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The introduction presented a description of the character and history of
Stotham invented by Ripley. According to his introduction, "When Zabdiel Podbury fled from Stoke-on-Tritham in the Spring of 1689 with Drusilla Ives, taking passage on the bark Promise, sailing for Massachusetts Bay, it was not
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pair, the village of
Stotham (so named by them in memory of their autochthonous abode) would in later days come to be regarded as a typical example, although, perhaps, not so well known, of the unspoiled New England Village."
207:
Ripley, Hubert G. (1920) "An
Architectural Monograph on a New England Village". White Pine Monograph, Vol. VI, No. 2. Published by Russell F. Whitehead, Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y.
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as the purported locale of a number of photographs of New
England structures which had been edited out of earlier location-specific issues of the bi-monthly series.
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Only a few of the edifices described in the "Stotham" monograph have been positively identified. The "House on Sandy Point" is actually the Joseph Lynde House in
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Some of the town's buildings were credited to fictional "town architect" Ruben Duren. The "Rogers
Mansion" was given a legend of buried treasure and a ghost.
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114:, editor of the White Pine series, about the mysterious town, eliciting a full explanation. The matter was explored in a 1964 article in the
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150:. and the "First Meeting House of the Stotham Congregational Society" is, in fact, the North Congregational Church of
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Underhill, Roy (1987) "And Why Can't You Get There From Here", explanatory essay in Lisa C. Mullins, editor.
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Weird New
England: Your Travel Guide to New England's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets
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Weird New
England: Your Travel Guide to New England's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets
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realized at the time that, from this union, and the joint labors of the
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in an article he wrote for the April 1920 issue (vol. VI, No. 2) of the
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Harbeson, J.F. (May, 1964). โStotham, The
Massachusetts Hoax, 1920.โ
134:. The "Salmon White House" is actually the Abram Mitchell House in
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Ripley's article about the town was printed under an epigram from
142:. The "Heman Billings House" is, in truth, the Champion House of
232:
Citro, Joseph A. (2005) "The
Confounding Fathers of Stotham" in
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and explained in the 1987 reprinting of the monographs as
236:. New York, NY: Sterling Publishing Company. p. 124
224:. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: National Historical Society
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The
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
146:. The "Uriel Underwood House" is the Wheeler House in
138:. The "Podbury-Ives House" is an unnamed house from
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116:Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
102:The fiction was uncovered by catalogers at the
27:Fictional town in Massachusetts, United States
51:White Pine Series of Architectural Monographs
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222:The Architectural Treasures of Early America
120:The Architectural Treasures of Early America
69:Far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife,
85:They kept the noiseless tenor of their way.
75:Their sober wishes never learn'd to stray;
218:Village Architecture of Early New England
183:. Sterling Publishing Company. p.
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79:Along the cool sequester'd vale of life
62:Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
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173:"The Confounding Fathers of Stotham"
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41:which was invented by architect
171:Citro, Joseph A. (2005-09-25).
106:in the 1940s. Department head
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283:Phantom geographical features
278:Hoaxes in the United States
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250:. 23(2): pp. 111โ112
144:East Haddam, Connecticut
108:Leicester Bodine Holland
45:(1869โ1942) of the firm
47:Ripley and LeBoutillier
33:is a fictional town in
140:Bedford, Massachusetts
132:Melrose, Massachusetts
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18:Stotham, Massachusetts
256:entry in the on-line
254:Stotham Massachusetts
152:Woodbury, Connecticut
148:Oxford, New Hampshire
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136:Chester, Connecticut
112:Russell B. Whitehead
104:Library of Congress
16:(Redirected from
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258:Museum of Hoaxes
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