History of Dedham, Massachusetts, 1793–1999
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The history of Dedham, Massachusetts from 1793 to 1999 begins with the naming of Dedham as the shiretown of the newly formed Norfolk County. Being named county seat brought an influx of new residents and visitors to town and Dedham experienced rapid growth with the new turnpikes and railroads. The Town was central to three major court cases, the Fairbanks Case, the Dedham Case, and the world-famous Sacco and Vanzetti Case.
Shire town
When Norfolk County was formed in 1793 Dedham was named as the shire town and "an influx of lawyers, politicians, and people on county business forced the town to abandon its traditional insularity and its habitual distrust of newcomers."[1] A new county courthouse was built by Solomon Willard, the same architect who built the Bunker Hill Monument. When it was remodeled in 1863 a dome was added, but it was too large and had to be removed. A new dome sits atop the building today.[2]
One of the new residents of Dedham was Horace Mann, who lived for several years at the Norfolk House and opened a law office in December 1823.[3] He soon "became interested in town affairs, was often chosen Moderator of the town meetings, and was an early candidate for office."[3] Mann served as Dedham's Representative in General Court from 1827 to 1832 as well as on the School Committee.[3][4] In only his first year in Dedham he was invited to deliver the Independence Day address. In his speech he "outlined for the first time the basic principles that he would return to in his subsequent public statements, arguing that education, intelligent use of the elective franchise, and religious freedom are the means by which American liberties are preserved."[5] Former President and then Congressman John Quincy Adams later read the address and "expressed great confidence in the future career of Mr. Mann."[3]
Turnpikes, including those linking Boston and Providence and Dedham and Hartford, were laid through town during the first few years of the 19th century. Inns and taverns sprung up along the new roads as more than 600 coaches would pass through Dedham each day on their way to Boston or Providence.[6] The stable behind Gay's Tavern could hold over 100 horses and eight horse teams could be switched within two minutes.[7]
In 1802 a local mason named Martin Marsh built his brick home at what is today 19 Court Street and was then right on one of the new turnpikes. He saw the traffic flowing daily past his house and quickly turned his home into a tavern. His establishment, the Norfolk House, like the other inns and taverns in Dedham at that time, were bustling with the arrival of both the turnpikes and the courts. He maintained the tavern until 1818, and then sold it to Moses Gray and Francis Alden. It was this partnership that hosted President Andrew Jackson for lunch as he and his entourage passed through town in 1832.[7]
The Norfolk House was also a hotbed for Republican politics in its day. It competed with the Democratic Phoenix House, so named because it rebuilt after having been destroyed by arson, which stood at the site of the present day Knights of Columbus building on the corner of Washington and High streets in Dedham Square. The proprietors of the two establishments generally stayed away from each other but "every once in a while they slipped and then there would be a short burst of newspaper venom."[7]
A young Congressman named Abraham Lincoln gave a speech at the Norfolk House[6] on September 20, 1848 while in Massachusetts to campaign for Zachary Taylor.[8] He appeared uncomfortable as he arrived but
His indifferent manner vanished as soon as he opened his mouth. He went right to work. He turned up the cuffs of his shirt. Next, he loosened his necktie, and soon after it he took it off altogether. All the time, he was gaining upon his audience. He soon had it as by a spell. I never saw men more delighted. He began to bubble out with humor. For plain pungency of humor, it would have been difficult to surpass his speech. The speech ended in a half-hour. The bell that called to the steam cars sounded. Mr. Lincoln instantly stopped. ‘I am engaged to speak at Cambridge tonight, and I must leave.’ The whole audience seemed to rise in protest. ‘Go on! Finish it!’ was heard on every hand. One gentleman arose and pledged to take his horse and carry him across country. But Mr. Lincoln was inexorable.[9]
The Norfolk House was also the site where "on June 4, 1810, in an expression of public outrage, a number of Dedham citizens assembled" and founded the Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves. Today the "Society is the oldest continually existing horse thief apprehending organization in the United States, and one of Dedham’s most venerable social organizations."[10]
Liberty pole
In the late 18th century, Massachusetts was a solidly Federalist state.[11] Dedham, however, was divided between Federalists and Republicans.[12][11]
Fisher Ames, the patriot, orator, and Congressman who saved the Jay Treaty, retired from Congress due to illness and returned home to Dedham in 1797.[12] Upon returning, he was alarmed by the growing number of Republicans in town, led by his brother Nathaniel.[12] In 1798 he hosted a Fourth of July party for 60 residents that was complete with patriotic songs and speeches.[12] The attendees wrote a letter to President John Adams, pledging their support should the new nation go to war with France.[12] Referring to the XYZ Affair, they wanted France to know that "we bear no foreign yoke--we will pay no tribute."[12]
Nathaniel Ames wrote in his diary that his brother had convinced "a few deluded people" into signing the letter by "squeezing teazing greazing" them with food and drink.[13] Despite his brother the Congressman's efforts, Nathaniel believed that "the Great Mass of People" in the town were with the Republicans. For his part, Fisher wrote to Secretary of State Timothy Pickering after the party that "the progress of right opinions" was winning out in Dedham over "perhaps the most malevolent spirit that exists," the Republican Party.[12]
Several years later, residents awoke one October morning to find a large wooden pole had been erected on the Hartford Road. At the top was a hand painted sign declaring
No Stamp act; no sedition; no alien bill; no land tax.
