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Castles and a Painted Pig

Madame Sherri Castle Ruins

On this Day – October 5th

2017 – Bancroft Castle

Bancroft Castle
Bancroft Castle

AFTER A LONG CAREER AS a soldier, politician, and businessman, in 1906 General William Bancroft began building his lavish retirement home on the scenic Gibbet Hill in his hometown of Groton in Massachusetts. He even had a name in mind: Shawfieldmont.

But Bancroft’s dream project only got as far as the bungalow and tower, when he ran out of money. He kept the property for 12 years, but then sold it to to Harold Ayers, a physician who converted the structure into a sanatorium. Through the 1920s, patients in the area suffering from ailments like tuberculosis who could afford to pay $20 a week reaped the benefits of the fresh air and treatments offered by the Groton Private Hospital, as Ayers named his facility.

When the hospital closed down toward the end of the decade, the space segued from sanatorium to social center, where dances and other events were held by the Groton Hunt Club. The fox hunting-related festivities came to end when parts of the structure were burnt down after a firecracker accident on the Fourth of July, 1932.

Now part of a hiking trail, the castle ruins offer great views and a perfect dramatic backdrop for local photographers and cosplayers. As with any ruins in New England, combined with the local legend that the hill was used for hangings in the 1600s, there are plenty of ghost stories surrounding the hill, such as sightings of figures wearing colonial garb and sporting disembodied limbs.

Source – Atlas Obscura
Bancroft Castle
View from inside tower
Bancroft Castle
Courtyard

2013 – Kimball Castle

Kimball Castle
Broken window of Kimball Castle

Benjamin Kimball, a director of railroad companies operating in the region, built the castle and estate outbuildings beginning in 1894, and used it as his summer estate until his death in 1920, in his home in Concord. The castle was built by Italian stonemasons using local granite and materials imported from Europe; its construction cost was about $50,000.

Source Wikipedia
Kimball Castle
Broken Window at Kimball Castle

I was interested in the interior but decided it would be a bad idea to poke around, I imagined myself falling through a rotten floor and spending eternity haunting the place.

The Painted Pig

At the entrance to the castle is this unique mailbox

Oink
Mail call at Kimball Castle

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