"Frost first
discovered this area of the White Mountains when he came there to seek
relief from hay fever. He brought his family there and they fell in
love with the area. The Frosts first rented rooms from the Irish farmer
John Lynch in the late summer of 1907 outside of Bethlehem, N.H. Frost
wrote to his friend and early editor Susan Hayes Ward, who had visited
the family there, of the time spent at Bethlehem: 'How long ago and far
away Bethlehem is already. Our summer was one of the pleasantest we
have had for years. . . . There is a pang there that makes poetry.'
Frost had returned from England and had grown romantic for New
Hampshire and New England. He was searching for a farm in the Franconia
area that had a view. He happened on one farm that he liked but it
wasn't for sale. The owner of the farm Willis E. Herbert was outside
and the two men began a conversation. Herbert happened to be looking
for more land and if Frost could pay a thousand dollars for the farm
then he would be willing to sell it.
Frost showed the house to his family and they all agreed and he shook
hands with Herbert on the price of a thousand. It wasn't until Herbert
began to see Frost's picture in the papers that he decided a thousand
was too fair a price for Frost to pay and he should pay one or two more
hundred for the farm. Frost agreed and the family moved in June of
1915."
— Francis McGovern, from literarytraveler.com
Photo by Star Black, used with permission of
CavanKerry Press, Ltd.
So here the great man
stood,
fermenting malice and poems
we have to be nearly as fierce
against ourselves as he
not to misread by their disguises.
-William Matthews, former resident poet, from "On the Porch of The Frost Place, Franconia, N.H."
The Frost Place is a nonprofit educational center for
poetry and the arts based at Robert Frost’s old homestead, which is
owned by the town of Franconia, New Hampshire.
The Frost Place was founded in 1976 when a group of neighbors led by
David Schaffer and Evangeline Machlin persuaded the Franconia town
meeting to approve the purchase of the farmhouse where Robert Frost and
his family lived full-time from 1915 to 1920 and spent nineteen
summers. A board of trustees was given responsibility for management of
the house and its associated programs, and from 1977 through 2005
teacher and scholar Donald Sheehan served as executive director. In
2010 the trustees appointed poet Maudelle Driskell as Sheehan’s
successor.
Since 1977, The Frost Place has awarded a fellowship each summer to an
emerging American poet, including a cash stipend and the opportunity to
live and write in the house for several months. In addition, The Frost
Place has sponsored an annual Festival and Conference on Poetry for
writers seeking classes and workshops with a faculty of illustrious
poets, a teachers’ conference, and
an advanced seminar.
|
Board of Trustees Deming Holleran, Chair Advisory Board Jeanne Marie Beaumont, Eloise Bruce, Robert Cording, Peter Gilbert, David Keller, Elise Paschen, Sue Payne, Martha Rhodes, David Schaffer (Founder), William Wadsworth, Jeffrey Wheeler, and Baron Wormser Honorary: Hayden Carruth (1921-2008), Donald Hall, Galway Kinnell, Maxine Kumin, Thomas Lux, Grace Paley (1922–2007), and Ellen Bryant Voigt |
ADA Notice
The Frost Place does not discriminate on the basis of disability in
admissions, policies, services, employment, communication, or in any
other aspect of its operations.
This notice is provided as required by Title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973. Questions related to this notice may be forwarded to
or 603-823-5510.
P.O. Box 74 , 158 Ridge
Road, Franconia, NH 03580
Telephone: (603) 823-5510
Site by John Lehet