Downfall to the tyrants of America; peace and
retirement to the President; long live the vice
President and the minority.[14][15][16][17][nb 1]
This Liberty Pole was erected by David Brown, an itinerant veteran of the American Revolution who traveled from town to town in Massachusetts, drumming up subscribers for a series of political pamphlets he had written.[19][20][15] He was assisted by Benjamin Fairbanks and about 40 others,[11] including Amariah Chapin, who painted the sign.[21] Brown held the ladder while another, presumably Fairbanks, put up the sign.[21] Nathaniel Ames was also very likely involved.[18]
When it appeared, Fisher Ames and the rest of Dedham's Federalist community were enraged.[11] The pole was taken down[18] and the culprits were sought. A Boston newspaper, Russell's Gazette, wrote that "a vagabond Irishman, or Scotchman" was likely the ringleader.[19] Fairbanks, a prosperous farmer and former Selectman but also an "impressionable, rather excitable man," was quickly arrested and charged with violating the Sedition Act of 1798.[11] He posted bond and was scheduled for trial the following June in Boston.[11]
Brown, on the other hand, eluded authorities until March 1789, when he was caught in Andover, 28 miles away.[22][23] While Fairbanks was out on bail, Brown sat for three months in dank jail cell in Salem awaiting trial because he could not afford the $4,000 bail, which was twice the maximum fine if found guilty.[24][23] When the trial came, Fairbanks was brought before the court first. He requested the legal aid of Fisher Ames, and while Ames declined to serve as the defendant's attorney he did appear as a character witness.[25] Fairbanks, facing the "powerful forces" arrayed against him, confessed on June 8.[24]
Fairbanks said that "it was not then known by me, nor perhaps by others concerned, how heinous an offense it was."[24] He then added that he was a patriotic citizen, and would attempt to live his life accordingly in the future.[24] Justice Samuel Chase sentenced Fairbanks to six hours in prison and a fine of five dollars, plus court costs, the lightest sentence ever given for any of the Sedition Act defendants.[25]
On June 9, Brown also pled guilty, but he was not shown the same mercy as Fairbanks.[25][15] [14] Chase accepted the guilty plea, but insisted on trying the case anyway so that the "degree of his guilt might be duly ascertained."[26][15] Several Dedham residents, including Chapin, Joseph Kingsbury, Jeremiah Baker, and Luther Ellis, testified against Brown, who was not represented by a lawyer.[27] Nathaniel Ames received what he called "two illegal summons to the High Fed Circ't Court," but refused to appear and testify.[27] He was arrested and charged with contempt of court the following October, but nothing came of it.[28]
Chase offered Brown a chance to reduce his sentence by naming everyone involved with his "mischievous and dangerous pursuits," and the names of all those who subscribed to his pamphlets.[15][28] Brown refused, saying, "I shall lose all my friends."[28] He did, however, apologize for his political opinions and "more especially in the way and manner I did utter them."[28] Despite this apology, and the promise to change his ways, Chase found "no satisfactory indication of a change of disposition, or amelioration of temper" that might lessen "the punishment which his very pernicious and dangerous practice demanded."[28]
Brown was sentenced to 18 months in prison and a $480 fine, the harshest sentence ever imposed under the Sedition Act.[29][15][30] Brown had requested that there be no fine as he had no way to pay it.[28] As he did not have the money, and had no way of earning it while in prison, Brown petitioned President John Adams for a pardon in July 1800, and then again in February 1801.[31][15][32] Adams refused both times, keeping Brown in prison.[31][20]
When Thomas Jefferson became president, one of his first acts was to issue a general pardon for any person convicted under the Sedition Act. This set free Brown and James T. Callendar, the only two remaining in prison.[33] It is unknown what Brown did after his release, or where or when he died.[33]
The Fairbanks case
The first major trial to be held at the new courthouse was that of Jason Fairbanks. He lived in the family homestead on East Street and was courting Elizabeth Fales, two years his junior at 18. Jason had told a friend that "planned to meet Betsey, in order to have the matter settled" and that he "either intended to violate her chastity, or carry her to Wrentham, to be married, for he had waited long enough."[34] On May 21, 1801, Fales met Fairbanks in a "birch grove next to 'Mason’s Pasture'" and told him that she could not marry him.[35]
Fales was stabbed 11 times, including once in the back, and her throat was slashed. Fairbanks staggered to her home, covered in blood, and told her family that she had committed suicide. He also told them that he had also attempted to take his own life, but was unable to, and that accounted for his wounds[35] which left him ""still alive, but in a most deplorable situation."[36] The editor of the local paper, Herman Mann, was called to the scene and reported the incident in the next edition of his weekly newspaper under the headline "MELANCHOLY CATASTROPHE!"[37]
Fairbanks' murder trial opened on August 5, 1801 at the Courthouse but interest in the case involving two prominent families was so great that the trial was moved to the First Parish Meetinghouse across the street. When that venue proved to still be too small, the trial again moved to the Town Common. Prosecuting the case was the then-Attorney General and later Governor James Sullivan and defending Fairbanks was future Boston mayor and US Senator, Harrison Gray Otis. The trial lasted three days after which Fairbanks was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging. He escaped on August 18, at which time a $1,000 bounty offered for his capture and a newspaper implored readers to "Stop the Murderer!"[35]
Fairbanks was captured in Skeensborough, New York as he attempted to escape to Canada. On September 10 he was returned to Dedham from the Boston jail and was hanged. To ensure that he would not escape again two Army Cavalry and one volunteer militia units stood guard. In addition to the military presence, "the 10,000 people who showed up at the Town Common to witness the execution were five times the town’s population at the time."[35]
Within days of the execution the first of four instalments of the Report of the Trial of Jason Fairbanks was published by the Boston firm Russell and Cutler. It was 87 pages long and was issued over the course of several months, making it "the first demonstrably popular trial report published in early national New England."[37] A number of books and pamphlets would be written about the case in the months and years to come including "one of the earliest novels based on an actual murder case," the Life of Jason Fairbanks: A Novel Founded on Fact.[38]
The Dedham case
In the early 19th century, all Massachusetts towns were Constitutionally required to tax their citizens "for the institution of the public worship of God, and for the support and maintenance of public Protestant teachers of piety."[39] All residents of a town were assessed, as members of the parish, whether or not they were also members of the church. The "previous and long standing practice [was to have] the church vote for the minister and the parish sanction this vote."[40]
In 1818 "Dedham [claimed] rights distinct from the church and against the vote of the church."[40] The town, as the parish, selected a liberal Unitarian minister, Rev. Alvan Lamson, to serve the First Church in Dedham. The members of the church were more traditional and rejected Lamson by a vote of 18-14. When the parish installed and ordained Lamson the majority of the Church left "with Deacon [Samuel] Fales who took parish records, funds and silver with him."[41] The parish, along with the members of the church who remained, installed their own deacons and sued to reclaim the church property.
