Wicked Newport: Sordid Stories from the City by the Sea
By Larry Stanford and J. Bailey
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About this ebook
Take a trip with Larry Stanford through 350 years of Newport's hidden, dark history.
Founded by a small band of religious freedom seekers in 1639, Newport, Rhode Island, subsequently became a bustling colonial seaport teeming with artists, sailors, prosperous merchants and, perhaps most distinctively, the ultra-rich families of the Gilded Age. Clinging to the lavish coattails of these newly minted millionaires and robber barons was a stream of con artists and hangers-on who attempted to leech off their well-to-do neighbors. From the Vanderbilts to the Dukes, the Astors to the Kennedys, the City by the Sea has served as a sanctuary for the elite, and a hotbed of corruption. Local historian Larry Stanford pulls back the curtain on over 350 years of history, uncovering the real stories behind many of Newport's most enduring mysteries, controversial characters and scintillating scandals.
Larry Stanford
Larry Stanford, a native of Newport, currently works as an Information Specialist at the Newport Visitors Center. He founded Ghost Tours of Newport in 2002. He has previously published Wicked Newport with The History Press.
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Wicked Newport - Larry Stanford
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INTRODUCTION
Newport, Rhode Island, represents a variety of things to a multitude of people. For over a million guests annually, the city symbolizes a picturesque getaway with priceless mansions, unforgettable harbor tours or a meal at a waterfront eatery. To many natives, Newport is the town where they were born and has been the only place they have ever lived. Those who are old enough have seen their city evolve from a strategic navy port to a tourist mecca. For those of us who have made Newport our adopted hometown, it represents a place with unique architecture, stunning ocean views and perhaps a small taste of what colonial life was like.
Newport has certainly come a long way from its infancy as a tiny enclave of pioneers seeking their religious freedom in 1639. The city progressed into a thriving colonial seaport, then subsequently an encampment for British soldiers; a depressed fishing village; a summer getaway for wealthy Southern planters; a colony for artists, writers and intellectuals; the playground for America’s super wealthy; a strategic navy base; and eventually a world-renowned resort area. Who knows what the city will evolve into next? The best part of all these diverse layers of history is that there is at least a small remnant of each era still in existence in Newport to this day.
One thing you will notice as you progress through your reading is the frequent number of times New York City and Newport are linked. Throughout Newport’s gilded era, it would be almost impossible to mention one location without the other. These two cities will be inexorably linked throughout history because of the steady stream of affluent globetrotters who spent at least a portion of the summer season seaside. Many of the characters highlighted in this book may have earned their vast fortunes in New York, but chose Newport to spend their seemingly unending flow of capital in an attempt to out-build, out-spend and out-entertain each other. The City that Never Sleeps
and The City by the Sea
have seen their fair share of these people’s indiscretions and we are more than happy to share some of the more memorable ones with you in the next few chapters.
Hopefully, you will have as much fun reading about these unsolved mysteries, colorful characters and salacious scandals as I have had writing about them. Enjoy!
THE MYSTERY TOWER
Atop one of the highest points in all the city of Newport, Rhode Island, stands an object that has been perhaps the most controversial structure in all of the Americas. The first time one sees the mysterious structure, one cannot help but be awed by the size and symmetry of this beautifully constructed circular stone tower. After looking over the object, the mind drifts to its purpose and to the obvious question of why this thing was built.
Unfortunately, there is no easy or concrete answer. Philosophers, scientists, theologians and just about every man, woman and child who lay eyes on it come to their own conclusions. Locals and visitors alike have been trying to solve this mystery for over three hundred years. One thing is for sure—it was built by someone and must have served a specific purpose. There seem to be more questions than answers when it comes to the Mystery Tower.
Let’s examine the few known facts we do have about the tower. It is defiantly circular and constructed of local, mostly flat stones set in mortar to hold the stones stable and in place. For the structure’s support, there are eight arched columns of flat stone. Each arch measures seven and a half feet in height. The curved portion of each arch contains flat stones angled toward the ground, also held in place by mortar. Above the arches is the main body of the tower. A look inside the circular portion reveals notches in the stones where crossbeams may have held up a floor at one time. There are also three small, square windows, with one facing Newport harbor. Curiously, there is an indentation on the inside wall that seems to have been a fireplace. The total height of the tower is twenty-four feet with the width across at twenty-three feet. That’s where the absolutes end and the theories begin, with some more plausible than others. Let’s examine some of the most popular theories that have evolved over the years.
