History of Dedham, Massachusetts, 1900–1999
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The history of Dedham, Massachusetts in the 20th century saw great growth come to the town. It played host to the Sacco and Vanzetti trial, saw the Endicott Estate and a number of schools constructed, a great deal of economic development, and growth in the number of services provided by the Town.
Government
[edit]A bill establishing a representative town meeting was established in 1928, and then amended in 1948.[1] 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.[1] A charter was adopted later in the century, and amended again in the 21st century. The Department of Public Works was created in 1933.[2]
Fire Department
[edit]The first fire chief was appointed in 1920.[3] Prior to that there was a four-member Board of Fire Engineers who had charge over fires.[3] Hurricane Carol knocked down the East Dedham firehouse's 80 foot bell tower on August 31, 1954.[4] It flew across the station and landed on 219 Bussey St, the house next door, where Maria Guerriero was feeding her one-year-old son, Joseph.[4] It also crushed three cars parked on Bussey St.[4]
A firehouse was constructed on Westfield Street, near High Street, in 1906.[5][6] The lower level had horse stalls, a stable room, a hose wago, and engine room, and an opening to the paddock in the rear.[6] The second story had a sleeping room, a company room, a lavatory, a bath, and a hay and grain room.[6] The building housed horse drawn steamer engines.[6] It went out of service sometime in the 20th century, but still exists as a private residence.[5][6]
Firefighters began wearing uniforms in 1906.[7]
Police Department
[edit]After the department purchased its first police motorcycle in 1923, Abe Rafferty was appointed the first motorcycle officer.[8] By 1936, there were 18 officers.[8]
In December 1973, the Dedham Police Department investigated the sighting of several unidentified flying objects over town.[9] A young couple on a date had their car followed by UFO while they drove through Dedham.[9]
Headquarters
[edit]The department was located on the first floor of Memorial Hall until Town Clerk John Carey locked the doors for the last time on March 16, 1962.[10] The building was demolished in April 1962 after a new town hall was built on Bryant St.[10] The police took up temporary residence in the new town hall for a year[11] while a new police station was built on the Memorial Hall property.[10]
On April 29, 1963, the Police Department moved into their new headquarters on the corner of High and Washington Streets.[11][a] It included a fallout shelter in the cellar that featured walls of 6-inch reinforced concrete and a lead window cover that could be put in place to shield occupants from fallout resulting from a nuclear explosion.[11] It also housed the Civil Defense Communication Center.[11]
Recreation
[edit]In the early 1900s, the ancient Indian burial ground near Wigwam Pond was leveled to make way for athletic fields and a commercial shopping area.[12] The last person known to have been buried there was Sarah David, the wife of Alexander Quapish.[12]
The Recreation Department was begun in the 1930s with an effort to build and staff three playgrounds around town.[13] By the 1960s there were 10 playgrounds.[13] The first Recreation Commission was elected in 1941.[13]
In 1951, the Town of Dedham purchased a three acre plot from the Paul estate for $2,625 and built Paul Park on it.[14][b] Several hundred people attended the dedication ceremony on June 8, 1952.[14]
The Commonwealth took much of the Town Forest in the 1950s to construct Massachusetts Route 128.[16] The state returned 71 acres in the median to the Town in 1972 for use of hikers and picnickers.[16]
Swimming, fishing, boating, and ice skating were popular activities on Mother Brook. In 1925, the Town built a bathhouse on what is today Incinerator Road to replace the 1898 bathhouse that burned down in 1923.[17] It was set aside for women and girls to use on Tuesday and Friday afternoons.[18]
Baby Cemetery
[edit]Land purchased in the late 1940s by Joseph Stivaletta, a local developer, was once home to the Temporary Asylum for Discharged Female Prisoners.[19][20][c] He discovered 11 small, oval stones made of marble marking the graves of children and, rather than disturb them, set the land aside and did not build a home on it.[20][19] When Massachusetts Route 128 was being constructed, Stivaletta convinced then-Transportation Secretary John Volpe to move the road rather than disturb the graves.[19] Volpe's family came from the same small town in Italy as Stivaletta.[19]
Town Meeting voted to accept the cemetery in 1998 after being gifted the land from the Stivaletta family.[21][20][19]
20th century representation in the General Court
[edit]Dedham was represented by a number of women and men in the Great and General Court of Massachusetts.
Public schools
[edit]Quincy School
[edit]In April 1909, Town Meeting voted to appropriate $60,000 to build a new Quincy School and $6,000 for furnishings, fittings, and grading.[38] The original school, it was said at the time was "only held together by the last coat of paint [and had] clearly outlived its usefulness."[39]
The new school was completed on budget and built at the intersection of Greenhood, Quincy, and Bussey Streets.[40][38] It was dedicated on June 4, 1910.[40][38] Within the two-story building were ten rooms.[40][38] It measured 79' by 140' and was made of brick with sandstone trimming.[40] The interior was outfitted with hard pine.[40]
The new school was used until 1982 when declining enrollment and Proposition 2½ forced its closure.[40] Town Meeting authorized the sale of the property to a developer in 1982, but only after off-duty police officers and firefighters were able to find and bring enough Town Representatives to reach a quorum.[41]
Dedham High School
[edit]Dedham High School began playing Norwood High School in an annual football contest in 1920.[42] Over the years, there have been several notable incidents. In 1946, thousands of fans swarmed the field for about 20 minutes after a Norwood touchdown pass was brought back on an offensive interference penalty.[42] During the closing minutes of the game, the crowd threw stones and other objects at the officials.[42] The Dedham Police Department had to escort them off the field after the game.[42]
In 1956, seven boys from Norwood High School threw bottles of blue and white paint, the school colors, through the windows of Dedham's School Department administration building to celebrate their team's win the day before.[43] While they admitted to the paint, they denied being involved with the smashing of 22 windows at Dedham High School on Thanksgiving Day.[43]
Crime and trials
[edit]Sacco and Vanzetti
[edit]The historic Sacco and Vanzetti trial was held in the Norfolk County Courthouse in 1921 under heavy police guard.[44] 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.[45] 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."[44]
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[44] 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."[46] The "cage" in which the defendants sat was "more like a fancy Ferris wheel car" than a cage designed to hold prisoners.[47] It has a tall back, an open front, and no top.[47]
During the trial, Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, who was then in Washington, invited Sacco's wife to stay at his home near the courthouse.[48][49] Sacco's seven-year-old son, Dante, would sometimes stand on the sidewalk outside the jail and play catch with his father by throwing a ball over the wall.[49]
Brandeis 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."[50] At one point, the trial moved outdoors, to Norfolk Street behind the courthouse, so the getaway car could be viewed.[49] Testimony was also offered outdoors.[49]
The 12 jurors were sequestered at the courthouse for the entirety of the six-week trial.[49] They slept on cots in the courthouse's gran jury room and bathed in the basement of the jail.[49] To celebrate the 4th of July, they were brought to Scituate, Massachusetts and given a lobster dinner.[49]
To get a full jury, courthouse officials had to go to extraordinary lengths. Over 600 men were interviewed, with the most common reason for dismissal bringing their opposition to the death penalty.[49] One man, a sugar dealer, tried to pretend that he was deaf in an attempt to get out of serving on the jury. When he was discovered, by answering a question posed by the judge, the Sacco and Vanzetti were sent into fits of laughter.[49]
After 500 potential jurors were interviewed, but only seven selected, deputies from the Norfolk County Sheriff's office went out to workplaces, club meetings, concerts, and elsewhere to bring in additional potential jurors.[49] One man, ultimately selected, was brought from his wedding dinner.[49] The Quincy man had to postpone his honeymoon until after the trial.[49]
At one point the prosecution presented a cap that was found at the crime scene and which they contended to be Sacco's.[49] When Sacco's lawyers had him try the cap on, however, it was found to be much too small for his head.[49]
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.[44] 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."[44] The American embassy in Paris was surrounded by tanks to fend off 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."[44] 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.
