Was Little Compton a model for the Christmas classic ‘It’s A Wonderful Life’?

Seneca Falls, New York, may not have the only claims on the film

Jimmy Stewart as George Bailey in the 1946 films “It’s A Wonderful Life,” directed by Frank Capra.
Jimmy Stewart as George Bailey in the 1946 films “It’s A Wonderful Life,” directed by Frank Capra.
Share
Jimmy Stewart as George Bailey in the 1946 films “It’s A Wonderful Life,” directed by Frank Capra.
Jimmy Stewart as George Bailey in the 1946 films “It’s A Wonderful Life,” directed by Frank Capra.
Was Little Compton a model for the Christmas classic ‘It’s A Wonderful Life’?
Copy

While the Christmas classic It’s A Wonderful Life was filmed on a Hollywood set, the upstate New York town of Seneca Falls boasts that it’s the model for the movie’s fictional town of “Bedford Falls.”

But a small Rhode Island town also has claims on the beloved film.

Little Compton town historian Marjory O’Toole says clues of a local connection are sprinkled throughout the movie. And they started with the married script writing team of Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett, and their main character George Bailey, played by Jimmy Stewart.

“Frances and Albert summered on Bailey’s Ledge in Little Compton, on the Bailey Family Farm,” said O’Toole, the executive director of the Little Compton Historical Society. “The fact that they named their incredibly sympathetic main character ‘George Bailey’ is an absolute tie to this summer home, summer community that they loved.”

The setting of Bedford Falls may also be a nod to the region.

“The folks in Seneca Falls may argue this,” O’Tool said, “but Little Compton sits in between two cities: New Bedford and Fall River. I think the fact that the town in the movie is called ‘Bedford Falls’ is a direct combination of the names of those two cities.”

And, O’Toole says, “Pottersville,” has for decades been a neighborhood in Little Compton and it is the name of the town featured as the film’s nightmarish alternate reality.

“Every time I watch the movie,” O’Toole said, “I keep my eyes open for additional connections.”

Life Science Hub CEO Mark Turco discusses job creation, competition and whether the state entered the biotech race too late
The stay marks the fourth time a federal judge has ruled against the Trump administration’s effort to halt offshore wind construction
State Rep. Megan Cotter has introduced legislation to incentivize school districts to build regional partnerships
A Senate study commission backs a new public medical school as part of a long-term plan to expand primary care
Removing GLP-1s from Rhode Island’s Medicaid formulary for weight loss would save $6.3 million in general revenue, according to McKee’s proposed budget
The South County native, known for his novels and political activism, has produced a book featuring six short stories