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  1. A National Historic Landmark in Stonington, Connecticut, the 1901 James Merrill House is a late-Victorian commercial & residential building significant for its forty-one-year association with American poet James Ingram Merrill. Learn more about 107 Water Street.

  2. James Ingram Merrill (1926–1995) stands among the leading literary figures of his generation, winner of a Pulitzer Prize, National Book Award (twice), and widely admired for lyrical, beautifully crafted poems that explore such universal themes as love, memory, and the inevitable passing of time.

  3. Two of the former street-level tenants occupied their retail spaces for over 50 years and knew Merrill as their landlord and friend. The second-floor rental apartments maintain their late Victorian façade and floor plans.

  4. The James Merrill House is a 19th-century late-Victorian style house at 107 Water Street in Stonington Borough in southeastern Connecticut, formerly owned by poet James Merrill. Upon his death in 1995, the house was kept by the village as a home for writers and scholars.

  5. The James Merrill House. The first writers in residence came to the James Merrill House nearly 30 years ago, shortly after James Merrill’s death in 1995. Since then, over 100 writers have visited, staying in his home, now a National Historic Landmark, to work on projects of their own.

  6. APPLICATIONS FOR 2025-26 RESIDENCIES WILL BEGIN OCTOBER 1, 2024. In recognition of Merrills own contributions to Stonington, and his longstanding generosity, the fellowship provides living and working space and a $1,100 stipend to a writer to complete a project of literary or academic merit.

  7. Significant for its close, forty-one-year association with American poet James Ingram Merrill (1926–1995), the eclectically styled, shingle-clad building at 107 Water Street originally contained street-level retail space, second-floor clubrooms and third-floor living quarters.

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