Millen/Faber trial
[edit]The brothers Millen, Irving and Murton, alighted from the Yankee Clipper at Readville station on On April 14, 1934, to a crowd of thousands booing and hissing them.[47] A caravan of 40 cars took them from the station to the Dedham jail.[47] When they stopped at the corner of High and Washington streets to ask traffic Officer John Keegan for directions to the jail, Keegan jumped on the running board of the lead car to direct them personally.[51]
The pair, along with Abraham Faber, had robbed a bank in Needham and killed several police officers, including Francis Oliver Haddock and Forbes McLeod.[52] After the robbery and murder, a Dedham selectman recommended that the Dedham Police Department buy a submachine gun.[52]
The trial attracted national attention, and crowds of hundreds, including schoolchildren, waited outside the Norfolk County Courthouse each morning.[53] Several times, people mistakenly walked into the Dedham Historical Society, thinking it was either the jail or the courthouse.[53] When Roscoe Ates tried to get in, courthouse personnel served him with a fake arrest warrant demanding that he appear at the courthouse.[53] The crime was the inspiration for the 1939 film Let Us Live.[52]
Bettina Masserelli
[edit]In 1928, 28-year-old Bettina Masserelli of Dedham robbed a store in Everett, Massachusetts with a male accomplice.[54] When the clerk asked the pair not to take his "bread money," Masserelli told her friend to "sock him."[54] The clerk suffered four broken teeth in the incident and was locked in a coal closet where he was told he was lucky to still be alive.[54]
At the trial, the clerk was able to identify Masserelli, a singer, by her "marked attractiveness" and her "sweet voice."[54] She was found guilty and sentenced to 15 years in the women's prison in Framingham.[54] She was the first woman convicted of armed robbery in Massachusetts.[54]
While in prison, Masserelli climbed down a rope made of bedsheets and escaped.[54] A few weeks later, she was spotted in a car in Dedham again and the Dedham Police Department began a wild car chase through the streets of town.[54] During the chase, she leapt from the moving car and fled on foot.[54] Police eventually found her hiding behind a stone wall.[54]
Endicott Estate
[edit]In 1904, the East Street home of Henry Bradford Endicott, the founder of the multimillion-dollar Endicott-Johnson Shoe Company,[55] burned 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,[56] including one at the fire house.[57] Henry cleared the ashes away and built a new homestead on the 15-acre (61,000 m2) parcel.[56] 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.[58]
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."[56]
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[59] in 1969 the Commonwealth gave the estate back to the Town.[60]
Endicott branch library
[edit]In 1971, the Finance Committee's recommendation to Town Meeting was to appropriate $61,000 to convert the nine car garage[61][58] into a library.[62][63] They also recommended that Town Meeting not adopt a competing article from the Youth Commission that would have turned the garage into a youth center at a cost of $16,000.[62][63] The Finance Committee did recommend, however, that the Recreation Department open a teen center and that a director be hired for it.[63] The Finance Committee argued that it was a prudent move to consolidate the other branches, and that a library would serve all age groups within the town.[62][63] Neighbors of the Estate also objected to a teen center, but supported a library.[62][63]
Town Meeting debated the competing proposals for more than three hours, and ultimately rejected both.[64][65] Though they had initially supported it, at Town Meeting the Finance Committee changed their recommendation from supporting the proposal to recommending indefinite postponement.[64] As a result, the garage continued to be used for storage.[64]
At the 1972 Annual Town Meeting, the Library Trustees made a new pitch for two of the Estate's 26 acres, including the garage.[64] This time, Town Meeting appropriated $68,000 to convert the garage to a branch library.[66][67][65]
Fairbanks House
[edit]The 20th century saw a number of near disasters come to the Fairbanks House, the oldest wooden house in the United States.
