Description
Rock Rest is located on the northwest side of Brave Boat Harbor Road (on this section designatedHistory
The property was purchased in 1938 by Clayton and Hazel Sinclair; both were originally from New York City, and had served on the staffs hired by white summer visitors to Maine before they met. In New York City, Hazel Sinclair had worked as a ladies maid to a family that summered in Maine. Clayton Sinclair, who worked at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, enlarged what was originally a modest Cape. The Sinclairs began taking in guest lodgers at some point before the end of World War II. The Sinclairs continued to operate the business after Maine passed a civil rights law governing public accommodations in 1971, and only closed in 1977 due to poor health.Reputation
Drawn in part by Hazel's reputation as a cook, word of mouth brought them additional business, and they formally opened Rock Rest as a summer guest house in 1946. The property accommodated 16 guests at its height, and housed as many as 50 at parties during the summer season in the 1950s. The predominantly Black clientele was drawn mostly from the northeastern United States. The Sinclairs advertised through postcards they sent to a mailing list they maintained. The business was successful even though it did not advertise in publications catering to the African-American traveling public, such as '' The Negro Motorist Green Book.''Legacy
Rock Rest is included in the 2020 documentary ''Driving While Black'', which showed on PBS. The film was based on the book ''Driving While Black: African American Travel and the Road to Civil Rights'' by Gretchen Sorin. In the film, Valerie Cunningham, founder of the Portsmouth Black Heritage Trail who formerly worked at Rock Rest, spoke about Rock Rest, which advertised "fine home cooked food and a garden with fresh vegetables, plenty of shade trees with a relaxing atmosphere." The National Museum of African American History & Culture has objects and memorabilia from Rock Rest in its collection. One object is a boulder with the words "Rock Rest" painted in white.See also
*References
{{National Register of Historic Places Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Maine Houses completed in 1946 Houses in York County, Maine African-American history of Maine National Register of Historic Places in York County, Maine