The case reached the Supreme Judicial Court who ruled that "[w]hatever the usage in settling ministers, the Bill of Rights of 1780 secures to towns, not to churches, the right to elect the minister, in the last resort."[42] The case was a major milestone in the road towards the separation of church and state and led to the Commonwealth formally disestablishing the Congregational Church in 1833.[43]
Nineteenth century
Early in the 19th century Dedham become a transportation hub and the "existence of quick freight service promoted a burst of industrial development."[1] Within 50 years of the railroads' arrival the population would almost double to 6,641.[44] By the end of the century a gazetteer with entries for each city and town in Massachusetts would describe "the substantial old court house, with its massive columns and yellow dome; the county jail; the house of the boat club on the bank of the Charles; the beautiful building of the Dedham Historical Society; the ample town-hall, erected in 1867 as a memorial of the fallen brave; the old cemetery and the beautiful modern one; and the new library building with its 10,000 volumes,— making a list of attractions such as few towns can show."[44]
In 1832, a tree in West Dedham, today Westwood, was named for the fortuneteller Moll Pitcher, who enjoyed the shade beneath the tree during her travels to the area.[45] On a hot summer day, she once asked a workman for a sip of his cider. When he refused, the broke her clay pipe in two and told the worker that the same thing would happen to his neck. She also said that the Nanhattan Street house he was working on would burn to the ground, which it did years later.[46]
In 1837, the year after the first rail line came to town, Dedham had a population of 3,532. By then the mills and factories in town were producing cotton and woolen goods, leather, boots, shoes, paper, marbled paper, iron castings, chairs, cabinet wares, straw bonnets, palm-leaf hats, and silk goods. Together they were worth $510,755 with the silk goods alone worth $10,000.
Dedham Village was described at the time as "very pleasant, and possesses every inducement to render it a desirable residence for the mechanic or man of leisure."[47] The "scenery" of the town was described as "varied and picturesque" with "an appearance of being well kept, and the roads are noticeably good."[44]
Dedham played a role in the development of baseball. On May 13, 1858 members of the various town ball teams in the Boston area met in Dedham to form the Massachusetts Association of Baseball Players. The Association developed a set of rules that came to be known as The Massachusetts Game. There were no foul balls, four bases, and games lasted until one team had scored 100 runs.[48]
In 1865, the first notice of Abraham Lincoln's death was posted on a buttonwood tree in front of the home of Jeremiah Shuttleworth, today the Dedham Historical Society.[49] Several years earlier, a young recruit to the Union Army opened an umbrella when it began to sprinkle during a training session on the Town Common. An effigy of the "man with the umbrella" appeared hanging from a noose several days later, and the young man quickly left town.[50] For many years many important notices were tacked to the tree, and it eventually was toppled during Hurricane Gloria in 1985.[49]
In 1888 Dedham's 6,641 residents lived in 1,228 dwellings and had 97 farms. The farms produced a product valued at $5,273,965 and yet was only $192,294 in 1885. The two major banks included the Dedham National Bank with over $300,000 in capital and the Dedham Institution for Savings with more than $2,000,000 in deposits. There were two weekly newspapers, the Dedham Standard and the Dedham Transcript. The first public schoolhouse in the country had by this time grown "complete system of graded schools, which are provided for in thirteen buildings having a value of about $60,000; to which has recently been added a new high school building in a central location in which have been embodied all known improvements."[44]
On January 11, 1895 the citizens of the town gathered in Memorial Hall to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the founding of the first free, tax supported public school in the nation. A "felicitous" speech was made by Governor Frederic T. Greenhalge and an "historical address" was made by Rev. Carlos Slafter. Lieutenant Governor Roger Wolcott, Judge Ely and the Honerable F. A. Hill also spoke.[51]
Railroads and subdivisions
Within a few decades of the turnpikes' arrival railroad beds were laid through Dedham. The railroad was at first "considered dangerous. It was new fangled. People didn’t trust it, so they wouldn’t ride it. Only a very few brave souls in those opening years" ever boarded one. This fear was short lived, however as the first rail line came in 1836 and by 1842 locomotives had put the stagecoach lines out of business.[7] The first line was a branch connecting Dedham Square to the main Boston-Providence line in Readville. In 1848 the Norfolk County Railroad connected Dedham and Walpole and in 1854 the Boston and New York Central ran through town.[1]
In 1881 the Boston and Providence Railroad company built a station in Dedham Square out of Dedham Granite. There were more than 60 trains a day running to it in its heyday, but it was demolished in 1951 and the stones were used to build the main branch of the Dedham Public Library.[2] In 1886 the railroad built a new bridge over High Street and placed a granite plaque there to commemorate both the new bridge and the 250th anniversary of the town's incorporation. The plaque was removed sometime thereafter and ended up in the woods near railroad tracks in Sharon. It has since been returned to Dedham.[52]
Moses Boyd was the "well-known and gentlemanly" conductor of the Dedham branch of the Providence Railroad. At a party for his 25th wedding anniversary his passengers presented him with gifts of cash that totaled between $600 and $700. In addition to the passengers from Dedham, West Roxbury and Jamaica Plain, the President and Superintendent of the railroad attended the party at his home and presented him with a silver plate.[53]
Nathaniel Whiting arrived in Dedham in 1641 and over the course of the next 182 years he and his descendants owned mills along Mother Brook and a great swath of farmland. In 1871 William Whiting, the last member of the family to own a mill, sold the remainder of the family farm and Charles Sanderson began laying it out in a subdevelopment to become known as Oakdale.[54] Today, Whiting Ave is home to both the High School and the Middle School, and Sanderson Avenue runs into Oakdale Square.
