guest house, and an event center. In 2008 it became the lake environmental center of the LSPA.
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Backstory and Context
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In 1851 Americus Sargent built a home on this site. After it changed hands a few times, Lucy Knowlton, the wife of Moses Knowlton, purchased it in 1886. Moses wanted to build a grand home where the old house stood so he had the building separated into two sections and moved to different ends of the property to use as tenements. Claremont’s Hira A. Beckwith, the county’s leading architect, was hired to design this Queen Anne style home. It was completed in 1890 proudly sitting high above the lake overlooking the whole harbor.
Moses Knowlton and his father ran a dry goods store in Sunapee. In addition to building this home, he purchased all the land along the lake shore up to what is now called Dewey Beach then sold off more than 30 cottage lots. The Knowlton’s only son died young. They befriended Herbert (Bert) Sawyer, who ran the livery across the street from the Knowlton’s home and took over operations at the Knowlton Store. In 1911, the Knowlton home was sold to Bert and his wife Alys. Before Lucy Knowlton died, she sold the Anchorage property to Burt, with a deed restriction that limited the height of the building so that it could never block the lake view from the house.
During the 1950s, the Sawyers farmed the property and ran a guest house, and in 1960, sold the property to Norman and Elizabeth Perkins of Sunapee. The house was next a bed and breakfast inn until being sold in 1995 to Sandy Rouse who restored the old house and turned the property into an event center. In 2008 she sold to the Lake Sunapee Protective Association (LSPA) for use as their headquarters and environmental education center.
For a deeper look into the stories of all that has happened here over the years, check with the Sunapee Historic Society. Look for Sunapee's Historic Buildings & Places Vol. 1
Sources
Barbara Bache Chalmers, Sunapee's Historic Buildings & Places Vol. 1 (Sunapee Historical Society, 1918 & 1919).