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History of Dedham, Massachusetts, 1800–1899

The history of Dedham, Massachusetts, from 1800 to 1899 saw growth and change come to the town. In fact, the town changed as much during the first few decades of the 19th century as it did in all of its previous history.[1]

Having been named Dedham shiretown of the newly formed Norfolk County in 1793, the town got an influx of new residents and visitors. This growth was aided by new turnpikes and railroads, with taverns popping up to serve travelers. In the 19th century many former farms became businesses and homes for those who commuted into Boston. The population of the town more than tripled in this period.

The Town government expanded dramatically with the institution of the public library, the police department, fire department, and others. St. Mary's Church was established, with William B. Gould doing the plaster work. The congregation at St. Paul's constructed a number of churches, and First Church suffered a schism. A number of schools were established, including Dedham High School. The Town was central to two major court cases, the Fairbanks Case and the Dedham Case.

The "scenery" of the town was described as "varied and picturesque" with "an appearance of being well kept." Several new towns broke away, including Dover, Westwood, and Norwood.

Local government edit

The Dedham Public Library was established in 1872 and first occupied rented space at the corner of Court Street and Norfolk Street.[2][3] It built a permanent home in 1886 at the corner of Church and Norfolk Streets using funds left by Hannah Shuttleworth.[2] The building, made of Dedham Granite and trimmed with red sandstone, opened in 1888.[2] The Dedham Infirmary, also known as the Poor Farm, built a home on Elm Street in 1898.[4] It closed in February 1954.[4]

The Dedham Water Company was chartered in 1882.[3] Gas streetlights were introduced in 1869 and were followed by electric lights in 1890.[3]

The first police officers were appointed in 1876 and worked each day from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m.[5] The police department was originally housed on the first floor of Memorial Hall.[5]

Fire Department edit

A fire truck made by Paul Revere was purchased by a group of citizens and donated to the Town in 1800 as "a public utility and a very great security against the calamities of fire."[6][7] It was known as Hero No. 1.[6][7][8] It was stationed at the Connecticut Corner firehouse.[7] A second hand tub, the Good Intent No. 2, was purchased in 1802 and stationed in the central village.[9][8] The third engine, the Enterprise, was purchased in 1826.[8]

In 1831, Town Meeting purchased eight more engines, including the Niagara and Water Witch.[10] These two, together with the Hero, Good Intent, and Enterprise, were all located in the First Parish.[10] The first steam engine was purchased in 1872.[3]

Each engine had its own company of men attached to it and keen was the rivalry existing between the organizations.[10] The Norfolk House was often selected for the annual meetings and dinners of the different companies for the next 40 years.[10]

A firehouse in East Dedham was constructed in 1846 on Milton Street near the Old Stone Mill.[11] It was used until 1897, when the firehouse on Bussey Street was constructed.[11] Hose Number 3[a] was purchased by the town for the Milton Street station in 1891 and then moved to the Bussey Street location.[11] That building also housed a supply wagon.[11]

The central fire house was built at the corner of Washington and Bryant Streets.[12] It housed Steamer Number 1, Hose Number 1, and Hook and Ladder Number 1.[12] Both Hose Number 1, which carried 1,000' of hose, and Hook and Ladder Number 1, were drawn by two horses.[12]

Selectmen edit

 
The Dedham Board of Selectmen. Clockwise from top left: Benjamin Weatherbee, Augustus Bradford Endicott, J.Bradford Baker, Ezra W. Taft, and Samuel E. Pond.
Year first elected Selectman Total years served Notes
1813 Eliphalet Pond Jr. [13][b]

Town Clerks edit

Year first elected Town Clerk Total years served Notes
1812 Josiah Daniell 3 [17]
1815 Richard Ellis 29 [17]
1824 John Bullard 1 [17]
1845 Jonathan H. Cobb 3 [18]
Charles H. Farrington [18][c]

First townhouse edit

After the new courthouse was constructed in 1827, the old courthouse was sold to Harris Monroe and Erastus Worthington.[19] The pair speculated that the Town may want to use it as a town hall, and so they dragged it south down Court Street to a new lot.[19] The Town decided to build an entirely new structure, however, on Bullard Street in 1828.[20][19] By 1858, however, a town committee was complaining that "the present town house is neither in location, size, or style, sufficient to meet the reasonable requirements of the town."[19] It was too far away from the center village and too ugly they said, and though there were over 1,000 voters in the town the building could not accommodate more than 275.[21] Town meetings were frequently crowded and confused in the townhouse, and it was difficult to hear speakers and determine votes.[21]

Memorial Hall edit

 
Memorial Hall

A committee decided that the first town hall was inadequate, but it remained standing for an additional eight years.[22] Eventually, in 1867, it was decided that a new building should be erected to both house the town offices and to memorialize those who died in the Civil War.[22] The firm of Ware and Van Brunt was hired to design the building, and they produced a "supremely Victorian plan" that recalled the "provincial town halls of England in outline and design."[22]

Though Town Meeting had appropriated virtually unlimited funds for the project, a town committee tried to save money by cutting out several elements.[23] The changes left it with a slightly unfinished appearance from the outside and an interior "utterly barren of all decent conveniences."[23] It was described as Dedham's "monument alike to her dead soldiers and to living stupidity."[23]

Brookdale Cemetery edit

For nearly 250 years after it was established, Old Village Cemetery was the only cemetery in Dedham.[24] Seeing a need for greater space, the Annual Town Meeting of 1876 established a committee to look into establishing a new cemetery.[25] Town Meeting accepted the committee's recommendation on October 20, 1877, and appropriated $8,150 to purchase more than 39 acres of land to establish Brookdale Cemetery.[26]

County, state, and federal government edit

In the 1812 Massachusetts gubernatorial election, Dedham voters cast 299 votes for Democratic-Republican Party Elbridge Gerry and 172 for Federalist candidate Caleb Strong.[27] The Democratic-Republican Party gained 46 votes over the previous election but the Federalists gained 56.[27] During the campaign, Dedham's Democrats held rallies to get out the vote on April 1, 1812, at Marsh's Tavern and April 2, 1812, at Lem Ellis' Tavern.[27] All parts of town represented at the rallies except the South Parish.[27]

By 1836, Dedham "had long been a focus for the vigorous political activity popularly associated with the Jacksonian era."[28]

New courthouse edit

When it became apparent that the old County Courthouse was out of date, the Norfolk County Commissioners ordered a new one to be built.[29] The old courthouse eventually became Temperance Hall.[21]

The Commissioners originally were seeking a utilitarian building that would be fireproof and safe to store important documents.[29] Local boosters, however, wanted a building that aligned with the town's rapidly improving self-image.[30] The commissioners were persuaded that

something more was required... than what was barely necessary; that... the state of this County, rapidly advancing in wealth and prosperity, required a liberal and judiciously expenditure for public accommodation, and that acquiring a taste for the fine arts was intimately connected with a refinement of manners and even with moral sentiment; that a magnificent temple of Justice would inspire an elevation of mind and contribute to cherish those feelings of reverence for the administration of the laws which it is so desirable to cultivate in a free community; the as the situation was in the most handsome and conspicuous place in the town, the building should be made in accordance with the architectural spirit of the times and comporting with the dignity and taste of the citizens of the County.[29]

The land for the courthouse, across the street from the existing one, was purchased from Frances Ames for $1,200.[29] Masonic ceremonies, bell ringing and cannon fire accompanied the laying of the cornerstone on July 4, 1825.[29] It was designed by Solomon Willard and built in the Greek style with pillared porticoes.[29][31] Construction was completed in February 1827.[29]

From the outside, it was an attractive building, but it was not a comfortable place to work.[29] The only water was provided by a well on Court Street, and it did not have an adequate heating system.[29] One employee complained that it was "barren and destitute of every convenience, demanded for health, comfort and decency."[29]

Renovations in 1854 added gas lights to the building and running water from an on-site well.[29] Six years later, in 1860, the building was fireproofed to protect county records.[29][d] A group of citizens petitioned the commissioners, asking them not to make any structural changes for fear of ruining the exterior aesthetics of the building.[19] Despite this, the Commission decided to extend the north front of the building, to add wings on either side, and add a large dome to the roof.[19][31][e] Following plans developed by Gridley J. F. Bryant, the building was enlarged again between 1892 and 1895 to its present H-shaped configuration, adding wings to the southern facade that matched those added in 1863 to the north.[32]

Representation in the General Court edit

Year Representative Representative Representative Senator Notes
1800 Isaac Bullard [33]
1801 Isaac Bullard Ebenezer Fisher [33]
1802 Ebenezer Fisher [33]
1803 Ebenezer Fisher [33]
1804 Ebenezer Fisher [33]
1805 Ebenezer Fisher John Endicott [33]
1806 Ebenezer Fisher John Endicott Isaac Bullard [33]
1807 John Endicott Isaac Bullard Samuel H. Deane [33]
1808 John Endicott Samuel H. Deane Jonathan Richards [33]
1809 John Endicott Samuel H. Deane Jonathan Richards [33]
1810 John Endicott Samuel H. Deane Jonathan Richards [33]
1811 John Endicott Samuel H. Deane Jonathan Richards [33]
1812 John Endicott Samuel H. Deane Jonathan Richards [33]
1813 John Endicott Samuel H. Deane Jonathan Richards James Richardson [33]
1814 John Endicott Erastus Worthington Abner Ellis [33]
1815 Erastus Worthington Samuel H. Deane Abner Ellis [33]
1816 John Endicott William Ellis Abner Ellis [33]
1817 Abner Ellis William Ellis Timothy Gay Jr. [33]
1818 William Ellis [33]
1819 William Ellis [33]
1820 William Ellis [33]
1821 Edward Dowse [33]
1822 John W. Ames [33]
1823 William Ellis Abner Ellis Pliny Bingham [33]
1824 William Ellis Pliny Bingham Josiah S. Fisher [33]
1825 Richard Ellis [33]
1826 Richard Ellis [33]
1827 Richard Ellis Horace Mann [33]
1828 Richard Ellis Horace Mann [33]
1829 Richard Ellis Horace Mann [33]
1830 Richard Ellis [33]
1831 Theron Metcalf (in May) Richard Ellis (in November) Horace Mann (in November) [33]
1832 Theron Metcalf John W. Ames [33]
1833 Theron Metcalf Richard Ellis John Morse [33]
1834 John Endicott John Morse Daniel Covell [33]
1835 William Ellis Daniel Marsh John Dean III [33]
1836 Joshua Fales John Morse Daniel Covell [33]
1837 Joshua Fales John Morse Daniel Covell [33]
1838 Joshua Fales [33]
1839 Joshua Fales [33]
1840 Joshua Fales [33]
1841 Merrill D. Ellis Ezra W. Wilkinson [33][34]
1842 Merrill D. Ellis [33]
1843 Merrill D. Ellis [33]
1844 Joseph Day [33]
1845 Joseph Day [33]
1846 Edward L. Keyes [33][35]
1851 Ezra W. Wilkinson Edward L. Keyes [35][34]
1852 Ezra W. Taft Edward L. Keyes [36][35]
1856 Ezra W. Wilkinson [34]
1859 Ezra W. Taft [37]
1872 Augustus Bradford Endicott [38]
1873 Augustus Bradford Endicott [38]
1874 Augustus Bradford Endicott [38]
1892 George S. Winslow William Francis Ray [39]

Military and wars edit

Bursting of the Town cannon edit

In the mid-1800s, the town's 17th century cannon was ordered to be destroyed. The cannon was prepared for use during King Philip's War but was never used,[40] and was ordered to be swung during the Revolution.[41] Thomas Cobbett, who was a member of an artillery company when he was younger, dragged the cannon to a meadow far from the village, filled it with gunpowder and gravel, and then lit a long fuse.[41][f] Pieces of the cannon were then distributed to residents.[41] One, which went to Horatio Clarke, was subsequently used to hold open the door of the grocery store at the corner of School and Washington Streets.[41]

War of 1812 edit

While Massachusetts as a whole opposed the War of 1812, the people of Dedham largely supported it.[42] Many in the Federalist press called it "unjustifiable," " needless," "bloody," "destructive," objectless," "and "Godless."[42] Both houses of the Great and General Court passed resolutions opposing the war, and every county in Massachusetts except Norfolk held anti-war conventions.[43] There were calls for a state convention to discuss ways to resist the war, but others said it would be unconstitutional and illegal.[44] Governor Caleb Strong refused to call up the militia to protect the seacoast.[45]

Dedham fully supported the war, and adopted resolutions at town meeting on July 20 calling it a "just and necessary war waged for the protection of our violated rights and liberties."[44] Town Meeting "Resolved, that since Congress has thought it necessary to declare war for the protection of commerce, for the liberties of our citizen, for our national sovereignty and independence, for a republican form of government itself, we hesitate not to declare our firm resolution to prosecute it with all our energy."[43]

On August 17, 1812, a convention was held at Marsh's Tavern to join the Suffolk and Middlesex conventions in their addresses to the president relating to the war.[46] Though there was a downpour of rain, the meeting hall was filled with war supporters.[47] Dr. Nathaniel Ames made frequent references to the war in his diary, including on the USS Constitution's battle with the HMS Guerriere.[48]

When news of victory in the war reached Dedham, the old town cannon was dragged to the First Church green to celebrate.[49] Rev. Joshua Bates opposed the firing, so he went there with a bucket of water to douse the fuse before it could be lit.[49] Pitt Butterfield, a republican and captain of the artilierists, "faced the church militant and in language more forcible than elegant gave the other party to understand that any interference with the loading or firing of the field piece would result in a fight then and there and that the broadcloth of a priest would not protect a meddling and domineering politician."[49] Bates backed off.[49] The cannon was fired.[49]

Defense of Boston edit

In June 1814, the British Navy was off the coast of Massachusetts and threatening to invade.[50] As people on the coast worried about invasion, they moved their valuables inland.[50][g] Seven loads[51] of specie from the Union Bank and other goods from Boston[52] were moved to the vault of the Dedham Bank.[50] By September, large amounts of naval and military goods would be moved from Boston to Dedham for safekeeping.[53]

On September 12, 1814, Dedham's militia marched to Boston to help in the defense.[52]

US Army troops edit

In the spring of 1814, a "regiment of flying artillery" had their headquarters in Dedham and were recruiting men there.[48] Ames wrote of a Federalist doctor on the staff of the regiment who he called "an internal enemy."[48] Ames claimed the doctor opposed the war and wished every American soldier would die before they reached Canada.[48]

In August 1815, a regiment arrived and encamped on the "Church lot (Swets) South of Mill Creek."[54] The next moth, Ames recorded: "Vast militia parade these two days at Dedham. 1st division, Boston, Bellingham Cohasset -- all meet at much expense and grumbling, only to salute a bareheaded General."[54]

A number of Dedham soldiers fought, and some died,[h] in the Battle of Lundy's Lane during the War of 1812 under General Winfield Scott.[55]

Powder House edit

In the mid-1800s, a group of boys pried open the doors of the powder house one winter day.[41] They found kegs of stiff white card cartridges filled with damn powder and heavy bullets.[55] There were also kegs filled with flints used in flintlock muskets.[41]

The boys took the cartridges down to the meadows where fires burned for the benefit of the ice skaters nearby.[41] The damp powder hissed and sizzled when thrown into the fires, and the bullets were melted down.[41]

A proposal was made by Louis Bullard to turn the powder house into a memorial of prominent Dedhamites, with their names carved into the building.[41] Nothing came of it.

The striped pig edit

In the early 1800s, the quarterly militia training days had become drunken and licentious affairs.[21][56] In response, the General Court passed a law in 1838 that prohibited the sale of alcohol in quantities of less than 15 gallons on training days.[21][57] Dedham, as the county seat, hosted a number of militia companies on training days.[21]

A farmer from Dedham's Low Plains came to Common with a pig he said was striped by a zebra.[21][56] For 6.25 cents, people could enter the tent to view the animal.[21][56] With admission, everyone was entitled a free glass of rum or gin.[21][56]

The incident upset many in the temperance movement and was the topic of a number of pamphlets.[21] Within days, newspapers across the country ran stories about the striped pig.[56] A popular song was also written about it.[21][58] Entitled "The Dedham Muster, or the Striped Pig," it was set to the tune of King and Countryman and talks about how greedy water vendors charged so much on a hot day that soldiers instead turned to the striped pig tent to quench their thirst.[56]

Public intoxication became known as "riding the striped pig" and the striped pig became a symbol of efforts to skirt the law.[56] Temperance promoters began enacting laws against ruses to evade the law that were known as "striped pig devices."[56] A political party, known as the Striped Pig Party, was formed to oppose anti-alcohol laws.[56] A local meeting of the striped pig party met at the Norfolk Hotel just a month after the training day were the striped pig first appeared.[56]

Taverns and public began adopting the name the Striped Pig, and people would argue about the proper direction of the stripes.[59]

Civil War edit

Several days after the fall of Fort Sumter, a mass meeting was held in Temperance Hall which opened with a dramatic presentation of the American flag.[60] A total of 47 men signed up to serve in the war at that meeting, forming Dedham's first military unit since the Dedham militia was disbanded in 1846.[60][61][i] More men enlisted in the coming days[60] and the first company was formed in early May.[62]

The troops would march and maneuver through the streets of the village.[63] When they did so, townspeople would come out to watch and young boys would often tag along.[63] During one training session on the Common, a young recruit opened an umbrella when it began to sprinkle.[64][63] The man, a barber who worked on Church Street, was told by Captain Onion that he could not march with an umbrella.[63] He chose to leave instead, listening to the jeers of the men who remained.[63] An effigy of the "man with the umbrella" appeared hanging from a noose several days later at the corner of Church and High Streets, and the young man quickly left town.[64][63]

On September 3, 1864, the 18th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment was mustered out of service.[65] It had participated in some 15 battles.[65] Of the 58 who enlisted from Dedham, 11 had fallen in the field, six had died from disease and wounds received in battle, eight had been discharged by reason of wounds, and 13 by reason of disability resulting from wounds.[65] Of the whole company, 23 men had either died or fallen in battle.[65] The regiment bore a part in nearly all the general battles of the Army of the Potomac except those of the Peninsula before Richmond.[65] Upon their return, Dedham welcomed them with fitting ceremonies.[65]

The 35th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment saw nearly three years of active service, beginning almost with the day of their arrival in the field.[66] On its colors were inscribed, by an order of General Meade, the names of 13 battles to which was afterwards added a 14th.[66] Their campaigns were not limited by a state or a department. They fought in Kentucky, East Tennessee, and Mississippi, as well as in Maryland and Virginia.[67] In many of their battles, their position was among the most exposed to the enemy and sometimes in the most deadly conflicts.[68] It became a proverb among the soldiers that the commanding officer of the 35th was sure to be struck down in every engagement.[68]

Of the 68 who enlisted from Dedham, six were killed in battle and one more died soon after of his wounds, five died in the service from disease, eight were discharged on account of their wounds, and eleven for disability.[68] The Town desired to give them a public welcome home, but they declined the honor, saying they preferred to pass without ceremony from the life of the soldier to that of the citizen.[68]

Support from home edit

The women of the town immediately began working on producing supplies for the troops at the outbreak of war.[60][61][69][70][71] In a span of 24 hours, they sewed 100 flannel shirts, of which 60 were sent to the state and 40 were reserved for Dedham soldiers.[60] In the next two weeks, they made an additional 140 shirts, 140 pairs of flannel underwear, 126 towels, 132 handkerchiefs, 24 hospital shirts, 70 pincushions, 70 bags, and a handful of needlebooks.[60] During the war, several Dedhamites traveled to visit the soldiers in camp, and several in service received furloughs to visit home.[69]

After the Second Battle of Bull Run, a messenger burst into a church on Sunday morning with news of the defeat.[22][72][73][70] The service was halted, and churchgoers organized into work parties.[22][72][73][70] Less than six hours later, two wagon loads of clothing, bandages, medicines, and other supplies were on their way to Boston to be loaded onto an emergency supply train.[22][72][73][70][74]

On May 6, 1861, the Town voted to "stand by the volunteers and to protect their families during the war."[61] The Town Meeting also appropriated $10,000 for the cause.[61] A number of other similar votes took place in the coming years such that the town spent a total of $136,090.81 on outfitting the troops, supporting the families, and providing bonuses for soldiers who enlisted.[74]

Churches edit

In 1807, Nathaniel Ames discovered the Town was using the taxes he paid for the support of the church to pay the First Church's minister, and not his new Anglican church minister.[75] The tax collector told him it was a bad law and refused to follow it, which prompted Ames to retort that he was as big of a tyrant as Napoleon Bonaparte.[75]

First Church edit

Votes were taken in 1805 and 1807 to expand the meetinghouse, but nothing came from either effort.[75]

Seeing the success the Anglican Church down the street had renting out land, First Church began renting out lots around the meetinghouse around the turn of the 19th century.[76]

Ministers edit

First Church Minister Years of service Notes
Jason Haven 1756-1802 [77]
Joshua Bates March 16, 1803-February 20-1818 [78][79][80]
Alvan Lamson October 29, 1818 – October 29, 1860 [79][81][82][80]
Benjamin H. Bailey March 14, 1861 – October 13, 1867 [79][83]
George McKean Folsom March 31, 1869 – July 1, 1875 [79]
Seth Curtis Beach December 29, 1875- [79][84]

As the years went on, Rev. Jason Haven's mental and physical condition continued to decline.[85] He was frequently so beset with fevers, migraines, and coughing spells that he could not get out of bed.[85] The prospect of hiring an assistant or a replacement was brought up time and again at parish meetings, but without a decision ever being made.[86] Finally, Rev. Joshua Bates, a recent Harvard College graduate, was called to serve as associate pastor in April 1802.[87][88] Fisher Ames served on the search committee, helping to explain why a Federalist minister was called to serve a congregation that was Democratic Republican by a ratio of 3 to 1.[89]

Three months later, Haven died.[87][90] On December 30, 1802, the parish met and debated whether or not Bates should be afforded the traditional lifetime contract.[88] Nathaniel Ames, noting how unpopular Haven had become over the years, advocated for a trial period first.[88] Fisher Ames made an eloquent speech of support and this was enough to issue a call.[87][88] As a result, several members, including Nathaniel, left the church and became Episcopalians.[87][90]

Bates was ordained on March 16, 1803 "before a very crowded, but a remarkably civil and brilliant assembly."[87] The opposition to Bates was so intense that it seems some, including the newspapers, expected there to be some sort of protest at his ordination, but nothing ever materialized.[88]

During his pastorate, the Lord's Supper was administered every six weeks.[91] On the Thursdays preceding, he would preach the Preparatory Lecture.[91] Students in the nearby school were marched to the meetinghouse to listen to the lecture, and Bates would visit the school on Mondays to quiz students on the catechism.[91]

Politically, he was an ardent Federalist while the town and the church were strongly anti-Federalist.[91] Though he was not as liberal as some had hoped, his sermons often were intolerant of those whose politics who differed from his own and were not well received.[90][91] He believed Thomas Jefferson to be an infidel and that his followers were, at best, doubtful Christians.[91] He was a "high-toned Calvinist school," and he was not particularly charitable towards those of other denominations.[75] He also demonstrated a sense of superiority over his own flock.[92] By 1808, even Fisher Ames would have enough with Bates and would join Dedham's Anglican church.[75]

Just after midnight on the Fourth of July, 1809, a group of Republicans dragged the old town cannon to just below Bates' bedroom window.[75] They stuffed it with sod from his lawn and were about to set it off when Bates appeared in his nightshirt.[75] Not recognizing him immediately, one celebrant yelled "Get out of the way, you old bugger, or you'll get your brains blown out!"[75] Bates and his bucket of water convinced the crowd to leave, but they soon returned.[75] They fired the cannon, which was more than 150 years old, and awoke Bates again to the sound of shattering windowpanes.[93]

Several years later, the entire choir resigned, en masse.[94] It is not clear why from the records, but Bates missed them and worked to get them back.[75]

In 1818 he asked to be dismissed from the church to accept the presidency of Middlebury College.[91][95] It is assumed that, due to his differing political beliefs and his politically tinged sermons, that many in the congregation were glad to let him go.[91] His last sermon was delivered February 5, 1818.[95] He was later go on to become Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives.