The following year the Farrington farm was laid out into house plots and became the Endicott neighborhood, and in 1873 the Whiting/ Turner tract of land was developed into Ashcroft. By 1910 the area on the opposite side of the Charles River began to be developed. It was once known as Dedham Island or Cow Island, as the Long Ditch connected the river in two spots and bypassed the 'great bend.' Today, the neighborhood is known as Riverdale. The Sprauge farm by the Neponset River became known as the Manor and in the last major development of town, the Smith Farm became the neighborhood of Greenlodge.[1]
New Dedhamites
In 1800[55] Colburn Gay of Dedham wished to marry Sarah Ellis of Walpole. The laws at the time said that a wedding must take place in the town of the bride, however Gay insisted that Rev. Thomas Thatcher preside. Thatcher was the minister in Dedham's third parish, however, and could not officiate outside of the town's borders. To resolve this dilemma the couple stood on the Walpole side of Bubbling Brook, and Thatcher stood on the Dedham side. They were married across the stream[56] and had two children before Sarah died in 1810.[55]
Albert W. Nickerson first arrived in Dedham in 1877. He was the president of Arlington Mills in Lawrence and director of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway and built a home near Connecticut Corner[57] where he "took an active part in community affairs and made generous donations to charitable causes."[58] He sold the house to his brother George[59] when he had a dispute with the town over taxes and improvements he wished to make to the property a few years later and moved to an estate on Buzzards Bay. Nickerson entertained President Grover Cleveland here and helped convince him to purchase the adjoining estate Grey Gables.[58]
Several years later he bought another parcel in Dedham, this time a 600-acre (2.4 km2) estate on the Charles known as Riverdale. The estate was the boyhood home of ambassador and historian John Lothrop Motley.[58][60] In 1886, he commission the architectural firm of Henry Hobson Richardson to build him a castle on the estate and hired Frederick Law Olmsted's firm to do the landscaping.[61] The castle has a number of interesting architectural elements but its most famous is by far its numerous secret passages[62] and "legendary underground mazes and hallways."[63] It was built on top of a rocky hill "so that the Castle and the River appeared magically to carriages or cars arriving through the forested Pine Street entrance."[64]
Among the other noted men who spoke in Temperance Hall were Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., Horace Mann, Abraham Lincoln, William R. Alger, and John Boyle O'Reilly.[65]
St. Mary's
In 1843, 85 years after the Acadians arrived, the first Catholic Mass was said in Daniel Slattery's home where the police station now stands in Dedham Square. For the next three years after that first Mass with eight Catholics present, John Dagget, Slattery's brother in law, would drive to Waltham each Sunday and bring Father James Strain to Dedham to say Mass. In 1846 Dedham became part of the mission of St. Jospeph's Church in Roxbury and Father Patrick O'Beirne would celebrate Mass in the Norfolk House, by this time known as Temperance Hall.[7][66]
Large number of Irish immigrants fled the potato famine a few years later and many of them settled in Dedham.[67] By 1857 so many had settled that Father O'Beirne built the first Catholic church in Dedham, St Mary's Parish. When the Civil War broke out in 1861 Dedham men from all religious persuasions responded to the call but "no church in Dedham lost so many men in proportion to their numbers" as St. Mary's did.[66] In 1880 the current church was built on High Street, next to the rectory that had been purchased three years earlier. Thousands attend the laying of the cornerstone by Archbishop John J. Williams and a special train was run from Boston to accommodate all those who wished to be present. The master of ceremonies was Fr. Theodore A. Metcalf, a descendant of Michaell Metcalfe, the teacher.[66] Theodore Metcalf may also have been a descendant of Jonathon Fairbanks.[68] At the time St. Mary's, "a fine stone church at a cost of about $125,000" was completed there was a Methodist, two Baptist, two Congregationalist, two Unitarian, and two Episcopal churches in Dedham.[44]
It was also in 1880 that the Town Meeting set aside of the town cemetery, Brookdale, for Catholics to be buried in. The following year two Protestant businessmen gave great financial support to the fledgling parish. John R. Bullard contributed the Dedham granite used to construct the great upper church. Albert W. Nickerson paid off the debt still remaining on the old church and contributed $10,000 to help complete the new one.[66]
William Gould
On September 21, 1862, a slave plasterer working on an antebellum mansion in Wilmington, North Carolina named William B. Gould I escaped with seven other slaves. They rowed a small boat 28 nautical miles (52 km) down the Cape Fear River and out into the Atlantic Ocean where the USS Cambridge of the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron picked them up as contraband. Gould joined the U.S. Navy and believed he was "defending the holiest of all causes, Liberty and Union."[69] Beginning with his time on the Cambridge and continuing through his discharge at the end of the war he kept a diary of his day-to-day activities. In it he chronicles his trips to the northeastern U.S. to Holland, Belgium, Spain, Portugal and England.[70]
After he was discharged from the Navy at the Charlestown Navy Yard he married Cornelia Read[69] in November 1865.[71] Cornelia was a former slave who was then living on Nantucket and they corresponded throughout the war. The Goulds moved to Milton Street and together they would have two daughters and six sons. In Dedham Gould "became a building contractor and community pillar."[72]