On August 18, 1964, a 17-year-old Dedhamite who lived down the street was driving and missed a left hand turn from Whiting Avenue onto East Street.[68][69] It was raining, and the pavement was wet.[69] His car ended up in the east wing of the house, with the rear bumper flush with the wall.[69][68] The 1957 sedan remained in the house overnight until it could be removed the next day.[69] The accident prompted a stone wall to be erected which prevented another car from hitting the house in 1973.[68]
A group of arsonists tried to burn the house down on July 4, 1967.[68] Powderpost beetles were exterminated from the house in the 1970s.[68]
Private Schools
[edit]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.[70] In 1957, Ursuline Academy moved from Boston's Back Bay to a 28-acre (110,000 m2) parcel in Upper Dedham.[71] 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.[72] 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.[72]
Churches
[edit]In 1907, the Methodist congregation built a new church in Oakdale Square at the corner of Oakdale Avenue and Fairview Streets.[73] St. Luke's Lutheran Church expanded their chapel in West Roxbury in 1917 before building a new church at 950 East Street, on the site of the former Endicott School,[74] in 1960.[73]
The Riverdale Congregational Church grew out of a Sunday School class held in William Lent's boathouse.[75] Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bingham donated money and land to build the church, which was completed in 1914 and expanded in the 1960s.[75] When the church closed, the church donated their remaining funds in 1992 to be used as a scholarship for a member of the graduating class of Dedham High School who attended the Riverdale School.[76] As of 2001[update], the building was used by the Calvary Baptist Church.[75]
The Christian Science congregation first held services in the Odd Fellows Hall in 1920 and in 1930 moved to the Masonic Hall.[77] In 1932, they bought Nathaniel Ames' house, moved it to the back of the lot, and built a new church.[77] The cornerstone for the church was laid in December 1938 and a steeple was added after 1940.[77] The first service was held on March 3, 1940.[77]
By the 1930s, St. Mary's was one of the largest parishes in the Archdiocese with over 6,000 parishioners and 1,300 students in Sunday School.[78] During the middle of that decade there were four priests and six nuns ministering to the congregation.[78] In the 1950s, it became clear that a second parish was needed in Dedham, and so St. Susanna's Church was established in 1960 to serve the needs of the Riverdale neighborhood.[79][77] When St. Susanna's opened it had 300 families, while 2,500 stayed at St. Mary's.[80] Before the first mass was said in the new church on February 11, 1962, services were held at Moseley's on the Charles.[77]
Fellowship Bible Church
[edit]Baptists began holding meetings in East Dedham in 1822.[81] The East Dedham Baptist Church was founded in 1843 and was renamed the First Baptist Church in 1919.[82] In 1994, Roslindale's Grace Baptist Church merged with the Dedham church, and the new congregation became known as Fellowship Bible Church.[81][82]
In 1843, they built a small church near Maverick Street.[81] In 1852, a new wooden church was constructed on Milton Street on the corner of Myrtle Street.[82][81] Canton's Jonathan Mann commissioned a new bell, weighing 2,000 pounds, to be cast by the William Blake Company of Boston and presented it to the church on February 20, 1882.[82] In 1911, a belfry was added to the church and the bell was placed in it.[82][81][d]
By 1972, the wooden church was in such disrepair that it needed to be torn down.[82] A new church was built on the same site that year.[81][82]
The John J. Duane Wrecking Company of Quincy demolished the 1852 church in August of 1972 and the church offered their bell to the wrecking company in partial payment of the bill.[82] The company sold it to Charlie and Margaret Spohr, and the couple placed it in one of their lush gardens in their Quissett estate.[82] Following the Spohrs deaths, the property was given to a trust which maintains the gardens free of charge for the public.[82] The Church attempted to re-obtain the bell in 2005, but the trust declined to sell it back.[82]
Economy
[edit]Dedham Square
[edit]In 1900, the Greenleaf Building was finished on the corner of High and Washington Streets, opposite Memorial Hall.[83] It was designed and built by Luther C. Greenleaf and his architectural firm of Greenleaf and Cobb.[83] The building was home to the waiting rooms and offices for the trolley company, stores, a banquet room, offices, and an apartment for the janitor.[83] It was razed in the 1940s.[83]
On March 1, 1967, Ma Riva's Sub Shop opened in Dedham, where Emily and Addie's was in 2018.[84] It eventually would become D'Angelos and then bought out by Papa Gino's.[84] Both are still headquartered on the old Route 1 in Dedham.
In 1903, there were nine blacksmith shops in Dedham. The last one listed in the town directory, Frank P. Kern of Williams Street, appeared in 1941.[85]
Oakdale
[edit]A six storefront building was built in Oakdale Square at the corner of Oakdale Avenue and Sanderson Avenue in 1925.[86] Neighbors complained, however, that it would create a "blind corner" for motorists, and the building inspector tried to shut the construction down.[86] The builder, John Picone of Newton, sued the Town to resume construction.[86] The case made it to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court where Associate Justice Henry K. Braley ruled in favor of Picone.[86] The main store in the building would go on to house Danny's Supermarket, Stop & Shop, Tedeschis, and 7-11.[86] 7-11 shut down in the fall of 2022.[86]
The Rust Craft Greeting Card Company moved to Dedham in 1954 from Kansas City.[87] In 1958, they built what was at the time the largest greeting card factory in the world on what is today Rustcraft Road.[88] They were the first company to sell greeting cards with a fitted envelope and introduced cards for Easter, Valentine's Day, St. Patrick's Day, anniversaries, and more.[88] The building has been used for a variety of other purposes since 1980.[88]
East Dedham
[edit]By the early part of the 20th century, East Dedham had become developed as a busy mill village.[89] The neighborhood had schools, churches, and homes, in addition to the commercial district known today as East Dedham Square centered at the intersection of High and Bussey Streets.[89] The textile mills along Mother Brook began closing in the 1910s and 1920s, however, as owners sought cheaper labor and more favorable conditions in the south.[89][90]
Dedham Drive-In
[edit]On August 11, 1948, the Dedham Drive-In opened on the Providence Pike.[91] The Town Selectmen and business leaders joined Michael Redstone in cutting a ceremonial length of film as hundreds of cars lined up on Elm Street to get in.[91] Fun and Fancy Free and Blondie in the Dough played on opening night.[91] It was the 20th drive-in in Massachusetts.[91]
Permission to build the "open air theater," an exact copy of the drive-in Redstone had operated on Long Island for the previous 10 years, was granted in the fall of 1947.[91] Prior to the construction of the drive-in, the 23 acre parcel was an eyesore.[91] It had housed Farquhar's Nursery at one point, but a "moonscape" was created after it closed and gravel and loam was removed from the site.[91]
Originally, the screen was the 60 feet by 42 feet, but it was enlarged sometime before the fall of 1955.[91] Over time, the theater stopped showing first run films and instead ran B movies.[91]
In 1954, the United Christian Youth Movement held the first of an annual sunrise Easter service at the theater.[91] St. Luke's Lutheran Church took over in 1961, and they continued the tradition until at least 1977.[91]