Split at First Church edit

 
The First Church of Dedham and church green.

The First Church and Parish in Dedham split in 1818 over a dispute about who should become the next minister. At the time, 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."[96] 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."[97]

In 1818, "Dedham [claimed] rights distinct from the church and against the vote of the church."[97] 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."[98] The parish, along with the members of the church who remained, installed their own deacons and sued to reclaim the church property.

With the Congregational Church established as the state religion in Massachusetts at the time, the dispute eventually reached the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. The court 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."[99] 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.[100]

The breakaway members formed the Allin Congregational Church across the street from the First Church. The remaining members of First Church renovated their meetinghouse and moved the front door to face the church green, and away from the Allin Church in 1820.[101] In 1888, on the 250th anniversary of the church, a joint service was held in First Church in the afternoon, followed by a social reunion, and then a second service at the Allin church.[102]

Episcopal churches edit

St. Paul's edit

Anglican Church Minister Years of service Notes
William Montague 1794-1818 [80][103]
Samuel B. Babcock 1830s [104]

In 1791, the congregation regrouped after the American Revolution and called William Montague away from Old North Church.[105] Montague received a salary of £100 sterling.[106] He remained in the Dedham church until 1818.[103][j]

When the church began leasing out land, it offered a flat rate for the first seven years which would then be adjusted for the subsequent years.[107] Many of the tenants refused to pay the increases, however, and the church evicted them.[107]

The 1798 Episcopal church in Franklin Square was replaced by a new building at the corner of Court Street and Village Ave.[108] It was 90' long and had a bell tower in front that was 100' high.[108] The builders, Thomas and Nathan Phillips, were from Dedham.[108] Designed by Arthur Gilman after Magdalen College, Oxford, it was consecrated in 1845 but burned down in 1856.[108]

The fourth church was completed in 1858 with a bell tower added in 1869.[109] The bell was donated by Ira Cleveland.[109] One minister, Rev. Samuel B. Babcock, served as rector in three buildings from 1834 to 1873.[109] A chapel was added later, built with a bequest from George E. Hutton.[109]

Good Shepherd edit

Lay readers from St. Paul's began ministering to Episcopalians in the Oakdale section of town in 1873 who could not get to the church easily.[110] Out of their efforts grew the Church of the Good Shepherd, which was dedicated in 1876.[110] One of the early members was William B. Gould.[111]

St. Mary's edit

In 1843, 85 years after the Acadians arrived, the first Catholic Mass was said in Daniel Slattery's home where the police station stood in Dedham Square from the 1960s until 2023. 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 Temperance Hall.[112][113]

Large number of Irish immigrants fled the Great Famine a few years later and many of them settled in Dedham.[114] 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.[113] 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.[113] Theodore Metcalf may also have been a descendant of Jonathon Fairbanks.[115] 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.[116]

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.[113]

Other churches edit

Beginning in 1818, itinerant Methodist ministers held services in private homes in Dedham.[102] The first resident pastor, Rev. Joseph Pond, arrived in 1842 and a church was completed in 1843 on Milton Street near the intersection with Walnut Street.[102][k]

The first Baptist church was opened in 1843 near Maverick Street, but meetings had been held for years prior beginning in 1822.[117] A new church was built at the corner of Milton and Myrtle Streets in 1852.[117] Rev. Calvin Durfee[l] was minister of the South Parish in 1836 and Rev. John White was at the West Parish.[119]

Over the course of his career, William H. Mann was the organist at St. Paul's, the First Church and Parish in Dedham, and at the Baptist Church in East Dedham.[120][m]

Residents edit

Population edit

The population of Dedham has grown more than 10 times since 1793, reaching its peak around the year 1980.

Historical population
YearPop.
17501,500[121]
18001,973[122]
18012,000[123]
18303,057[122]
18373,532[124]
18657,198[125][122][n]
18886,641[116]
YearPop.
1892>7,000[126]
18957,211[127]
18996,641[128]
19159,284[129]
193011,043[129]
194015,136[130]
195015,508[131]
YearPop.
196018,407[131]
197023,869[131]
198026,938[131]
199025,298[131]
200023,782[131]
200223,378[132]

The population grew dramatically in the 19th century, largely by immigrants seeking work in the mills along Mother Brook.[122] The largest group, comprising 75% of new arrivals, were the Irish who fled the Great Famine.[122] The second largest group were Germans who moved to the area in large numbers beginning in the 1850s.[122] Later in the century, large numbers of Italians and Eastern Europeans moved to Dedham.[122] The immigrants were overwhelmingly Catholic.[122]

Race and ethnicity edit

In the mid-1800s, there were only a few non-white families in town. One student remembers only two black classmates at the Centre School during this time: Sara Robbins, the daughter or granddaughter of Seth Robbins, and Sam Johnson, the grandson of Mott Johnson.[118] There was also only one Irish student, Patrick "Pat Slat" Slattery.[133]

A black family lived at the corner of Washington Street and Wilson's Lane (modern day Worthington Street).[134] The father was a whitewasher and was assisted by his son, who also had a great musical talent.[134] They were very social with the boys of the neighborhood, although practical jokes were played on the family, including lighting a quantity of gunpowder placed under one of their beds on the morning of the Fourth of July.[134]

Neighborhoods were often segregated by national origin.[122] In the area between Bussey and Washington Streets, the Germans congregated on Shiller Road and Goethe Street.[122] Many Irish lived on Maverick, Colburn, and Curve streets.[122] Curve Street also had a number of Canadians.[122] An Irish immigrant, who lived at 27 Myrtle Street from 1872 to 1907, rose from working in the woolen mills to becoming Superintendent of Streets and then eventually a deal estate developer.[122] He both rented and sold many homes in the Hill Avenue area to fellow Irish immigrants.[122]

New Dedhamites edit

Alcott edit

Louisa May Alcott's mother, Abba, ran an "intelligence office" to help the destitute find employment.[135] When James Richardson came to Abba seeking a companion for his frail sister who could also help out with some light housekeeping, Alcott volunteered to serve in the house filled with book, music, artwork, and good company on Highland Avenue.[136] Alcott imagined the experience as something akin to being a heroine in a Gothic novel as Richardson described their home in a letter as stately but decrepit.[136]

His sister, Elizabeth, was 40 years old and suffered from neuralgia.[136] Elizabeth was shy and did not seem to have much use for Alcott.[136] Instead, Richardson spent hours reading her poetry and treating her like his confidant and companion, sharing his personal thoughts and feelings with her.[136] Alcott reminded Richardson that she was supposed to be Elizabeth's companion, not his, and she was tired of listening to his "philosophical, metaphysical, and sentimental rubbish."[136] He responded by assigning her more laborious duties, including chopping wood and scrubbing the floors.[136]

She quit after seven weeks in the winter of 1851, when neither of two girls her mother sent to replace her decided to take the job.[136] As she walked from his home to Dedham station, she opened the envelope he handed her with her pay.[136] She was so unsatisfied with the four dollars she found inside that Aloctt family tradition states that she mailed in back to him in contempt.[136]

She later wrote a slightly fictionalized account of her time in Dedham titled How I went into service, which she submitted to Boston publisher James T. Fields.[137] He rejected the piece, telling Alcott that she had no future as a writer.[137]

Browns edit

In 1847, a successful dry-goods merchant in Boston moved to Dedham with his wife.[138] Charles Brown and Mary Patterson Shaw[o] built a home at the corner of East Street and Auburn Street, modern day Whiting Avenue.[138] It was described as "one of the most commanding positions in the town."[138] At a cost of $18,264, it was one of the most expensive home in the Greater Boston area.[138] After Mary died in 1886, it was purchased by the Boston Children's Friend Society as a home for boys.[138][p]

Goulds edit

 
William and Cornelia Gould with their children.

After the Civil War, the formerly enslaved Naval veteran William B. Gould settled in Dedham with his wife, Cornelia, who had been purchased out of slavery before the war. Together they had six sons and two daughters and raised them on Milton Street in East Dedham. While living in Dedham, Gould became a building contractor and community pillar. He did the plaster work at St. Mary's Church, was a founder of the Church of the Good Shepherd, and was extremely active in the Grand Army of the Republic's Charles W. Carroll Post 144.

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." A statue of him was unveiled on Milton Street to mark the 100th anniversary of his death during Memorial Day 2023.

Mann edit

During the 1800s Dedham became the summer home of many wealthy Bostonians and, with the Industrial Revolution, many immigrants to the United States.[139] 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.[140] He soon "became interested in town affairs, was often chosen Moderator of the town meetings, and was an early candidate for office."[140] Mann served as Dedham's Representative in General Court from 1827 to 1832 as well as on the School Committee.[140][141] 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."[142] Former President and then Congressman John Quincy Adams later read the address and "expressed great confidence in the future career of Mr. Mann."[140]

Nickerson edit

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 where he "took an active part in community affairs and made generous donations to charitable causes."[143] He sold the house to his brother George[144] 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.[143]

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.[143][129] 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.[145] The castle has a number of interesting architectural elements but its most famous is by far its numerous secret passages[146] and "legendary underground mazes and hallways."[147] 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."[148]

Economy edit

Early in the 19th century Dedham become a transportation hub and the "existence of quick freight service promoted a burst of industrial development."[149] By the 200th anniversary of the town's incorporation in 1836, Dedham was "a thriving commercial and manufacturing center."[28] Within 50 years of the railroads' arrival in 1836, the population almost doubled to 6,641.[116]

Industry edit

With the arrival of railroads in 1831, Dedham became an attractive location for manufacturing.[150] By 1837, 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.[124] Together they were worth $510,755 with the silk goods alone worth $10,000.[124]

A silk factory opened on Eastern Ave in 1836[151] but burned down on March 11, 1845.[41] In later years it became a dye house, a laundry, and a playing card factory.[151][152][q] By 1880, the site had become home to the C.D. Brooks Chocolate Factory.[151] On March 28, 1845, the Ashcroft Calico Works burned down.[41]

There were more than 500 people employed in local industries in 1845.[150] That year there were two cotton mills, a silk factory, a furnace foundry, a shovel works, three woolen mills, a paper factory, two tanneries, eight woodworking factories, a cotton thread factory, two iron and tin works, four coach manufacturers, and a number of smaller businesses producing boots, shoes, saddles, harnesses, cigars, marbled paper, pocket books, and headwear.[150] The marbled paper manufactory, S.C. & E Mann, was located on the south side of High Street between Court and Pearl Streets.[18][r]

Frederick L. Bestwick, the harness maker, lived on School Street just east of the Centre School with his nephew, Albert.[153] After Joel Richard's died, Aaron Marden and Henry Curtis opened up a planing mill and sawing business in this first floor of the Richards' shop.[154][s]

Major Jacob Clark[t] was a building contractor who later became a millwright, setting up water-wheels at mills around New England and the maritime provinces before the advent of the steam engine.[55] Clark lived on Federal Hill and his factory was powered by horses who walked in a circle and powered a large gear overhead.[55] Most of the waterwheels in use at the time, including those on Mother Brook, were overshot wheels.[55] Clarke also built the Allin Congregational Church.[55]

After Clark's death in 1837, his partner, Edward B. Holmes, continued the wheelwright business.[55][u] In 1846, Thomas Dunbar, who had been their apprentice, became Holmes' partner.[55][155][v] They moved the shop from Federal Hill to an old paper mill on High Street near East Street.[155] The building was across the street from the train tracks in a building connected to a blacksmith shop.[155] In the basement was a stationary engine of a peculiar design. In the lower story were circular saws, lathes, and planers.[155] On the floor that was level with the train tracks was iron work machinery.[155] The pair then moved to an unused building near the old stone depot on Mother Brook where they used steam power.[55]

Sumner Wilson had a carpenter shop on Wilson's Lane where the saws and lathes were run by horsepower.[134][w] He later built a two family rental house next door.[134] A carriage manufacturing and painting shop owned by Elisha McIntosh was located on Court Street and a blacksmith was located in the rear.[120][x]

With the Industrial Revolution, Dedham experienced the ups and downs of a national economy.[139][23]

Dedham Pottery edit

Hugh C. Robertson moved the Dedham Pottery plant from Chelsea to Dedham in 1896.[156][157] The architect of the building, who also served on the company's board, was Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow Jr.[158] The plant, which rarely if ever employed more than six people at a time, was located on Pottery Lane, off High Street, where the 2012 Avery School stands.[158] The company closed in 1942 and the building burned to the ground in the 1970s.[158] Maude Davenport, who was raised on Greenlodge Street in Dedham, is regarded as the company's most skilled decorator.[159]

Roads edit

Turnpikes, including the South Road, linking Boston and Providence, and the Middle Road, linking Dedham and Hartford, were laid through town during the first few years of the 19th century.[160] In 1810, the stage left Boston at 4 a.m. and passed through Dedham as it traveled 100 miles to Hartford.[161] It arrived at 8 p.m., stopping only to change horses.[161]

In 1802, Fisher Ames and a group of others requested that the Great and General Court lay out a new turnpike between the Norfolk County Courthouse and Pawtucket.[162] Dedham's representative, Ebenezer Fisher, voted no, but the Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike was chartered on March 8, 1802.[163] Nathaniel Ames was incensed and believed Fisher's no vote made him a "traitor" motivated by "an ancient prejudice against the Old Parish."[163] At the following May's election, the issue of turnpikes was a greater driver of participation than political party.[163] Those from the outlying parts of town attended in large numbers to support Representative Fisher and his opposition to the turnpike.[163]

The Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike created modern day Washington Street from High Street in Dedham Square to the Roxbury line.[163][y] It then turned west to Court Street, where it ran south to Washington Street, and then straight to Pawtucket.[163]

Edward L. Penniman laid out Mt. Auburn Street (modern day Whiting Avenue[128]) and Mt. Vernon Street through his own property.[165][z] The Town named the intersection of those two streets Penniman Square, but Penniman died the same day and never learned of the honor.[165]

Jeremiah Shuttleworth leased a lot of land from St. Paul's Church at the corner of Church and High Streets.[166] The minister, William Montague, referred to the intersection as "Jere Square" in his honor.[166]

Modern day Worthington Street was known in the 19th century as Wilson's Lane.[153] Dwight's bridge over Wigwam Creek stood at the intersection of High and East Streets.[154] Lyons Street is named for a 19th-century landowner, Elisha Lyon.[167] Lyon lived on the Needham side of the Charles River.[167] There has been a bridge on the site since the 1740s, but the current bridge was built in 1879.[167] Lyons Street originally ran as far as Common Street but was cut short and dead ended when Route 128 was built.[167]

Railroads edit

 
The Dedham Train Station was located in Dedham Square where the parking lot now is.
 
Sketches of the station

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.[112] 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.[112] 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.[149]

The train bridge over Wigwam Creek, near the intersection of East and High Streets, had a red roof.[155] Mrs. Hutchins' boarding house was next door.[155][aa] 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.[168]

In 1881 the Boston and Providence Railroad company built a station in Dedham Square out of Dedham Granite.[169] 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 an addition to the main branch of the Dedham Public Library.[169]

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.[170]

Connecticut Corner edit

In 1800, a group of tinsmiths from Connecticut, including Calvin Whiting[ab] and Eli Parsons, began a business at the corner of Lowder and High Streets.[171][172][7] They attracted additional businesses, including a dry good store.[171] The area became known as Connecticut Corner.[7][171][172][ac] In 1833, the Russel and Baker furniture company moved into the area but, after two bad fires, moved downtown in 1853.[174] It employed 500 people.[174]

Banks edit

The Dedham Bank was founded in Dedham in 1814 and asked Nathaniel Ames to be a director.[7] Ames declined, citing the large number of lawyers involved with its creation.[7] Ten months after creation, however, the bank had 66 shareholders in Dedham, Boston, Bellingham, Medway, Dover, Walpole, Franklin, Needham, Woburn, Roxbury, Medfield, Sharon, Wrentham, Hopkington, Bridgewater, Canton, and Sherburne.[7] There was an attempted burglary of the Dedham Bank in 1863 with the would-be thieves using gunpowder.[3]

The two major banks at the end of the century were the Dedham National Bank, with over $300,000 in capital, and the Dedham Institution for Savings, with more than $2,000,000 in deposits.[116]

Retail shops edit

A grocery store stood in the middle part of the century at the corner of School and Washington Streets.[41] It was owned by Austin Bryant, the Town's treasurer and tax collector.[175][ad] Bryant sold the store to Horatio Clarke in 1845, and in 1847 it was sold again William H. Mason.[175] Mason owned it until his death, at which point it was taken over by Merrill D. Ellis.[175][ae] Enoch Sutton, the watchmaker, owned the next house south on Washington Street.[175] Another grocery store opened on the first floor of the S.C. & E. Manufactory on High Street[18] and there was a slaughterhouse on Eastern Ave near the railroad station.[176]

Andrew Wiggin's shoe store was on the corner of High Street and Washington Street.[155][41] At the same corner was a tailor and Mason Richard's dry goods store.[155][af]

A Mr. Eaton was the lumber dealer.[152][ag] A millinery store was located under Temperance Hall.[41] Erastus Shumway owned a stove and tinshop on School Street.[153] He later moved the shop to Court Street on the first floor of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows building.[120][ah] Next door lived Ambrose Galucia, a house painter.[153]

Around the corner on Franklin Square was the home of Joseph Guild, the hardware dealer.[134] Nathaniel Hewins was the Town's baker, and he employed a Mr. Sawin, Bestwick's neighbor.[153] Hewins bakery, which adjoined his residence, faced Franklin Square.[177][ai]

On Court Street, near the intersection with Church Street, was a fish market and restaurant.[120] The owner, Warren "Oyster" Fisher, lived next door in a house where a number of people boarded.[120][aj] A few doors down was a bakery.[120]

On Church Street, near the intersection with Norfolk Street, was William Field's dry good store.[154] Above the store was the original location of Dedham High School.[154] Just north of the school was Mr. Packard's stove store.[154][ak] Next door was a hat making shop owned by Timothy Phelps.[154] In the back, Phelps had a bathing establishment that offered both hot and cold baths.[154]

Just north on Church Street was a barber shop owned by Amory "Barber" Fisher who later owned and an ice and coal business.[154] Further up the street was the home and paint shop of John Cox.[154][al] Next to the Cox home was Nancy Damon's store that sold "thread, ribbons, silks, and fancy goods."[154][am] It was previously located across the street from the Norfolk House.[154]

At the corner of Washington and High Streets, where the police station sits in 2021, was a number of buildings owned by Charles Coolidge.[155] Those buildings "were rented by a class of people, especially in the rear, that made the whole locality an eyesore in the heart of the village."[155] At the corner was Coolidge's book and newspaper store, a tailor by the name of Lynch, and another store that sold secretly sold liquor.[155] Memorial Hall was later built on the site.[155]

Medical edit

In 1819, George Dixon bought the land at 601-603 High Street and built a home there.[178][179] In the ell of the house was an apothecary shop that sold products produced by Dedham's Wheaton & Dixon.[179] After Dixon's death, an apothecary named Tower took over the shop.[180] When Tower was named postmaster, George Marsh, who had attended the Dedham Public Schools, then became the village apothecary.[152][180] Marsh had learned the trade at a chemist's store on Cambridge Street in Boston.[180]

Jesse Wheaton, a doctor in the town, opened an apothecary shop on High Street.[7][an] In the shop he employed his nephew, Jesse Talbot.[181] Wheaton lived on the south side of Court Street and was one of the oldest residents in Dedham.[120][ao] He also hired Lemuel Thwing to sell his patent medicines, including Wheaton's Itch Ointment, Lee's Bilious Pills, Dumfrey's Eye Water, Godfrey's Cordial, and Godfrey's Bone Liniment, around New England and Canada in a large wagon with "Itch Ointment and Others" emblazoned on the side.[7]

Jeremy Stimson was a family physician and president of the Dedham Bank who lived on High Street.[155][182][ap] Doctor Samuel Stillman Whitney lived in Franklin Square and later sold his house to Dr. J.P. Maynard.[120] Maynard also lived in a house just to the west of what is today 601-603 High Street.[180] Maynard invented a forerunner to the Band-Aid.[aq]

Agriculture edit

In 1888, the 97 farms in town produced a product valued at $5,273,965, up from only $192,294 in 1885.[116]

Other businesses edit

On Ames Street in the mid-19th century near High Street was a long building that housed a number of lawyers, with their signs adorning the exterior.[41] Two houses down from the Centre School lived Jeremiah Radford, who cared for both the Norfolk County Courthouse and St. Paul's Church.[153][ar] Daniel Marsh was a mason.[153][as]

The town's 1889 directory lists 10 blacksmiths, six boarding houses, five hotels, two ice dealers, 17 grocers, seven physicians and surgeons, four lawyers, 17 dressmakers, and one dentist.[128] The products produced in town that year included boots, cabinets, chocolate, carriages, cigars, dresses, harnesses, slippers, suspenders, soap, tools, watches, and whips.[128]

After the Columbian Minerva, the Norfolk Repository began covering the news of Dedham. Both were published by Herman Mann.[183][184] It was followed by the Dedham Gazette, published by Jabez Chickering with Theron Metcalf as editor.[185] There were two weekly newspapers, the Dedham Standard and the Dedham Transcript.[116] The Norfolk Democrat was published by Elbridge G. Robinson.[155][at]

In the 1800s many Dedham men, constrained by the growing population and the scarcity of land, left Dedham for the Ohio Country.[139] They could thank, in part, Manasseh Cutler, a former Dedham resident and the son-in-law of South Dedham's Minister, Thomas Balch, who convinced Congress to approve a plantation there.[186]

The town pump was located at the head of Franklin Square.[153] It was made of wood painted green with an iron handle.[153] Two lots over was an octagonal building with a large circular reservoir inside fed by the Federal Hill spring.[153] The cistern was filled with hay in the winter to keep it from freezing and then emptied each spring.[153] It was later taken down and rebuilt as a residence near Stone Haven station.[153]

Taverns edit

 
The Norfolk House was built in 1802 and once hosted a speech by Abraham Lincoln.