Gould "took great pride in his work" when he resumed work as a plasterer and helped to build the new St. Mary's Church.[69] One of his employees improperly mixed the plaster and even though it was not visible by looking at it, Gould insisted that it be removed and reapplied correctly.[69] Gould helped to build the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepard in Oakdale Square, though as a parishioner and not as a contractor. It may have been the Episcopal church he attended in Wilmington as a slave that taught him to read and write, and thus to be able to keep his diary.[69]
Gould was extremely active in the Grand Army of the Republic's Charles W. Carroll Post 144. He "held virtually every position that it was possible to hold in the GAR from the time he joined [in 1882] until his death in 1923, including the highest post, commander, in 1900 and 1901." Five of his sons would fight in the First World War and one in the Spanish–American War. A photo of the six sons and their father, all in military uniform, would appear in the NAACP's magazine, The Crisis, in December 1917.[71] Gould's great-grandson would describe them as "a family of fighters."[69]
When he died in 1923 at the age of 85 he was interred at Brookdale Cemetery. The Dedham Transcript reported his death under the headline “East Dedham Mourns Faithful Soldier and Always Loyal Citizen: Death Came Very Suddenly to William B. Gould, Veteran of the Civil War.”[69]
Twentieth century
In 1900, the same year St. Mary's was dedicated, a talented young lawyer from Boston bought a home with his new wife at 194 Village Avenue. Sixteen years later Louis D. Brandeis rode the train home from his office and his wife greeted his as "Mr. Justice." While he was at work that day his appointment to the United States Supreme Court had been confirmed that day by the United States Senate. Brandeis was a member of the Dedham Country and Polo Club and the Dedham Historical Society[73] as well as a member of the Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves.[10] He wrote to his brother of the town saying: "Dedham is a spring of eternal youth for me. I feel newly made and ready to deny the existence of these grey hairs."[73]
Around 1900, Dr. Harry K. Shatswell of School Street built and drove a "steam powered horseless carriage" through the streets of town.[74] This was two years after the first automobile went on sale in the United States. That same year, Theodore Burgess purchased three French automobiles for himself and his wife, who is thought to be the first woman to drive in Massachusetts.[74] In 1903, there were 11 cars registered in Dedham.[74]
During World War I, 642 men from Dedham served, and 18 died.[75] The first to enlist was Henry W. Farnsworth who fought with the with the French Foreign Legion and was killed in action at Tahure, France, in October 1915.[75] Of the 60 soldiers who voluntarily were inoculated with the germs that caused trench fever, two, Joseph Fiola and Norman G. Barrett, were from Dedham.[75] A memorial was erected to those who served in the war at the corner of East Street and Whiting Ave.[75]
In 1920 a man's skeleton was found hanging from a tree in the woods near Wigwam Pond.[45] Another was unearthed on the eastern shore of the Pond in 1923 when workers were digging a foundation for a house.[45]
A bill establishing a representative Town Meeting was established in 1928, and then amended in 1948.[76] It was almost amended again when a resident used a friendly representative in a neighboring community to introduce and pass a bill in the General Court.[76] A Charter was adopted later in the century, and amended again in the 21st century.
During the 1936 tercentenary celebrations, Olympians Ellison "Tarzan" Brown and Johnny Kelley ran in a "mug hunt."[77] The roughly 9.5 mile race was the third annual, and was sponsored by the Oakdale Athletic Club and organized by Harold Rosen.[77] The start was in Oakdale Square and the finish was at Stone Park.[77]
the Rust Craft Greeting Card Company moved to Dedham in 11954 from Kansas City. In 1957, Joseph Demling, a resident of Macomber Terrace, walked into Town Hall with the carcass of the 35 pound bobcat. He asked for a $20 bounty on the animal, citing a by-law passed by the Town Meeting in 1734. The Town originally balked, suggesting that the animal came from Needham, but eventually paid Demling the money he requested.[78]
The first transatlantic direct dial telephone call was made by Sally Reed in Dedham, Massachusetts to her penpal, Ann Morsley, in Dedham, Essex, in 1957.[79] It was witnessed by Reed's teacher, Grace Hine, Dedham's former chief telephone operator, Margaret Dooley, and several representatives of New England Telephone and Telegraph Company.[79]
The 1960s brought a number of events to Dedham that, like the building of the Fairbanks House, may not have seemed important at the time but have proved to be major events. After an executive order[80] signed by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 allowed federal employees to unionize, the Federal Employees Veterans Association met in an emergency convention in Dedham. They voted to reorganize themselves into the National Association of Government Employees, today a large and powerful public union.[81]
David Stanley Jacubanis robbed a bank in Dedham the following year, after he was paroled in Vermont. He was, for a time, on the Federal Bureau of Investigation's 10 Most Wanted List. Several years later, on March 1, 1967, Ma Riva's Sub Shop opened in Dedham. It eventually would become D'Angelos and then bought out by Papa Gino's. Both are still headquartered on the old Route 1 in Dedham. Also in 1967, the Flag Day Parade began, which quickly became one of Dedham's most beloved traditions.[82]
Sacco and Vanzetti
The historic Sacco and Vanzetti trial was held in the Dedham Courthouse in 1921 under heavy police guard.[83] The two were Italian-born American anarchists, who were arrested, tried, and executed for the killings of Frederick Parmenter, a shoe factory paymaster, and Alessandro Berardelli, a security guard, and for the robbery of $15,766.51 from the factory's payroll on April 15, 1920.[84] Many believe that they "were the innocent victims of political and economic interests determined to send a message about the rising tide of anarchist violence."[83]