The drive-in closed in the late 1970s or early 1980s.[91] In 1973, Showcase 1-2-3, a traditional indoor movie theater also owned by Redstone, opened next door. [91]Legacy Place was built on the site in the 20th century, and the Showcase Cinema de Luxe sits on the exact site of the old drive-in.[91]
Dedham Mall
[edit]Ground was broken for the 420,000 sq.ft. Dedham Mall, know then as the Charles River Arcade, on July 1, 1964 by the Pacella Concrete Pipe Corp.[92] While it was originally intended to open in September 1965, it did not actually open until 1967.[92] It was the first enclosed mall in New England.[92] The engineer on the project was J.L. Hayden and the architect was Donald Gillespie.[92] The project director was Richard Wood.[92]
To build the mall, part of Mother Brook was piped underground.[93] It also required reclaiming marshlands near the head of the brook.[94][95] Runoff from the mall ran into the brook and then the Neponset River, which was unable to handle the extra water during heavy rains.[96] In 1968, when the marshes were being drained, the Metropolitan Park Commission applied for an "Open Spaces Grant" from the federal government.[97]
More than 60 stores were in the mall in September 1986.[98]
Television and film
[edit]Dedham has been the setting or filming location of a number of films and television shows:
- In 1920, a film version of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem The Bell of Atri was filmed in Dedham on the Town Common.[99] The screenplay was written by Ethel Howard Lincoln, a Dedhamite.[99][e] The hundreds of extras, or "supes," put on their 18th century attire in Memorial Hall.[99] The extras had a picnic on the Common while the major players ate at the Dedham Inn.[99]
- The film was used as part of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals' "Be Kind to Our Dumb Animals" campaign.[99] The film was lost in a fire at the MSPCA in 2008.[99]
- In the 1980s, the Endicott Estate was featured in an episode of Spenser: For Hire.[100][58]
- The 1982 cult classic Pieces was filmed mainly in Madrid, but also included the same Dedham Square bank robbed in Eddie Coyle.[101]
Anne of Green Gables
[edit]William Desmond Taylor's 1919 silent film Anne of Green Gables was filmed in Dedham.[102][103] After the studio purchased the rights to the book, they sent a scout to New England to find a filming location.[104] He declared Dedham to be the "quaint New England village" they were looking for, but choosing the Fairbanks House as the title home was an odd choice as it did not resemble the Nova Scotian farmhouse that served as the inspiration.[105][f]
It was the favorite role of star Mary Miles Minter, who starred as Anne Shirley. It was while in Dedham that Minter fell in love with Taylor, who was 30 years older than she was.[107] Taylor and the film crew arrived in Dedham in July and filmed at First Church and Parish in Dedham, St. Paul's Church, the Endicott School, the lawn of the Endicott Estate, the Charles River, the Captain Onion House, and the Dedham Woods.[108] They also filmed in Islington.[108]
In addition to local landmarks, there were 75 locals who were cast as extras, and James Burke's Jersey cow and Arthur Benson's "prize porkers" were also shown.[109] The film also starred Paul Kelly.[110]
A picnic was held at the Fairbanks House for the film crew after production finally ended in August, having been delayed by an unusually rainy summer.[108] Minter spoke at the Fairbanks family reunion where she was presented with a bouquet of American beauty roses.[108] It was released on November 23, 1919.[102] On December 1, the film was shown for the first time in Memorial Hall.[109] There was a second showing later in the week and two more the following week.[109]
It is considered to be a lost film. After Taylor was murdered, and Minter and her mother were named suspects, the studio and many theater owners destroyed their copies of the films.[111][112] None are known to have survived.[111]
The Friends of Eddie Coyle
[edit]On October 17, 1972, The Friends of Eddie Coyle was shot at the Dedham Plaza, showing W.T. Grant's, Woolworth's, Barbo's Furniture, Liggett's Drugstore, Capitol Supermarket, Friendly's, and Plaza Liquors.[113] A few weeks later, on December 1, the crew shot the film's opening scene in Dedham Square.[113] The South Shore Bank[g] was the used as the bank robbed in the film.[113] Local businesses including Geishecker's, P.J.'s Pastry Shop, McLellan's, and Gilbert's Package Store can be seen as the movie's bank manager drives through the Square.[113] Robert Mitchum signed autographs for fans in between takes.[113]
Technology and modernization
[edit]East Dedham urban renewal project
[edit]In 1965, Town Meeting voted to declare East Dedham Square "blighted" and undertake an urban renewal project.[114] The measured passed by a single vote more than was needed to reach the two-thirds majority required.[114] The project was scaled back from 26 to 14 acres, but nine residential properties were taken, forcing the relocation of 42 families.[114]
Much of East Dedham Square was raised.[115] In the 1920s, the neighborhood was home to a haberdashery, an undertaker, stables, a grocery story, a bakery, a pharmacy, a dentist, and more.[115] After the project, a strip mall, public housing, a parking lot, and condo development took their place.[115]
Telephone history and changes
[edit]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.[116] It was witnessed by Reed's teacher, Grace Hine, Dedham's former chief telephone operator of 39 years, Margaret Dooley, Selectman Arthur Lee, and several representatives of New England Telephone and Telegraph Company.[116][117] The call took place at the Dedham Historical Society and was placed by the president-emeritus of the Society, Dr. Arthur Worthington.[117]
The call was made possible by the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company’s new telephone exchange building at 387 Washington Street.[117] Construction had begun on the building in July 1954 when the previous wooden structure, the 88-year-old J. Everett Smith Market building, was demolished.[117] It was not until late in 1955 when construction on the new building began.[117] The cornerstone was laid on April 4, 1956, with a time capsule placed inside.[117] At the cornerstone laying ceremony were several selectmen, telephone company officials, the town’s postmaster, police chief Walter Carroll, and State Representative Francis Harding.[117] Father William Kennedy of St. Mary’s Church delivered an invocation and Reverend Leland Maxfield of the Westwood Baptist Church offered a benediction.[117]
The new facility enabled Dedham residents, starting at 2:01 am on Sunday, December 1, 1957, to make direct dial calls. Previously, residents asked an operator at a building on Church Street next to the Dedham Public Library to connect lines using the exchange DEdham 3.[117] The new direct dial exchanges were either DAvis 6 or DAvis 9.[117] The telephone company ran ads in the Dedham Transcript to alert customers to the change, and the Avery School PTO hosted a workshop to help explain the new system.[117] While the new systems enabled residents to obtain new phones in colors other than black, it also resulted in the layoffs of 176 operators who worked in the Church Street facility.[117]
As of 2023[update], the building is mainly a switching center for Verizon FIOS internet, telephone, and television subscribers.[117]
Automobiles
[edit]Around 1900, Dr. Harry K. Shatswell of School Street built and drove a "steam powered horseless carriage" through the streets of town.[118] 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.[118] In 1903, there were 11 cars registered in Dedham.[118]
