Elisabeth and George Keith:  1770 Innkeepers

    Elisabeth and George Keith's inn provided a welcome overnight stay for weary
    Post Road travelers during colonial New England times.  Traveling from New York
    to Boston over dusty, bumpy roads in a cramped stagecoach was not a pleasant
    journey.  Mendon served as one of the stopovers for a good night's sleep and a
    hot meal.  The Keith Inn opened in the village center in 1770 at what is now ten
    Hastings Street (corner of Route 16 and Elm St.) and provided lodging for the next
    thirty years.

    Post Road is America's oldest interstate highway (1672).  It was divided into three
    parts: upper, middle, and lower.  Middle Post Road went through Mendon in a
    southwest-northeast direction a few hundred yards north of the village center.  (A
    stone marker is located across from Clough School.)  Travel was difficult and
    uncomfortable over a long distance, so inns were a pleasant place for relaxation.  
    The newly elected President George Washington toured New England by way of
    Post Road in 1789, and he concluded that if the new nation were to grow and
    prosper, then the roads connecting the cities had to be greatly improved.

    Keith's Inn had an interesting history.  On December 3, 1770, a town meeting
    being held at the Fourth Meetinghouse was moved to the inn because the
    meetinghouse was too cold.  George Keith died in 1774, so Elisabeth operated the
    inn by herself until she married John Hill in 1780. They ran the inn together until
    her death in 1802 at the age of 86. John sold the inn to Atty. Seth Hastings who
    used it as a residence. A few years later, Seth had the building moved to a new
    location  at 26 Maple Street and built a new brick building in its place.     
                                                                                 
    The closing of the Keith Inn came at the same time that Middle Post Road was
    discontinued. The wider, smoother Hartford Turnpike opened in 1804, and
    segments of Post Road were sold as private property. New stagecoach lines
    continued to bring travelers to Mendon, and they stayed at another popular inn
    down the street owned by the Ammidon family. Mendon Village Center, with Seth
    Hastings' influence, soon grew and prospered. However, it was at a special time in
    our history, when our nation was being formed, that Post Road brought travelers
    from New York to Boston, and their journey was made more comfortable by staying
    overnight at a Mendon inn.

    Russell and Anne Dudley are the current owners of the George and Elisabeth
    Keith Inn at 26 Maple Street.
                             
    Richard Grady                                                                                                         
    Mendon, MA

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The Keith Inn - 26 Maple Street

North Avenue, across from Clough School.