The trial opened on May 31, 1921 with heavy security. Police were stationed at every entrance of the courthouse and all those entering were searched for weapons. The State Constabulary patrolled outside on horseback and motorcycles[83] and the courtroom was retrofitted with bomb shutters and sliding steel doors that could seal off that wing of the courthouse in case of an attack. The cast iron shutters on the windows were designed and painted to match the wooden ones on the rest of the building. The courtroom was so protected that "the trial would be conducted in a far more formidable cage than the simple prisoner's cage that surrounded Sacco and Vanzetti during their trial."[85]
During the trial Supreme Court Justice Brandeis, who was then in Washington, invited Sacco's wife to stay at his home near the courthouse.[73] He was not the only member of the nation's highest court to be involved with the case. Felix Frankfurter, then a law professor at Harvard, "did more than any individual to rally "respectable" opinion behind the two men, saw the case as a test of the rule of law itself."[86] Several years later, in May 1926, Frankfurter would travel to the Dedham courthouse to make a motion for a new trial after another man, also in the Dedham Jail, confessed to the crime.[83]
The motion was denied by Judge Webster Thayer in October and in the next 10 months the Supreme Judicial Court, a federal judge and three Supreme Court Justices, including Brandeis, each denied motions for either a new trial or a stay of execution. On August 23, 1927 the two were electrocuted in the Charlestown jail. The "executions sent hundreds of thousands of protesters into the streets of six continents."[83] The American embassy in Paris was surrounded by tanks to fend of rioting mobs and demonstrations in Germany ended with six deaths. In Geneva "over 5,000 protesters destroyed all things American: cars, goods, even theaters showing American films."[83] Frankfurter would write a scathing critique of the case entitled "The Case of Sacco-Vanzetti: a critical analysis for lawyers and laymen." It would first be published in The Atlantic Monthly and then as a hardcover book.
Endicott Estate
In 1904 the home of Henry Bradford Endicott, the founder of the multimillion-dollar Endicott-Johnson Shoe Company[87] had his home on East Street burn to the ground. The fire department was not able to get to the estate in time as they were dealing with three other fires simultaneously,[88] including one at the fire house.[2] Henry cleared the ashes away and built a new homestead on the 15-acre (61,000 m2) parcel.[88] The three story building he constructed has nine bathrooms, eight bedrooms, a library, a music room, a ballroom, a mirrored parlor, a butler's kitchen, a linen room, and servants' quarters.[89]
When he died in 1920 he left the building to his stepdaughter Katherine. She died in 1967 without any children and willed the land and the estate to the town for "education, civic, social and recreational purposes".[88] At the time "town didn't know quite what to do with it" and "Town Meeting voted to offer it to the Commonwealth." Governor John Volpe took the title to the 25 room estate in a ceremony on December 7, 1967 and intended to use it as a governor's mansion. It soon became apparent that it would be cheaper to build a brand new mansion than to remodel the estate to Volpe's wife's "lavish taste" and "crazy notions" than to renovate the Endicott Estate and[90] in 1969 the Commonwealth gave the estate back to the Town.[91] In 1921 Endicott's widow gave $35,000 to the American Legion to build a clubhouse nearby the estate on Whiting Ave.[92]
Private Schools
In 1922 the Noble and Greenough School moved from Boston to Dedham. They purchased the Nickerson Castle and turned the estate into a 187-acre (0.8 km2) campus in Riverdale along the Charles River.[93] In 1957 Ursuline Academy moved from Boston's Back Bay to a 28-acre (110,000 m2) parcel in Upper Dedham.[94] The Ursuline nuns who ran the school purchased the property which included a grand manor house designed by Boston architect Guy Lowell. The house, described as "one of the grandest of grand mansions west of Boston, and comparable to what one would see in Newport," was built by Francis Skinner for his new wife Sarah Carr, in 1906.[95] Today, the mansion once known as the Federal Hill Farm has "the richest and most elaborate residential rooms in Dedham" and serves as a convent for the sisters who run the school.[95]
Fires
Shortly after 2 a.m. on October 19, 1940, a fire at the Log Cafe on Bridge Street was called in.[96][97] The fire destroyed the Cafe and Breed's boathouse.[96] Chief Henry J. Harrigan entered one of the buildings to inspect the progress of the fire when the floor beneath him gave way, causing him to fall 15 feet, stunning him and causing him to become overcome by smoke and heat[96][97][98] Fireman Joseph C. Nagle, "despite the blinding smoke and flames, rushed into the building and carried Chief Harrigan outside," suffering burns and smoke inhalation in the process.[96][97][98]
Nagle was brought to the Dedham Emergency Hospital, and a firefighter worked on Harrigan with a pulmanator before he was taken to the Faulkner Hospital by several police officers in an ambulance.[98] Harrigan, a 47-year veteran of the force, died slightly after 4 a.m., leaving behind a wife and four daughters.[96] A plaque was unveiled in his honor outside the main firehouse on the 75th anniversary of his death, and both Harrigan and Nagle were posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.[96][97][98] Harrigan's funeral at St. Mary's Church was attended by 1,500 people, including chiefs from 100 cities and towns.[98]
In 1994, a difficult fire broke out on Rockland Street. A woman was trapped inside, and was rescued by members of Engine Company 3. The Henry J. Harrigan Medal of Honor was established to honor the members of the engine company for their bravery.[99]
Population
The population of Dedham has grown more than 10 times since 1793, reaching its peak around the year 1980.
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Notes
References
- 1 2 3 4 "A Capsule History of Dedham". Dedham Historical Society. 2006. Archived from the original on October 6, 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-10.