William Kissam Vanderbilt was pulled over by Dedham Police Department officers Smith, Hatch, and Crocker in August 1906.[54] He was accused of "scorching" through town at a speed of 30 miles per hour.[54] Vanderbilt was driving from Boston to his family vacation home, The Breakers, in Newport, Rhode Island.[54] He claimed he was warned of the speed trap in West Roxbury and thus was only doing 12 miles per hour as he drove through town with his wife and a mechanic.[54] His brother had been pulled over for speeding on the same stretch of road just one week earlier.[54] Vanderbilt said he was going to fight the ticket, and crowds gathered outside the courthouse the following week in hopes of seeing the tycoon and racecar driver.[54] They were disappointed, however, when his attorney arrived instead to pay the $15 fine.[54]
Holidays
[edit]Independence Day
[edit]Wagon burnings
[edit]Beginning in the early 1900s and continuing until the 1990s, bonfires would be held first in Oakdale Square and then in the Manor to celebrate the 4th of July.[119] It would usually begin at midnight, either on July 3 or July 4, when a young person would climb onto the roof of the Church of the Good Shepherd and ring the bell.[119][120][h] This would signal others to bring old farm carts they had stolen into Oakdale Square and light them ablaze.[119][120]
In the early days, through the 1930s, police and fire officials were on hand to keep order and maintain safety.[119][120] As farm carts became scarcer as Dedham and surrounding areas became more developed and less agricultural, people would begin building their own carts for the express purpose of burning them.[119] Other times, carts would be stolen from other area communities that still had a large farm presence such as Medfield or Sharon.[120] They would be hidden in backyards and garages until it was time to bring them to the fire.[120]
In 1938, when no carts could be found, an old outhouse was used instead.[119][120] A cart had been stolen from Canton, but police stopped the boys who were transporting it.[120]
The fires would often grow so large and so intense that windows in the Square would crack and tar would melt.[119][120] By 1959, the fires had grown so intense that the Town adopted a by-law, perhaps one of a kind, to outlaw the practice:
“No person shall set fire to or burn, or cause to be moved through any way or street of the Town, any waste material, paper, wood or any inflammable substance on any wagon, cart, buggy, push–cart or on any vehicle, with the intention of setting fire to or burning same on any way or street of the Town.”[119]
The last fire in Oakdale Square took place in 1963.[119][120] When police and the fire department arrived to shut it down, they were pelted with rocks, cherry bombs, and full cans of beer from the thousands of people there.[120][119] When the fire department attempted to douse the flames, a reveler jumped into the firetruck and turned off the ignition.[120] He was arrested.[120]
This proved to be too much for Police Chief Walter Carroll and Fire Chief John Hartnett, and they vowed to end the tradition.[121] July 4, 1964, was rainy, which kept the crowds at home, and the police shut down Oakdale Square on the evenings of July 3 and July 4, 1965.[122]
Several years later, the tradition was revived in the Manor but, after an explosion and an intense fire melted the siding on a nearby house in 1990, the tradition was finally ended.[119][123] In that year, propane-soaked wood in a camper trailer exploded, leading to destruction.[122] A block party was held in MacDonald Square and attended by hundreds of people, preventing a fire from taking place.[123] Smaller attempts were made in the following years, but the tradition died after that.[124]
Antiques and Horribles parade
[edit]As time went on, the Antiques and Horribles parade became less of a lampoon of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts' parade and more of a general costume parade.[125] Those who marched in the parade and the floats they rode on came to be satirical, poking fun at current events and public figures.[125] The 1907 parade included Siamese twins, the Wild Man of Borneo, a bearded lady, a bicycle navy, and a "nondescript what is it--man or woman--a nickle a guess."[125] The Dedham Transcript said that parade "gave the jokesmiths a grand opportunity to wok off superflous wit."[125]
During World War II, marchers dressed up as Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini were booed during the 1942 parade.[125] The tradition continued until the 1950s, when it became a more traditional parade with bands and others, including Rex Trailer.[125]
Safe and Sane 4th Campaign
[edit]During the early years of the century, the Playground Association of America encouraged people to celebrate Independence Day safely, without fireworks or other rowdy behavior.[125] In 1908, the Dedham Transcript ran a list of things not to do on the 4th that was a mixture of both real and tongue in cheek, including:
- Don't encourage small boys to fire large canons.
- Don't throw firecrackers at passing bicyclists.
- Don't aim a sky rocket at an upstairs window.
- Don't put firecrackers on the steps of a church.
- Don't put firecrackers under old ladies' dresses.[120]
Flag Day
[edit]In 1967, the Flag Day Parade began and quickly became one of Dedham's most beloved traditions.[126] The parade has occasionally rejected controversial floats. In 1975, the Parks and Recreation Commission unanimously refused to allow an anti-busing float during the nearby Boston desegregation busing crisis.[127] In 1971, after Arthur "Mr. Wake Up America" Stivaletta claimed to be a co-sponsor of the parade, Recreation Director James E. Dunderdale publicly clarified that the Parks and Recreation Department was the only sponsor.[128]
Fires
[edit]1923 dry meadows fire
[edit]Starting around 1908, the bogs around the Charles and Neponset Rivers were declared to be "pest holes" and drained.[129] During a drought in the summer of 1923, the now dry meadows caught fire and burned for weeks.[129] Fires burned in Rodman's Woods off of Westfield Street and Job's Island[i] as well as in Broad Meadow in Needham and Purgatory Swamp in Canton.[129]
Smoke was so thick that car crashes were common and a driving ban was instituted in Dedham Square.[129] Streetcars in the area had to be guided by men holding ropes and carrying lanterns.[129] Members of the Department of Public Works and civilians joined the fire department, which only numbered eight men, to try and put out the flames through September and into October.[129]
The fires became an attraction of sorts, with spectators coming to watch frogs, chipmunks, and screeching birds trying to escape the flames.[129] The fire was not extinguished until it rained on October 15.[129] After two months of fire, the stream produced by the rain was as thick as the smoke—which had drifted as far north as Reading at times.[129]
Log Cafe fire
[edit]Shortly after 2 a.m. on October 19, 1940, a fire at the Log Cafe on Bridge Street was called in.[130][131] The fire destroyed the Cafe and Breed's boathouse.[130] 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.[130][131][132] 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.[130][131][132]
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.[132] Harrigan, a 47-year veteran of the force, died slightly after 4 a.m., leaving behind a wife and four daughters.[130] 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.[130][131][132] Harrigan's funeral at St. Mary's Church was attended by 1,500 people, including chiefs from 100 cities and towns.[132]
Rockland Street
[edit]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 Engine Company Three for their bravery.[133][134]
Wars
[edit]World War I
[edit]During World War I, 642 men from Dedham served, and 18 died.[135] The first to enlist was Henry W. Farnsworth who fought with the French Foreign Legion and was killed in action at Tahure, France, in October 1915.[135] Robert Bayard also died early in the war.[136] His name is memorialized on a boulder at the Riverdale School, along with two other soldiers from Pine Heights, Charles Clough and Stanley Luke.[136]
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.[135]
