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Dr. Moses Mason
And His House

The Moses Mason House C. 1813...!
The Moses Mason House...
National Register of Historical Places in the State of Maine
"Dr. Moses Mason and His House"
Dr. Moses Mason's life spans a particularly significant period of Bethel's history and development. Although he did not settle in the town until he was ten years old (three years after incorporation in 1796), he became its leading citizen. Born in Dublin, New Hampshire in 1789, the son of a soldier of the American Revolution and the fifth of eleven children, he began his career in 1813 practicing medicine, having earlier apprenticed under the guidance of his brother-in-law, Dr. James Ayer of Newfield. However, after 1832 business and political pursuits claimed far more of his attention than the healing arts.
In 1815, he became the first postmaster of Bethel, serving in that capacity until 1833 when he departed for Washington, D.C. Dr. Mason later admitted that not even the arrival of the railroad in 1851 could equal the excitement he felt when he heard the sound of the postal rider's horn for the first time in 1815.
Dr. Mason's arrival in Washington as a member of Maine's eight-man delegation in the House of Representatives marked the high point of his life. (He was elected as a Jacksonian Democrat from the Second District (Oxford County plus a few towns in Cumberland, Kennebeck and Lincoln Counties). The Doctor was re-elected in 1834 and knew all his more illustrious contemporaries in Andrew Jackson's Washington including John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay and Daniel Webster. In fact, Dr. Mason was so proud of being in congress that he collected the autographs of all those who served with him, plus the signatures of President's John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren. This book and one with the autographs of Mrs. Mason's associates have survived and are currently in the collection of the Bethel Historical Society
Prior to his Washington experience, Dr. Mason had served on the Board of County Commissioners from 1831 to 1833 and the Bethel Board of Selectmen. Soon after he returned from Congress in 1837, he again entered local and state affairs becoming a member of the Governor's Executive Council (1843-1845) and a trustee of the State Insane Hospital (1844), president of the Gould Academy Board of Trustees (1854-1866) and a Selectman for several additional terms. He remained a Justice of the Peace from 1821 until his death in 1866, marrying some forty-three couples and always returning the fee to the bride.
Dr. Moses Mason Antlers Illustration...!


Dr. Moses Mason 1789 - 1866...!
Agnes Staw Mason
1789 - 1866
The year after young Moses Mason came to Bethel, the population, according to the first federal census, numbered 616. Most of the settlement existed in the eastern part of town (East Parish) where families were largely engaged in farming. On Bethel Hill (West Parish) there were few houses and little commerce until after the arrival of the Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railway, which passed through as part of the Portland to Montreal Route in 1851. By the end of Dr. Mason's life, Bethel Hill had become the center of a town whose inhabitants numbered over 2,600.

Dr. Moses Mason brought many of the rudiments of refinement to the frontier inland Maine community. A Baptist, he also reflected the agrarian Democratic sentiment that dominated interior Maine through most of the first half of the nineteenth century. Although he could not be classed as a learned man, he had access to more knowledge and wealth (the latter derived from his business ventures in the neighboring township named in his honor in 1843 and the holding of several thousand acres of timberland) than his neighbors, and the circle of his acquaintances was considerably greater. These fortunate circumstances enabled him to assume a rather patriarchal role in the town exerting an influence upon nearly every Bethel development.
Dr. Mason was a man of good taste, discerning eye, gregarious temperament, sterling honesty and unusual wisdom. He was always fond of collecting statistics and facts relating to the town. Very adept in mechanical ways as well, he built his own carriage, a pictorial bookcase and a moose antler chair; the latter two can be seen in the house today. Always interested in the material progress of the town, he supported many projects designed to enhance these ends. In cooperation with F.O.J. Smith of Portland and others, he proposed and planned an extension of the Cumberland and Oxford Canal by diverting the waters of the Androscoggin down to meet Sebago Lake. This project did not succeed as the railroad came to Bethel about this time and Dr. Mason's plan went unfilled, the only noteworthy failure in a life so rich with success.
Dr. Moses Mason Moose Antler Chair Illustration...!--------------------Dr. Mose Mason Bookshelf Illustration...!


