The abandoned Benjamin Kimball summer castle that overlooks Lake Winnipasaukee in Gilford. The castle has been empty since 1960 when Charlotte Kimball died. Railroad tycoon Benjamin Kimball died in 1920.
The abandoned Benjamin Kimball summer castle that overlooks Lake Winnipasaukee in Gilford. The castle has been empty since 1960 when Charlotte Kimball died. Railroad tycoon Benjamin Kimball died in 1920. Credit: GEOFF FORESTERโ€”Monitor staff

Kimball Castle, the historic home overlooking Lake Winnipesaukee in Gilford, was destroyed in a fire Wednesday morning.

The blaze broke out around 3:45 a.m., according to firefighting officials. It spread to a couple acres of surrounding woodland before crews contained it mid-morning. Lake Shore Drive was closed nearby Route 11 while firefighters worked at the scene.

Gilford Fire Chief Stephen Carrier told WMUR the roof collapsed and the building is a complete loss. He has ordered it to be completely taken down because the structure is unsafe.

The home at 59 Lockes Hill Road was built in the late 1890s as a summer home for Benjamin Ames Kimball, president of the Boston, Montreal and Concord railways. The two-story granite building was modeled on castles that Kimball saw on Germany’s Rhine River.

It passed out of the Kimball family in 1960 and has had a turbulent history since, including derailed attempts to run it as a wildlife preserve as the result of money missing from a trust. Much of the original 300-acre property was subdivided after Gilford took over as trustees in 1981.

The home and surrounding 20 acres have been privately owned for years. Plans to turn it into a wedding venue never came to pass.

The building is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Nobody was injured in the blaze, and a cause has not been determined.

David Brooks can be reached at dbrooks@cmonitor.com. Sign up for his Granite Geek weekly email newsletter at granitegeek.org.