After living for a time in a rented home in
Lenox, Massachusetts, author
Nathaniel Hawthorne considered purchasing a home for his family. He assured his wife
Sophia Peabody that his publishers
Ticknor & Fields "promise the most liberal advances of money, should we need it, towards buying the house." On March 8, 1852, Hawthorne finalized his purchase of the house for $1,500 from the Alcotts. After buying the house, Hawthorne wrote, "Mr Alcott... had wasted a good deal of money in fitting it up to suit his own taste—all of which improvements I get for little or nothing. Having been much neglected, the place is the raggedest in the world but it will make, sooner or later, a comfortable and sufficiently pleasant home." The Hawthornes had previously lived in Concord at
The Old Manse, which they moved to after their July 9, 1842, wedding. Their new home was about two miles from there noting that it stood so close to the road that it could have been mistaken for a coach stop. He explained in a letter: "I think [it] a better name, and more morally suggestive than that which... Mr. Alcott... bestowed on it." Bronson never accepted the name change and continued referring to it as "Hillside". Some time in 1852, the Hawthornes hired Henry David Thoreau to survey the property. The young six-year old
Julian Hawthorne, the second of the Hawthornes' three children, accompanied him in silence. Thoreau remarked to the boys father he was a "good boy! Sharp eyes, and no tongue". By October 1852, Hawthorne wrote to his friend
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "I am beginning to take root here, and feel myself, for the first time in my life, really at home."
European trips The family moved to England when Nathaniel Hawthorne was appointed United States consul at Liverpool; he served in that role from August 1, 1853, to October 12, 1857. Shortly before leaving, on June 14, 1853, friend and poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow held a farewell dinner party at his
Cambridge home. The Hawthornes stayed in Europe until 1860 and, during that time, they leased The Wayside to family members including Sophia's sister,
Mary Peabody, who later married
Horace Mann. During her time in the house,
Franklin Benjamin Sanborn stayed at The Wayside for a night while hiding his connection to
John Brown's
raid on Harpers Ferry. The Hawthornes' son Julian later went to Sanborn's school. Before returning to the United States, the Hawthornes spent several months in Italy where, in April 1859, Nathaniel grew a mustache. While the Hawthornes were overseas, the Alcotts had Henry David Thoreau survey the land next door to The Wayside. The site was the former home of a man named John Moore and was surrounded by elms and
butternut trees, and included an apple orchard. They purchased the home, which they named
Orchard House, for $945 (~$ in ) on September 22, 1857. The Hawthornes referred to it as "Apple Slump". While the Orchard House was being renovated, the Alcott family rented a wing of The Wayside. Unlike Bronson Alcott, Nathaniel was not known for socializing with his neighbors. He often used the hilltop in his backyard as a means of escaping social interactions. As Bronson noted, "he feared his neighbor's eyes would catch him as he walked." The children of the respective families, however, became quite friendly. Bronson was disappointed in his inability to connect with Nathaniel and noted, "Nobody gets a chance to speak with him unless by accident." Louisa was surprised the neighboring families did not become better friends. She wrote, "We did all we could to heal the breach between the families but they held off, so we let things rest."
Return to the United States After the family returned to the United States in 1860, Nathaniel considered moving to Boston, noting, "I am really at a loss to imagine how we are to squeeze ourselves into that little old cottage of mine." Nevertheless, the family made several changes to the home, most notably the three-story tower on the back of the house. The top room became Nathaniel's study—he named it his "sky parlor"—though the tin roof made the room very hot in summer and very cold in winter. During those months he used the front parlor for his writing. Julian Hawthorne moved his bedroom to the first floor sitting room. Next-door neighbor Bronson Alcott cut paths and planted gardens for the Hawthornes, which included
fir trees and
larches imported from England, and Thoreau surveyed the property for $10. Urged by his friend
Horatio Bridge, he took a trip to
Washington, D.C., where he met President
Abraham Lincoln in the spring of 1862. Nathaniel noted he was "about the homeliest man I ever saw" but that he "liked this sallow, queer, sagacious visage". He visited several sites related to the War and the Army especially in Virginia, where he traveled for a time with writer
Nathaniel Parker Willis. He returned to the Wayside on April 10, 1862, and less than a month later sent
The Atlantic an essay titled "
Chiefly About War Matters by a Peaceable Man". Fields, editor of
The Atlantic, had accompanied Nathaniel on the trip at Sophia's request and insisted on changes to the essay. He and publishing partner
William Ticknor agreed that comments about President Lincoln's odd features and references to "Uncle Abe" should be omitted. Nathaniel cut the entire section, though he considered it "the only part of the article really worth publishing" and lamented, "What a terrible thing it is to try to let off a little bit of truth into this miserable humbug of a world!"
The Atlantic received very "cruel and terrible notes", Fields claimed, after the article was published. In the late spring of 1864, Nathaniel took ill and traveled with his friend, the former President of the United States
Franklin Pierce. It was on this trip that Nathaniel died on May 19, 1864. On hearing the news, Louisa May Alcott sent the family a bouquet of violets picked from Nathaniel's walking path by the Wayside. Sophia and the three children moved to England shortly after; she sold The Wayside in 1870. ==The Lathrops and the Lothrops==