In June of 1813, he had married Agnes Straw of Newfield who came to Bethel six months later by sleigh. The couple subsequently moved into a simple while clapboard house gracing the east side of the common. The fourth dwelling to be built in the vicinity, it was certainly the most elegant, standing two stories with a graceful central entrance complete with fanlight and side windows. The delicacy of the Federal style was modified by dark shutters, double in front and single on the ell.

According to Dr. Nathaniel T. True, Bethel's eminent historian, Dr. Mason's House was the first house on the Common to be painted white, the first on a foundation and the first with shutters. Early in its construction, some of the leading citizens, seeing the sills blocked so high, chose a committee to prevail upon the Doctor to lower them as the building would, in their opinion, blow over. But, Dr. Mason was not dissuaded and construction proceeded as planned
.Agnes Straw Mason 1793 - 1869...!
Agnes Staw Mason
1793 - 1869
The main part of the structure is a single room in depth and contains a living room and dining room downstairs, and two bedrooms above, divided by a full hall, upstairs and down, with a formal stairway. It is in the hall that the most intriguing feature of the house is found, for the walls are decorated with murals depicting distant seascapes and engaging landscapes with lush foliage. These were painted by an itinerant artist, perhaps the famed Rufus Porter or his nephew, Jonathan Poor, but certainly someone working in the Porter style. He murals are unique in Bethel and have been the subject of much attention through the years. They remain in a state of preservation that belies their years, and required only a careful cleaning and slight repair during the restoration of the building in 1972-1973. Jean Lipman has written of them in her book, Rufus Porter: Yankee Pioneer, published in 1968.
Dr. Moses Mason Compass Illustration...!--------------------Dr. Moses Mason Book and Glasses Illustration...!


Visitors to the Moses Mason House Museum will appreciate the unobtrusive manner in which the restoration has been carried out. The house has been adapted to present amenities but in ways so as to preserve its authentic character. Interior colors were selected after laboratory analysis of paint samples to determine the color schemes selected by Dr. Moses Mason and his bride in 1813. In each room a patch has been left to reveal the original color.

Dr. Moses Mason House Museum...!
The Moses Mason House...
National Register of Historical Places in the State of Maine
The furnishings in the house are appropriate to the period of Dr. Mason's life and have been acquired by many generous donations and bequests. Above the period rooms in the ell which was used by Dr. Mason for farm animals and hay storage and by later residents as a workshop now houses a meeting room and modern kitchen on the first floor and the office of the Bethel Historical Society and the Eva Bean Research Room on the second


Dr. Moses Mason House Mural Illustration...! Any account dealing with the Moses Mason House would be incomplete without mention of the later owners of the property. Dr. and Mrs. Mason, having no children of their own, willed their home to a favorite niece, Cyrene S. Ayer, who married Daniel Twitchell and occupied the premises. After Mr. Twitchell's death, she married O.C. Littlehale. Mrs. Littlehale's daughter by her first marriage, Ada, succeeded to her mother's house and lived there for many years with her husband, Tristram Durell. Their only child, Daniel and his wife Ada Everett, were the fourth and last family to make their home there.

In 1973 the property was purchased by the William Bingham II Trust for Charity. Through the generosity of the Bingham trustees, the Moses Mason House was brought to its present restored state and in January of 1974, the title for the property passed to the Bethel Historical Society. The facilities now serve as a museum, a headquarters for the Society, and an educational center for the area. This is a fitting tribute to Dr. Mason, whose long life and many activities contributed to the evolution of Bethel as a town and Maine as a state, and to the Durells, who through their long occupancy of the House, held back the tide of modernization and preserved the murals and other irreplaceable features. Fittingly, the Moses Mason House is on the National Register in its own right as well as part of the Broad Street Historical District.
This Story has been reprinted in Sunday River On-Line with the permission of the Bethel Historical Society from the book entitled "Dr. Moses Mason And His House" written by Stanley Russell Howe with illustrations by Sue Wight.

You can find more information about the Moses Mason House and the Bethel Historical Society and their Current and Upcoming Exhibits at: Search & Find...!


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