Captain Reuben Shapley was a Portsmouth
mariner, merchant, and shipbuilder born on the Isle of Shoals’ Star Island
in 1750. He was married to Lydia Blaisdell Shapley, and they had one daughter,
Nancy, who died in 1802 at the young age of 17.
In 1789, Captain Shapley purchased a three-story home next
door to this house – a building that no longer exists – on the lot just east on
Court Street. He subsequently bought this lot in 1790 and constructed either a workshop or a store here.
On the evening of August 13, 1811, a sailing ship owned by
Captain Shapley, the Wonolanset,
caught fire. According to Nathaniel Adams' 1825 book, Annals of Portsmouth, the ship “had
arrived from sea about an hour before, laden with hemp, cotton, molasses, naval
stores and flour, and lay at Shapley’s Wharf.” Although townspeople tried to
extinguish the blaze, the fire persisted, and they were forced to cut the vessel loose and
let it drift safely out into the river and away from other vulnerable ships and
warehouses. Captain Shapley’s loss was estimated at $12,000.
By the year 1813, he had converted this workshop or store to
the house that exists today. Captain Shapley died in 1825, but the house continued as part of his
estate until 1831.
“Whatever virtues could command respect and insure
attachment were united in the character of this estimable man. Kind, liberal,
and humane, his good deeds have erected a monument to his name more lasting
than marble, and now that he rests from his labors his works do follow him.”
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