- 1 2 3 Robert Hanson (1999). "Stories Behind the Pictures in the Images of America: Dedham Book". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (December). Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- 1 2 3 4 ), Dedham Historical Society (Mass (1894). "Horace Mann". The Dedham Historical Register. The Society. V: 17.
- ↑ Maria Sacchetti (2005-11-27). "Schools vie for honor of being the oldest". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2006-11-26.
- ↑ Susan Ritchie. "Horace Mann". Unitarian Universalist Association. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
- 1 2 "The Tale of the Norfolk Inn". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (January). 1999. Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Robert Hanson (2005). "The Inn Thing: Taverns of Dedham" (PDF). Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (March).
- ↑ "Abraham Lincoln's Visit to Chelsea". Chelsea Historical Society. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
- ↑ Herndon, William Henry; Weik, Jesse William (1892). Abraham Lincoln: The True Story of a Great Life. D. Appleton. pp. 292–293.
- 1 2 Bob Hanson. "Historical Sketch". The Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves. Archived from the original on March 13, 2007. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Slack 2015, p. 138.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Slack 2015, p. 72.
- ↑ Slack 2015, p. 73.
- 1 2 Slack 2015, p. 137.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Stone, Geoffrey R. (2004). Perilous times: free speech in wartime from the Sedition Act of 1798 to the war on terrorism. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-393-05880-2.
- ↑ Tise 1998, p. 420.
- ↑ Curtis, Michael Kent (2000). Free speech, "the people's darling privilege": struggles for freedom of expression in American history. Duke University Press. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-8223-2529-1.
- 1 2 3 Slack 2015, p. 141.
- 1 2 Slack 2015, p. 139.
- 1 2 Tise 1998, pp. 422.
- 1 2 Slack 2015, p. 140.
- ↑ Slack 2015, p. 177.
- 1 2 Tise 1998, p. 421.
- 1 2 3 4 Slack 2015, p. 178.
- 1 2 3 Slack 2015, p. 179.
- ↑ Slack 2015, p. 180.
- 1 2 Slack 2015, p. 181.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Slack 2015, p. 182.
- ↑ Slack 2015, p. 183.
- ↑ Simon 2003, p. 55.
- 1 2 Slack 2015, p. 221.
- ↑ Tise 1998, pp. 421-2.
- 1 2 Slack 2015, p. 232.
- ↑ Report of the Trial of Jason Fairbanks, on an Indictment for the Murder of Miss Elizabeth Fales. Boston, Massachusetts: Russell and Cutler. 1801.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Sean Murphy (2006). "Historian recalls the Fairbanks case, Dedham’s first big trial". Daily News Transcript. Retrieved 2006-11-30.
- ↑ Herman Mann (1801). "Melancholy Catastrophe!". Columbian Minerva (May 19): 3.
- 1 2 Daniel A. Cohen (1993). "The Story of Jason Fairbanks: Trial Reports and the Rise of Sentimental Fiction". Legal Studies Forum. 17 (2).
- ↑ Cohen, Daniel (1993). Pillars of Salt, Monuments of Grace: New England Crime Literature and the Origins of American Popular Culture, 1674-1860. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 188. ISBN 0-19-507584-6.
- ↑ "Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts". Wikisource.com. 1780. Retrieved 2006-11-28. See Part the First, Article III.
- 1 2 Ronald Golini. "Taxation for Religion in Early Massachusetts". www.rongolini.com. Archived from the original on 2007-01-08. Retrieved 2006-11-28.
- ↑ Sally Burt (2006). "First Church Papers Inventoried". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (January). Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- ↑ Eliphalet Baker and Another v. Samuel Fales, 16 Mass. 403
- ↑ Johann N. Neem (2003). "Politics and the Origins of the Nonprofit Corporation in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, 1780-1820" (PDF). Nonprofit and voluntary sector quarterly. 32 (3): 363. doi:10.1177/0899764003254593.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rev. Elias Nason, M.A. (1890). "A Gazetteer of the State of Massachusetts". CapeCodHistory.us. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- 1 2 3 Parr 2009, p. 14.
- ↑ Parr 2009, p. 15.
- 1 2 John Hayward (1839). "Massachusetts towns in 1839". Boyd & White, Concord, N.H. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ Tom Kelleher (1999). "Baseball Before 1860". Old Sturbridge Village. Archived from the original on August 13, 2006. Retrieved 2007-03-19.
- 1 2 Parr 2009, pp. 15-16.
- ↑ Parr 2009, p. 16.
- ↑ "Dedham's Day". The Boston Daily Globe: 1. January 12, 1895.
- ↑ Stephen Brayton (2004). "1886 Railroad Commemorative Plaque Returns Home". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (January). Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- ↑ "Christmas, 1864: People in Dedham greet each other and wish each other a "Merry Christmas!" with a smile". The Dedham Times: 21. January 5, 2007.
- ↑ Eleanor Palma (2005). "The Whiting Family in Dedham". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (September). Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- 1 2 "Descendants of John Gay". Retrieved 2007-02-20.
- ↑ Rev. Calvin Stoughton Locke (1890). "West Dedham". Dedham Historical Register. Dedham Historical Society.
- ↑ The term Connecticut Corner has generally fallen out of use in Dedham, but it is listed as a historic district Archived 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine. in town. The historic district generally runs down High and Bridge Streets from slightly passed Lowder Street to slightly passed Common Street. It encompasses the Town Common and the houses around it.
- 1 2 3 Guy Altree. "The Castle: A Great House of the Gilded Age". TeachingCompany.com. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ "Soiree- Dedham's Social Event of the Season, to be May 19". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (May). 2000. Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- 1 2 3 Guide Book To New England Travel. 1919.