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.[187] The stable behind Gay's Tavern could hold over 100 horses and eight horse teams could be switched within two minutes.[112] Gay's Tavern was out of business by 1810.[163] The Ames Tavern closed after the death of its last operator, Deborah Woodward, and was demolished in 1817.[163]

Norfolk House edit

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.[112][188] Marsh rented the land from the First Church and Parish in Dedham.[188] He saw the traffic flowing daily past his house and quickly turned his home into a tavern, opening by August 12, 1805[112][188] 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.[112] He maintained the tavern until 1818, and then sold it to Moses Gray and Francis Alden.[112][188]On the north side of Court Street was a building called the "Flat Iron Building" due to its wedge-like shape.[189] It was this partnership that hosted President Andrew Jackson for lunch as he and his entourage passed through town in 1832.[112]

The Norfolk House was also a hotbed for Republican politics in its day.[112] A young Congressman named Abraham Lincoln gave a speech at the Norfolk House[187] on September 20, 1848, while in Massachusetts to campaign for Zachary Taylor.[190] 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.[191]

Phoenix Hotel edit

The Phoenix Hotel was one of the most popular social spots in Dedham during the 19th century.[192] It was located on the northwest corner of the High Street-Washington Street intersection in modern-day Dedham Square. Among the distinguished guests of this hotel were Andrew Jackson and James Monroe.[193]

When the Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike was opened in 1803, Timothy Gay leased a tavern directly on the new road.[188][194] Gay was also the owner of the Citizen Stagecoach Line and, due to this, all of the stagecoaches traveling between Providence and Boston stopped at his tavern.[188][112][au] Gay was out of business by 1810,[192] but was then operated by a number of others who gave the business their name, including Calp, Smith, Polley, Alden, and Bride.[188] John Bride was proprietor by 1832 and it was an attractive hotel that could handle the relay of horses and the needs of the many passengers who passed through each day.[188][112] The 12 to 15 coaches that pulled up each day typically had seven or more people in each.[188] The stable housed over 100 horses at any given time.[112] Teams of eight horses could be swapped out in two minutes.[112]

Fires edit

Around two o'clock in the morning on October 30, 1832, a fire broke out in the stable and quickly traveled to the hotel, leveling both in 90 minutes.[193][195][112] The fire killed 66 horses and one man, who was sleeping in the barn.[196][112][193] It was assumed that the man, a veteran of the Revolution walking to Washington, D.C. to beg for a pension, was the cause of the fire.[196] The veteran was buried at the local cemetery, and it took several days to cart all of the dead horses down to the marshes where their carcasses could be sunk into the mud.[196]

Bride rebuilt the inn, naming it the Phoenix Hotel in honor of it rising from the ashes.[196][193] It had four large parlors on the first floor in addition to a dining hall that measured 58' by 28' and a bar that was 38' by 18'.[196] The second floor had six parlors and ten chambers, with a total of sixty guest rooms.[196] The Norfolk Advertiser called it "a splendid new house, not surpassed in size, fixtures, or elegance of finish, by any in all the villages of Massachusetts."[196][193] The stable was built adjacent to the hotel again, but this time a brick wall served as a firestop between the two.[196]

Another fire broke out in the stables around 2:00 a.m. on January 7, 1834, just 15 months later.[196] After the second fire, the stables were rebuilt further down Washington Street and away from the hotel.[192] A third fire broke out on January 7, 1850.[192] The hotel and other buildings in the area were emptied as a precaution, but the engine companies were able to keep the flames confined to the stable.[192]

John Wade, a resident at the competing Norfolk House, got drunk one evening and mentioned that he knew something about the first fire.[197][112] He was arrested within an hour and eventually confessed that he had been hired by the owner of the Norfolk House to light the first fire.[197][112]

Wade was found guilty of both arson and murder and sentenced to death, but Rev. Ebenzer Burgess intervened on his behalf and helped get it communed to life imprisonment.[197] The accused owner of the Norfolk House, which was a stop on the competing Tremont Stagecoach Line, committed suicide shortly after Wade named him.[197] George Walton was later identified as the culprit in the second fire and was indicted, but he died of consumption in prison before he could be tried.[192]

Rules of baseball edit

On May 13, 1858, members of the various town ball teams in the Boston area met at the Phoenix Hotel to form the Massachusetts Association of Baseball Players.[198][199] The nine team association included three teams from Boston and one from Dedham.[198][av]

The association developed a set of rules that came to be known as the Massachusetts Game.[198][199] There were no foul balls, four bases in a rectangular shape, and games lasted until one team had scored 100 runs.[198][199] At the end of the day, after they adopted 17 rules, they broke to play a game that was well attended by residents.[199]

Later years edit

Under different names and different managers, the house continued to do a good business.[192][193] John Howe and his wife owned the hotel from 1850 to 1879, during which time it became one of the community's leading social spots.[192] During the Civil War, it was commonly frequented by officers from nearby Camp Meigs.[192] After that it gained a reputation as a spa, where people from the city might escape for a few days.[192]

Its last owner, Henry White, had owned it for only a year when it finally burned to the ground on the morning of December 25, 1880.[193][200][199][aw] It was the last tavern in Dedham at the time and, when it finally burned, Dedham's days of hosting stagecoach travelers ended.[199]

Temperance Hall edit

The Temperance Hall Association, which was part of the temperance movement that opposed alcohol, purchased the old Norfolk County Courthouse in 1845.[21] They extended the second floor by building an addition propped up by stilts that extended into the back yard.[201] The Boy's Dedham Picnic Band often played before temperance rallies and other events.[180]

The hall was rented out to a great number of organizations.[201] Among the groups using the hall were ventriloquists, magicians, a painted panorama entitled "The Burning of Moscow," a glassblowing exhibition, a demonstration of a model volcano called "The Eruption of Vesuvius," plays, concerts, including one by the Mendelssohn String Quartet, lectures, fundraisers, debates, bell ringers, and marching sessions by a para-military drill club.[201] Among the speakers who took the podium there were Theodore Parker, Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., Frederick Douglass, Horace Mann, Father Matthew, Abraham Lincoln, William R. Alger, and John Boyle O'Reilly.[201][202]

By 1846, the Catholic community in Dedham was well established enough that the town became part of the mission of St. Joseph's Church in Roxbury.[203][204] The flood of Irish immigrants escaping the Great Famine necessitated celebrating Mass in Temperance Hall, often by Father Patrick O'Beirne.[204][205][206]

The building burned down on April 28, 1891.[207]

Fenian raid edit

Following the Civil War, the local chapter of the Fenian Brotherhood, which had offices in the nearby Norfolk House, hosted a meeting in which a Fenian raid into Canada was organized.[201] John R. Bullard, a recent Harvard Law School graduate, was elected moderator of the meeting and, having been swept up in his own sudden importance and fever of the meeting, ended his animated speech by asking "Who would be the first man to come forward and pledge himself to go to Canada and help free Ireland?"[60] The first of the roughly dozen men to sign the "enlistment papers" were Patrick Donohoe and Thomas Golden.[60] Thomas Brennan said he could not participate, but donated $50 to the cause.[60] The meeting ended with the group singing "The Wearing of the Green."[60]

The raid was a failure.[60] Some of the men got as far as St. Albans, Vermont, but none made it to Canada.[60] A few were arrested and some had to send home for money.[60] Around the same time, Patrick Ford, the treasurer of the Brotherhood, absconded to South America with the organization's money.[60]

Howe Tavern edit

William Howe opened the Howe Tavern on Court Street at the intersection of Church Street, at the site of the original St. Paul's Church.[188] He sold it in 1818 to Mace Smith who renamed it the Punch Bowl Tavern.[188] Smith sold it in 1833 and from then on it was used as either a tavern or a boardinghouse, being known as the Columbian House in the 1840s.[188] It was nearly destroyed in a fire in 1891, at which point it was rebuilt for use as a private residence.[188]

Bicentennial edit

Planning edit

At a town meeting held on November 9, 1835, a committee of 21 citizens was appointed to make arrangements for the celebration of the bicentennial anniversary of the incorporation and settlement of the town.[208] On March 7, 1836, they reported that they engaged Samuel Foster Haven to compose and deliver an address on that occasion at the First Parish meetinghouse on September 21, 1836, at 11 a.m.[208] All the clergy and choirs of the town were invited and asked to participate, and the Dedham Light Infantry Company was requested escort the procession.[208] A dinner was to follow for the clergy and paid guests.[208] On April 11, 1836, William Ellis, Enos Foord, Ira Cleveland, William King Gay, and Jabez Coney Jr. were chosen as a committee to execute on the plan.[208]

Procession edit

For nearly a year prior to the Town's bicentennial in 1836, a committee worked to make plans for a celebration.[209][208] At dawn, church bells throughout the town began ringing and a 100 gun cannonade was launched.[209][208] At 10:30 a.m., a procession left the new town house and processed through the streets of town.[209] Nathaniel Guild, the grand marshal, was aided by 25 assistant marshals,[ax] Dedham's Light Infantry, and a military band.[209][208] The "industrious classes" of the town divided the procession up by occupation.[210] The mechanics, tradesmen, and manufacturers all had their own sections, but the farmers were excluded.[210]

The agricultural workers of the town tried to participate but, having been denied the place of honor they thought they deserved, largely avoided the event.[210] The organizers dismissed the farmers' complaints as the sour grapes of "a proud lump of aristocracy."[210] They said that if any group was to be given the place of honor, it should be these "to whom we are indebted for the present prosperity of the town," and not those who were "far behind the age in many respects."[211] It was the industrious classes, they believed, who had transformed Dedham from an agricultural community into a "thriving, businesslike and growing community."[212] As a result, it was on their shoulders that "all of our hopes for the future rest."[212]

At the Norfolk House, the procession was joined by Governor Edward Everett and a number of clergy and then proceeded to the First Parish green.[209][119] There they passed through lines of the eight fire companies with their engines and apparatus, and 500 schoolchildren, and under an arch of evergreen boughs and flowers with "Incorporated 1636" on one side and "1836" on the other.[213][119]

Service edit

The services were commenced by singing the anthem "Wake the Song of Jubilee."[119] A prayer was then offered by the Rev. Alvan Lamson of the First Parish.[119] The following hymn, composed especially for the occasion by the Rev. John Pierpont of Boston, was read by the Rev. Calvin Durfee of the South Parish and sung to the tune of Old Hundred.[119]

Not now, O God, beneath the trees
That shade this plain at night's cold noon
Do Indian war songs load the breeze
Or wolves sit howling to the moon
The foes the fears our fathers felt
Have with our fathers passed away
And where in their dark hours they knelt
We come to praise thee and to pray
We praise thee that thou plantedst them
And mad st thy heavens drop down their dew
We pray that shooting from their stem
We long may flourish where they grew
And Father leave us not alone
Thou hast been and art still our trust
Be thou our fortress till our own
Shall mingle with our father's dust

Haven then gave an address on the history of the town.[104] Another anthem was then sung and the services were closed with a Benediction by the Rev. Samuel B. Babcock of the Episcopal Church.[104]

Dinner edit

After a prayer service, 600 people then processed to a pavilion erected to host a dinner on the land of John Bullard a few rods to the west.[214][104] James Richardson presided at this dinner, assisted by John Endicott, George Bird, Abner Ellis, Theron Metcalf, and Thomas Barrows as Vice Presidents.[104]

A blessing was asked by the Rev. John White of the West Parish and thanks returned by the Rev. Dr. Jonathan Homer of Newton.[104] After the cloth was removed, Richardson gave a number of toasts, interspersed with music from the band:

1. The Day, with all its hallowed associations and congenial joys. May we prove true and faithful to our ancestors to our institutions and to posterity.
2. The memory of the first settlers of this town, their resolution, fortitude, perseverance, and devotion to civil and religious liberty. May we never in our zeal to outstrip them in accomplishments leave their virtues in the rear.
3. The Governor of the Commonwealth. The stock was the growth of our own soil; a branch is refreshing the State by its shadow, and its fruit has been healthful to the nation.
4. The University at Cambridge - the offspring of the labors and privations of the Puritan Fathers: while we venerate the parents, let us cherish the child and may it always be guided by as unerring a hand as now holds the reins.
5. Practical Education: That teaches what to do and when to do it and never to rest satisfied till it is done and well done.
6. The objects of the deep solicitude of our ancestry - the church and the school house. May the progress of religious, moral, and intellectual culture within transcend that of material beauty without.
7. The memory of the Rev. Samuel Dexter and Doctor Nathaniel Ames, Senior: Townsmen distinguished for piety and learning, science, and philosophy, and whose descendants have been and are among the gifted and illustrious men of our nation.
8. The principles and spirit that brought the pilgrims to these shores - cherished and venerated by succeeding ages, embodied in our constitution and laws, dispensing blessings over our whole country in peace or war, in weal or woe, may we never abandon those principles nor prove recreant to that spirit.
9. The memory of Governor Winthrop: His presence awed the savages during his life. He is indebted to a Savage for the best edition of his memorable Journal.
10. The Militia - the only safe defense of Republics. When legislators doubt, let them consult the spirits of Warren, Prescott and the Heroes of Bunker Hill.[215]

After the toast to him, the governor spoke of Richard Everett, his ancestor and one of the early settlers of Dedham, and the multiple generations of his family who played a part in the history of the town.[214][104] He also noted the "wonderful progress and development" in the commonwealth and the nation over the preceding four decades.[214][104] He added that the advancement had been truer nowhere than in Dedham.[214][104]

On announcing sentiments alluding to the guests or their ancestors, several besides the governor addressed the company, including John Davis, Judge of the District Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts, Josiah Quincy III, President of Harvard College, Henry Alexander Scammell Dearborn, Adjutant General of the Commonwealth, William Jackson, Representative in Congress, Franklin Dexter, Alexander Hill Everett, and Robert C. Winthrop, Aid to Governor Everett.[216] A great number of sentiments were also given by invited guests and by the citizens of the town.[216]

Women's events edit

The women of the town spread a table the whole length of the lower floor of the Court House and furnished it with an ample collation.[216] The court room was used as a drawing room and the library room was decorated with native and exotic fruits.[217] A piano forte was placed in the court room and music formed part of the entertainment.[217] The following hymn, prepared for the occasion by a lady, was sung by the ladies accompanying the piano:

Welcome, all dear friends, returning,
Though from different paths you come;
Welcome all whose hearts are yearning,
For their dear-loved native home.

Some in foreign lands have wandered,
Some from the far west have come;
Yet where er the footsteps lingered,
Thought still turned to home sweet home.

Many a well known face shall meet ye,
Many a joyous smile shall bless;
Many a kindred heart shall greet ye,
While old friends around you press.

Come then hasten with us gather,
Round our simple festive board;
Come and with us bless that Father,
Who on all his love hath poured.

Condescend to grant Thy blessing,
Thou who dost our lives defend;
While Thy children Thee addressing,
Own Thee as their common Friend.[217]

At the invitation of the ladies to who on the display, Governor Everett attended the ladies' event after the dinner.[217] After sampling the fruit, the women sang the hymn again for him.[217] He then returned to the court room and, from the bench, made a short address to the ladies in which he remarked on the privations, sufferings, fortitude, and piety of the first mothers and daughters of the town.[217]

Scenic community edit

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."[124] The "scenery" of the town was described as "varied and picturesque" with "an appearance of being well kept, and the roads are noticeably good."[116]

By the end of the century a gazetteer with entries for each city and town in Massachusetts described "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."[116] On the north side of Court Street was a building called the "Flat Iron Building" due to its wedge-like shape.[120]

Louis Mellen drowned in Wigwam Pond.[152] A heat wave in July 1811 killed several people.[218] A bathhouse was constructed in 1898 along the banks of Mother Brook.[219]

Subdivisions edit

In the 19th century many former farms became businesses and homes for those who commuted into Boston.[139]

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.[220] Charles Sanderson began laying it out in a subdevelopment to become known as Oakdale.[220] By 1895, Oakdale was still largely woodland, with only about a dozen houses clustered around the Ashcroft railroad station.[221][ay] Today, Whiting Ave is home to both the High School and the Middle School, and Sanderson Avenue runs into Oakdale Square.

In 1867, the Farrington farm was laid out into house plots by the Elmwood Land Company and became the Endicott neighborhood, and in 1873 the Whiting/ Turner tract of land was developed into Ashcroft.[149][23] Fairbanks Park was developed in 1895.[23]

Trees edit

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.[222] On a hot summer day, she once asked a workman for a sip of his cider. When he refused, she broke her clay pipe in two and told the worker that the same thing would happen to his neck.[223] She also said that the Nanhattan Street house he was working on would burn to the ground, which it did years later.[223]

In the mid-1800s stood a large sycamore tree at the intersection of Court and Church Streets.[120] Tradition holds that this was the tree to which those who broke the law would be tied and whipped.[120] It was also the location of the town's pillory.[120]

Schools edit

Though Dedham had the first public school in the country, the Commonwealth sued the Town in 1819 for failing to hire a grammar school teacher.[107]

As early as 1848, Rev. Dr. Alvan Lamson of the First Church and Parish in Dedham was making the argument that the districts should be abolished and Horace Mann said that the law allowing districts was "beyond comparison, the most pernicious law ever pass in the Commonwealth on the subject of schools."[224] The districts were discontinued in 1866 when the Town purchased all 11 buildings for a total of $49,180 and returned their value to the taxpayers of the respective districts.[224]

The first public school system in the country had, by 1890, 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."[116] 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 Honorable F. A. Hill also spoke.[225]

Dedham High School edit

As early as 1827, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts required all towns with more than 500 families to establish a free public high school.[226][227] Beginning in 1844, the School Committee repeatedly began recommending that the town establish a high school.[228][224] It was not until 1850 when, under threat of a lawsuit, that the town meeting voted to "instruct the Town's School Committee to hire a building and teacher, and establish a High School according to law."[228] A sum of $3,000 was appropriated to support it.[228]

The new school was opened on September 15, 1851[229] with 42 students.[230] Charles J. Capen, a private high school teacher, was hired to teach at the new school, and his classroom above the Masonic Hall was rented by the town.[228][224][230] The building, located at 25 Church Street, was previously Miss Emily Hodge's Private School.[231] The school used this space from 1851 to 1854, at which point it was moved to the Town House on Bullard Street.[232][230] In 1855, a new school was built on Highland Street and dedicated on December 10.[232][233] A new school was built on Bryant Street in 1887, and students moved in on October 3.[234][233]

Parishes, precincts, and new towns edit

With the division and subdivision of so many communities, Dedham has been called the "Mother of Towns."[235]

Community Year incorporated as a town[236] Notes
Dover 1836 Then known as Springfield, it became a precinct of Dedham by vote of Town Meeting in 1729;[237] relegated to a parish the same year by the General Court.[238] Created the Fourth Precinct by the General Court in 1748.[238]
Hyde Park 1868 800 acres taken from Dedham, along with land from Dorchester and Milton.[239]
Norfolk 1870 Separated from Wrentham.
Norwood 1872 Created a precinct with Clapboard Trees (Westwood) in 1729.[238] Became its own precinct in 1734.[238]
Wellesley 1881 Separated from Needham
Millis 1885 Separated from Medfield.
Avon 1888 Part of the Dorchester New Grant of 1637. Separated from Stoughton.
Westwood 1897 Joined with South Dedham (Norwood) to create Second Precinct in 1729.[238] Returned to First Precinct in 1734.[238] In 1737 became Third Precinct.[238][240] Last community to break away directly from Dedham.

