VESTAL STREET NEIGHBORHOOD

Similar documents
1800 HOUSE. The 1800 House at 4 Mill Street in the 1970s JOHN MCCALLEY PH7-72. Nantucket Historical Association

Submitted to Fire Station 8 Working Group and Arlington County Public Library HOUSE AT 2211 NORTH CULPEPER STREET

grocery. Later they built a home just up the street at 1127 Haslage. Eventually as the children became adults they all acquired there own homes on Has

Welcome to Hale House

Mary Ann Hodgson Collins Family Collection

SOUTH CAROLINA HALL OF FAME

NEW HAMPSHIRE HISTORIC PROPERTY DOCUMENTATION DINARDO-DUPUIS HOUSE NH STATE NO Wight Street, Berlin, Coos County, New Hampshire

ELI LILLY S EARLY WAWASEE DAYS MANUSCRIPT, 1960

Langdon Farm 7373 tilghman island road sherwood, maryland 21665

Rochester Avon Historical Society Research Reports

the magazine of splendid homes and gardens september/october 2012 new england RENOVATION

Guide to the Hunt family papers and undated (bulk )

HADWEN HOUSE. Hadwen House EILEEN POWERS, Nantucket Historical Association

1 3 1 We s t 6 9 th S t r e e t

Single-Family Townhouse in Majestic Neighborhood Lush Garden and Civil War Era Charm

NEW HAMPSHIRE HISTORIC PROPERTY DOCUMENTATION LESSARD HOUSE NH STATE NO Second Avenue, Berlin, Coos County, New Hampshire

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE MACDONALD HOUSE

City of Loveland Community and Strategic Planning Civic Center 500 East 3 rd Street Loveland, Colorado Fax

The Battle Family of Campsea Ashe

West Aurora Schools. Mary A. Todd. (West Aurora Teacher & Principal )

F a r m s & E s t a t e s R e a l t y, I n c. P r e m i e r P r o p e r t i e s

Twentieth Century Women

Haldane House 30 Paulding Avenue Cold Spring, NY

Fried Chicken and Chocolate Cake. The Story of Youngs Tea Room,

GOSS Hutt Valley - Upper Hutt Family History Genealogy Miscellaneous Information (Weblink HVFGossHulbertCollett)

NEW HAMPSHIRE HISTORIC PROPERTY DOCUMENTATION BICKFORD RENTAL HOUSE NH STATE NO First Avenue, Berlin, Coos County, New Hampshire

AASU Lane Library Special Collections, Eleanor W. Boyd Papers, Finding Aid

FULL NAME Alexandrina Victoria. DATE OF BIRTH May 24 th, 1819 PLACE OF BIRTH

Preen House 20 Linden Avenue, Sheffield S8 0GA

Ruth R. Woodman Papers,

A Finding Aid to the Edith Blake Research Papers. Record Unit 176

Teachers Guide GRADES NINTH - TWELFTH

CYNTHIA COULTER H O M E D E S I G N S

Mary Ralph Erkkila and Annie Sullivan Ralph Family Papers

Henry Schultz Lubbock

CHRS House and Garden Tour - May 13 and 14, 2017 Terrace Court, NE Outdoor Mini Tour

heritage property nomination form

Landmarks Approved Restoration of Iconic Red Brick Single-Family Gorgeous Open Concept Embraces Historical Detail and Modern Living

This Paper was written by. Katherine Hillock. for the 2007 Spring Semester of the. Historic Preservation Studio Course

The Historic Raleigh Times Building Restoration Project

NOW, THEREFORE, THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF CALGARY ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:

A Tribute to Emilie Wenban-Smith Brash: Granddaughter of Charles Valentine Riley. The Person

Guide to the Aaron Director Papers

List of Landmarks. Below are the properties currently designated as Cary Historic Landmarks:

J.J. Lankes Papers, (bulk , 1942)

Criteria Evaluation: Landmark staff found that the structure application meets History Criteria 1a, and Architecture Criterion 2a and 2b.