Newport’s Old Stone Mill remains one of our country’s great unsolved architectural mysteries. The mysterious tower sits atop one of the tallest hills in Newport and its actual purpose for construction is still unknown. Photo courtesy of the author.
The most romanticized of all the tower’s possible builders is the Viking or Norse theory. It is so prevalent in Newport’s popular culture that many local businesses, including a luxury hotel and a tour company, use the name Viking.
Even the local high school uses the nickname the Vikings.
The origin of this hypothesis came from a Danish scholar named Carl Christian Rafn, who published a series of letters called the Antiquitates Americanae in 1837. Rafn drew the conclusion that Viking explorers visited the area and built the tower as a house of worship in the early eleventh century. He based his assumption on some poorly drawn architectural drawings of similar structures. Later, scholars also ran with these ideas to make their arguments that the tower was of Viking origin. There is evidence that Norse explorers visited Mount Hope Bay in Rhode Island between AD 1000 and 1004. Another argument these theorists use is that the tower’s construction is similar to early church buildings in northern Europe. One major point that proponents of this theory argue is that the Newport tower is oriented to true points of the compass, just like early stone churches in Norway and Denmark. It has also been proven that Vikings did explore other parts of the North American continent. Artifacts have been uncovered in L’Anse aux Meadows on the island of Newfoundland, in Canada. There have been numerous archaeological digs in this area, including around the tower site, yet no eleventh-century artifacts have been uncovered this far south.
Another less popular theory is that Portuguese explorers constructed the tower in the early 1500s. The Portuguese were some of the most renowned seamen in the world at this time and were credited with numerous discoveries in the New World. Prince Henry the Navigator funded dozens of expeditions along the African coast and, in 1500, Pedro Cabral claimed Brazil for his home country. The explorer who may have built the tower was Miguel Corte-Real, who disappeared off the North Atlantic around 1502. He was searching for his brother Gaspar who had been searching for the Northwest Passage. Gaspar had reached Newfoundland and then sailed southwest along the present United States coast. Gaspar was thought to have been lost in a storm somewhere off what is now the coast of New England. Miguel is thought to have sailed extensively around Narragansett Bay, before becoming wrecked himself. The tower may have been built as a signaling device or a beacon to alert possible rescuers. There is an indentation in the upper structure that looks like a fireplace, lending support to the theory that the platform could be used for a signal fire. There is also evidence of Portuguese explorers landing at Dighton Rock, in nearby Massachusetts, around 1511. A cannon and sword of Portuguese origin have also been uncovered at Fort Ninigret in Charlestown, Rhode Island. Perhaps other expeditions came to search for the lost Corte-Real brothers. No Portuguese artifacts have been located in and around Newport itself, but similar structures used as watch towers and fortified churches do exist along the Portuguese coast.
The most bizarre of the other theories is that a Chinese navigator named Zheng He built it as a lighthouse in 1421. This theory is presented in the book 1421: The Year China Discovered America. The author argues the tower’s dimensions match several measurement units used in Ming Dynasty China. He also claims that the mortar used to hold the stones together is made of crushed shells, which would be consistent with Chinese building methods. He also suggests the tower’s construction was for a colony of Chinese sailors and concubines from the junks of the Zheng He voyages. Some European explorers, including Giovanni Verrazzano, described some of the natives as having skin the color of brass
and having long, black hair. Verrazzano also noted they wore jewelry similar to people of the Far East. The lighthouse would have been used to guide future Chinese expeditions to the exact location of the colony. This tower also matches designs used in lighthouses and observatories located along the Chinese coast.
The indentation in the stonework looks similar to a modern fireplace. This would suggest a fire was needed for warmth or for use as a signaling device. Photo courtesy of the author.
One thing Verrazzano fails to mention in his detailed writings when he sailed through Narragansett Bay and around Newport harbor was the existence of a large stone tower. That factor, as well as a few other details, may lead to the actual builder. It is widely speculated that the first colonial governor of Rhode Island, a man named Benedict Arnold, had the tower constructed to function as a windmill. Arnold, the great-grandfather of the Revolutionary War traitor, owned large tracts of land in Newport, including the plot where the tower is located. There is evidence that a wooden windmill located on the same spot was blown down in a hurricane in 1675. There is also a similar stone windmill near Arnold’s boyhood home in Chesterton, England. He also mentions my stone built windmill
twice in his will. Arnold’s Newport home was located right down the hill on Spring Street. Scientific evidence points toward seventeenth-century construction as well. An extensive archaeological dig in 1949 yielded twenty thousand artifacts, including a rusty meat cleaver, bits of a clay pipe and some coins. Also found were grinding stones, which seem to imply that the tower was