Dover edit

At the 1729 election the village reasserted its political power by taking back control of the Board of Selectmen.[241] Four men from the village were elected, including Ebenezer Woodward, along with one man from the Springfield area of town.[241] Shortly thereafter, Springfield became its own precinct in an apparent quid pro quo.[241][242] It later became Dover in 1836.

Norwood edit

The south precinct had long complained that they did not receive a fair share of services from the Town.[23] In 1872, the complaint was focused around the lack of opportunities for their children to attend the high school.[23] In that year, they seceded and formed the town of Norwood, Massachusetts.[23]

Westwood edit

In 1897, the third parish became the final area to break away directly from Dedham, incorporating as Westwood.[23] There had been calls for a partition since at least 1857.[3]

Waldeddo and Back Bay edit

In the 1850s, a proposal was made by James Tisdale to take portions of Dedham, Dover, and Walpole to create a new town of Waldeddo, but nothing came from it.[3][243]

In the late 1800s, when the Commonwealth of Massachusetts was filling in Boston's Back Bay, most of the landfill came from nearby Needham.[244] When the gravel pits there were exhausted, they turned to other area communities, including Dedham.[244]

Notable visits edit

James Monroe edit

During his 1817 tour of the country, President James Monroe visited Dedham and stayed at the home of future Congressman Edward Dowse.[245] A large number of people escorted him from the Norfolk border to the Boston line, including artillery and Crane's Division Ist of Militia.[245] Monroe reviewed the troops on the Town Common.[245] He met residents the next morning when he walked from Dowse's home to Polly's Tavern.[245]

Fisher Ames edit

After he retired from Congress due to his poor health, prominent Federalist officials continued to visit Fisher Ames in Dedham.[94] In 1800, Alexander Hamilton took a tour of New England. His stated objective was to disband the army, but his real reason was to try and convince people to vote for Charles Cotesworth Pinckney instead of John Adams.[246]

On his way to Boston, where a dinner was held in his honor that included Governor Caleb Strong, the Lt. Governor, former senator George Cabot, Francis Dana, chief justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, and several congressmen and clergy, Hamilton stopped in Dedham.[247] He was the guest of Fisher Ames on June 24, 1800.[247][94] Next door, Fisher's brother Nathaniel was not pleased with the visit, writing in his journal that "A. Hamilton the high Adul[tere]r run after a tiptoe thro' Dedham."[247][94]

On July 20, 1803, Gouverneur Morris also visited Fisher Ames in Dedham.[248]

Crime edit

The Fairbanks case edit

 
The south face of the courthouse in Dedham Square, as it appeared in 1839.

The first major trial to be held at the new courthouse was that of Jason Fairbanks. He was courting Elizabeth Fales and the two carried on a "desultory and somewhat ambiguous relationship" marked by Fales' parents' disapproval, Fairbanks' poor health, and Fales continually breaking up with Fairbanks and then taking him back again.[249] Fairbanks 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."[250] On May 18, 1801, Fales met Fairbanks in a "birch grove next to 'Mason's Pasture'" and told him that she could not marry him.[123][249]

Fales was stabbed 11 times, including once in the back, and her throat was slashed.[249] Fairbanks staggered to her home, covered in blood, and told her family that she had committed suicide.[249] He also told them that he had also attempted to take his own life, but was unable to, and that accounted for his wounds.[123] Fairbanks was too injured to be moved, and was left to recuperate at the Fales' home.[249] He did not attend Fales' funeral, but 2,000 others did, probably making it the largest crowd ever assembled in Dedham.[251]

Interest in the case involving two prominent families was so great that the trial was moved to the First Parish Meetinghouse across the street.[252] When that venue proved to still be too small, the trial again moved to the Town Common. The defense told the jury that Fairbanks did not have the use of his right arm and was sickly in general.[252][az] They suggested, though Fairbanks later strongly denied it, that the lovers had a murder-suicide pact.[252] The jury found him guilty and he was sentenced to death.[252]

On the night of August 17, Fairbanks escaped from jail along with several others.[253][123] A $1,000 bounty offered for his capture.[253][123] The murder, trial, and the escape set off a media firestorm. Fairbanks was captured in Skeensborough, New York while waiting for a steamer to bring him to Canada.[254] Fairbanks was not returned to Dedham, the site of his previous escape, but was instead brought to the Suffolk County Jail in Boston.[254]

On September 10, 1801, he was returned to Dedham from the Boston jail and was hanged.[254] In addition to a military presence to ensure he didn't escape again, "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."[123][254] It set a new record for the largest crowd in Dedham.[254]

Within days of the execution, a number of books and pamphlets were written about the case, including "one of the earliest novels based on an actual murder case," the Life of Jason Fairbanks: A Novel Founded on Fact.[255]

1820 duel edit

A barber living in the village received a note from a painter on January 13, 1820.[256] The two men had previously boarded together. The note stated

Sir--from the many insults received, and attempts made on my life by you, I cannot rest easy until I get satisfaction: and as I am about to leave Dedham, it does hurt my feelings (though mean indeed) to fight with a barber. So I shall expect to meet yo in half and hour from this time, at the back of Mr. C's shop."[256]

The barber responded thusly:

Your challenge is accepted. I will meet you ar the time and place appointed. My life, my honour shall pay, or yours shall be my sacrifice.[256]

The two men met in the ally just after the sun had set for a duel.[256] They were each accompanied by a second, and started pacing off steps.[256] When they turned, the painted pointed his pistol at the barber and pulled the trigger.[256] The barber immediately collapsed and the painter ran off.[256]

The barber was then helped to a nearby doctor by his second and several bystanders who came when they heard gunfire.[256] It was later discovered that the barber and the two seconds conspired to only load the pistols with powder, but not bullets, to satisfy the anger of the painter but not put anyone in actual danger.[256]

Other hangings edit

As the shiretown, Dedham was home to both the Norfolk County Courthouse and the Norfolk County Jail. It thus also was the site of a number of hangings.

  • On October 7, 1802, Ebenezer Mason was hung on the Town Common for the murder of his brother-in-law, William Allen, in Medfield.[257]
  • In 1804, John Battus of Canton was hung for murdering a young girl.[258]
  • In July 1829, John Bois was hung for murdering his wife.[258] The execution was set for 9 a.m. in an attempt to limit the crowds, but they were uncusessful as large numbers attended anyway.[258]
  • On August 8, 1862, George Hersey of South Weymouth was hung at the jail with attendance permitted only by invitation and the presentation of a ticket.[258][ba]
  • James H. Costley was hung in the jail on June 25, 1875, for the murder of Julia Hawke.[259] The Phoenix Hotel was full in the days prior to the execution with both spectators who came to watch and Boston police officers who were called in to help keep the peace.[259]

Other edit

Gay-Ellis wedding edit

In 1800[260] 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[261] and had two children before Sarah died in 1810.[260]

Post offices edit

There were seven post offices, mostly in rail depots or grocery stores, in the 19th century.[128] Dr. Elisha Thayer[bb] an apothecary named Tower,[180] and Ambrose Galucia[bc] were postmasters.[152] Thayer ran the post office office from a small addition on the east side of his house from 1833 until his resignation in 1855.[262][263] Galucia was postmaster at the Memorial Hall post office before leaving for California during the California Gold Rush.[153]

Landon Moore attempted to rob a post office in 1877.[3]

Animals edit

In August 1810, it was thought a dog "under symptoms of madness" bit 12 cows and gave them an illness which killed them.[161] "Some idle fellow" in the town then when around shooting every dog he could find, even shooting into houses and killing dogs wrapped up in women's aprons who were trying to protect them.[161] The town was divided between those who argued for the "Rights of Dogs" and those who thought they should be exterminated.[161]

In 1870, a horse owned by John Gardiner broke free from the carriage to which it was hitched and took off down River Place.[264] Crowds tried to stop it when it reached Memorial Hall, but the horse turned instead and ran into Andrew Norris' grocery store on the first floor.[264] The front assembly of the carriage, which was trailing behind, hit a granite hitching post, and turned the assembly vertically so that one wheel was on the air and the other was scraping along the ground.[264] The horse bolted through the store, past a rack of glassware and crockery, and then out the other door without causing any damage.[264]

Organizations edit

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.[265][266] 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."[265]

A Masonic lodge opened in 1803.[266]

Ghosts edit

When spiritualism swept over the country in the 1840s, many in Dedham took interest and attempted to communicate with the dead.[180]

A few decades later, in October 1877, a "spook" was seen in the Old Village Cemetery.[267] P.H. Hurley was walking through the graveyard when he was accosted by the ghost.[267] The spook then took off, leaping over a tall fence.[267] Later the same night, John Ward saw the spook in Brookdale Cemetery.[267]

The spook seen by Hurley and Ward was described as being over seven feet tall and wearing a long blue coat.[267] Others reported seeing a spectral woman in the cemeteries. She was silent and still, pointing at various graves.[267]

One report indicated that the spook liked eggs, so the police investigated a grocery store.[268] Women of the town made sure to confirm their husbands' identities before letting them into the house, and a woman in Oakdale fired a shotgun at the spook.[269]

Around midnight on November 8, neighbors on Village Avenue heard shots fired in the cemetery.[268] Caretaker John Carey found blood scattered on the white marble gravestone of Lavinia Turner the next morning, as well as a bloody handprint on the iron rail surrounding the family plot.[268] There was also trampled grass and indications of a struggle.[268] Constable de Morse thought the red liquid was blood, but Police Chief William F. Drugan ruled that it was simply red ink.[268] Drugan also declared that the "spook sensation" was not real but was the work of pranksters.[268]

The press, including the Dedham Transcript and newspapers from Boston and New York, covered the story extensively.[268] One reporter spent the night in the cemetery, hoping to catch a glimpse of the spook.[268] By the end of November, when a ghost was seen in a Palmer, Massachusetts cemetery and the newspaper coverage moved there, the sightings in Dedham died down.[268]

Independence Day edit

In the early 1800s, residents would gather at a tavern for a feast, to drink toasts, read the United States Declaration of Independence, and to celebrate the "Glorious Fourth" of July.[270]

By the mid-point of the century, a new annual tradition of a Parade of Antiques and Horribles was established in Dedham and in much of New England.[271] Mocking the Boston parade of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts, older residents and young people would dress in outlandish costumes.[271]

In the 1880s, a tradition started where youths would climb to the top of the Church of the Good Shepherd and ring the bell at midnight on the 4th of July. This tradition eventually evolved into the bell being rung to signal the start of wagons being brought to Oakdale Square and lit aflame in the early 20th century.[271]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hose No. 3, which had 300' of house, was built by J.V. Fell, J. Wally & Brother, and J. Lynas.[11]
  2. ^ His father was Eliphalet Pond. He was born in 1745[14] and was Registrar of Deeds in Norfolk County, Massachusetts from the establishment of the county in 1793 to his death in 1813.[15][13][16] He also served as the Dedham, Massachusetts town clerk for 25 years and as a selectman for 1813.[13] He also served as a colonel in the American Revolution.[13]
  3. ^ Farrington was also a copyist at the Registry of Deeds. He was in a wheelchair due to a childhood affliction. He served as Clerk until his death.[18]
  4. ^ The original design had brick floors on top of a layer of salt covering a wooden subfloor, providing little protection from a fire originating in the cellar.[29]
  5. ^ It was rumored that the county saved money on the dome by using existing plans from the United States Customshouse in Providence.[19]
  6. ^ Cobbett was a carpenter who lived at the corner of School and Worthington Streets. He went to work for Horatio Clarke making flasks in the foundry in Mill Village (modern day East Dedham) and eventually retired to Hyde Park to live with his daughter, Georgianna and her husband, Henry Holtham.[41]
  7. ^ On the 11th, all the specie from the Massachusetts State Bank in Boston was removed to Worcester.[50]
  8. ^ Including the father of Edward Holmes[55]
  9. ^ Worthington believed the last disbanded in 1842.[61]
  10. ^ Burgess has his departure as being in 1815.[80]
  11. ^ Membership in the church grew steadily for more than 50 years and in 1907 the congregation opened a new church in Oakdale Square.[102]
  12. ^ Durfee also served on the school committee in the mid-1800s.[118]
  13. ^ Mann lived on Court Street. He learned the trade of a printer and in his later years he was a bookkeeper at the Maverick Woolen Mills.[120]
  14. ^ 27% of the population was foreign born.[122]
  15. ^ Charles lived from 1797 to 1869 and Mary from 1802 to 1883. Their portraits hang in the Dedham Historical Society among some other of their possessions and papers.[138]
  16. ^ It would go on to become the home of the American Legion in 1921, and then the administration offices for the Dedham Public Schools in 1951. It was torn down in 2004 to make room for the new Dedham Middle School.[138]
  17. ^ The factory was run by the father of Henry W. Fiske.[152]
  18. ^ Samuel Mann manufactured "fancy paper and cards." He lived on Court Street and later moved to Green Lodge.[120]
  19. ^ Marden lived on Church Street.[154]
  20. ^ Clark was born in 1774 and died in 1837.[55]
  21. ^ Holmes was an officer at the First Church and Parish in Dedham.[155] After the death of his wife he boarded with Abiathar Richards and then moved to Connecticut, where he died in 1861.[155]
  22. ^ Dunbar, who was born in Canton, later moved to St. Catherine's, Canada in 1852 where he began working in canal and harbor dredging. He had a son, Charles, and eventually settled in Buffalo, N.Y.[155]
  23. ^ Wilson Lane is modern day Worthington Street.[134]
  24. ^ McIntosh also owned rental housing behind the Centre School.[120]
  25. ^ The creation of the road necessitated moving and reorienting the Colburn family home. It originally sat across what is today the road, and was moved to a position on the new corner where the Knights of Columbus building is today on the northwest corner of the Washington Street-High Street intersection.[164]
  26. ^ Penniman was born in Boston in 1799 and first moved to Dedham Island, which he improved and named Riverdale. He sold the land to John Lothrop Motley's family. He later moved to the intersection of East Street and Whiting Avenue and then Pearl Avenue. He was a director in the Dedham Bank, Dedham Savings, or both. He evenutally moved to New York and lived there until his death in July 1871.[118]
  27. ^ Hutchins had a son, George, who attended the Centre School.[155]
  28. ^ Whiting also owned a company that delivered fresh water to homes via hollowed out logs.[7]
  29. ^ The term Connecticut Corner has generally fallen out of use in Dedham, but it is listed as a historic district in Dedham.[173] The historic district generally runs down High and Bridge Streets from slightly past Lowder Street to slightly past Common Street. It encompasses the Town Common and the houses around it.
  30. ^ Bryant was also an officer of the First Church and Parish in Dedham.[175]
  31. ^ Ellis was the brother of Calvin F. Ellis and lived in Clapboardtree parish and played the violin in the West Dedham Unitarian choir.[175]
  32. ^ Richards lived above the store.[155]
  33. ^ Eaton had a son, Joel.[152]
  34. ^ The Odd Fellows Lodge did not exist for very long before folding.[120]
  35. ^ Hewins had two sons, Fisher and Alfred.[134]
  36. ^ Fisher had lost an eye.[120]
  37. ^ Packard was the sexton at the Allin Congregational Church.[154]
  38. ^ Cox was the father of John Cox Jr., and Samuel H. Cox, the publisher and editor, respectively, of the Dedham Transcript, as well as William H. "Willie" Cox, an invalid.[154] Cox was born near the railroad station.[176]
  39. ^ Damon had a speech impediment. Her later years "were clouded" and she died "in a state of despondency."[154]
  40. ^ Wheaton once treated a patient for a cold and a sore throat by giving him a shot of julep and calomel. The patient was unaware of the calomel in the treatment, however, and its laxative effects kept the patient suffering for the next two days. A court awarded the patient $40, but it was overturned on appeal.[107]
  41. ^ Wheton was also an active member of the Allin Congregational Church.[120]
  42. ^ He lived next door to Rev. William Montague[155]
  43. ^ Maynard had a daughter. His son-in-law, Fred Russell, lived in Indianapolis in 1876.[180]
  44. ^ Radford's wife was a "neighborly woman" who only had one eye.[153]
  45. ^ Marsh's children include Daniel, George, William, Libbie, Jane, Abby, Eliza, and Fanny. The family lived on School Street. He sold his land on Wilson's Lane (modern day Worthington Street) to Horatio Clarke.[153]
  46. ^ Robinson lived on the corner of Washington Street and High Street. It was already an old house in the mid-1800s with a long sloping roof. He lived next door to Charles J. Capen.[155]
  47. ^ All of the coaches for the Citizen Stagecoach Line were built in Dedham as well.[112]
  48. ^ One of the original ten teams to arrive that morning preferred the Knickerbocker Rules and so left the meeting.[198][199]
  49. ^ White was also the jailkeeper at the nearby Norfolk County Jail.[199]
  50. ^ The assistant marshals were John Morse, Ira Russell, Nathan Phillips, Luther Eaton, Merrill Ellis, Josiah Dean, 2d, Theodore Gay, 2d, Samuel C. Mann, Benjamin Boyden, Reuben Guild, 2d, Edward B. Holmes, Joseph Day, Ezra W. Taft, Edward D. Weld, Elbridge G. Robinson, James Downing, Austin Bryant, Theodore Metcalf, Francis Guild, Nathaniel A. Hewins. Reuben G. Trescott, Stephen Barry, Joseph Fisher, Joseph A. Wilder, and John D. Colburn.[208]
  51. ^ Those who lived there included Horatio Turner, Charles Turner, and Mrs. Clapp.[221]
  52. ^ Hanson believes Fairbanks was also suffering from an undiagnosed case of tuberculosis.[252]
  53. ^ Hersey was later implicated in the deaths of several other women, including his wife.[259]
  54. ^ Thayer had a son, George H.[152] He also owned a large vacant meadow near the intersection of High and East Streets which grew Acorus calamus.[155] Thayer lived next door to Jeremiah Shuttleworth.[180] He was also the organist at St. Paul's.[180] He had three sons, Elisha, John, and George, and a daughter, Maria.[180] Elisha Jr. became a veterinarian, and John led the orchestra at the Allin Congregational Church by the time he was 15 or 16 years old.[180] John was a violinist and later an organist there, before moving to St. Paul's.[180]
  55. ^ Galucia had a son, Warren. He previously worked as a house painter.[152][153]

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  249. ^ a b c d e Hanson 1976, p. 177.
  250. ^ Report of the Trial of Jason Fairbanks, on an Indictment for the Murder of Miss Elizabeth Fales. Boston, Massachusetts: Russell and Cutler. 1801.
  251. ^ Hanson 1976, p. 177-178.
  252. ^ a b c d e Hanson 1976, p. 178.
  253. ^ a b Hanson 1976, p. 185.
  254. ^ a b c d e Hanson 1976, p. 186.
  255. ^ 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 978-0-19-507584-7.
  256. ^ a b c d e f g h i Parr 2009, p. 65.
  257. ^ Parr 2009, p. 54.
  258. ^ a b c d Parr 2009, p. 55.
  259. ^ a b c Parr 2009, p. 56.
  260. ^ a b "Descendants of John Gay". Retrieved 2007-02-20.
  261. ^ Rev. Calvin Stoughton Locke (1890). "West Dedham". Dedham Historical Register. Dedham Historical Society.
  262. ^ Clarke 1903, p. 11, 13-14.
  263. ^ Dedham Historical Society 2001, p. 9.
  264. ^ a b c d Hanson 1976, p. iX.
  265. ^ a b Bob Hanson. . The Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves. Archived from the original on March 13, 2007. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
  266. ^ a b Hanson 1976, p. 196.
  267. ^ a b c d e f Parr 2009, p. 47.
  268. ^ a b c d e f g h i Parr 2009, p. 48.
  269. ^ Parr 2009, p. 47-8.
  270. ^ Parr 2009, p. 101.
  271. ^ a b c Parr 2009, p. 102.