To honor those who served and died in the war, the Town set aside 23 acres of marshland at the corner of East Street and Eastern Avenue and created Memorial Park.[136] Across the street, a memorial was erected at the corner of East Street and Whiting Ave.[135] When it was dedicated on May 17, 1931, the pastor of St. Mary's Church, Fr. George P. O'Connor, noticed that the Latin inscription at the top, Pax Victus, translated to "peace to the vanquished" instead of "peace victorious."[136]
In 1936, the monument needed repairs and the commander of the American Legion[j] looked into the matter further.[137] He brought up the issue at Town Meeting, and newspapers around the country started running stories about how Dedham had mistakenly erected a monument to the enemies the Americans had defeated.[138] A sum of $400 was appropriated to change the inscription to Pax Victoribus or "Peace to the Victors," but it was eventually changed to simply Pax.[138]
World War II
[edit]Many Dedhamites served in the armed forces during World War II. One, John Hayes, was a pilot who earned a Bronze Star and a Distinguished Flying Cross.[138] While stationed at Camp McCauley in Salzburg, Austria in 1954, he began taking children suffering from whooping cough on flights.[138] The high altitude helped to alleviate some of their pain and discomfort.[138] He made over 100 flights with sick children and became known as the "Whooping Cough Captain."[138] After he died in 1954 when his single engine plane crashed, a nine foot granite obelisk was erected by local officials near the airfield in tribute to him.[138]
Dedham's dogs also played an part in the war effort. The Dogs For Defense set up a training center for canines at the Karlstein polo grounds[k] In July 1942, the first class of 35 dogs were graduated after an eight week training program.[139] They had emotional goodbyes with their owners and were then sent off to undisclosed assignments.[139]
At least two Dedham dogs took part including a Belgian shepherd named Teddy, who was owned by the Allgaier family.[139] Another dog, Bessie, was owned by Ford and Josephine Friend's family.[139] After the war, when Bessie would hear fireworks on the 4th of July, she would hit the ground and hide under the nearest table, just as she was trained to do during the war.[139][l]
Draft
[edit]Before the United States entered the Second World War, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, instituting the nation's first peace time draft.[140] October 29, 1940, Secretary of War Henry Stimson put on a blindfold, reached his hand into a glass container, and pulled out the number 158.[140] On Fairview Street, 22-year old Stephen Ferris was eating lunch when his mother, who was listening to the live radio broadcast, gave him the news that he had been drafted.[140] In response, Ferris shouted "Hooray for Uncle Sam, I’m the first one!"[140]
On November 18, 1940, a ceremony was held at the Norfolk County Courthouse to honor to Dedham residents and one Canton resident who had volunteered for a year of military service. More than 50 people attended, including members of their family, local clergy, selectmen, draft board officials, and members of V.F.W Post 2017. The young men then walked to Dedham station where they departed for Fort Devens.
As the number of recruits and draftees grew larger, the ceremony became more elaborate with marching bands and a color guard escorting the young men to the train station.[140] Members of the public again stood on the sidewalk and cheered while the Women’s Defense Corps gave them refreshments and the Dedham Association for Men in the Service handed them a billfold full of cash.[140] When Phillip Jackson entered the Navy in 1944, he handed the drumsticks he used as a marching band member off to his replacement before boarding his own train.[140]
Vietnam War
[edit]During the Vietnam War, a group of friends known as the Dedham Seven served in the war.[141] Two of them did not return home.[141] Private First Class Neil Thalin was killed in action and Robert Todd was missing in action.[141] The remaining members have all committed to being cremated and having their ashes interred on Veteran's Hill at Brookdale Cemetery.[141] Others from Dedham who were killed include John Barnes, Bernard Dutton, Angelo Larraga, Frank Litchfield,[m] and Robert Todd.[141]
During Barnes' second tour in Vietnam, his unit came under attack during the Battle of Dak To. Barnes was killed when he jumped on a grenade to save the lives of wounded comrades. For "conspicuous gallantry" that was "above and beyond the call of duty", Barnes posthumously received the Congressional Medal of Honor. Within hours of learning that Barnes was to be awarded the Medal of Honor, a Blue Ribbon Commission was established by the Town of Dedham to make plans for a "John A. Barnes Memorial Day."[142][n] On April 19, 1970, The Town of Dedham rededicated Memorial Park as Barnes Memorial Park.[142]
New towns and subdivisions
[edit]With the division and subdivision of so many communities, Dedham has been called the "Mother of Towns."[144]
Community | Year incorporated as a town[145] | Notes |
---|---|---|
Plainville | 1905 | Eastern section of town was part of the Dorchester New Grant of 1637. Separated from Wrentham. |
New neighborhoods
[edit]Ashcroft
[edit]Ashcroft began to be developed in 1873,[146][147] but it took off in the 20th century.
After his father's death in 1898, Ebenezer Talbot Paul[o] inherited a vast tract of land that stretched from what is today known as Oakdale, Greenlodge, Endicott, and the Manor,[14][p] as well as the family home at 390 Cedar St.[148][q] In the 1920s, he began subdividing the land into house lots[14] and named the streets after members of his family.[149] Paul Street was named for him, while Taylor Ave was named for his wife, Marietta Taylor.[149] Dresser Ave was named for his mother, Susan Dresser, and Crane Street for his grandmother, Martha Crane.[149] He proposed calling the new neighborhood Ashcroft Woods.[14]
Some of the proposed streets were never built, and a proposed intersection of Beech Street with Turner Street never materialized, likely due to a large rock in what was once known as Ogden's Woods.[14] It was proposed that the name Mt. Vernon Street be continued on the other side of the Boston and Providence Railroad, but it was named Kimball Road instead.[14] Paul died in 1930, but most of the homes were not built until the 1950s.[14]
Greenlodge
[edit]In the last major development of town, the Smith Farm became the neighborhood of Greenlodge.[146][147] Greenlodge became known in its early days as the Peanut Butter Valley as it was said that after paying for their expensive new homes that residents could only afford to eat peanut butter sandwiches.[16]
Riverdale
[edit]By 1910 the area on the opposite side of the Charles River began to be developed.[146] 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.'[146] Today, the neighborhood is known as Riverdale.[146]
The Manor
[edit]The Sprague farm by the Neponset River became known as the Manor.[147][146]
Fairbanks Park
[edit]House lots along Central Avenue and its side street began to be sold on April 19, 1894 by the Fairbanks Park Land Company.[150] A tract of land measuring 1.7 million square feet was sold by John Bullard to Albert T. Foster of the Fairbanks Park Land Company, who intended to subdivide the land into house lots between 3,000 and 20,000 square feet.[150] In the first year, 200 lots were sold.[150] The company had agents riding the train to Dedham station on Sunday, Wednesday, and Saturday afternoons.[151] Anyone who was going to look at lots would be given a free train ticket by the agent, who walked through the train with the conductor, and then a carriage ride to the office at the subdivision.[151]
John F. Kennedy
