Tuesday, September 7, 2021

The Wing Fort House, Sandwich, Massachusetts


While we were exploring Cape Cod a few months ago we had a serendipitous discovery.  We were lost on a back road, searching for the Quaker cemetery, when we stumbled across this historic home.  It was the Wing Fort House on Spring Hill Road in Sandwich, Massachusetts.  Of course, we stopped to take a few photos before continuing our search. This house was built by an a relative who became a Quaker, so we knew we were very close to our destination!

This garrison home was built in 1641 by Stephen Wing.  (I descend from his grandfather, the Reverend Stephen Batchelder (1561 – 1656) through his two children Nathaniel (1590 – 1630) and Ann (b. about 1603) who married John Sanborn).  It is puzzling why this was built as a garrison, since the native Wampanoags were friendly to the English settlers on Cape Cod.  Stephen Wing lived here with his family and his mother, Deborah Batchelder (my 10th great aunt) who was the wife of the Reverend John Wing.

Stephen Wing was one of the first Quakers in Sandwich, Massachusetts.  The Plymouth Court records have some of the first legal proceedings against the early Quakers in Sandwich.  On March 2, 1657/8 “Lieut. Ellis, Stephen Winge and Thomas Butler, being summoned to answer for tumultuous carriage as aforesaid, [at a Quaker meeting] being examined, and not found so faulty as was supposed, were admonished and cleared.”  He was fined many times for refusal to take the oath of Fidelity because Quakers believed it a sin to take any oath. 

Descendants of the Wing family have lived in this house until 1942 when it was sold to the Wing Family of America (the family association) as a museum house.  Unfortunately, the tours run from June through September, so we missed seeing the inside of the house.  During the rest of the year the house is available by appointment to members of the Wing association.

 There have been several archaeological digs at the site of the Wing Fort House.  Most recently was an archaeological dig at this house in 2010 that revealed a small addition to the north side (a possible milk house?) and many 17th, 18th and 19th century artifacts.  See the link below for a report on what was found. 


WING FORT HOUSE
HAS BEEN PLACED ON THE
NATIONAL REGISTER OF
HISTORIC PLACES IN 1976
BY THE UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
WILLIAM G. POMEROY FOUNDATION 2019     239



STEPHEN WING

SON OF THE REV. JOHN AND DEBORAH
WING, CAME TO BOSTON IN 1632
WITH HIS MOTHER AND BROTHERS
JOHN, DANIEL, AND MATHEW, WITH
WHOM HE SETTLED IN SANDWICH IN 1637.
HE LIVED UPON THIS LAND AND BUILT
THIS HOUSE IN 1641.  HE WAS AN ORGINAL
MEMBER OF THE FIRST FRIENDS MEETING
IN AMERICA, ESTABLISHED AT SPRING
HILL IN 1658, AND SUFFERED GREAT
PERSECUTION AT THE HANDS OF THE
PLYMOUTH GOVERNMENT IN THE CAUSE
OF RELIGIOUS LIBERTY.  HE DIED IN
1710 AND LIES BURIED AT SPRING
HILL.
ERECTED IN 1910 BY THE WING
FAMILY OF AMERICA INCORPORATED.



For the truly curious:

The Wing Family of America website:    https://www.wingfamily.org/ 

“Tour the Wing Fort House from Your Own Home with Caretaker, Dave Wheelock”  (two parts)  via YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zp8afIPBFk 

Click here to see the reports on the 2010 archaeological dig (report and artifacts)  http://www.plymoutharch.com/wing-fort-house-excavations/  

“Mystery of Missing Family Members Still Unsolved After Archaeological Dig”, The Sandwich Enterprise, July 28, 2017,  https://www.capenews.net/sandwich/news/mystery-of-missing-family-members-still-unsolved-after-archaeological-dig/article_4a4bd723-40c8-5427-ae4e-a539e03fdab6.html 

A slide show of a visit to the Wing Fort House (no narration or captions):  https://vimeo.com/28244835 

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To Cite/Link to this post: Heather Wilkinson Rojo, “The Wing Fort House, East Sandwich, Massachusetts”, Nutfield Genealogy, posted September 7, 2021, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2021/07/the-wing-fort-house-sandwich.html: accessed [access date]). 

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