Works cited edit

  • Ames, Nathaniel (1998). Hanson, Robert B. (ed.). The Diary of Dr. Nathaniel Ames of Dedham, Massachusetts. Picton Press.
  • Austin, Walter (1912). Tale of a Dedham Tavern: History of the Norfolk Hotel, Dedham, Massachusetts. Priv. print. at the Riverside Press. Retrieved June 25, 2021.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Beach, Seth C.; Sanford, Carroll; Smith, Nathaniel; Whitney, Mrs. S.W.; Maynard, Mrs. C.E.; Capen, Charles James (1878). Covenant of the First Church in Dedham: With Some Facts of History and Illustrations of Doctrine; for the Use of the Church. H. H. McQuillen. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  • Bowers, Claude Gernade (1925). Jefferson and Hamilton: The Struggle for Democracy in America. Houghton Mifflin.
  • Burgess, Ebenezer (1840). Dedham Pulpit: Or, Sermons by the Pastors of the First Church in Dedham in the XVIIth and XVIIIth Centuries. Perkins & Marvin. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
history, dedham, massachusetts, 1800, 1899, history, dedham, massachusetts, from, 1800, 1899, growth, change, come, town, fact, town, changed, much, during, first, decades, 19th, century, previous, history, having, been, named, dedham, shiretown, newly, formed. The history of Dedham Massachusetts from 1800 to 1899 saw growth and change come to the town In fact the town changed as much during the first few decades of the 19th century as it did in all of its previous history 1 Having been named Dedham shiretown of the newly formed Norfolk County in 1793 the town got an influx of new residents and visitors This growth was aided by new turnpikes and railroads with taverns popping up to serve travelers In the 19th century many former farms became businesses and homes for those who commuted into Boston The population of the town more than tripled in this period The Town government expanded dramatically with the institution of the public library the police department fire department and others St Mary s Church was established with William B Gould doing the plaster work The congregation at St Paul s constructed a number of churches and First Church suffered a schism A number of schools were established including Dedham High School The Town was central to two major court cases the Fairbanks Case and the Dedham Case The scenery of the town was described as varied and picturesque with an appearance of being well kept Several new towns broke away including Dover Westwood and Norwood Contents 1 Local government 1 1 Fire Department 1 2 Selectmen 1 3 Town Clerks 1 4 First townhouse 1 5 Memorial Hall 1 6 Brookdale Cemetery 2 County state and federal government 2 1 New courthouse 2 2 Representation in the General Court 3 Military and wars 3 1 Bursting of the Town cannon 3 2 War of 1812 3 2 1 Defense of Boston 3 2 2 US Army troops 3 3 Powder House 3 4 The striped pig 3 5 Civil War 3 5 1 Support from home 4 Churches 4 1 First Church 4 1 1 Ministers 4 1 2 Split at First Church 4 2 Episcopal churches 4 2 1 St Paul s 4 2 2 Good Shepherd 4 3 St Mary s 4 4 Other churches 5 Residents 5 1 Population 5 2 Race and ethnicity 6 New Dedhamites 6 1 Alcott 6 2 Browns 6 3 Goulds 6 4 Mann 6 5 Nickerson 7 Economy 7 1 Industry 7 2 Dedham Pottery 7 3 Roads 7 4 Railroads 7 5 Connecticut Corner 7 6 Banks 7 7 Retail shops 7 8 Medical 7 9 Agriculture 7 10 Other businesses 8 Taverns 8 1 Norfolk House 8 2 Phoenix Hotel 8 2 1 Fires 8 2 2 Rules of baseball 8 2 3 Later years 8 3 Temperance Hall 8 3 1 Fenian raid 8 4 Howe Tavern 9 Bicentennial 9 1 Planning 9 2 Procession 9 3 Service 9 4 Dinner 9 5 Women s events 10 Scenic community 10 1 Subdivisions 10 2 Trees 11 Schools 11 1 Dedham High School 12 Parishes precincts and new towns 12 1 Dover 12 2 Norwood 12 3 Westwood 12 4 Waldeddo and Back Bay 13 Notable visits 13 1 James Monroe 13 2 Fisher Ames 14 Crime 14 1 The Fairbanks case 14 2 1820 duel 14 3 Other hangings 15 Other 15 1 Gay Ellis wedding 15 2 Post offices 15 3 Animals 15 4 Organizations 15 5 Ghosts 15 6 Independence Day 16 Notes 17 References 18 Works citedLocal government editThe Dedham Public Library was established in 1872 and first occupied rented space at the corner of Court Street and Norfolk Street 2 3 It built a permanent home in 1886 at the corner of Church and Norfolk Streets using funds left by Hannah Shuttleworth 2 The building made of Dedham Granite and trimmed with red sandstone opened in 1888 2 The Dedham Infirmary also known as the Poor Farm built a home on Elm Street in 1898 4 It closed in February 1954 4 The Dedham Water Company was chartered in 1882 3 Gas streetlights were introduced in 1869 and were followed by electric lights in 1890 3 The first police officers were appointed in 1876 and worked each day from 4 p m to 2 a m 5 The police department was originally housed on the first floor of Memorial Hall 5 Fire Department edit Main article Dedham Fire Department A fire truck made by Paul Revere was purchased by a group of citizens and donated to the Town in 1800 as a public utility and a very great security against the calamities of fire 6 7 It was known as Hero No 1 6 7 8 It was stationed at the Connecticut Corner firehouse 7 A second hand tub the Good Intent No 2 was purchased in 1802 and stationed in the central village 9 8 The third engine the Enterprise was purchased in 1826 8 In 1831 Town Meeting purchased eight more engines including the Niagara and Water Witch 10 These two together with the Hero Good Intent and Enterprise were all located in the First Parish 10 The first steam engine was purchased in 1872 3 Each engine had its own company of men attached to it and keen was the rivalry existing between the organizations 10 The Norfolk House was often selected for the annual meetings and dinners of the different companies for the next 40 years 10 A firehouse in East Dedham was constructed in 1846 on Milton Street near the Old Stone Mill 11 It was used until 1897 when the firehouse on Bussey Street was constructed 11 Hose Number 3 a was purchased by the town for the Milton Street station in 1891 and then moved to the Bussey Street location 11 That building also housed a supply wagon 11 The central fire house was built at the corner of Washington and Bryant Streets 12 It housed Steamer Number 1 Hose Number 1 and Hook and Ladder Number 1 12 Both Hose Number 1 which carried 1 000 of hose and Hook and Ladder Number 1 were drawn by two horses 12 Selectmen edit nbsp The Dedham Board of Selectmen Clockwise from top left Benjamin Weatherbee Augustus Bradford Endicott J Bradford Baker Ezra W Taft and Samuel E Pond Year first elected Selectman Total years served Notes 1813 Eliphalet Pond Jr 13 b Town Clerks edit Year first elected Town Clerk Total years served Notes 1812 Josiah Daniell 3 17 1815 Richard Ellis 29 17 1824 John Bullard 1 17 1845 Jonathan H Cobb 3 18 Charles H Farrington 18 c First townhouse edit After the new courthouse was constructed in 1827 the old courthouse was sold to Harris Monroe and Erastus Worthington 19 The pair speculated that the Town may want to use it as a town hall and so they dragged it south down Court Street to a new lot 19 The Town decided to build an entirely new structure however on Bullard Street in 1828 20 19 By 1858 however a town committee was complaining that the present town house is neither in location size or style sufficient to meet the reasonable requirements of the town 19 It was too far away from the center village and too ugly they said and though there were over 1 000 voters in the town the building could not accommodate more than 275 21 Town meetings were frequently crowded and confused in the townhouse and it was difficult to hear speakers and determine votes 21 Memorial Hall edit Main article Memorial Hall Dedham Massachusetts nbsp Memorial Hall A committee decided that the first town hall was inadequate but it remained standing for an additional eight years 22 Eventually in 1867 it was decided that a new building should be erected to both house the town offices and to memorialize those who died in the Civil War 22 The firm of Ware and Van Brunt was hired to design the building and they produced a supremely Victorian plan that recalled the provincial town halls of England in outline and design 22 Though Town Meeting had appropriated virtually unlimited funds for the project a town committee tried to save money by cutting out several elements 23 The changes left it with a slightly unfinished appearance from the outside and an interior utterly barren of all decent conveniences 23 It was described as Dedham s monument alike to her dead soldiers and to living stupidity 23 Brookdale Cemetery edit Main article Brookdale Cemetery For nearly 250 years after it was established Old Village Cemetery was the only cemetery in Dedham 24 Seeing a need for greater space the Annual Town Meeting of 1876 established a committee to look into establishing a new cemetery 25 Town Meeting accepted the committee s recommendation on October 20 1877 and appropriated 8 150 to purchase more than 39 acres of land to establish Brookdale Cemetery 26 County state and federal government editIn the 1812 Massachusetts gubernatorial election Dedham voters cast 299 votes for Democratic Republican Party Elbridge Gerry and 172 for Federalist candidate Caleb Strong 27 The Democratic Republican Party gained 46 votes over the previous election but the Federalists gained 56 27 During the campaign Dedham s Democrats held rallies to get out the vote on April 1 1812 at Marsh s Tavern and April 2 1812 at Lem Ellis Tavern 27 All parts of town represented at the rallies except the South Parish 27 By 1836 Dedham had long been a focus for the vigorous political activity popularly associated with the Jacksonian era 28 New courthouse edit Main article Norfolk County Courthouse When it became apparent that the old County Courthouse was out of date the Norfolk County Commissioners ordered a new one to be built 29 The old courthouse eventually became Temperance Hall 21 The Commissioners originally were seeking a utilitarian building that would be fireproof and safe to store important documents 29 Local boosters however wanted a building that aligned with the town s rapidly improving self image 30 The commissioners were persuaded that something more was required than what was barely necessary that the state of this County rapidly advancing in wealth and prosperity required a liberal and judiciously expenditure for public accommodation and that acquiring a taste for the fine arts was intimately connected with a refinement of manners and even with moral sentiment that a magnificent temple of Justice would inspire an elevation of mind and contribute to cherish those feelings of reverence for the administration of the laws which it is so desirable to cultivate in a free community the as the situation was in the most handsome and conspicuous place in the town the building should be made in accordance with the architectural spirit of the times and comporting with the dignity and taste of the citizens of the County 29 The land for the courthouse across the street from the existing one was purchased from Frances Ames for 1 200 29 Masonic ceremonies bell ringing and cannon fire accompanied the laying of the cornerstone on July 4 1825 29 It was designed by Solomon Willard and built in the Greek style with pillared porticoes 29 31 Construction was completed in February 1827 29 From the outside it was an attractive building but it was not a comfortable place to work 29 The only water was provided by a well on Court Street and it did not have an adequate heating system 29 One employee complained that it was barren and destitute of every convenience demanded for health comfort and decency 29 Renovations in 1854 added gas lights to the building and running water from an on site well 29 Six years later in 1860 the building was fireproofed to protect county records 29 d A group of citizens petitioned the commissioners asking them not to make any structural changes for fear of ruining the exterior aesthetics of the building 19 Despite this the Commission decided to extend the north front of the building to add wings on either side and add a large dome to the roof 19 31 e Following plans developed by Gridley J F Bryant the building was enlarged again between 1892 and 1895 to its present H shaped configuration adding wings to the southern facade that matched those added in 1863 to the north 32 Representation in the General Court edit Year Representative Representative Representative Senator Notes 1800 Isaac Bullard 33 1801 Isaac Bullard Ebenezer Fisher 33 1802 Ebenezer Fisher 33 1803 Ebenezer Fisher 33 1804 Ebenezer Fisher 33 1805 Ebenezer Fisher John Endicott 33 1806 Ebenezer Fisher John Endicott Isaac Bullard 33 1807 John Endicott Isaac Bullard Samuel H Deane 33 1808 John Endicott Samuel H Deane Jonathan Richards 33 1809 John Endicott Samuel H Deane Jonathan Richards 33 1810 John Endicott Samuel H Deane Jonathan Richards 33 1811 John Endicott Samuel H Deane Jonathan Richards 33 1812 John Endicott Samuel H Deane Jonathan Richards 33 1813 John Endicott Samuel H Deane Jonathan Richards James Richardson 33 1814 John Endicott Erastus Worthington Abner Ellis 33 1815 Erastus Worthington Samuel H Deane Abner Ellis 33 1816 John Endicott William Ellis Abner Ellis 33 1817 Abner Ellis William Ellis Timothy Gay Jr 33 1818 William Ellis 33 1819 William Ellis 33 1820 William Ellis 33 1821 Edward Dowse 33 1822 John W Ames 33 1823 William Ellis Abner Ellis Pliny Bingham 33 1824 William Ellis Pliny Bingham Josiah S Fisher 33 1825 Richard Ellis 33 1826 Richard Ellis 33 1827 Richard Ellis Horace Mann 33 1828 Richard Ellis Horace Mann 33 1829 Richard Ellis Horace Mann 33 1830 Richard Ellis 33 1831 Theron Metcalf in May Richard Ellis in November Horace Mann in November 33 1832 Theron Metcalf John W Ames 33 1833 Theron Metcalf Richard Ellis John Morse 33 1834 John Endicott John Morse Daniel Covell 33 1835 William Ellis Daniel Marsh John Dean III 33 1836 Joshua Fales John Morse Daniel Covell 33 1837 Joshua Fales John Morse Daniel Covell 33 1838 Joshua Fales 33 1839 Joshua Fales 33 1840 Joshua Fales 33 1841 Merrill D Ellis Ezra W Wilkinson 33 34 1842 Merrill D Ellis 33 1843 Merrill D Ellis 33 1844 Joseph Day 33 1845 Joseph Day 33 1846 Edward L Keyes 33 35 1851 Ezra W Wilkinson Edward L Keyes 35 34 1852 Ezra W Taft Edward L Keyes 36 35 1856 Ezra W Wilkinson 34 1859 Ezra W Taft 37 1872 Augustus Bradford Endicott 38 1873 Augustus Bradford Endicott 38 1874 Augustus Bradford Endicott 38 1892 George S Winslow William Francis Ray 39 Military and wars editBursting of the Town cannon edit In the mid 1800s the town s 17th century cannon was ordered to be destroyed The cannon was prepared for use during King Philip s War but was never used 40 and was ordered to be swung during the Revolution 41 Thomas Cobbett who was a member of an artillery company when he was younger dragged the cannon to a meadow far from the village filled it with gunpowder and gravel and then lit a long fuse 41 f Pieces of the cannon were then distributed to residents 41 One which went to Horatio Clarke was subsequently used to hold open the door of the grocery store at the corner of School and Washington Streets 41 War of 1812 edit Main article War of 1812 While Massachusetts as a whole opposed the War of 1812 the people of Dedham largely supported it 42 Many in the Federalist press called it unjustifiable needless bloody destructive objectless and Godless 42 Both houses of the Great and General Court passed resolutions opposing the war and every county in Massachusetts except Norfolk held anti war conventions 43 There were calls for a state convention to discuss ways to resist the war but others said it would be unconstitutional and illegal 44 Governor Caleb Strong refused to call up the militia to protect the seacoast 45 Dedham fully supported the war and adopted resolutions at town meeting on July 20 calling it a just and necessary war waged for the protection of our violated rights and liberties 44 Town Meeting Resolved that since Congress has thought it necessary to declare war for the protection of commerce for the liberties of our citizen for our national sovereignty and independence for a republican form of government itself we hesitate not to declare our firm resolution to prosecute it with all our energy 43 On August 17 1812 a convention was held at Marsh s Tavern to join the Suffolk and Middlesex conventions in their addresses to the president relating to the war 46 Though there was a downpour of rain the meeting hall was filled with war supporters 47 Dr Nathaniel Ames made frequent references to the war in his diary including on the USS Constitution s battle with the HMS Guerriere 48 When news of victory in the war reached Dedham the old town cannon was dragged to the First Church green to celebrate 49 Rev Joshua Bates opposed the firing so he went there with a bucket of water to douse the fuse before it could be lit 49 Pitt Butterfield a republican and captain of the artilierists faced the church militant and in language more forcible than elegant gave the other party to understand that any interference with the loading or firing of the field piece would result in a fight then and there and that the broadcloth of a priest would not protect a meddling and domineering politician 49 Bates backed off 49 The cannon was fired 49 Defense of Boston edit In June 1814 the British Navy was off the coast of Massachusetts and threatening to invade 50 As people on the coast worried about invasion they moved their valuables inland 50 g Seven loads 51 of specie from the Union Bank and other goods from Boston 52 were moved to the vault of the Dedham Bank 50 By September large amounts of naval and military goods would be moved from Boston to Dedham for safekeeping 53 On September 12 1814 Dedham s militia marched to Boston to help in the defense 52 US Army troops edit In the spring of 1814 a regiment of flying artillery had their headquarters in Dedham and were recruiting men there 48 Ames wrote of a Federalist doctor on the staff of the regiment who he called an internal enemy 48 Ames claimed the doctor opposed the war and wished every American soldier would die before they reached Canada 48 In August 1815 a regiment arrived and encamped on the Church lot Swets South of Mill Creek 54 The next moth Ames recorded Vast militia parade these two days at Dedham 1st division Boston Bellingham Cohasset all meet at much expense and grumbling only to salute a bareheaded General 54 A number of Dedham soldiers fought and some died h in the Battle of Lundy s Lane during the War of 1812 under General Winfield Scott 55 Powder House edit In the mid 1800s a group of boys pried open the doors of the powder house one winter day 41 They found kegs of stiff white card cartridges filled with damn powder and heavy bullets 55 There were also kegs filled with flints used in flintlock muskets 41 The boys took the cartridges down to the meadows where fires burned for the benefit of the ice skaters nearby 41 The damp powder hissed and sizzled when thrown into the fires and the bullets were melted down 41 A proposal was made by Louis Bullard to turn the powder house into a memorial of prominent Dedhamites with their names carved into the building 41 Nothing came of it The striped pig edit In the early 1800s the quarterly militia training days had become drunken and licentious affairs 21 56 In response the General Court passed a law in 1838 that prohibited the sale of alcohol in quantities of less than 15 gallons on training days 21 57 Dedham as the county seat hosted a number of militia companies on training days 21 A farmer from Dedham s Low Plains came to Common with a pig he said was striped by a zebra 21 56 For 6 25 cents people could enter the tent to view the animal 21 56 With admission everyone was entitled a free glass of rum or gin 21 56 The incident upset many in the temperance movement and was the topic of a number of pamphlets 21 Within days newspapers across the country ran stories about the striped pig 56 A popular song was also written about it 21 58 Entitled The Dedham Muster or the Striped Pig it was set to the tune of King and Countryman and talks about how greedy water vendors charged so much on a hot day that soldiers instead turned to the striped pig tent to quench their thirst 56 Public intoxication became known as riding the striped pig and the striped pig became a symbol of efforts to skirt the law 56 Temperance promoters began enacting laws against ruses to evade the law that were known as striped pig devices 56 A political party known as the Striped Pig Party was formed to oppose anti alcohol laws 56 A local meeting of the striped pig party met at the Norfolk Hotel just a month after the training day were the striped pig first appeared 56 Taverns and public began adopting the name the Striped Pig and people would argue about the proper direction of the stripes 59 Civil War edit Main article Dedham Massachusetts in the American Civil War Several days after the fall of Fort Sumter a mass meeting was held in Temperance Hall which opened with a dramatic presentation of the American flag 60 A total of 47 men signed up to serve in the war at that meeting forming Dedham s first military unit since the Dedham militia was disbanded in 1846 60 61 i More men enlisted in the coming days 60 and the first company was formed in early May 62 The troops would march and maneuver through the streets of the village 63 When they did so townspeople would come out to watch and young boys would often tag along 63 During one training session on the Common a young recruit opened an umbrella when it began to sprinkle 64 63 The man a barber who worked on Church Street was told by Captain Onion that he could not march with an umbrella 63 He chose to leave instead listening to the jeers of the men who remained 63 An effigy of the man with the umbrella appeared hanging from a noose several days later at the corner of Church and High Streets and the young man quickly left town 64 63 On September 3 1864 the 18th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment was mustered out of service 65 It had participated in some 15 battles 65 Of the 58 who enlisted from Dedham 11 had fallen in the field six had died from disease and wounds received in battle eight had been discharged by reason of wounds and 13 by reason of disability resulting from wounds 65 Of the whole company 23 men had either died or fallen in battle 65 The regiment bore a part in nearly all the general battles of the Army of the Potomac except those of the Peninsula before Richmond 65 Upon their return Dedham welcomed them with fitting ceremonies 65 The 35th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment saw nearly three years of active service beginning almost with the day of their arrival in the field 66 On its colors were inscribed by an order of General Meade the names of 13 battles to which was afterwards added a 14th 66 Their campaigns were not limited by a state or a department They fought in Kentucky East Tennessee and Mississippi as well as in Maryland and Virginia 67 In many of their battles their position was among the most exposed to the enemy and sometimes in the most deadly conflicts 68 It became a proverb among the soldiers that the commanding officer of the 35th was sure to be struck down in every engagement 68 Of the 68 who enlisted from Dedham six were killed in battle and one more died soon after of his wounds five died in the service from disease eight were discharged on account of their wounds and eleven for disability 68 The Town desired to give them a public welcome home but they declined the honor saying they preferred to pass without ceremony from the life of the soldier to that of the citizen 68 Support from home edit The women of the town immediately began working on producing supplies for the troops at the outbreak of war 60 61 69 70 71 In a span of 24 hours they sewed 100 flannel shirts of which 60 were sent to the state and 40 were reserved for Dedham soldiers 60 In the next two weeks they made an additional 140 shirts 140 pairs of flannel underwear 126 towels 132 handkerchiefs 24 hospital shirts 70 pincushions 70 bags and a handful of needlebooks 60 During the war several Dedhamites traveled to visit the soldiers in camp and several in service received furloughs to visit home 69 After the Second Battle of Bull Run a messenger burst into a church on Sunday morning with news of the defeat 22 72 73 70 The service was halted and churchgoers organized into work parties 22 72 73 70 Less than six hours later two wagon loads of clothing bandages medicines and other supplies were on their way to Boston to be loaded onto an emergency supply train 22 72 73 70 74 On May 6 1861 the Town voted to stand by the volunteers and to protect their families during the war 61 The Town Meeting also appropriated 10 000 for the cause 61 A number of other similar votes took place in the coming years such that the town spent a total of 136 090 81 on outfitting the troops supporting the families and providing bonuses for soldiers who enlisted 74 Churches editIn 1807 Nathaniel Ames discovered the Town was using the taxes he paid for the support of the church to pay the First Church s minister and not his new Anglican church minister 75 The tax collector told him it was a bad law and refused to follow it which prompted Ames to retort that he was as big of a tyrant as Napoleon Bonaparte 75 First Church edit Votes were taken in 1805 and 1807 to expand the meetinghouse but nothing came from either effort 75 Seeing the success the Anglican Church down the street had renting out land First Church began renting out lots around the meetinghouse around the turn of the 19th century 76 Ministers edit Main article First Church and Parish in Dedham First Church Minister Years of service Notes Jason Haven 1756 1802 77 Joshua Bates March 16 1803 February 20 1818 78 79 80 Alvan Lamson October 29 1818 October 29 1860 79 81 82 80 Benjamin H Bailey March 14 1861 October 13 1867 79 83 George McKean Folsom March 31 1869 July 1 1875 79 Seth Curtis Beach December 29 1875 79 84 As the years went on Rev Jason Haven