Images of Post Office Square & Jarves Street
- Kaethe Maguire
- Nov 12, 2020
- 2 min read
This building at 1 Jarves Street was created in 1866 during the post-Civil War building boom. This building remains, although the adjacent building on the corner of Main is no longer and now we have a patio garden of the Brown Jug in that space.

Some remember the building as Buttner's (below), but many years earlier, the upstairs of the building was used as a meeting place for post Civil War veterans, and was named after Charles Chipman who died in the Civil War. It was called the Grand Army of the Republic, and after WWI it became the American Legion.
The upstairs was also used as a general meeting place for officials, and during parades which always took place between Town Hall Square and Post Office Square, VIP's would stand on the second floor deck and wave to on goers.




The commercial building behind the RR Crossing, 1 Church Street, was owned by S.I. Morse and used as a coal shed and hay and grain storage according to the 1915 Sanborn map.
The nearer building on the left, 43 Jarves Street, was once the home of the Embroult family in the 1930's, according to the Barnstable Patriot. Sisters Merilyn Myers & Thelma Burke (maiden names Embroult) lived there.


Kaethe Maguire is a member of the Friends of the Sandwich Town Archives, a dedicated, all-volunteer, 501(c)(3) nonprofit committed to supporting and promoting the archives’ collections and the rich, diverse history of the town of Sandwich.
Comments