[edit]A reception and campaign rally was held at the Ames Junior High School for John F. Kennedy in September during the 1952 United States Senate election in Massachusetts.[152][r] Kennedy returned to the Oakdale School in October.[152] In 1953, he was the keynote speaker at the annual meeting of the Holy Name Society at St. Mary's Church.[152] He spoke before 800 people at the school hall.[152] When he was running for reelection in October 1958, Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy were the guests of honor at a dinner at the Hotel 128.[152] They then went to a reception at the Dedham High School.[152]
When Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, Dedham mourned with the rest of the country.[152] On the National Day of Mourning on November 25, there was a public memorial service at noon in Dedham. Town leaders, veterans groups, the Knights of Columbus, the police and fire departments, the Women's Auxiliary, and the Dedham High School marching band processed from Memorial Park to Dedham Square.[152] When they reached the police station, clergy from the various churches in Dedham gave brief remarks.[152] There was a volley fire and a bugler who played taps.[152]
The 5th annual torchlight parade was canceled the night before the annual Thanksgiving Day football game against Norwood High School, but Dedham won the game at home by a score of 30-0.[152] A few weeks later, at the 153rd annual meeting of the Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves, a moment of silence was held for the late president, and the new president, Lyndon B. Johnson, was elected as a member.[152]
Proposals to memorialize the president were considered in the weeks that followed, with the selectmen originally considering a standing memorial somewhere on public property.[152] They later decided that a scholarship would be established at the High School to better "embody some of the warmth of the late president for people, some of his love for athletics and his interest in literature."[152]
Other
[edit]1900s
[edit]In 1900, 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 him 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[48] as well as a member of the Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves.[153] 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."[48]
Anna Huntington Smith moved to Dedham and established the Pine Ridge Pet Cemetery and animal sanctuary.[154] The facility was to be a place where the working horses of Boston could rest or, if needed, be euthanized.[155] Smith built an electrified stall on the property, which she called "the House of the Blessed Release," that would kill the horse whenever it happened to wander into it.[154] If a horse could be saved, it was given a few weeks of rest and then returned to its owner along with a warning to take better care of the animal.[154] As motors took the place of horses, the facility eventually changed its focus to cats and dogs instead.[156]
1910s
[edit]In 1919, the Dedham Fire Department switched from horse-drawn apparatus to motorized trucks.[131]
1920s
[edit]In 1920 a man's skeleton was found hanging from a tree in the woods near Wigwam Pond.[157] Another was unearthed on the eastern shore of the pond in 1924 when workers were digging a foundation for a house in Fairbanks Park near the ice houses.[157][158]
In 1921, the local American Legion post moved into the home at the corner of East Street and Whiting Avenue originally built by Charles and Mary Brown.[159][160] The Legion purchased the house with a $35,000 donation from Henry B. Endicott's widow.[160][161]
In 1927, a stone bench and memorial plaque were installed at "the keye," the site where the first settlers disembarked from their canoes on the Charles River, where the river makes its "great bend," near what is today Ames Street.[162][163] It was designed by Charles E. Millis.[164]
1930s
[edit]During the 1936 tercentenary celebrations, Olympians Ellison "Tarzan" Brown and Johnny Kelley ran in a "mug hunt."[165] The roughly 9.5 mile race was the third annual, and was sponsored by the Oakdale Athletic Club and organized by Harold Rosen.[165] The start was in Oakdale Square and the finish was at Stone Park.[165]
1940s
[edit]During World War II, there were 2,400 men and women who served in every branch of the armed forces.[166] On them, 55 were killed in action.[166]
1950s
[edit]In 1956, the American Legion moved from the Shaw House to 155 Eastern Avenue.[160] The Dedham Public Schools then used the house as their administrative offices.[159][160]
In 1957, Joseph Demling, a resident of Macomber Terrace, walked into Town Hall with the carcass of the 35 pound bobcat.[167] He asked for a $20 bounty on the animal, citing a by-law passed by the Town Meeting in 1734.[167] The Town originally balked, suggesting that the animal came from Needham, but eventually paid Demling the money he requested.[167]
1960s
[edit]In July 1961, Connie Hines returned with great fanfare to Dedham after appearing on Mr. Ed.[168] The 1948 Dedham High School graduate rode into Dedham Square in a convertible with a Dedham Police Department escort.[168] The red carpet was rolled out for her in front of Memorial Hall.[168] Town officials gave her a Key to the Town and Ralph Eaton, her principal at Dedham High School, presented her with a bouquet of roses.[168] She later hosted a reception of Hotel 128 for her high school classmates.[168]
After an executive order[169] 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.[170]
David Stanley Jacubanis robbed a bank in Dedham in 1962, after he was paroled in Vermont. He was, for a time, on the Federal Bureau of Investigation's 10 Most Wanted List. The day after Thanksgiving, 1963, Santa Claus arrived by helicopter and landed at the Dedham Plaza.[152]
1980s
[edit]Mike Weir[s] entered the Guinness Book of World Records for throwing a grape the longest distance into the mouth of another person.[171]
Population
[edit]The population of Dedham has grown more than 10 times since 1793, reaching its peak around the year 1980.
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Notes
[edit]- ^ A new public safety building for both the police and fire departments was opened on March 12, 2023.[11]
- ^ A plaque was placed on a boulder recognizing the Paul family, but has been missing since at least 2011.[15]
- ^ Stivaletta is the father of Arthur Stivaletta.[20]
- ^ Parr and the Historical Society differ in the year the belfry was added. Parr says 1910, while the Society says 1911.
- ^ Lincoln's mother, Doris Howard, was principal of the Avery School for many years.[99]
- ^ The author of the book, L.M. Montgomery, was displeased with the film as a whole as she thought it was too "New England" and not enough "Prince Edward Island."[106]
- ^ As of 2023, it is a Citizen's Bank.
- ^ The tradition of ringing the bell at midnight dated back to the 1880s.[120]
- ^ Job's Island is now a peninsula at 91 Common Street.
- ^ A man named Hamilton.[137]
- ^ Located near the present day Rashi School.[139]
- ^ The Friend family live on Emmett Avenue in East Dedham.
- ^ Litchfield was a 1965 graduate of Dedham High School. Just two months before he was scheduled to return home, he stepped on a booby trap and was killed.[141]
- ^ The Commission was chaired by Stan Embress, a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Jacob Jones Post, the same post in Dedham that Barnes joined after his first tour of duty.[143] Also on the commission were the Town's three selectmen, Charles M. McGowan, Francis W. O'Brien, and Daniel P. Driscoll, as well as Edgar George, Ralph Timperi, John McMillian, Robert F.X. Casey, James McNichols, James Tansey, and James Cline.[143]
- ^ Ebenezer Talbot Paul's parents were Susan and Ebenezer Paul.[14] Paul was on the Board of Assessors in Dedham for many years.[15] When he died in 1930, his estate was worth $1.2 million in 2022 dollars.[14] His wife, Marietta (née Taylor[15]), died in 1949 at the age of 92.[14] They had no children.[14] In Marietta's will, she stipulated that a fountain should be placed in the pond at Brookdale Cemetery and dedicated to her husband.[15] It was dedicated in May 1953.