s mental and physical condition continued to decline 85 He was frequently so beset with fevers migraines and coughing spells that he could not get out of bed 85 The prospect of hiring an assistant or a replacement was brought up time and again at parish meetings but without a decision ever being made 86 Finally Rev Joshua Bates a recent Harvard College graduate was called to serve as associate pastor in April 1802 87 88 Fisher Ames served on the search committee helping to explain why a Federalist minister was called to serve a congregation that was Democratic Republican by a ratio of 3 to 1 89 Three months later Haven died 87 90 On December 30 1802 the parish met and debated whether or not Bates should be afforded the traditional lifetime contract 88 Nathaniel Ames noting how unpopular Haven had become over the years advocated for a trial period first 88 Fisher Ames made an eloquent speech of support and this was enough to issue a call 87 88 As a result several members including Nathaniel left the church and became Episcopalians 87 90 Bates was ordained on March 16 1803 before a very crowded but a remarkably civil and brilliant assembly 87 The opposition to Bates was so intense that it seems some including the newspapers expected there to be some sort of protest at his ordination but nothing ever materialized 88 During his pastorate the Lord s Supper was administered every six weeks 91 On the Thursdays preceding he would preach the Preparatory Lecture 91 Students in the nearby school were marched to the meetinghouse to listen to the lecture and Bates would visit the school on Mondays to quiz students on the catechism 91 Politically he was an ardent Federalist while the town and the church were strongly anti Federalist 91 Though he was not as liberal as some had hoped his sermons often were intolerant of those whose politics who differed from his own and were not well received 90 91 He believed Thomas Jefferson to be an infidel and that his followers were at best doubtful Christians 91 He was a high toned Calvinist school and he was not particularly charitable towards those of other denominations 75 He also demonstrated a sense of superiority over his own flock 92 By 1808 even Fisher Ames would have enough with Bates and would join Dedham s Anglican church 75 Just after midnight on the Fourth of July 1809 a group of Republicans dragged the old town cannon to just below Bates bedroom window 75 They stuffed it with sod from his lawn and were about to set it off when Bates appeared in his nightshirt 75 Not recognizing him immediately one celebrant yelled Get out of the way you old bugger or you ll get your brains blown out 75 Bates and his bucket of water convinced the crowd to leave but they soon returned 75 They fired the cannon which was more than 150 years old and awoke Bates again to the sound of shattering windowpanes 93 Several years later the entire choir resigned en masse 94 It is not clear why from the records but Bates missed them and worked to get them back 75 In 1818 he asked to be dismissed from the church to accept the presidency of Middlebury College 91 95 It is assumed that due to his differing political beliefs and his politically tinged sermons that many in the congregation were glad to let him go 91 His last sermon was delivered February 5 1818 95 He was later go on to become Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives Split at First Church edit nbsp The First Church of Dedham and church green Main article Baker v Fales See also First Church and Parish in Dedham and Allin Congregational Church The First Church and Parish in Dedham split in 1818 over a dispute about who should become the next minister At the time 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 96 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 97 In 1818 Dedham claimed rights distinct from the church and against the vote of the church 97 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 98 The parish along with the members of the church who remained installed their own deacons and sued to reclaim the church property With the Congregational Church established as the state religion in Massachusetts at the time the dispute eventually reached the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court The court 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 99 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 100 The breakaway members formed the Allin Congregational Church across the street from the First Church The remaining members of First Church renovated their meetinghouse and moved the front door to face the church green and away from the Allin Church in 1820 101 In 1888 on the 250th anniversary of the church a joint service was held in First Church in the afternoon followed by a social reunion and then a second service at the Allin church 102 Episcopal churches edit St Paul s edit Main article St Paul s Church Dedham Massachusetts Anglican Church Minister Years of service Notes William Montague 1794 1818 80 103 Samuel B Babcock 1830s 104 In 1791 the congregation regrouped after the American Revolution and called William Montague away from Old North Church 105 Montague received a salary of 100 sterling 106 He remained in the Dedham church until 1818 103 j When the church began leasing out land it offered a flat rate for the first seven years which would then be adjusted for the subsequent years 107 Many of the tenants refused to pay the increases however and the church evicted them 107 The 1798 Episcopal church in Franklin Square was replaced by a new building at the corner of Court Street and Village Ave 108 It was 90 long and had a bell tower in front that was 100 high 108 The builders Thomas and Nathan Phillips were from Dedham 108 Designed by Arthur Gilman after Magdalen College Oxford it was consecrated in 1845 but burned down in 1856 108 The fourth church was completed in 1858 with a bell tower added in 1869 109 The bell was donated by Ira Cleveland 109 One minister Rev Samuel B Babcock served as rector in three buildings from 1834 to 1873 109 A chapel was added later built with a bequest from George E Hutton 109 Good Shepherd edit Main article Church of the Good Shepherd Dedham Massachusetts Lay readers from St Paul s began ministering to Episcopalians in the Oakdale section of town in 1873 who could not get to the church easily 110 Out of their efforts grew the Church of the Good Shepherd which was dedicated in 1876 110 One of the early members was William B Gould 111 St Mary s edit Main article St Mary s Church Dedham Massachusetts In 1843 85 years after the Acadians arrived the first Catholic Mass was said in Daniel Slattery s home where the police station stood in Dedham Square from the 1960s until 2023 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 Temperance Hall 112 113 Large number of Irish immigrants fled the Great Famine a few years later and many of them settled in Dedham 114 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 113 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 113 Theodore Metcalf may also have been a descendant of Jonathon Fairbanks 115 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 116 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 113 Other churches edit Beginning in 1818 itinerant Methodist ministers held services in private homes in Dedham 102 The first resident pastor Rev Joseph Pond arrived in 1842 and a church was completed in 1843 on Milton Street near the intersection with Walnut Street 102 k The first Baptist church was opened in 1843 near Maverick Street but meetings had been held for years prior beginning in 1822 117 A new church was built at the corner of Milton and Myrtle Streets in 1852 117 Rev Calvin Durfee l was minister of the South Parish in 1836 and Rev John White was at the West Parish 119 Over the course of his career William H Mann was the organist at St Paul s the First Church and Parish in Dedham and at the Baptist Church in East Dedham 120 m Residents editPopulation edit The population of Dedham has grown more than 10 times since 1793 reaching its peak around the year 1980 Historical populationYearPop 17501 500 121 18001 973 122 18012 000 123 18303 057 122 18373 532 124 18657 198 125 122 n 18886 641 116 YearPop 1892 gt 7 000 126 18957 211 127 18996 641 128 19159 284 129 193011 043 129 194015 136 130 195015 508 131 YearPop 196018 407 131 197023 869 131 198026 938 131 199025 298 131 200023 782 131 200223 378 132 The population grew dramatically in the 19th century largely by immigrants seeking work in the mills along Mother Brook 122 The largest group comprising 75 of new arrivals were the Irish who fled the Great Famine 122 The second largest group were Germans who moved to the area in large numbers beginning in the 1850s 122 Later in the century large numbers of Italians and Eastern Europeans moved to Dedham 122 The immigrants were overwhelmingly Catholic 122 Race and ethnicity edit In the mid 1800s there were only a few non white families in town One student remembers only two black classmates at the Centre School during this time Sara Robbins the daughter or granddaughter of Seth Robbins and Sam Johnson the grandson of Mott Johnson 118 There was also only one Irish student Patrick Pat Slat Slattery 133 A black family lived at the corner of Washington Street and Wilson s Lane modern day Worthington Street 134 The father was a whitewasher and was assisted by his son who also had a great musical talent 134 They were very social with the boys of the neighborhood although practical jokes were played on the family including lighting a quantity of gunpowder placed under one of their beds on the morning of the Fourth of July 134 Neighborhoods were often segregated by national origin 122 In the area between Bussey and Washington Streets the Germans congregated on Shiller Road and Goethe Street 122 Many Irish lived on Maverick Colburn and Curve streets 122 Curve Street also had a number of Canadians 122 An Irish immigrant who lived at 27 Myrtle Street from 1872 to 1907 rose from working in the woolen mills to becoming Superintendent of Streets and then eventually a deal estate developer 122 He both rented and sold many homes in the Hill Avenue area to fellow Irish immigrants 122 New Dedhamites editAlcott edit Louisa May Alcott s mother Abba ran an intelligence office to help the destitute find employment 135 When James Richardson came to Abba seeking a companion for his frail sister who could also help out with some light housekeeping Alcott volunteered to serve in the house filled with book music artwork and good company on Highland Avenue 136 Alcott imagined the experience as something akin to being a heroine in a Gothic novel as Richardson described their home in a letter as stately but decrepit 136 His sister Elizabeth was 40 years old and suffered from neuralgia 136 Elizabeth was shy and did not seem to have much use for Alcott 136 Instead Richardson spent hours reading her poetry and treating her like his confidant and companion sharing his personal thoughts and feelings with her 136 Alcott reminded Richardson that she was supposed to be Elizabeth s companion not his and she was tired of listening to his philosophical metaphysical and sentimental rubbish 136 He responded by assigning her more laborious duties including chopping wood and scrubbing the floors 136 She quit after seven weeks in the winter of 1851 when neither of two girls her mother sent to replace her decided to take the job 136 As she walked from his home to Dedham station she opened the envelope he handed her with her pay 136 She was so unsatisfied with the four dollars she found inside that Aloctt family tradition states that she mailed in back to him in contempt 136 She later wrote a slightly fictionalized account of her time in Dedham titled How I went into service which she submitted to Boston publisher James T Fields 137 He rejected the piece telling Alcott that she had no future as a writer 137 Browns edit In 1847 a successful dry goods merchant in Boston moved to Dedham with his wife 138 Charles Brown and Mary Patterson Shaw o built a home at the corner of East Street and Auburn Street modern day Whiting Avenue 138 It was described as one of the most commanding positions in the town 138 At a cost of 18 264 it was one of the most expensive home in the Greater Boston area 138 After Mary died in 1886 it was purchased by the Boston Children s Friend Society as a home for boys 138 p Goulds edit Main article William B Gould I nbsp William and Cornelia Gould with their children After the Civil War the formerly enslaved Naval veteran William B Gould settled in Dedham with his wife Cornelia who had been purchased out of slavery before the war Together they had six sons and two daughters and raised them on Milton Street in East Dedham While living in Dedham Gould became a building contractor and community pillar He did the plaster work at St Mary s Church was a founder of the Church of the Good Shepherd and was extremely active in the Grand Army of the Republic s Charles W Carroll Post 144 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 A statue of him was unveiled on Milton Street to mark the 100th anniversary of his death during Memorial Day 2023 Mann edit During the 1800s Dedham became the summer home of many wealthy Bostonians and with the Industrial Revolution many immigrants to the United States 139 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 140 He soon became interested in town affairs was often chosen Moderator of the town meetings and was an early candidate for office 140 Mann served as Dedham s Representative in General Court from 1827 to 1832 as well as on the School Committee 140 141 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 142 Former President and then Congressman John Quincy Adams later read the address and expressed great confidence in the future career of Mr Mann 140 Nickerson edit 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 where he took an active part in community affairs and made generous donations to charitable causes 143 He sold the house to his brother George 144 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 143 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 143 129 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 145 The castle has a number of interesting architectural elements but its most famous is by far its numerous secret passages 146 and legendary underground mazes and hallways 147 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 148 Economy editEarly in the 19th century Dedham become a transportation hub and the existence of quick freight service promoted a burst of industrial development 149 By the 200th anniversary of the town s incorporation in 1836 Dedham was a thriving commercial and manufacturing center 28 Within 50 years of the railroads arrival in 1836 the population almost doubled to 6 641 116 Industry edit See also Mother Brook With the arrival of railroads in 1831 Dedham became an attractive location for manufacturing 150 By 1837 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 124 Together they were worth 510 755 with the silk goods alone worth 10 000 124 A silk factory opened on Eastern Ave in 1836 151 but burned down on March 11 1845 41 In later years it became a dye house a laundry and a playing card factory 151 152 q By 1880 the site had become home to the C D Brooks Chocolate Factory 151 On March 28 1845 the Ashcroft Calico Works burned down 41 There were more than 500 people employed in local industries in 1845 150 That year there were two cotton mills a silk factory a furnace foundry a shovel works three woolen mills a paper factory two tanneries eight woodworking factories a cotton thread factory two iron and tin works four coach manufacturers and a number of smaller businesses producing boots shoes saddles harnesses cigars marbled paper pocket books and headwear 150 The marbled paper manufactory S C amp E Mann was located on the south side of High Street between Court and Pearl Streets 18 r Frederick L Bestwick the harness maker lived on School Street just east of the Centre School with his nephew Albert 153 After Joel Richard s died Aaron Marden and Henry Curtis opened up a planing mill and sawing business in this first floor of the Richards shop 154 s Major Jacob Clark t was a building contractor who later became a millwright setting up water wheels at mills around New England and the maritime provinces before the advent of the steam engine 55 Clark lived on Federal Hill and his factory was powered by horses who walked in a circle and powered a large gear overhead 55 Most of the waterwheels in use at the time including those on Mother Brook were overshot wheels 55 Clarke also built the Allin Congregational Church 55 After Clark s death in 1837 his partner Edward B Holmes continued the wheelwright business 55 u In 1846 Thomas Dunbar who had been their apprentice became Holmes partner 55 155 v They moved the shop from Federal Hill to an old paper mill on High Street near East Street 155 The building was across the street from the train tracks in a building connected to a blacksmith shop 155 In the basement was a stationary engine of a peculiar design In the lower story were circular saws lathes and planers 155 On the floor that was level with the train tracks was iron work machinery 155 The pair then moved to an unused building near the old stone depot on Mother Brook where they used steam power 55 Sumner Wilson had a carpenter shop on Wilson s Lane where the saws and lathes were run by horsepower 134 w He later built a two family rental house next door 134 A carriage manufacturing and painting shop owned by Elisha McIntosh was located on Court Street and a blacksmith was located in the rear 120 x With the Industrial Revolution Dedham experienced the ups and downs of a national economy 139 23 Dedham Pottery edit Main article Dedham Pottery Hugh C Robertson moved the Dedham Pottery plant from Chelsea to Dedham in 1896 156 157 The architect of the building who also served on the company s board was Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow Jr 158 The plant which rarely if ever employed more than six people at a time was located on Pottery Lane off High Street where the 2012 Avery School stands 158 The company closed in 1942 and the building burned to the ground in the 1970s 158 Maude Davenport who was raised on Greenlodge Street in Dedham is regarded as the company s most skilled decorator 159 Roads edit Turnpikes including the South Road linking Boston and Providence and the Middle Road linking Dedham and Hartford were laid through town during the first few years of the 19th century 160 In 1810 the stage left Boston at 4 a m and passed through Dedham as it traveled 100 miles to Hartford 161 It arrived at 8 p m stopping only to change horses 161 In 1802 Fisher Ames and a group of others requested that the Great and General Court lay out a new turnpike between the Norfolk County Courthouse and Pawtucket 162 Dedham s representative Ebenezer Fisher voted no but the Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike was chartered on March 8 1802 163 Nathaniel Ames was incensed and believed Fisher s no vote made him a traitor motivated by an ancient prejudice against the Old Parish 163 At the following May s election the issue of turnpikes was a greater driver of participation than political party 163 Those from the outlying parts of town attended in large numbers to support Representative Fisher and his opposition to the turnpike 163 The Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike created modern day Washington Street from High Street in Dedham Square to the Roxbury line 163 y It then turned west to Court Street where it ran south to Washington Street and then straight to Pawtucket 163 Edward L Penniman laid out Mt Auburn Street modern day Whiting Avenue 128 and Mt Vernon Street through his own property 165 z The Town named the intersection of those two streets Penniman Square but Penniman died the same day and never learned of the honor 165 Jeremiah Shuttleworth leased a lot of land from St Paul s Church at the corner of Church and High Streets 166 The minister William Montague referred to the intersection as Jere Square in his honor 166 Modern day Worthington Street was known in the 19th century as Wilson s Lane 153 Dwight s bridge over Wigwam Creek stood at the intersection of High and East Streets 154 Lyons Street is named for a 19th century landowner Elisha Lyon 167 Lyon lived on the Needham side of the Charles River 167 There has been a bridge on the site since the 1740s but the current bridge was built in 1879 167 Lyons Street originally ran as far as Common Street but was cut short and dead ended when Route 128 was built 167 Railroads edit Main article History of rail in Dedham Massachusetts nbsp The Dedham Train Station was located in Dedham Square where the parking lot now is nbsp Sketches of the station 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 112 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 112 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 149 The train bridge over Wigwam Creek near the intersection of East and High Streets had a red roof 155 Mrs Hutchins boarding house was next door 155 aa 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 168 In 1881 the Boston and Providence Railroad company built a station in Dedham Square out of Dedham Granite 169 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 an addition to the main branch of the Dedham Public Library 169 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 170 Connecticut Corner edit In 1800 a group of tinsmiths from Connecticut including Calvin Whiting ab and Eli Parsons began a business at the corner of Lowder and High Streets 171 172 7 They attracted additional businesses including a dry good store 171 The area became known as Connecticut Corner 7 171 172 ac In 1833 the Russel and Baker furniture company moved into the area but after two bad fires moved downtown in 1853 174 It employed 500 people 174 Banks edit The Dedham Bank was founded in Dedham in 1814 and asked Nathaniel Ames to be a director 7 Ames declined citing the large number of lawyers involved with its creation 7 Ten months after creation however the bank had 66 shareholders in Dedham Boston Bellingham Medway Dover Walpole Franklin Needham Woburn Roxbury Medfield Sharon Wrentham Hopkington Bridgewater Canton and Sherburne 7 There was an attempted burglary of the Dedham Bank in 1863 with the would be thieves using gunpowder 3 The two major banks at the end of the century were the Dedham National Bank with over 300 000 in capital and the Dedham Institution for Savings with more than 2 000 000 in deposits 116 Retail shops edit A grocery store stood in the middle part of the century at the corner of School and Washington Streets 41 It was owned by Austin Bryant the Town s treasurer and tax collector 175 ad Bryant sold the store to Horatio Clarke in 1845 and in 1847 it was sold again William H Mason 175 Mason owned it until his death at which point it was taken over by Merrill D Ellis 175 ae Enoch Sutton the watchmaker owned the next house south on Washington Street 175 Another grocery store opened on the first floor of the S C amp E Manufactory on High Street 18 and there was a slaughterhouse on Eastern Ave near the railroad station 176 Andrew Wiggin s shoe store was on the corner of High Street and Washington Street 155 41 At the same corner was a tailor and Mason Richard s dry goods store 155 af A Mr Eaton was the lumber dealer 152 ag A millinery store was located under Temperance Hall 41 Erastus Shumway owned a stove and tinshop on School Street 153 He later moved the shop to Court Street on the first floor of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows building 120 ah Next door lived Ambrose Galucia a house painter 153 Around the corner on Franklin Square was the home of Joseph Guild the hardware dealer 134 Nathaniel Hewins was the Town s baker and he employed a Mr Sawin Bestwick s neighbor 153 Hewins bakery which adjoined his residence faced Franklin Square 177 ai On Court Street near the intersection with Church Street was a fish market and restaurant 120 The owner Warren Oyster Fisher lived next door in a house where a number of people boarded 120 aj A few doors down was a bakery 120 On Church Street near the intersection with Norfolk Street was William Field s dry good store 154 Above the store was the original location of Dedham High School 154 Just north of the school was Mr Packard s stove store 154 ak Next door was a hat making shop owned by Timothy Phelps 154 In the back Phelps had a bathing establishment that offered both hot and cold baths 154 Just north on Church Street was a barber shop owned by Amory Barber Fisher who later owned and an ice and coal business 154 Further up the street was the home and paint shop of John Cox 154 al Next to the Cox home was Nancy Damon s store that sold thread ribbons silks and fancy goods 154 am It was previously located across the street from the Norfolk House 154 At the corner of Washington and High Streets where the police station sits in 2021 was a number of buildings owned by Charles Coolidge 155 Those buildings were rented by a class of people especially in the rear that made the whole locality an eyesore in the heart of the village 155 At the corner was Coolidge s book and newspaper store a tailor by the name of Lynch and another store that sold secretly sold liquor 155 Memorial Hall was later built on the site 155 Medical edit In 1819 George Dixon bought the land at 601 603 High Street and built a home there 178 179 In the ell of the house was an apothecary shop that sold products produced by Dedham s Wheaton amp Dixon 179 After Dixon s death an apothecary named Tower took over the shop 180 When Tower was named postmaster George Marsh who had attended the Dedham Public Schools then became the village apothecary 152 180 Marsh had learned the trade at a chemist s store on Cambridge Street in Boston 180 Jesse Wheaton a doctor in the town opened an apothecary shop on High Street 7 an In the shop he employed his nephew Jesse Talbot 181 Wheaton