Fort Juniper
“Home is this little house in which I live, and much beyond it.” — Robert Francis, 1986
170 Market Hill Road
Solitaire [View 2]
The View from Robert Francis Footbridge
A Small, Small House
Robert Frost Trail [view 2]
Tree, Twine, Vine
Southern Terminus of a Short, Short Walk
Stove/Heater
Robert Francis Footbridge [View 3]
Robert Francis Footbridge [View 2]
Robert Francis Footbridge [View 1]
Plans for Fort Juniper
A Path in the Woods
Mill River [View 3]
Meadow near Fort Juniper
Lord Wilbur’s Oak [View 1]
Mill River [View 2]
Looking Through Fort Juniper
Lord Wilbur’s Oak [View 2]
Factory Hollow Pond [View 2]
A Fort in the Woods
Henry’s Note
Factory Hollow Pond [View 3]
A Bend in the River [Spring]
A Bend in the River [Late Winter]
A Bend in the River [Summer]
A Bend in the River [Winter]
Francis' Piano
Fort Juniper
Factory Hollow Pond [View 1]
And If You Look in Through the Door...
Encounter [Robert Frost Trail]
Cushman Brook [View 1]
Cushman Brook [View 5]
Come Out Into the Sun
House for Robert Francis
A Broken View
Black Lives Matter
Black Oak at Fort Juniper
Elevation View of Fort Juniper
Fort Juniper is the name of a small one-person house in the woods of Amherst, Massachusetts. It was built by the poet Robert Francis (1901-87) in 1940 and served as his home until his death. Presently, it is used to host poets-in-residence through the Robert Francis Trust.
While wandering in the woods as a teenager, I often encountered an older man in a cap, someone I never spoke to; many years later, I learned that the man who tipped his hat to me was the poet Robert Francis. It was in this area of Amherst where I first forged my sense of intimacy with the land, and it was in these same environs, Francis would walk for inspiration. Via Francis’ poems and prose, I am seeing my former hometown with new eyes and capturing the intersection of his understanding of this place with my own experience.
Many people know of the other two great poets from Amherst, Robert Frost, and Emily Dickinson, and an additional aim of this project is to bring more attention to Francis and his work. For Francis, Fort Juniper was more than just an abode in which to reside; it was a fort to shelter him, a lens through which he viewed the world, and a mirror with which to observe his inner states. In researching Francis, I have read his autobiography, poems, and many of his newspaper columns. Tales of walks and neighbors, trees and chickens, these are the observations made with the eyes of a poet. It is from Francis’ reflections and poetry that I occasionally cull titles and inspiration for my images.
The area being photographed is growing naturally to include parts of the river that flow away from Fort Juniper towards my childhood home and other locations related to Francis. In essence, this project allows me entrance into a world I had left many years ago and the opportunity to explore how and where our lives interweave through time.
Amherst, Massachusetts, is on the unceded homeland of the Pocumtuc Nation, specifically the Norrwutuck community. The land is part of the ancestral homeland of the larger Pocumtuc "confederacy," which included villages along the Connecticut River.