Robert W. Gerlach. November 29, February 17, Evelyn Bell Gerlach. May 17, February 17, World War I

Makes Dreams a Reality

Guide to the Pedro de Saisset Family Collection, circa No online items

APRIL GREIMAN. SAIC Introduction to Graphic Design Summer 2017 Lucy J. Nicholls

Steve Mizokami Senior Planner, City of Santa Monica. From: Christine Lazzaretto, Principal; Heather Goers, Architectural Historian Date: April 3, 2018

Material For Reference Only

Obituaries FREDERICK DOVETON NICHOLS

Algonquin Civil War Veterans Charles Clearman aka Kjalman (Swedish Name)

105 East 64th Street New York, New York $9,900,000 Price: $9,900,000 Approx SQFT: 6,300 $ Per SQFT: $1,571 R.E Taxes: $7,267monthly

A Touch of Glass. photography and editorial by sasfi hope ross.

Dr. Paula McKenzie Bethune-Cookman University 2017

Old Town, Chicago. 438 W. Eugenie Street. The History. The Location

Elegance, History and 21st Century Convenience in the Heart of Harlem. 133 West 1 22 nd Street

NEW HAMPSHIRE HISTORIC PROPERTY DOCUMENTATION JOSEPH DUBE HOUSE NH STATE NO First Avenue, Berlin, Coos County, New Hampshire

The Ward M. Canaday Center for Special Collections The University of Toledo

GERMAN UNION CEMETERY THREE-GENERATION GENEALOGY Created By: Ronald R. Prinzing

Author: Angus Skene Architect - for Owner of 35 Dinnick Dr. Victor Spear - As read to Heritage Committee,

STAFF REPORT NEW BEDFORD HISTORICAL COMMISSION MEETING July 10, 2017

APPROXIMATELY 45 MINUTES Please be respectful of private property. WELLINGTON STREET WALKING TOUR 47

Henry Abbott Lawrence. A Central Library for a City of 25, Ink and watercolor. 21 x 32 in.

Kieran Boughan. San Francisco Architect RESIDENTIAL

Masterpiece: Tree of Life (Art Glass Window), 1904 by Frank Lloyd Wright for the Darwin D. Martin House

British Museum in the 18 th century

119 Maywood Lane (DHR # )

CASA GRANDE HISTORY. He designed war plants during WW2 and then returned to Florida to resume his practice there.

Jackie After Jack: Portrait Of The Lady By Christopher P. Andersen

Guide to the Papers of John D. Runkle MC.0007

Giving Is Good. for the Soul. The Life and Legacy of Charles and Shirley Weiss

Unified Vision. Greater Minnesota. Owatonna. The Architecture and Design of the Prairie School Architectural tour:

Baye Fadioul Niang: A Brief Biography of an Ebeniste in Senegal

neuhaus Estate 4201 neuhaus drive, mcallen TX

South Harlem Free-Market with Original Details and Wonderful Light 143 West 120 th Street

This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on May 25, English Describing Archives: A Content Standard

GREENDALE FARM, BURTON ROAD, ELFORD, TAMWORTH, STAFFORDSHIRE, B79 9DJ

Development of Architectural Documentation in Japan: Accelerated by DOCOMOMO s Activities. Mari Nakahara, Ph.D.

TWENTY UPPER BROOK STREET MAYFAIR W1

KATHARINE WATSON ATKINS ORAL HISTORY INTERVIEW, 9 JANUARY 1978

A Finding Aid to the Thomas Downing Papers, circa , in the Archives of American Art

BUILDING INVENTORY SHEET

The New York Public Library Manuscripts and Archives Division

The W. D. Beaty House

C. E. Urban Elizabethtown Public High School: 70 South Poplar Street Elizabethtown, PA

Los Angeles Department of City Planning RECOMMENDATION REPORT

ABE PEPINSKY ( ) 1. Abe Pepinsky died in Norristown, Pennsylvania, on January 31,

Collection Allen family papers. Creators: Allen, Alfred Reginald, Allen, Alfred Reginald,

Rock Island County Courthouse History & Significance

alvar aalto houses 19F0CC576601BD7B431322D023A44EBD Alvar Aalto Houses 1 / 6

Beatrice Wickens Miller Sandford and Barbara Miller Sandford:

Hope Cottage, the Bow Garret and William Turner

HAROLD C. VOGEL Sculptor and Master Stone Carver

PERTUCH FAMILY PHOTOGRAPHS CA

C McVean, Ruby T. (1909- ), Papers, linear feet RESTRICTED

Property Name Haxton-Griffin Farm Location Athens vic., Greene County, New York NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES CONTINUATION SHEET

\ Town. St,- F O R M B - BUILDING. Massachusetts Historical Commission 80 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts 02116

Transcription:

VESTAL STREET NEIGHBORHOOD The small lane south of Main Street now named Vestal Street was known as Prison Lane in the late eighteenth century. Today Vestal Street is lined with a number of historic structures developed largely in the early nineteenth century as the town grew and several of its institutional buildings were relocated to this neighborhood. Nearby were the Town Hall (once located at the corner of Milk and Main Streets), jail (along Vestal) and poor house (once found at Quaker Lane). 7 Milk Street: Hinchman House Natural Science Museum Built in the early nineteenth century for Thomas Coffin, the Hinchman House belonged to Mitchell family members who were descendants of Maria Mitchell s uncle, Peleg Mitchell Jr. In 1945, the house came to the Maria Mitchell Association in the estate of C. Russell for use as the MMA s natural science museum. Today Hinchman House is the center of activity for research on a myriad of subjects related to the island s natural world from Burying Beetles and Black Widow spiders to the island s birds and snakes, to studies of the invasive species of the island and Ospreys and Barn Owls. Exhibits of the island s animals and insects and the plant life found on the island are on display. The Hinchman House is an excellent example of a late eighteenth and early nineteenth century Federal house with a five bay wide front and central hallway. It s interior retains simple woodwork, transoms over doors to allow light to pass through, built-in chests of drawers, simple paneling, interior shutters and two staircases. 1 Vestal Street: Maria Mitchell Birthplace In 1790, Hezekiah Swain purchased the lot on Vestal Street, then Prison Lane, to build a house in the typical Quaker style. In 1816, Aaron Mitchell purchased the House from Simeon Gardner and in 1818 sold it to his cousin William Mitchell. In that same year, William Mitchell, his wife Lydia Coleman Mitchell, and their two children, Andrew and Sally, moved into the House just in time to welcome a new addition to the family, Maria, on August 1, 1818. Later that year, William added a small addition to the House: a sink room. During their residency in the House, William Mitchell also used his prodigious skills as a craftsman to enhance the structure. By 1825, the needs of a rapidly growing family they would have ten children necessitated the addition of a new kitchen to the 1790 structure. In 1837, William Mitchell was offered a job as cashier at the Pacific National Bank. Mitchell moved his family to the apartments above the bank and sold the House at 1 Vestal Street to his youngest brother, Peleg Mitchell, Junior, a tinsmith. Peleg moved into the House with his new bride, Mary Russell Mitchell, living there until his death in 1882. Peleg also made a few alterations to the House, adding a milk room and a smaller kitchen on the northwest corner of the House with a grape arbor in 1850. He commissioned an itinerant painter to paint the 1825 Kitchen addition with decorative grain painting that still exists today. Sometime after the death of Peleg, Mary

Russell Mitchell moved to Philadelphia to be closer to her daughters but kept the home at 1 Vestal Street as a summer home. Due mainly to Mary Mitchell s deep belief in her Quaker values, the House was not modernized with electricity or running water, leaving the House in its nineteenth century condition. Maria Mitchell birthplace, 1 Vestal Street In 1902, family members, former Vassar College students, and friends of Maria Mitchell came together to form the Nantucket Maria Mitchell Association. Their intention for founding such an association was to carry on the legacy of Maria Mitchell. Maria Mitchell s love of the natural world; her constant quest to learn and understand; her love of the sciences and mathematics; her belief in learning-by-doing; and her pursuit of education both for herself and others, especially women, were the foundation on which the MMA was established. In 1903, the organization purchased the House at 1 Vestal Street, where Maria Mitchell was born, from the estate of Mary Russell Mitchell, aunt of Maria Mitchell. In 1945, the MMA was given the house at 7 Milk Street for a natural science museum and the Mitchell House took on the sole responsibility of interpreting the life of Maria Mitchell and her family. In the 1920 s, a charming stencil with an astronomical theme was installed in the downstairs and upstairs hallways adding to the collection of decorative painting in the structure. Listed as the Swain-Mitchell House in the Historic American Buildings Survey, the two and a half story shingled home has a central ridge chimney with six fireplaces that dominates the roofline and is surrounded by a typical roofwalk. The offcenter front door is complimented with a transom and has an eccentric mix of twelve over twelve lights, as well as nine over nine lights, eight over eight, eight over six, six over

six, and several smaller windows. The original structure included a parlor, kitchen, and birthing room on the first floor; three bedrooms on the second floor; and an open attic. The House boasts original decorative paint on the floors and walls, a large collection of original family pieces, no electricity or running water, and it maintains its original plaster. Original mirror and cradle boards can be found in several rooms. The Mitchell House is the best example left on the island in its purest form of a typical Nantucket Quaker style home. Vestal Street Observatory The MMO as it is often referred to was built to house Maria Mitchell s five-inch Alvan Clark telescope which she purchased in the 1850s with money raised by the Women of America headed by Elizabeth Peabody. Built in four months in 1908 for a cost of $4,800.00, the MMO s inception was brought about with the help of astronomers Annie Jump Cannon, Edward Pickering of Harvard and the generous gifts of many, including Andrew Carnegie. The Observatory has had a long and illustrious career of research and discovery. Its first astronomer and director, Margaret Harwood, was the first woman to head a small private observatory in North America. Its second director, Dorrit Hoffleit, Ph.D., is known for her work with the National Science Foundation and a grant she received in 1957 to allow for the summer training of female undergraduate students in astronomy. Note the brick addition to the east added in 1922 which abuts the Mitchell House s 1825 kitchen. Also note that the brick sides of the original section are not straight, but slant inward as they approach the roof and the dome typical of Egyptian Revival architecture of the period. The dome, the original was replaced in 1951, now houses a seventeen-inch research telescope purchased with a grant from the National Science Foundation. Additionally, the Observatory houses an exhibit on astronomy, as well as a display of the telescope once used in the dome that took photographic plates of the night sky for over fifty years.

A late-nineteenth-century view of 5 Vestal with an unidentified woman on the stoop 5 Vestal Street Hezekiah Paddack (1794 1882) probably built this one-and-three-quarter-story house at 5 Vestal Street soon after he purchased the land in 1836. For almost fifty years it was his homestead, where he and his wife, Maria, and their three children lived. With its central ridge chimney and shed roof extension in the rear, the house combines elements of the saltbox style and the traditional Nantucket house, but it is essentially a small-scale Greek Revival house like those at 7 and 9 Vestal Street, and 4 Bloom Street. The doorway was moved to the east side of the house in the late twentieth century, but has been returned to its original location facing Vestal Street. The Paddack house was sold to Harriett A. Smith in 1883, for $550; it is probably Harriett who is pictured at the front door of the house in a photograph from the 1880s. Photographer Walter Lucas and his wife, Eleanor, were longtime owners of the house in the late twentieth century. Like several other houses on the tour, 5 Vestal Street retains simple Greek Revival moldings. Of special note are features in the kitchen area, including the brick fireplace with a board above containing the original owner s name (found hanging from a rafter), old wide board flooring, an untouched back staircase, and a door in the mud room which is painted to simulate maple; it was probably taken from another part of the house and reused.

4 Bloom Street When Hezekiah Paddack built his house at 5 Vestal Street, his neighbor at the corner of Bloom Street was a small boatbuilder s shop owned by Job Macy 2nd, whose son, Edmund (b. 1812), was in the same trade. In 1841, Edmund bought the land behind the shop on Bloom Street from his father, and built the one-and-three-quarter-story Greek Revival style house with a clapboard front. In 1852, he purchased the boatbuilder s shop, but by that time he had likely been in business there with his father for more than a decade. The shop was removed sometime before 1887, when the first Sanborn Insurance Company map of the island was published. Edmund and his wife, Elizabeth, had three sons born at 5 Vestal. When economic depression his Nantucket in the 1860s, Edmund became an insolvent debtor. His house was sold to Elizabeth Adlington for $200 in 1863. Note the floor, baseboards, doors with upper lights, mantels as well as the typical Greek Revival moldings with bull s eye corner blocks. The living room was originally two rooms and evidence of the dividing wall is visible in the floorboards. The kitchen is housed in a new or rebuilt wing which incorporates old flooring. 6 Vestal Street Known as the Starbuck Cooper Shop, the construction date of the building at 6 Vestal is unknown. The structure may have been built by Joseph Starbuck (1774 1861) or constructed in the 18th century and later acquired by him. One of the most successful shipowners on the island, Joseph was renowned for his business acumen, and remembered as the man who built the Three Bricks on Main Street for his three sons. When the boatbuilder s shop (now removed) across the street was in business, and Starbuck s coopers were at work, Vestal Street was noisy with commerce. Two of Starbuck s sons, along with his four daughters, sold the cooper shop to his oldest son, George Starbuck, in 1861, after Joseph died. George sold the building to sailmaker William P. Ceely (1810 82) the same year; it remained in the Ceely family for many years, and was used as a cobbler shop in the 1880s, and as a carpenter s shop in the early twentieth century. After more than a hundred years as a work space, the old cooperage was converted to a dwelling in the late twentieth century. The building is an excellent example of adaptive reuse. The original work space provides a large open plan for contemporary living. Note the timber frame construction and historic floorboards throughout the first floor. A hatch is evident in the floor between the staircase and kitchen.

Postcard by Henry S. Wyer c. 1905 with 13 Vestal (left) and 16 Vestal 16 Vestal Street William C. Swain (1801 1885) purchased thirty rods of land from master mariner Reuben Swain in May of 1835 for $240 and in December of the same year he sold the land and a new dwelling house to Reuben Swain 2nd (1787 1861) for $1,200. Research indicates that Reuben Swain 2nd was not the son of the Reuben Swain who originally owned the land, nor was he closely related to William C. Swain, who was a well-to-do merchant married to Joseph Starbuck s daughter Mary. William and Mary Swain lived at 92 Main Street, across from Mary s brothers, who lived at the Three Bricks. The daughters of Reuben Swain 2nd sold their father s house to widow Hepsabeth Chase in 1861. Chase held it until 1883. In the twentieth century the house was owned for thirty-two years by author Alice Alberton Shurrocks and her husband, architect Alfred Shurrocks, who may have moved the front door to the east side and added the dormer to the north roof facing the street. Note the fine staircase riser detail in the hallway, the simple Greek Revival- style mantels with classical features, original plaster walls, mirror board (between windows) and old flooring. 13 Vestal Street Gorham Hussey (1797 1879) and his wife, Lydia Macy (1798 1885), probably built the house at 13 Vestal Street shortly after their marriage in 1820. Lydia was the daughter of Job Macy, whose boatbuilder s shop was at the corner of Bloom Street; her younger brother, Edmond, built the house at 4 Bloom two decades later. Gorham and Lydia lived for sixty-five years at 13 Vestal, and their six children were born here. In 1927, artist Edgar Jenney purchased the house, and he and his wife, Kate, summered on Vestal Street for twenty years. Photographer John A. McCalley and his wife, Adrienne, owned the

house from 1959 to 1983. 13 Vestal is a typical Nantucket house: two-and-a-half stories high, with a ridge chimney; it was originally three bays wide, with the fourth bay on the west side during the Jenney ownership. Note the entry way with old photographs of the house up the staircase and the mortgage button in the newel post. The fanlight, added in the early twentieth century by Jenney, is not visible from the interior. The parlor was extended the beam in the ceiling marks the original room s end wall. The room holds a collection of Nantucket artwork, including watercolors by Edgar Jenney in the far corner (notice paintings by Hill, Bailey, Frazier and others throughout the first floor). The dining room also shows the evolution of the house with the addition of the later bay window and the twentieth century china cabinet added during the McCalley period. The garden s upper terrace once held the local women s jail. Biographical Sketches of Several Vestal Street Residents Maria Mitchell (1818-1889) Maria Mitchell was an astronomer, librarian, naturalist, and above all, educator. She discovered a comet through a telescope, for which she was awarded a gold medal by the King of Denmark. She was then thrust into the international spotlight and became America s first professional female astronomer. The Quaker tradition taught that both boys and girls should be educated and Maria received an education at local schools and from her father s tutoring. Her father was a great influence on her life; Maria developed her love of astronomy from his instruction on surveying and navigation. At age 12, Maria helped her father calculate the position of their home by observing a solar eclipse. Maria Mitchell By 14, sailors trusted her to do vital navigational computations for their long whaling journeys. Maria pursued her love of learning as a young woman, becoming the Nantucket Atheneum s first librarian. She and her father continued to acquire astronomical equipment and conduct observations. On October 1st, 1847, Maria was sweeping the sky from the roof of the Pacific National Bank on Main Street, where her father was a cashier. She spotted a small blurry object that did not appear on her charts. She had discovered a comet! After achieving her fame,