lived on the south side of Court Street and was one of the oldest residents in Dedham 120 ao He also hired Lemuel Thwing to sell his patent medicines including Wheaton s Itch Ointment Lee s Bilious Pills Dumfrey s Eye Water Godfrey s Cordial and Godfrey s Bone Liniment around New England and Canada in a large wagon with Itch Ointment and Others emblazoned on the side 7 Jeremy Stimson was a family physician and president of the Dedham Bank who lived on High Street 155 182 ap Doctor Samuel Stillman Whitney lived in Franklin Square and later sold his house to Dr J P Maynard 120 Maynard also lived in a house just to the west of what is today 601 603 High Street 180 Maynard invented a forerunner to the Band Aid aq Agriculture edit In 1888 the 97 farms in town produced a product valued at 5 273 965 up from only 192 294 in 1885 116 Other businesses edit On Ames Street in the mid 19th century near High Street was a long building that housed a number of lawyers with their signs adorning the exterior 41 Two houses down from the Centre School lived Jeremiah Radford who cared for both the Norfolk County Courthouse and St Paul s Church 153 ar Daniel Marsh was a mason 153 as The town s 1889 directory lists 10 blacksmiths six boarding houses five hotels two ice dealers 17 grocers seven physicians and surgeons four lawyers 17 dressmakers and one dentist 128 The products produced in town that year included boots cabinets chocolate carriages cigars dresses harnesses slippers suspenders soap tools watches and whips 128 After the Columbian Minerva the Norfolk Repository began covering the news of Dedham Both were published by Herman Mann 183 184 It was followed by the Dedham Gazette published by Jabez Chickering with Theron Metcalf as editor 185 There were two weekly newspapers the Dedham Standard and the Dedham Transcript 116 The Norfolk Democrat was published by Elbridge G Robinson 155 at In the 1800s many Dedham men constrained by the growing population and the scarcity of land left Dedham for the Ohio Country 139 They could thank in part Manasseh Cutler a former Dedham resident and the son in law of South Dedham s Minister Thomas Balch who convinced Congress to approve a plantation there 186 The town pump was located at the head of Franklin Square 153 It was made of wood painted green with an iron handle 153 Two lots over was an octagonal building with a large circular reservoir inside fed by the Federal Hill spring 153 The cistern was filled with hay in the winter to keep it from freezing and then emptied each spring 153 It was later taken down and rebuilt as a residence near Stone Haven station 153 Taverns edit nbsp The Norfolk House was built in 1802 and once hosted a speech by Abraham Lincoln 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 187 The stable behind Gay s Tavern could hold over 100 horses and eight horse teams could be switched within two minutes 112 Gay s Tavern was out of business by 1810 163 The Ames Tavern closed after the death of its last operator Deborah Woodward and was demolished in 1817 163 Norfolk House edit Main article Norfolk House Dedham Massachusetts 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 112 188 Marsh rented the land from the First Church and Parish in Dedham 188 He saw the traffic flowing daily past his house and quickly turned his home into a tavern opening by August 12 1805 112 188 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 112 He maintained the tavern until 1818 and then sold it to Moses Gray and Francis Alden 112 188 On the north side of Court Street was a building called the Flat Iron Building due to its wedge like shape 189 It was this partnership that hosted President Andrew Jackson for lunch as he and his entourage passed through town in 1832 112 The Norfolk House was also a hotbed for Republican politics in its day 112 A young Congressman named Abraham Lincoln gave a speech at the Norfolk House 187 on September 20 1848 while in Massachusetts to campaign for Zachary Taylor 190 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 191 Phoenix Hotel edit Main article Phoenix Hotel Dedham Massachusetts The Phoenix Hotel was one of the most popular social spots in Dedham during the 19th century 192 It was located on the northwest corner of the High Street Washington Street intersection in modern day Dedham Square Among the distinguished guests of this hotel were Andrew Jackson and James Monroe 193 When the Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike was opened in 1803 Timothy Gay leased a tavern directly on the new road 188 194 Gay was also the owner of the Citizen Stagecoach Line and due to this all of the stagecoaches traveling between Providence and Boston stopped at his tavern 188 112 au Gay was out of business by 1810 192 but was then operated by a number of others who gave the business their name including Calp Smith Polley Alden and Bride 188 John Bride was proprietor by 1832 and it was an attractive hotel that could handle the relay of horses and the needs of the many passengers who passed through each day 188 112 The 12 to 15 coaches that pulled up each day typically had seven or more people in each 188 The stable housed over 100 horses at any given time 112 Teams of eight horses could be swapped out in two minutes 112 Fires edit Around two o clock in the morning on October 30 1832 a fire broke out in the stable and quickly traveled to the hotel leveling both in 90 minutes 193 195 112 The fire killed 66 horses and one man who was sleeping in the barn 196 112 193 It was assumed that the man a veteran of the Revolution walking to Washington D C to beg for a pension was the cause of the fire 196 The veteran was buried at the local cemetery and it took several days to cart all of the dead horses down to the marshes where their carcasses could be sunk into the mud 196 Bride rebuilt the inn naming it the Phoenix Hotel in honor of it rising from the ashes 196 193 It had four large parlors on the first floor in addition to a dining hall that measured 58 by 28 and a bar that was 38 by 18 196 The second floor had six parlors and ten chambers with a total of sixty guest rooms 196 The Norfolk Advertiser called it a splendid new house not surpassed in size fixtures or elegance of finish by any in all the villages of Massachusetts 196 193 The stable was built adjacent to the hotel again but this time a brick wall served as a firestop between the two 196 Another fire broke out in the stables around 2 00 a m on January 7 1834 just 15 months later 196 After the second fire the stables were rebuilt further down Washington Street and away from the hotel 192 A third fire broke out on January 7 1850 192 The hotel and other buildings in the area were emptied as a precaution but the engine companies were able to keep the flames confined to the stable 192 John Wade a resident at the competing Norfolk House got drunk one evening and mentioned that he knew something about the first fire 197 112 He was arrested within an hour and eventually confessed that he had been hired by the owner of the Norfolk House to light the first fire 197 112 Wade was found guilty of both arson and murder and sentenced to death but Rev Ebenzer Burgess intervened on his behalf and helped get it communed to life imprisonment 197 The accused owner of the Norfolk House which was a stop on the competing Tremont Stagecoach Line committed suicide shortly after Wade named him 197 George Walton was later identified as the culprit in the second fire and was indicted but he died of consumption in prison before he could be tried 192 Rules of baseball edit On May 13 1858 members of the various town ball teams in the Boston area met at the Phoenix Hotel to form the Massachusetts Association of Baseball Players 198 199 The nine team association included three teams from Boston and one from Dedham 198 av The association developed a set of rules that came to be known as the Massachusetts Game 198 199 There were no foul balls four bases in a rectangular shape and games lasted until one team had scored 100 runs 198 199 At the end of the day after they adopted 17 rules they broke to play a game that was well attended by residents 199 Later years edit Under different names and different managers the house continued to do a good business 192 193 John Howe and his wife owned the hotel from 1850 to 1879 during which time it became one of the community s leading social spots 192 During the Civil War it was commonly frequented by officers from nearby Camp Meigs 192 After that it gained a reputation as a spa where people from the city might escape for a few days 192 Its last owner Henry White had owned it for only a year when it finally burned to the ground on the morning of December 25 1880 193 200 199 aw It was the last tavern in Dedham at the time and when it finally burned Dedham s days of hosting stagecoach travelers ended 199 Temperance Hall edit Main article Temperance Hall Dedham Massachusetts The Temperance Hall Association which was part of the temperance movement that opposed alcohol purchased the old Norfolk County Courthouse in 1845 21 They extended the second floor by building an addition propped up by stilts that extended into the back yard 201 The Boy s Dedham Picnic Band often played before temperance rallies and other events 180 The hall was rented out to a great number of organizations 201 Among the groups using the hall were ventriloquists magicians a painted panorama entitled The Burning of Moscow a glassblowing exhibition a demonstration of a model volcano called The Eruption of Vesuvius plays concerts including one by the Mendelssohn String Quartet lectures fundraisers debates bell ringers and marching sessions by a para military drill club 201 Among the speakers who took the podium there were Theodore Parker Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr Frederick Douglass Horace Mann Father Matthew Abraham Lincoln William R Alger and John Boyle O Reilly 201 202 By 1846 the Catholic community in Dedham was well established enough that the town became part of the mission of St Joseph s Church in Roxbury 203 204 The flood of Irish immigrants escaping the Great Famine necessitated celebrating Mass in Temperance Hall often by Father Patrick O Beirne 204 205 206 The building burned down on April 28 1891 207 Fenian raid edit Following the Civil War the local chapter of the Fenian Brotherhood which had offices in the nearby Norfolk House hosted a meeting in which a Fenian raid into Canada was organized 201 John R Bullard a recent Harvard Law School graduate was elected moderator of the meeting and having been swept up in his own sudden importance and fever of the meeting ended his animated speech by asking Who would be the first man to come forward and pledge himself to go to Canada and help free Ireland 60 The first of the roughly dozen men to sign the enlistment papers were Patrick Donohoe and Thomas Golden 60 Thomas Brennan said he could not participate but donated 50 to the cause 60 The meeting ended with the group singing The Wearing of the Green 60 The raid was a failure 60 Some of the men got as far as St Albans Vermont but none made it to Canada 60 A few were arrested and some had to send home for money 60 Around the same time Patrick Ford the treasurer of the Brotherhood absconded to South America with the organization s money 60 Howe Tavern edit William Howe opened the Howe Tavern on Court Street at the intersection of Church Street at the site of the original St Paul s Church 188 He sold it in 1818 to Mace Smith who renamed it the Punch Bowl Tavern 188 Smith sold it in 1833 and from then on it was used as either a tavern or a boardinghouse being known as the Columbian House in the 1840s 188 It was nearly destroyed in a fire in 1891 at which point it was rebuilt for use as a private residence 188 Bicentennial editPlanning edit At a town meeting held on November 9 1835 a committee of 21 citizens was appointed to make arrangements for the celebration of the bicentennial anniversary of the incorporation and settlement of the town 208 On March 7 1836 they reported that they engaged Samuel Foster Haven to compose and deliver an address on that occasion at the First Parish meetinghouse on September 21 1836 at 11 a m 208 All the clergy and choirs of the town were invited and asked to participate and the Dedham Light Infantry Company was requested escort the procession 208 A dinner was to follow for the clergy and paid guests 208 On April 11 1836 William Ellis Enos Foord Ira Cleveland William King Gay and Jabez Coney Jr were chosen as a committee to execute on the plan 208 Procession edit For nearly a year prior to the Town s bicentennial in 1836 a committee worked to make plans for a celebration 209 208 At dawn church bells throughout the town began ringing and a 100 gun cannonade was launched 209 208 At 10 30 a m a procession left the new town house and processed through the streets of town 209 Nathaniel Guild the grand marshal was aided by 25 assistant marshals ax Dedham s Light Infantry and a military band 209 208 The industrious classes of the town divided the procession up by occupation 210 The mechanics tradesmen and manufacturers all had their own sections but the farmers were excluded 210 The agricultural workers of the town tried to participate but having been denied the place of honor they thought they deserved largely avoided the event 210 The organizers dismissed the farmers complaints as the sour grapes of a proud lump of aristocracy 210 They said that if any group was to be given the place of honor it should be these to whom we are indebted for the present prosperity of the town and not those who were far behind the age in many respects 211 It was the industrious classes they believed who had transformed Dedham from an agricultural community into a thriving businesslike and growing community 212 As a result it was on their shoulders that all of our hopes for the future rest 212 At the Norfolk House the procession was joined by Governor Edward Everett and a number of clergy and then proceeded to the First Parish green 209 119 There they passed through lines of the eight fire companies with their engines and apparatus and 500 schoolchildren and under an arch of evergreen boughs and flowers with Incorporated 1636 on one side and 1836 on the other 213 119 Service edit The services were commenced by singing the anthem Wake the Song of Jubilee 119 A prayer was then offered by the Rev Alvan Lamson of the First Parish 119 The following hymn composed especially for the occasion by the Rev John Pierpont of Boston was read by the Rev Calvin Durfee of the South Parish and sung to the tune of Old Hundred 119 Not now O God beneath the trees That shade this plain at night s cold noon Do Indian war songs load the breeze Or wolves sit howling to the moon The foes the fears our fathers felt Have with our fathers passed away And where in their dark hours they knelt We come to praise thee and to pray We praise thee that thou plantedst them And mad st thy heavens drop down their dew We pray that shooting from their stem We long may flourish where they grew And Father leave us not alone Thou hast been and art still our trust Be thou our fortress till our own Shall mingle with our father s dust Haven then gave an address on the history of the town 104 Another anthem was then sung and the services were closed with a Benediction by the Rev Samuel B Babcock of the Episcopal Church 104 Dinner edit After a prayer service 600 people then processed to a pavilion erected to host a dinner on the land of John Bullard a few rods to the west 214 104 James Richardson presided at this dinner assisted by John Endicott George Bird Abner Ellis Theron Metcalf and Thomas Barrows as Vice Presidents 104 A blessing was asked by the Rev John White of the West Parish and thanks returned by the Rev Dr Jonathan Homer of Newton 104 After the cloth was removed Richardson gave a number of toasts interspersed with music from the band 1 The Day with all its hallowed associations and congenial joys May we prove true and faithful to our ancestors to our institutions and to posterity 2 The memory of the first settlers of this town their resolution fortitude perseverance and devotion to civil and religious liberty May we never in our zeal to outstrip them in accomplishments leave their virtues in the rear 3 The Governor of the Commonwealth The stock was the growth of our own soil a branch is refreshing the State by its shadow and its fruit has been healthful to the nation 4 The University at Cambridge the offspring of the labors and privations of the Puritan Fathers while we venerate the parents let us cherish the child and may it always be guided by as unerring a hand as now holds the reins 5 Practical Education That teaches what to do and when to do it and never to rest satisfied till it is done and well done 6 The objects of the deep solicitude of our ancestry the church and the school house May the progress of religious moral and intellectual culture within transcend that of material beauty without 7 The memory of the Rev Samuel Dexter and Doctor Nathaniel Ames Senior Townsmen distinguished for piety and learning science and philosophy and whose descendants have been and are among the gifted and illustrious men of our nation 8 The principles and spirit that brought the pilgrims to these shores cherished and venerated by succeeding ages embodied in our constitution and laws dispensing blessings over our whole country in peace or war in weal or woe may we never abandon those principles nor prove recreant to that spirit 9 The memory of Governor Winthrop His presence awed the savages during his life He is indebted to a Savage for the best edition of his memorable Journal 10 The Militia the only safe defense of Republics When legislators doubt let them consult the spirits of Warren Prescott and the Heroes of Bunker Hill 215 After the toast to him the governor spoke of Richard Everett his ancestor and one of the early settlers of Dedham and the multiple generations of his family who played a part in the history of the town 214 104 He also noted the wonderful progress and development in the commonwealth and the nation over the preceding four decades 214 104 He added that the advancement had been truer nowhere than in Dedham 214 104 On announcing sentiments alluding to the guests or their ancestors several besides the governor addressed the company including John Davis Judge of the District Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts Josiah Quincy III President of Harvard College Henry Alexander Scammell Dearborn Adjutant General of the Commonwealth William Jackson Representative in Congress Franklin Dexter Alexander Hill Everett and Robert C Winthrop Aid to Governor Everett 216 A great number of sentiments were also given by invited guests and by the citizens of the town 216 Women s events edit The women of the town spread a table the whole length of the lower floor of the Court House and furnished it with an ample collation 216 The court room was used as a drawing room and the library room was decorated with native and exotic fruits 217 A piano forte was placed in the court room and music formed part of the entertainment 217 The following hymn prepared for the occasion by a lady was sung by the ladies accompanying the piano Welcome all dear friends returning Though from different paths you come Welcome all whose hearts are yearning For their dear loved native home Some in foreign lands have wandered Some from the far west have come Yet where er the footsteps lingered Thought still turned to home sweet home Many a well known face shall meet ye Many a joyous smile shall bless Many a kindred heart shall greet ye While old friends around you press Come then hasten with us gather Round our simple festive board Come and with us bless that Father Who on all his love hath poured Condescend to grant Thy blessing Thou who dost our lives defend While Thy children Thee addressing Own Thee as their common Friend 217 At the invitation of the ladies to who on the display Governor Everett attended the ladies event after the dinner 217 After sampling the fruit the women sang the hymn again for him 217 He then returned to the court room and from the bench made a short address to the ladies in which he remarked on the privations sufferings fortitude and piety of the first mothers and daughters of the town 217 Scenic community editDedham 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 124 The scenery of the town was described as varied and picturesque with an appearance of being well kept and the roads are noticeably good 116 By the end of the century a gazetteer with entries for each city and town in Massachusetts described 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 116 On the north side of Court Street was a building called the Flat Iron Building due to its wedge like shape 120 Louis Mellen drowned in Wigwam Pond 152 A heat wave in July 1811 killed several people 218 A bathhouse was constructed in 1898 along the banks of Mother Brook 219 Subdivisions edit In the 19th century many former farms became businesses and homes for those who commuted into Boston 139 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 220 Charles Sanderson began laying it out in a subdevelopment to become known as Oakdale 220 By 1895 Oakdale was still largely woodland with only about a dozen houses clustered around the Ashcroft railroad station 221 ay Today Whiting Ave is home to both the High School and the Middle School and Sanderson Avenue runs into Oakdale Square In 1867 the Farrington farm was laid out into house plots by the Elmwood Land Company and became the Endicott neighborhood and in 1873 the Whiting Turner tract of land was developed into Ashcroft 149 23 Fairbanks Park was developed in 1895 23 Trees edit 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 222 On a hot summer day she once asked a workman for a sip of his cider When he refused she broke her clay pipe in two and told the worker that the same thing would happen to his neck 223 She also said that the Nanhattan Street house he was working on would burn to the ground which it did years later 223 In the mid 1800s stood a large sycamore tree at the intersection of Court and Church Streets 120 Tradition holds that this was the tree to which those who broke the law would be tied and whipped 120 It was also the location of the town s pillory 120 Schools editMain article Dedham Public Schools Though Dedham had the first public school in the country the Commonwealth sued the Town in 1819 for failing to hire a grammar school teacher 107 As early as 1848 Rev Dr Alvan Lamson of the First Church and Parish in Dedham was making the argument that the districts should be abolished and Horace Mann said that the law allowing districts was beyond comparison the most pernicious law ever pass in the Commonwealth on the subject of schools 224 The districts were discontinued in 1866 when the Town purchased all 11 buildings for a total of 49 180 and returned their value to the taxpayers of the respective districts 224 The first public school system in the country had by 1890 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 116 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 Honorable F A Hill also spoke 225 Dedham High School edit Main article Dedham High School As early as 1827 the Commonwealth of Massachusetts required all towns with more than 500 families to establish a free public high school 226 227 Beginning in 1844 the School Committee repeatedly began recommending that the town establish a high school 228 224 It was not until 1850 when under threat of a lawsuit that the town meeting voted to instruct the Town s School Committee to hire a building and teacher and establish a High School according to law 228 A sum of 3 000 was appropriated to support it 228 The new school was opened on September 15 1851 229 with 42 students 230 Charles J Capen a private high school teacher was hired to teach at the new school and his classroom above the Masonic Hall was rented by the town 228 224 230 The building located at 25 Church Street was previously Miss Emily Hodge s Private School 231 The school used this space from 1851 to 1854 at which point it was moved to the Town House on Bullard Street 232 230 In 1855 a new school was built on Highland Street and dedicated on December 10 232 233 A new school was built on Bryant Street in 1887 and students moved in on October 3 234 233 Parishes precincts and new towns editSee also History of Dedham Massachusetts 1635 1699 Parishes precincts and new towns History of Dedham Massachusetts 1700 1799 Parishes precincts and new towns and History of Dedham Massachusetts 1900 1999 New towns and subdivisions With the division and subdivision of so many communities Dedham has been called the Mother of Towns 235 Community Year incorporated as a town 236 Notes Dover 1836 Then known as Springfield it became a precinct of Dedham by vote of Town Meeting in 1729 237 relegated to a parish the same year by the General Court 238 Created the Fourth Precinct by the General Court in 1748 238 Hyde Park 1868 800 acres taken from Dedham along with land from Dorchester and Milton 239 Norfolk 1870 Separated from Wrentham Norwood 1872 Created a precinct with Clapboard Trees Westwood in 1729 238 Became its own precinct in 1734 238 Wellesley 1881 Separated from Needham Millis 1885 Separated from Medfield Avon 1888 Part of the Dorchester New Grant of 1637 Separated from Stoughton Westwood 1897 Joined with South Dedham Norwood to create Second Precinct in 1729 238 Returned to First Precinct in 1734 238 In 1737 became Third Precinct 238 240 Last community to break away directly from Dedham Dover edit At the 1729 election the village reasserted its political power by taking back control of the Board of Selectmen 241 Four men from the village were elected including Ebenezer Woodward along with one man from the Springfield area of town 241 Shortly thereafter Springfield became its own precinct in an apparent quid pro quo 241 242 It later became Dover in 1836 Norwood edit The south precinct had long complained that they did not receive a fair share of services from the