A Visit to the
Everett Davis House
A
VISIT TO THE EVERETT DAVIS HOUSE in CORAM
The first time I remember visiting the Everett Davis house was about 40
years ago. The "Davis Girls" (as they were known) told my mother how
much they regretted living on the main road as no one stopped for
Halloween, and how much their elderly mother (a woman in her 90's} would
love to see children. My mother packed us up and off we went. At that
time I was not as impressed with the age of the house, but much more the
age of the oldest resident of our town.
That
would be the first of many visits I made to the house over the years, as
the Davis's and Boddy's had known each other from the early years of the
20th century. My paternal great grandparents and the Davis's owned
beach houses in the same community on Fire Island and one of my
grandfather's sisters married Albert Smith of Coram (a childhood friend
of Minnie and Grace).
Both
Minnie and Grace took great pride in their house, and loved to show
people their home. The main portion of the house was build by their
grandfather in 1841, of bricks he made himself from a clay pit located
across the street from the house, and baked in a kiln onsite. Two brick
molds now refinished hung on the wall as small shelves for brickabrack.
The main floor in this section of the house held "twin parlors" (a more
formal room for company and more casual room for the family), a long
hallway with stairs to the second level, and the "borning room" were
several generations of Davis's were delivered. The remainder of the
lower level was an "out kitchen" that was originally not part of the
main house, and an oversized dinning room that was built to bridge the
once separate structures.
The
dinning room possessed a corner cupboard and mantle that were salvaged
from the much older house next door. They would also explain that the
fireplace in the room (one of five in the house) replaced the larger
"beehive oven" used for baking when the family got their first stove.
The
front parlor was the more interesting of the two as it held many of the
oldest furniture of the house, and a beautiful oversized sampler (about
12x24inches) wrought by Harriet Woodhull (grandmother of the sisters)
outlining the history of her family. It was here that Grace would
explain that her grandmother had made three similar samplers, one for
the Davis's, one for the Miller's, and theirs of the Woodhull family.
The two others were owned by other branches of the family.
On the
second floor were two bedrooms and a former bedroom that had been
converted to a bathroom when indoor plumbing was added to the house.
The plan followed the same plan as the lower level.
The third floor originally contained a small bedroom and large attic.
The attic was used to store food through the winter. Grace would talk
of how every year the family would butcher a hog and hand the hams,
sausage and bacon in the attic to keep it cool.
During
my years in high school, and college, I mowed the lawn for the sisters,
a task my uncle did for Grace's parents. Several years later I took to
looking in on Grace after her sister needed full time nursing care and
she was alone.
It was
in these later years that Grace shared stories of her life in Coram.
While I always thought of Grace as a perfect lady, always in a dress and
beautifully groomed, as a girl, she and her siblings had a wonderful
life on a farm. I remember her telling me how they all climbed up to
the roof of the two and a half story barn and jumped off hanging on to a
rope to see how far they would fly. She also told me how my grandfather
had challenged her to "skin an eel". When I remarked that this seemed
out of character for her she agreed but added "he challenged me to a
bet, and I was never able to pass up a bet".
Grace also talked of how all the produce from the farm was taken by
buckboard to Port Jefferson and shipped to Connecticut, and winter
sleigh rides. She always said how dangerous it was going up and down
the Coram-Selden Hill. Apparently it was much steeper in her time, and
if you look carefully you can see how it was trimmed and tappered
Like
other children of her generation, the Davis children went to grammar
school in Coram, but had to attend high school in Port Jefferson. Grace
and her siblings "boarded" with a Port Jeff family during the week and
were picked up by their father on Fridays to spend the weekends with the
family. Graduation was held at what is now Theatre Three.
Grace
was in her mid nineties when she died at the end of the summer. A few
days before her death she told me with great pride how she had done yard
work at the home she loved so much every day that season. She was laid
out in the front parlor of her home in the same manor of all her
ancestors. She was the last of her line to live in Coram.
Written by,
Larry Boddy
February, 2003
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