1822 Field Farm house in Chester destroyed in ‘suspicious’ early morning blaze
Shawn Cunningham | May 12, 2014 | Comments 0
By Shawn Cunningham
At 4:30 Monday morning, Chester firefighters responded to a house fire at the corner of Blue Hill Road and Route 11 west in Chester. The fire destroyed the brick and shingle-siding Field Farm, built in 1822 and owned by Ferren and Leah Bratton. Leah Bratton had been the director of the Little School in Weston for a number of years.
Fire departments from Rockingham, Bellows Falls, Ludlow, Springfield and Proctorsville, VT, as well as Charlestown and Walpole, NH, responded to the call. Around 90 minutes into the response, electricity throughout the area was shut off, forcing both Green Mountain Union High and Chester-Andover Elementary schools into a two-hour delay.
Because the home sat at a V-corner right off Route 11, east-west traffic along that artery was shut down much of the morning, sending commuters through back routes including up Popple Dungeon Road or Lovers Lane to Route 103.
According to Chester Police Chief Richard Cloud, the house had been broken into two weeks ago. “Some guys picking up trash along the highway spotted a broken window,” said Cloud. The police investigated and said there was no damage or apparent theft.
By 10 a.m. Monday, the state Fire Marshal was on the scene investigating and Chester Fire Chief Matt Wilson called the fire “definitely suspicious.” At the controls of a Chester Town excavator, highway superintendent Graham Kennedy knocked down multiple gable ends and a chimney that posed a danger to passersby.
One gable end that remained bore a plaque that said 1822 Field Farm. The Brattons could not be reached for comment.
Filed Under: Featured • Latest News
About the Author: