The Providence Journal

‘Walking Rhode Island’ book signing

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marked trail. Openings in the trees offered great views of the 41-acre pond.

The trail exits the woods and follows Plain Road for a short distance, crossing an outlet from the pond that forms Coney Brook. An old stone slab bridge built over the brook can be seen just off the road to the right.

We walked up the road on a gentle slope flanked by stone walls, with private property on the right and a huge pasture on the left where a swarm of starlings darted across the sky.

After reaching a white fence in front of a red barn, we turned left at a gate and followed an unblazed, dirt farm road called the Packer Trail. On the right, two, wide, parallel columns of tall pine trees form a quiet, needle-covered corridor to the Waite-Tillinghas­t cemetery.

The Tillinghas­ts arrived in Providence from England in 1643. Later, some family members moved to West Greenwich, where they farmed and cut and sold wood in the 1800s and early 1900s, according to research done by Tim Mooney, a co-leader of our group and the marketing and communicat­ions manager for the Rhode Island chapter of The Nature Conservanc­y.

Daniel Tillinghas­t (1815-1906) was perhaps the most prominent family member and served as town moderator in West Greenwich for 18 years.

Over the years, the Tillinghas­ts combined a number of adjacent parcels to expand their farmland. They owned the property until 1935, when it was sold to Robert L. Knight and his brother, Benjamin, who became “gentlemen farmers.” Their grandfathe­r, also Robert L. Knight, founded Fruit of the Loom. Later, the land was sold to Edward McAlpine, whose descendant­s transferre­d the land to The Nature Conservanc­y in 2007.

Historic cemeteries along the trail

I entered the historic cemetery through an iron gate and noted that the graveyard was ringed with large stone block walls topped with an iron railing, which was often a sign of wealthy landowners. Daniel Tillinghas­t’s grave is marked with a large stone. His wife, Halma, the daughter of Silas Waite, another farmer, is nearby. I also spotted an American flag on the grave of Henry Tillinghas­t (1835-1909) and three small, unmarked stones for infants, two of which were dated 1831 and the other 1841.

When we returned to the Packer Trail, our group walked between several large fields where tenant farmers cut and store hay in white, plastic-wrapped bundles.

After a short descent, the trail passes a wooden structure on the left called Sally House, named for Sally Bennett, a relative of Stephen Bennett (1777-1849), who farmed the land. Behind the house are several dilapidate­d structures, including a shed and a garage. Across the road are stone walls and the remains of old wells.

Continuing on the Packer Trail, we spotted the Stephen Bennett cemetery, almost hidden under pines on a hillside on the right. Most of the headstones were covered by brush and shrubs, but I found an iron gate between two stone pillars at the back of the cemetery.

After some inspection, we followed the raised farm road over some lowlands and passed two unusual sets of high, curved bridges built over streams that run to Coney Brook, which flows south to merge with water flowing out of Wickaboxet Pond to form Kelley Brook and eventually runs into the Wood River.

The bridges were built of round stones and later reinforced with concrete. When we brushed leaves from the top of the walls, we discovered that one was engraved with “L.A.” and another with “Mason” and dated 1911. Mason and Lloyd Tillinghas­t were sons of Daniel Tillinghas­t.

The road took us slightly uphill to a 25-acre pasture ringed with trees. On a hillock in the middle of the field is the small Ladd graveyard with about a dozen fieldstone­s. One marble stone with a curved top is engraved for a farmer named Daniel Ladd (1783-1862).

When we stopped for a break, Mooney told the story of a huge, granite boulder that had been excavated from the field and moved west to the edge of the management area to mark the start of the Shepard Trail off Hazard Road.

Picture-postcard Rhode Island scenery

At the far side of the field, the path continued into the woods, but we decided to stop and retrace our steps and headed back east on the Packer Trail. As we walked, we saw the red barn we had passed earlier rise above the hayfields on a hillside to create a classic Rhode Island scene. We also spotted a weather vane on top of a cupola and an adjacent silo. The barn and 10 surroundin­g acres, which The Nature Conservanc­y bought in 2019 with open-space funds from the DEM, is a roosting site for bats.

Back at the gate on Plain Road, it’s possible to cross the fields and walk east to get to the white-blazed trail around the pond, but to avoid private property, I suggest walking back down the road and picking up the trail that opens on the left, just before the stone slab bridge.

The path winds around the pond to a pine needle-covered peninsula. On earlier

John Kostrzewa’s new book,

“Walking Rhode Island: 40 Hikes for Nature and History Lovers with Pictures, GPS Coordinate­s and Trail Maps,” is available at local bookseller­s and from Amazon.com. He’ll sell and sign books at the Rhode Island Authors Expo on Saturday, Dec. 2, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Crowne Plaza Ballroom in Warwick.

hikes, I’d lingered on a trail bench in a shady spot there and surveyed the kayakers and canoeists paddling around the pond. In late fall, though, all is quiet.

The path ran across the top of an earthen ridge, ducked into the trees, crossed a wooden bridge over a stream and then continued around the pond. There’s a short path on the right to Howard’s Rest, named for Howard White Murre, a humanitari­an, naturalist and donor to conservati­on causes.

Signs of beaver activity at the edge of a cove

Farther along the trail, we came to another side spur that led to a wooden observatio­n deck with a great view of the lily pad-covered pond. I scanned the wild, natural shoreline and spotted several duck boxes.

We took a short break and then continued on the trail as it rose and fell over ridges, passed some erratics and then dropped down to a line of bog bridges over wetlands at the northern tip of the pond. The trail then climbed a hillside and headed south. We followed the banks and passed a junction to the yellow-blazed Flintlock Loop, which runs east into the Wickaboxet Management Area.

We took a side spur and had a good look at two beaver lodges built at the edge of a cove. The path led to a bench on the banks of the pond. The quiet spot is named Phebe’s Grove, for Phebe Shepard, the wife of John Shepard of the department store family and the daughter of Edward McAlpine, once the property’s owner.

When McAlpine died in 1975, the land known as Glen Avon Farm passed to Phebe. After she died, her descendant­s honored her wishes to donate some land and sell other parcels to The Nature Conservanc­y. A sign at the grove reads that Phebe “fiercely protected” the land, pond, wildlife and forest in the preserve.

We walked back to the white-blazed trail and followed it along the east edge of the pond to a junction. We went right on a flat path that wound through thick, white pines and crossed stone walls before returning to where we’d started.

In all, we walked about 5 miles for about 21⁄2 hours.

The rich history of the Tillinghas­ts and the other families who owned the farmland for hundreds of years is important to remember. But, it’s equally important to acknowledg­e the preservati­on of the land, pond, fields, watershed and woodlands that make up part of a 45,000-acre, unfragment­ed forest that stretches across the Rhode IslandConn­ecticut border.

All that makes Tillinghas­t a special, unique place.

John Kostrzewa’s column runs every other week in the Rhode Islander section of the Providence Sunday Journal. He welcomes email at johnekostr­zewa@gmail.com.

 ?? JOHN KOSTRZEWA/SPECIAL TO PROVIDENCE JOURNAL ?? The Packer Trail in the Tillinghas­t Pond Management Area starts off Plain Road.
JOHN KOSTRZEWA/SPECIAL TO PROVIDENCE JOURNAL The Packer Trail in the Tillinghas­t Pond Management Area starts off Plain Road.

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