Maria was widely sought after and went on to achieve many great things. She resigned her post at the Atheneum in 1856 to travel throughout the US and Europe. In 1865, she became Professor of Astronomy at the newly-founded Vassar College. Maria was an inspiration to her students. It was Vassar College that Maria felt was truly her home. She believed in learning by doing, and in the capacity of women to achieve what their male counterparts could. Miss Mitchell was beloved by her students whom she taught until her retirement in 1888, due to failing health. She died in 1889, and was buried next to her father in Nantucket s Prospect Hill Cemetery. (Courtesy of MMA) Edgar Jenney (1869 1939) Born in New Bedford, Edgar Jenney was a professional artist who studied in Boston and Paris. Early in his career he worked as a designer of stained glass and studied architectural drafting. After more than twenty years of employment with a prestigious New York interior design firm, he retired in 1927, and began spending time at 13 Vestal Street, his Nantucket home. Jenney is known for his watercolor paintings of Nantucket interiors, which reflect his interest in architecture, design, and decor. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York exhibited forty-five of his interiors posthumously in 1939; forty-one of those interiors were of Nantucket houses. Jenney was also an ardent preservationist, spending the winter of 1932-33 on the island sharing his knowledge of eighteenth- and early- nineteenth- century builders guides with local craftsmen. He hoped to inspire those who repaired and maintained Nantucket s historic buildings with an appreciation and respect for the houses in their care. Information about Edgar Jenney is derived from a discussion of the artist in Picturing Nantucket: An Art History of the Island with Paintings from the Collection of the Nantucket Historical Association, edited by Michael Jehle (NHA, 2000) John W. McCalley (1912 83) Like Edgar Jenney, John McCalley was a preservationist, serving as chairman of Nantucket s Historic District Commission from 1963 to 1968. He was also a longtime member of the Nantucket Conservation Foundation, but he is best known on Nantucket today as the photographer whose images of local architecture are found in the Historic American Buildings Surveys of the late 1960s and early 70s. McCalley, described as a man of great intellectual range and depth, worked as an economist at the Brookings Institute in Washington, D.C., and served as a research economist for the Federal Reserve Bank before becoming a professor of economics at the City College of New York. He had been interested in photography since he was an undergraduate at the University of California at Berkeley, however, and he pursued that avocation when he moved to Nantucket in 1960. McCalley had a photography studio in his home at 13 Vestal Street, aptly called Studio 13, where he developed photographs and took studio portraits of people, but he also explored the island in winter and summer, photographing landmarks and landscapes. His book, Nantucket Yesterday and Today, published in 1981, showcases contemporary photographs of historic houses, juxtaposed with nineteenth-century photographs of the same houses and streetscapes.

Dining room of 13 Vestal when it was the home of John McCalley Alfred F. Shurrocks (1870 1945) Alice Albertson Shurrocks (1880 1967) Alfred Shurrocks was born in Providence, Rhode Island, and graduated from M.I.T. with a degree in architecture. In 1927, he was appointed the consulting architect for the restoration of the NHA s Oldest House on Sunset Hill by the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities. That project led to others on the island, and he settled here and married Alice Albertson in 1929. Some of his other historic restoration and renovation projects include the Caleb Gardner house at 139 Main Street, and the house on Gull Island, off Centre Street; he designed one of the first summer houses in Dionis for Jacqueline Harris in the early 1930s. It is fitting that Alice Albertson Shurrocks lived on Vestal Street (16 Vestal); she was a cousin of Maria Mitchell. A Philadelphia native, Alice devoted decades of her life to the Natural Science Department of the Maria Mitchell Association, and she and her husband, Alfred, accumulated a large collection of local Native American artifacts. Her memoir, Two Steps Down, published in 1953, recalls childhood memories of her grandparents, Peleg Mitchell and Mary S. Mitchell, and their Nantucket home. A 1958 publication, A Grain of Mustard Seed, is devoted to Nantucket botany, one of Alice s many interests.