- ↑ John Fiske. "Uses Vary but Castle Remains a Very Sacred Space". Noble and Greenough School. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ "The Castle at Nobles". TeachingCompany.com. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ "Why Nobles". Nobles and Greenough School. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ Joyce Leffler Eldridge (2005). "Head of School Traces Nobles Attention to Aesthetics and Sustainability". Nobles and Greenough School. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ Cook, Louis Atwood (1918). History of Norfolk County, Massachusetts, 1622-1918. S.J. Clarke publishing Company. p. 45.
- 1 2 3 4 "St. Mary's Community Parish History". St. Mary's Parish. 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ "A Brief History". St. Catherine of Siena Church. Archived from the original on April 18, 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
- ↑ The possible lineage is as follows: Jonathan to his daughter Mary Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. who married Michael Metcalf Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine.. Together they had son Eleazer Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. and it continues to his son Michael Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. to his son Michael Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. to his son Hanan Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. to his son Theron Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. who was the father of an unmarried Theodore Metcalf Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine., born in 1812.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Stephen K. Brayton (2003). ""Diary of a Contraband" – Professor Gould Relates Story Of Dedham Civil War Veteran Who Escaped Slavery". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (July). Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- ↑ William B. Gould IV. "William B. Gould IV -- Diary of a Contraband". Stanford University. Retrieved 2006-12-12.
- 1 2 "William B. Gould's Life After the War". Stanford University. Retrieved 2006-12-23.
- ↑ Peter DeMarco (2006-04-23). "Diary of Dedham hero granted to society". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2006-12-23.
- 1 2 3 Hana Janjigian Heald (2005). "Prominent Supreme Court Justice was a Dedham Resident". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (November). Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- 1 2 3 "THE INTRODUCTION OF THE “HORSELESS CARRIAGE” IN DEDHAM" (PDF). Dedham Historical Society Newsletter. Dedham Historical Society. 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 "A Look at Dedham in World War I". Wicked Local Swampscott. April 6, 2017. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
- 1 2 "Sleeper Bill, Almost Law, Stirs Dedham". Daily Boston Globe. February 6, 1960. p. 1.
- 1 2 3 Nason, Jerry (July 17, 1937). "Dedham Run Tonight Features Kelley, Brown and Zamparelli". Daily Boston. p. 7.
- ↑ Parr 2009, p. 11.
- 1 2 "375 years of contentment". A special supplement to the Dedham Transcript. September 2011.
- ↑ Executive Order 10988
- ↑ "NAGE - Quick Facts". National Association of Government Employees. Archived from the original on November 29, 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
- ↑ Heald, Hana Janjigian (June 12, 2015). "Dedham's 48th Annual Flag Day Parade Set for Sunday". The Dedham Times. p. 1.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Doug Linder (2001). "The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti". University of Missouri - Kansas City School of Law. Retrieved 2007-01-14.
- ↑ Jean O. Pasco (2005). "Sacco and Vanzetti were guilty said novelist Upton Sinclair in a rediscovered note". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2007-01-14.
- ↑ Robert D'Attilio. "La Salute é in Voi: the Anarchist Dimension". RecollectionBooks.com. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
- ↑ Robert D'Attilio (6 Aug 2004). "Sacco-Vanzetti Case". University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
- ↑ "The Endicott Estate". James Joyce Ramble. Retrieved 2006-12-15.
- 1 2 3 "History". The Endicott Estate. Archived from the original on 2006-12-08. Retrieved 2006-12-15.
- ↑ Sandy Coleman (2005-05-12). "Historic mansion opens doors in gala celebration of 100 years". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
- ↑ Carol Gerwin (1999). "Where the heck is the governor's mansion?". Commonwealth (Fall).
- ↑ Chapter 471 of the Acts of 1969
- ↑ "Open New Clubhouse". Boston Post. February 23, 1921. p. 2. Retrieved April 27, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "The History of Noble and Greenough School". Noble and Greenough School. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
- ↑ "History of Ursuline". Ursuline Academy. Retrieved 2007-01-09.
- 1 2 "Historic House Tour Set For Sunday, May 18". Dedham Historical Society Newsletter (April). 2003. Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Town to Honor Former Fire Chief at Ceremony This Sunday". The Dedham Times. October 16, 2015. p. 1.
- 1 2 3 4 Angiolillo, Paul (October 21, 2015). "Firefighters and family unveil plaque to Henry Harrigan". The Dedham Transcript. Retrieved October 21, 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Heald, Scott (October 23, 2015). "Fire Department Unveils Plaque Honoring Chief Harrigan". The Dedham Times.
- ↑ Bowen, Max (December 31, 2015). "Dedham's top stories of 2015". The Dedham Transcript. Retrieved January 1, 2016.
- ↑ 1865 Massachusetts Census
- ↑ "Population of Massachusetts Cities, Towns & Counties: Census Counts and Current Estimates, 1930-1998 with Land Area and Population Density in 1990" (pdf). City of Newton, Massachusetts. Retrieved 2006-12-12.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 State Data Center/Mass. Inst. for Social & Economic Research. "Population of Massachusetts Cities and Towns, 1940-1990" (PDF). Boston Metropolitan Planning Agency. Archived from the original (pdf) on February 6, 2004. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ "Massachusetts Minor Civil Division Population Estimates" (pdf). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
Works cited
- Slack, Charles (2015). Liberty's First Crisis: Adams, Jefferson, and the Misfits Who Saved Free Speech. Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN 978-0802123428.
- Simon, James F. (2003). What Kind of Nation: Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-84871-6.
- Tise, Larry E. (1998). The American counterrevolution: a retreat from liberty, 1783-1800. Stackpole Books. p. 421. ISBN 978-0-8117-0100-6.
- Parr, James L. (2009). Dedham: Historic and Heroic Tales From Shiretown. The History Press. ISBN 978-1-59629-750-0.