The Captain’s Well
This monument in Amesbury is known as The Captain’s Well, and it quietly preserves pat of the town’s maritime past. The restored stone wall, complete with its long wooden sweep and bucket arm, reflects a time when wells were central gathering places within a community. Before modern plumbing, places like this supplied water not only for homes, but also for travelers, workers, and sailors connected to the town’s shipping activity.

This memorial reminds us that maritime culture shaped the town’s early history. The nearby rivers connected Amesbury to coastal trade and shipbuilding networks throughout New England. Captains and merchants traveled far from these small towns, carrying both goods and the reputation of their communities around the world.

The well was dug by Captain Valentine Bagley in 1796 and later immortalized by Whittier. A simple town well became important enough to survive in memory because it represented both the practical life and spirit of the community.

It is easy to imagine neighbors gathering around the well, sailors returning from voyages and townspeople sharing news long before newspapers, telephones or modern convenience connected communities. These smaller memorials preserve the human side of history and the routines of ordinary life.

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John Bartlett Monument
In Amesbury, there is a prominent statue of Josiah Barlett, a figure whose life connects this small New England town to the founding of the nation. Josiah Bartlett was born in 1729 in what was then part of Amesbury. Trained as a physician, he built a reputation for both skill and dedication. As tensions grew […]
Quaker Meeting House
This is the old Friends Quaker Meeting House in Amesbury, closely connected to the life of ohn Greenleaf Whittier and the Quaker traditions that shaped both his beliefs and his writing. Whittier was raised in a Quaker family, and the values of the Society of Friends remained central to his life. The Quakers emphasized simplicity, equality, peace, personal […]
Captain Bagley House
The Currier-Bagley-Huntington House is one of the oldest surviving structures connected to Amesbury’s early maritime and colonial history. Though now weathered and in disrepair, the house still carries the appearance of an early New England home that evolved over generations as families added rooms and altered the structure over time. The house is closely tied to Captain Valentine Bagley, the […]