Waban, Massachusetts
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Waban is one of the 13 villages of Newton, Massachusetts.
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[edit] Origin of name
Waban was named for Waban, the first Massachusett Indian converted to Christianity, in 1646. Although Waban lived in Nonantum, a hill in the northeasternmost part of Newton, the area around the present village of Waban was a favored hunting ground.
[edit] Education
Waban has two elementary schools, Angier and Zervas (formerly Beethoven).
The village is one of the few in Newton to retain its branch library.
[edit] Poor Farm
An area near where the shopping area of Waban now stands was originally the site of a working farm for the indigent.
[edit] Notable residents
- Ralph Waldo Emerson (and maybe Henry David Thoreau) [1]
- Joe Jarrell, M. Roland Heintzelman Award-winning playwright, author of Empathy Is In
- Richard F. Jarrell, co-founder of Jarrell-Ash Company (later Thermo Jarrell Ash) [2]
- Tom Jarrell, essayist, Boston Avatar contributor, author of "Confessions of a Two-Time Draft Card Burner" (included in Civil Disobedience: Theory and Practice, edited by Hugo Adam Bedau)
- Roger Kellaway, Grammy winning Pianist, Composer, created works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, and jazz big band, as well as for film, TV, ballet and stage productions
- Jack Lemmon was born in an elevator at Newton-Wellesley Hospital in Waban
- Fritz Richmond, folk musician, played jug and washtub bass in the Jim Kweskin Jug Band
- Mark Sandman, rock and roll musician, singer, and songwriter, member of the groups Treat Her Right and Morphine
- Paul Wiggin (not the football player), tenor, founder of M.U.S.E. (MUsic in Service to the Elderly), a non-profit that sends professional singers to perform in nursing homes and other shut-in venues (since its inception in 1973 M.U.S.E. has produced over 30,000 concerts)
- Jason Varitek (and family), catcher, Boston Red Sox, 2004 and 2007 World Series Champions.
[edit] See also