- ^ The family farm was located on what is today Dresser and Taylor Avenues, Beech Street, and Kimball Road.[15]
- ^ The house was torn down, and a new one built, in the winter and spring of 2023.
- ^ Kennedy's cousin, John Fitzgerald, and his wife Helen (née Fitzhenry), lived at 49 Meadow Street in Dedham.[152]
- ^ Weir would later become chief of the Dedham Police Department.[171]
- ^ 27% of the population was foreign born.[89]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Sleeper Bill, Almost Law, Stirs Dedham". Daily Boston Globe. February 6, 1960. p. 1.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Dedham Historical Society 2001, p. 12.
- ^ a b "States Dedham has no fire engineers". The Boston Globe. April 23, 1923. p. 7. Retrieved November 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c East Dedham Firehouse, Dedham Historical Society Archives, May 13, 2017
- ^ a b @DedhamFire (November 8, 2018). "#TBT In the 1800's the area of High at Westfield St. was known as Connecticut Corner and was the center of business activity in Dedham. This station was built in 1906 on Westfield St. and still exists today as a private residence" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ a b c d e Dedham Historical Society 2001, p. 16.
- ^ Dedham Historical Society 2001, p. 15.
- ^ a b Dedham Historical Society 2001, p. 14.
- ^ a b "UFO Follows Car in Massachusetts" (PDF). UFO Investigator (April 1974). National Investigations Committee On Aerial Phenomena: 2.
- ^ a b c Parr 2009.
- ^ a b c d e Parr, James L. (March 11, 2023). "Where in Dedham? The Dedham Police Station". Dedham Tales. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
- ^ a b Coughlin, Gail. "Dedham's Indigenous Histories" (PDF). Dedham Museum and Archive. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
- ^ a b c Dedham Historical Society 2001, p. 13.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Parr, James L. (November 12, 2022). "Who put the Paul in Paul Park? /Part 2". Dedham Tales. Retrieved November 19, 2022.
- ^ a b c d e Parr, James (June 2, 2024). "Where in Dedham- Brookdale Cemetery". Dedham Tales. Retrieved June 2, 2024.
- ^ a b c Parr 2009, p. 21.
- ^ Parr, Jim (March 11, 2024). "A Short History of the Dedham Incinerator". Dedham Tales. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
- ^ "Women Enjoy Swim at Dedham". The Boston Globe. August 17, 1907. p. 12. Retrieved March 17, 2015.
- ^ a b c d e "Tiny cemetery recalls a forgotten story". The Dedham Times. March 6, 1998.
- ^ a b c d Brems, Lisa (April 12, 1998). "For 'baby cemetery,' a taxing reemergence". The Boston Globe. p. 17. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
- ^ Brems, Lisa (April 19, 1998). "Dedham Town Meeting vote accepts 'baby cemetery'". The Boston Globe. p. 45. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
- ^ "Stimson asked". The Boston Globe. July 31, 1902. p. 5. Retrieved September 23, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f "Joseph H. Soliday". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 18, 1947. p. 29. Retrieved December 27, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b Secretary of the Commonwealth 1908, p. xciv.
- ^ a b Secretary of the Commonwealth 1908, p. lxi.
- ^ a b The Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1910, p. xcv.
- ^ a b The Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1910, p. xi.
- ^ Bridgman, A.M. A Legislative Souvenir 1916 (PDF). Vol. XXV. Stoughton, Mass.: The Pequa Press, Inc. p. 97.
- ^ a b c d e "John K. Burgess of Dies at His Dedham Home". The Boston Globe. December 10, 1941. p. 17. Retrieved November 20, 2019.
- ^ a b Public officials of Massachusetts (1925-1926). Boston Review. 1925. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Commonwealth of Massachusetts (1947). Public officials of Massachusetts (1947-1948). Boston Review. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
- ^ a b Public officials of Massachusetts (1927-1928). Boston Review. 1927. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
- ^ a b Public officials of Massachusetts (1929-1930). Boston Review. 1929. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
- ^ a b Public officials of Massachusetts (1929-1930). Boston Review. 1929. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
- ^ a b Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1931, p. 139.
- ^ a b Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1931, p. 309.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Commonwealth of Massachusetts (1955). Public officials of Massachusetts (1955-1956). Boston Review. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
- ^ a b c d "The Dedham Historical Society & Museum's trivia answer". The Dedham Times. Vol. 29, no. 35. September 3, 2021. p. 14.
- ^ Dedication of the Quincy Schoolhouse. Dedham, Massachusetts. June 4, 1910. Dedham Historical Society's archives.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c d e f Dedham Historical Society 2001, p. 24.
- ^ "The Dedham Historical Society & Museum's "Trivia Time"". The Dedham Times. Vol. 29, no. 35. September 3, 2021. p. 2.
- ^ a b c d "Unruly Fans Stone Officials as Dedham Tops Norwood". The Boston Globe. November 29, 1946. p. 7. Retrieved November 24, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "7 Norwood Boys Admit Hurling Paint at School". The Boston Globe. November 30, 1956. p. 39. Retrieved November 24, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d e f Doug Linder (2001). "The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti". University of Missouri - Kansas City School of Law. Archived from the original on February 20, 2007. Retrieved January 14, 2007.
- ^ Jean O. Pasco (2005). "Sacco and Vanzetti were guilty said novelist Upton Sinclair in a rediscovered note". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved January 14, 2007.
- ^ Robert D'Attilio. "La Salute é in Voi: the Anarchist Dimension". RecollectionBooks.com. Archived from the original on September 8, 2006. Retrieved January 15, 2007.
- ^ a b c d Parr 2009, p. 60.
- ^ a b c 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.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Parr 2009, p. 59.
- ^ Robert D'Attilio (6 Aug 2004). "Sacco-Vanzetti Case". University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved January 15, 2007.
- ^ Parr 2009, p. 60-61.
- ^ a b c Parr 2009, p. 61.
- ^ a b c Parr 2009, p. 62.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Parr 2009, p. 68.
- ^ "The Endicott Estate". James Joyce Ramble. Archived from the original on December 31, 2006. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
- ^ a b c "History". The Endicott Estate. Archived from the original on December 8, 2006. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
- ^ 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.
- ^ a b c Sandy Coleman (2005-05-12). "Historic mansion opens doors in gala celebration of 100 years". Boston Globe. Retrieved December 26, 2006.
- ^ Carol Gerwin (1999). "Where the heck is the governor's mansion?". Commonwealth (Fall).
- ^ Chapter 471 of the Acts of 1969
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{{cite podcast}}
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