Bronze tablets marking site of Roger Williams House and Spring
Landing Place
The house at 237 North Main Street occupies a part of the
original home lot of Roger Williams
A tablet on this house indicates where Roger Williams house stood
Remains of wall and stonework which formed his hearth are found here
The landing of Roger Williams and his companions in June 1636 by the
Late Chief Justice Thomas Durfee
They entered the cove whose natural basin receiving the unpolluted
tides of the bay and the virgin waters of the Woonasquatucket and
the Moshassuck
Diffuse them widely into inlet and pool
Across sandy bar and over sedgy flats that are now traversed by busy
thoroughfares but then frequented only by flocks of feeding water
fowl or by the dusky fowler in his frail canoe
They continued their stately course until before them they beheld a
spring
Which gushing from the verdant turf and pouring its crystal trubute to the
cove invites them to disembark
There beaching their boat on the smooth white sand they step ashore
They slake their thirst at the spring and invoke the divine blessing and
Providence Plantations are begun
Providence RI