Town 23 In 1872 the complaint was focused around the lack of opportunities for their children to attend the high school 23 In that year they seceded and formed the town of Norwood Massachusetts 23 Westwood edit In 1897 the third parish became the final area to break away directly from Dedham incorporating as Westwood 23 There had been calls for a partition since at least 1857 3 Waldeddo and Back Bay edit In the 1850s a proposal was made by James Tisdale to take portions of Dedham Dover and Walpole to create a new town of Waldeddo but nothing came from it 3 243 In the late 1800s when the Commonwealth of Massachusetts was filling in Boston s Back Bay most of the landfill came from nearby Needham 244 When the gravel pits there were exhausted they turned to other area communities including Dedham 244 Notable visits editJames Monroe edit During his 1817 tour of the country President James Monroe visited Dedham and stayed at the home of future Congressman Edward Dowse 245 A large number of people escorted him from the Norfolk border to the Boston line including artillery and Crane s Division Ist of Militia 245 Monroe reviewed the troops on the Town Common 245 He met residents the next morning when he walked from Dowse s home to Polly s Tavern 245 Fisher Ames edit After he retired from Congress due to his poor health prominent Federalist officials continued to visit Fisher Ames in Dedham 94 In 1800 Alexander Hamilton took a tour of New England His stated objective was to disband the army but his real reason was to try and convince people to vote for Charles Cotesworth Pinckney instead of John Adams 246 On his way to Boston where a dinner was held in his honor that included Governor Caleb Strong the Lt Governor former senator George Cabot Francis Dana chief justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and several congressmen and clergy Hamilton stopped in Dedham 247 He was the guest of Fisher Ames on June 24 1800 247 94 Next door Fisher s brother Nathaniel was not pleased with the visit writing in his journal that A Hamilton the high Adul tere r run after a tiptoe thro Dedham 247 94 On July 20 1803 Gouverneur Morris also visited Fisher Ames in Dedham 248 Crime editThe Fairbanks case edit Main article Death of Elizabeth Fales nbsp The south face of the courthouse in Dedham Square as it appeared in 1839 The first major trial to be held at the new courthouse was that of Jason Fairbanks He was courting Elizabeth Fales and the two carried on a desultory and somewhat ambiguous relationship marked by Fales parents disapproval Fairbanks poor health and Fales continually breaking up with Fairbanks and then taking him back again 249 Fairbanks 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 250 On May 18 1801 Fales met Fairbanks in a birch grove next to Mason s Pasture and told him that she could not marry him 123 249 Fales was stabbed 11 times including once in the back and her throat was slashed 249 Fairbanks staggered to her home covered in blood and told her family that she had committed suicide 249 He also told them that he had also attempted to take his own life but was unable to and that accounted for his wounds 123 Fairbanks was too injured to be moved and was left to recuperate at the Fales home 249 He did not attend Fales funeral but 2 000 others did probably making it the largest crowd ever assembled in Dedham 251 Interest in the case involving two prominent families was so great that the trial was moved to the First Parish Meetinghouse across the street 252 When that venue proved to still be too small the trial again moved to the Town Common The defense told the jury that Fairbanks did not have the use of his right arm and was sickly in general 252 az They suggested though Fairbanks later strongly denied it that the lovers had a murder suicide pact 252 The jury found him guilty and he was sentenced to death 252 On the night of August 17 Fairbanks escaped from jail along with several others 253 123 A 1 000 bounty offered for his capture 253 123 The murder trial and the escape set off a media firestorm Fairbanks was captured in Skeensborough New York while waiting for a steamer to bring him to Canada 254 Fairbanks was not returned to Dedham the site of his previous escape but was instead brought to the Suffolk County Jail in Boston 254 On September 10 1801 he was returned to Dedham from the Boston jail and was hanged 254 In addition to a military presence to ensure he didn t escape again 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 123 254 It set a new record for the largest crowd in Dedham 254 Within days of the execution a number of books and pamphlets were written about the case including one of the earliest novels based on an actual murder case the Life of Jason Fairbanks A Novel Founded on Fact 255 1820 duel edit A barber living in the village received a note from a painter on January 13 1820 256 The two men had previously boarded together The note stated Sir from the many insults received and attempts made on my life by you I cannot rest easy until I get satisfaction and as I am about to leave Dedham it does hurt my feelings though mean indeed to fight with a barber So I shall expect to meet yo in half and hour from this time at the back of Mr C s shop 256 The barber responded thusly Your challenge is accepted I will meet you ar the time and place appointed My life my honour shall pay or yours shall be my sacrifice 256 The two men met in the ally just after the sun had set for a duel 256 They were each accompanied by a second and started pacing off steps 256 When they turned the painted pointed his pistol at the barber and pulled the trigger 256 The barber immediately collapsed and the painter ran off 256 The barber was then helped to a nearby doctor by his second and several bystanders who came when they heard gunfire 256 It was later discovered that the barber and the two seconds conspired to only load the pistols with powder but not bullets to satisfy the anger of the painter but not put anyone in actual danger 256 Other hangings edit As the shiretown Dedham was home to both the Norfolk County Courthouse and the Norfolk County Jail It thus also was the site of a number of hangings On October 7 1802 Ebenezer Mason was hung on the Town Common for the murder of his brother in law William Allen in Medfield 257 In 1804 John Battus of Canton was hung for murdering a young girl 258 In July 1829 John Bois was hung for murdering his wife 258 The execution was set for 9 a m in an attempt to limit the crowds but they were uncusessful as large numbers attended anyway 258 On August 8 1862 George Hersey of South Weymouth was hung at the jail with attendance permitted only by invitation and the presentation of a ticket 258 ba James H Costley was hung in the jail on June 25 1875 for the murder of Julia Hawke 259 The Phoenix Hotel was full in the days prior to the execution with both spectators who came to watch and Boston police officers who were called in to help keep the peace 259 Other editGay Ellis wedding edit In 1800 260 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 261 and had two children before Sarah died in 1810 260 Post offices edit There were seven post offices mostly in rail depots or grocery stores in the 19th century 128 Dr Elisha Thayer bb an apothecary named Tower 180 and Ambrose Galucia bc were postmasters 152 Thayer ran the post office office from a small addition on the east side of his house from 1833 until his resignation in 1855 262 263 Galucia was postmaster at the Memorial Hall post office before leaving for California during the California Gold Rush 153 Landon Moore attempted to rob a post office in 1877 3 Animals edit In August 1810 it was thought a dog under symptoms of madness bit 12 cows and gave them an illness which killed them 161 Some idle fellow in the town then when around shooting every dog he could find even shooting into houses and killing dogs wrapped up in women s aprons who were trying to protect them 161 The town was divided between those who argued for the Rights of Dogs and those who thought they should be exterminated 161 In 1870 a horse owned by John Gardiner broke free from the carriage to which it was hitched and took off down River Place 264 Crowds tried to stop it when it reached Memorial Hall but the horse turned instead and ran into Andrew Norris grocery store on the first floor 264 The front assembly of the carriage which was trailing behind hit a granite hitching post and turned the assembly vertically so that one wheel was on the air and the other was scraping along the ground 264 The horse bolted through the store past a rack of glassware and crockery and then out the other door without causing any damage 264 Organizations edit 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 265 266 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 265 A Masonic lodge opened in 1803 266 Ghosts edit When spiritualism swept over the country in the 1840s many in Dedham took interest and attempted to communicate with the dead 180 A few decades later in October 1877 a spook was seen in the Old Village Cemetery 267 P H Hurley was walking through the graveyard when he was accosted by the ghost 267 The spook then took off leaping over a tall fence 267 Later the same night John Ward saw the spook in Brookdale Cemetery 267 The spook seen by Hurley and Ward was described as being over seven feet tall and wearing a long blue coat 267 Others reported seeing a spectral woman in the cemeteries She was silent and still pointing at various graves 267 One report indicated that the spook liked eggs so the police investigated a grocery store 268 Women of the town made sure to confirm their husbands identities before letting them into the house and a woman in Oakdale fired a shotgun at the spook 269 Around midnight on November 8 neighbors on Village Avenue heard shots fired in the cemetery 268 Caretaker John Carey found blood scattered on the white marble gravestone of Lavinia Turner the next morning as well as a bloody handprint on the iron rail surrounding the family plot 268 There was also trampled grass and indications of a struggle 268 Constable de Morse thought the red liquid was blood but Police Chief William F Drugan ruled that it was simply red ink 268 Drugan also declared that the spook sensation was not real but was the work of pranksters 268 The press including the Dedham Transcript and newspapers from Boston and New York covered the story extensively 268 One reporter spent the night in the cemetery hoping to catch a glimpse of the spook 268 By the end of November when a ghost was seen in a Palmer Massachusetts cemetery and the newspaper coverage moved there the sightings in Dedham died down 268 Independence Day edit See also History of Dedham Massachusetts 1900 1999 Antiques and Horribles parade In the early 1800s residents would gather at a tavern for a feast to drink toasts read the United States Declaration of Independence and to celebrate the Glorious Fourth of July 270 By the mid point of the century a new annual tradition of a Parade of Antiques and Horribles was established in Dedham and in much of New England 271 Mocking the Boston parade of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts older residents and young people would dress in outlandish costumes 271 In the 1880s a tradition started where youths would climb to the top of the Church of the Good Shepherd and ring the bell at midnight on the 4th of July This tradition eventually evolved into the bell being rung to signal the start of wagons being brought to Oakdale Square and lit aflame in the early 20th century 271 Notes edit Hose No 3 which had 300 of house was built by J V Fell J Wally amp Brother and J Lynas 11 His father was Eliphalet Pond He was born in 1745 14 and was Registrar of Deeds in Norfolk County Massachusetts from the establishment of the county in 1793 to his death in 1813 15 13 16 He also served as the Dedham Massachusetts town clerk for 25 years and as a selectman for 1813 13 He also served as a colonel in the American Revolution 13 Farrington was also a copyist at the Registry of Deeds He was in a wheelchair due to a childhood affliction He served as Clerk until his death 18 The original design had brick floors on top of a layer of salt covering a wooden subfloor providing little protection from a fire originating in the cellar 29 It was rumored that the county saved money on the dome by using existing plans from the United States Customshouse in Providence 19 Cobbett was a carpenter who lived at the corner of School and Worthington Streets He went to work for Horatio Clarke making flasks in the foundry in Mill Village modern day East Dedham and eventually retired to Hyde Park to live with his daughter Georgianna and her husband Henry Holtham 41 On the 11th all the specie from the Massachusetts State Bank in Boston was removed to Worcester 50 Including the father of Edward Holmes 55 Worthington believed the last disbanded in 1842 61 Burgess has his departure as being in 1815 80 Membership in the church grew steadily for more than 50 years and in 1907 the congregation opened a new church in Oakdale Square 102 Durfee also served on the school committee in the mid 1800s 118 Mann lived on Court Street He learned the trade of a printer and in his later years he was a bookkeeper at the Maverick Woolen Mills 120 27 of the population was foreign born 122 Charles lived from 1797 to 1869 and Mary from 1802 to 1883 Their portraits hang in the Dedham Historical Society among some other of their possessions and papers 138 It would go on to become the home of the American Legion in 1921 and then the administration offices for the Dedham Public Schools in 1951 It was torn down in 2004 to make room for the new Dedham Middle School 138 The factory was run by the father of Henry W Fiske 152 Samuel Mann manufactured fancy paper and cards He lived on Court Street and later moved to Green Lodge 120 Marden lived on Church Street 154 Clark was born in 1774 and died in 1837 55 Holmes was an officer at the First Church and Parish in Dedham 155 After the death of his wife he boarded with Abiathar Richards and then moved to Connecticut where he died in 1861 155 Dunbar who was born in Canton later moved to St Catherine s Canada in 1852 where he began working in canal and harbor dredging He had a son Charles and eventually settled in Buffalo N Y 155 Wilson Lane is modern day Worthington Street 134 McIntosh also owned rental housing behind the Centre School 120 The creation of the road necessitated moving and reorienting the Colburn family home It originally sat across what is today the road and was moved to a position on the new corner where the Knights of Columbus building is today on the northwest corner of the Washington Street High Street intersection 164 Penniman was born in Boston in 1799 and first moved to Dedham Island which he improved and named Riverdale He sold the land to John Lothrop Motley s family He later moved to the intersection of East Street and Whiting Avenue and then Pearl Avenue He was a director in the Dedham Bank Dedham Savings or both He evenutally moved to New York and lived there until his death in July 1871 118 Hutchins had a son George who attended the Centre School 155 Whiting also owned a company that delivered fresh water to homes via hollowed out logs 7 The term Connecticut Corner has generally fallen out of use in Dedham but it is listed as a historic district in Dedham 173 The historic district generally runs down High and Bridge Streets from slightly past Lowder Street to slightly past Common Street It encompasses the Town Common and the houses around it Bryant was also an officer of the First Church and Parish in Dedham 175 Ellis was the brother of Calvin F Ellis and lived in Clapboardtree parish and played the violin in the West Dedham Unitarian choir 175 Richards lived above the store 155 Eaton had a son Joel 152 The Odd Fellows Lodge did not exist for very long before folding 120 Hewins had two sons Fisher and Alfred 134 Fisher had lost an eye 120 Packard was the sexton at the Allin Congregational Church 154 Cox was the father of John Cox Jr and Samuel H Cox the publisher and editor respectively of the Dedham Transcript as well as William H Willie Cox an invalid 154 Cox was born near the railroad station 176 Damon had a speech impediment Her later years were clouded and she died in a state of despondency 154 Wheaton once treated a patient for a cold and a sore throat by giving him a shot of julep and calomel The patient was unaware of the calomel in the treatment however and its laxative effects kept the patient suffering for the next two days A court awarded the patient 40 but it was overturned on appeal 107 Wheton was also an active member of the Allin Congregational Church 120 He lived next door to Rev William Montague 155 Maynard had a daughter His son in law Fred Russell lived in Indianapolis in 1876 180 Radford s wife was a neighborly woman who only had one eye 153 Marsh s children include Daniel George William Libbie Jane Abby Eliza and Fanny The family lived on School Street He sold his land on Wilson s Lane modern day Worthington Street to Horatio Clarke 153 Robinson lived on the corner of Washington Street and High Street It was already an old house in the mid 1800s with a long sloping roof He lived next door to Charles J Capen 155 All of the coaches for the Citizen Stagecoach Line were built in Dedham as well 112 One of the original ten teams to arrive that morning preferred the Knickerbocker Rules and so left the meeting 198 199 White was also the jailkeeper at the nearby Norfolk County Jail 199 The assistant marshals were John Morse Ira Russell Nathan Phillips Luther Eaton Merrill Ellis Josiah Dean 2d Theodore Gay 2d Samuel C Mann Benjamin Boyden Reuben Guild 2d Edward B Holmes Joseph Day Ezra W Taft Edward D Weld Elbridge G Robinson James Downing Austin Bryant Theodore Metcalf Francis Guild Nathaniel A Hewins Reuben G Trescott Stephen Barry Joseph Fisher Joseph A Wilder and John D Colburn 208 Those who lived there included Horatio Turner Charles Turner and Mrs Clapp 221 Hanson believes Fairbanks was also suffering from an undiagnosed case of tuberculosis 252 Hersey was later implicated in the deaths of several other women including his wife 259 Thayer had a son George H 152 He also owned a large vacant meadow near the intersection of High and East Streets which grew Acorus calamus 155 Thayer lived next door to Jeremiah Shuttleworth 180 He was also the organist at St Paul s 180 He had three sons Elisha John and George and a daughter Maria 180 Elisha Jr became a veterinarian and John led the orchestra at the Allin Congregational Church by the time he was 15 or 16 years old 180 John was a violinist and later an organist there before moving to St Paul s 180 Galucia had a son Warren He previously worked as a house painter 152 153 References edit Davis 1973 p 2 3 a b c Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 12 a b c d e f g h Hanson 1976 p 245 a b Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 13 a b Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 14 a b Bryant David September 17 2020 East Dedham Fire House Retrieved January 21 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Hanson 1976 p 195 a b c Austin 1912 p 18 19 Hanson 1976 p 195 196 a b c d Austin 1912 p 19 a b c d e Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 15 a b c Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 16 a b c d Registers of Deeds The Early Years Norfolk County Registry of Deeds Norfolk County Registry of Deeds 225th Anniversary Notable Land Records Project Bernard Quartich New Acquisitions June 2018 PDF Bernard Quartich Ltd June 2018 Retrieved November 22 2019 Dedham Village in 1795 Dedham Historical Register XIV 2 Dedham Historical Society 39 April 1903 Retrieved 22 November 2019 Louis Atwood Cook 1918 History of Norfolk County Massachusetts 1622 1918 S J Clarke publishing Company p 478 a b c Worthington 1827 pp 79 a b c d e Clarke 1903 p 14 a b c d e f g Hanson 1976 p 230 Smith 1936 p 415 a b c d e f g h i j k l Hanson 1976 p 239 a b c d e f Hanson 1976 p 243 a b c d e f g h i j Hanson 1976 p 244 Smith 1936 p 146 Smith 1936 p 147 Smith 1936 pp 147 148 a b c d Warren 1931 p 248 a b Lockridge 1985 p 91 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hanson 1976 p 229 Hanson 1976 p 228 229 a b Hanson Robert 1999 Stories Behind the Pictures in the Images of America Dedham Book Dedham Historical Society News Letter December Archived from the original on December 31 2006 NHL nomination for Norfolk County Courthouse National Park Service Retrieved 2014 05 26 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au Worthington 1827 pp 106 107 a b c Hurd 1884 p 11 a b c Keyes Asa 1880 Genealogy Robert Keyes of Watertown Mass 1633 Solomon Keyes of Newbury and Chelmsford Mass 1653 and their descendants also others of the names Brattleboro Vt G E Selleck OL 24191068M Massachusetts House of Representatives Massachusetts Register Boston Adams Sampson amp Co 1858 p 11 Commonwealth of Massachusetts Manual for the Use of the General Court Boston 1859 p 210 via Internet Archive a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Cutter William Richard ed 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Wright Conrad 1988 The Dedham Case Revisited Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 3 100 Massachusetts Historical Society 15 39 JSTOR 25080991 Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Wikisource com 1780 Retrieved 2006 11 28 See Part the First Article III a b 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 Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly 32 3 363 doi 10 1177 0899764003254593 Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 26 a b c d Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 29 a b Slafter 1905 p 89 a b c d e f g h i Haven 1837 p 73 Hanson 1976 p 164 Burt Sally January 2008 Church History St Paul s Church Retrieved May 6 2021 a b c d Hanson 1976 p 215 a b c d Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 27 a b c d Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 28 a b Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 32 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 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Robert Hanson 2005 The Inn Thing Taverns of Dedham PDF Dedham Historical Society Newsletter March a b c d St Mary s Community Parish History St Mary s Parish 2006 Archived from the original on 2007 09 21 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 a b c d e f g h i Rev Elias Nason M A 1890 A Gazetteer of the State of Massachusetts CapeCodHistory us Retrieved 2006 12 10 a b Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 30 a b c Clarke 1903 p 5 a b c d e f Haven 1837 p 72 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Clarke 1903 p 10 Cook Jr Edward M 1970 Social Behavior and Changing Values in Dedham Massachusetts 1700 to 1775 The William and Mary Quarterly 546 580 doi 10 2307 1919704 JSTOR 00435597 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Neiswander Judy May 15 2020 Tales from Mother Brook Part 5 Citizens The Dedham Times Vol 28 no 20 p 8 a b c d e f Sean Murphy 2006 Historian recalls the Fairbanks case Dedham s first big trial Daily News Transcript Retrieved 2006 11 30 dead link a b c d John Hayward 1839 Massachusetts towns in 1839 Boyd amp White Concord N H Retrieved 2006 12 10 1865 Massachusetts Census Leahy William Augustine 1892 The Catholic churches of Boston and its vicinity and St John s Seminary Brighton Mass a folio of photo gravures with notes and historical information Boston McClellan Hearn and Co Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners 1899 p 102 a b c d e Parr Jim 17 August 2011 1889 Dedham Directory Part 2 Dedham Tales a b c Guide Book To New England Travel 1919 Population of Massachusetts Cities Towns amp Counties Census Counts and Current Estimates 1930 1998 with Land Area and Population Density in 1990 PDF City of Newton Massachusetts Archived from the original PDF on 2006 12 08 Retrieved 2006 12 12 a b c d e f State Data Center Mass Inst for Social amp Economic Research Population of Massachusetts Cities and 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Social Event of the Season to be May 19 Dedham Historical Society Newsletter May 2000 Archived from the original on December 31 2006 John Fiske Uses Vary but Castle Remains a Very Sacred Space Noble and Greenough School Archived from the original on 2006 09 07 Retrieved 2006 12 10 The Castle at Nobles TeachingCompany com Archived from the original on 2006 11 19 Retrieved 2006 12 10 Why Nobles Nobles and Greenough School Archived from the original on 2006 09 06 Retrieved 2006 12 10 Joyce Leffler Eldridge 2005 Head of School Traces Nobles Attention to Aesthetics and Sustainability Nobles and Greenough School Archived from the original on 2006 09 11 Retrieved 2006 12 10 a b c A Capsule History of Dedham Dedham Historical Society 2006 Archived from the original on October 6 2006 Retrieved 2006 11 10 a b c Hanson 1976 p 228 a b c Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 40 a b c d e f g h i Clarke 1903 p 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Clarke 1903 p 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Clarke 1903 p 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1903 p 10 11 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 a b c d e f g h i j Hanson 1976 p 225 a b c d e f g Cook 1918 p 128 Cook 1918 p 222 Hanson 1976 p 222 223 a b c d e f g h i Hanson 1976 p 223 a b c d Hanson 1976 p 224 a b c d e Tom Kelleher 1999 Baseball Before 1860 Old Sturbridge Village Archived from the original on August 13 2006 Retrieved 2007 03 19 a b c d e f g h Parr 2009 Hanson 1976 p 226 a b c d e Hanson 1976 p 240 Cook 1918 p 45 St Mary s A cathedral in the wilderness The Dedham Times October 5 2001 p 14 a b History St Mary s Church St Mary s Church Dedham MA Retrieved March 9 2015 Hurd 1884 p 78 Daniel Slattery s house and the Temperance Hall The Dedham Times August 8 1995 p 6 Dedham Historical Society 2001 p 10 a b c d e f g h i Haven 1837 p 71 a b c d e Davis 1973 p 1 a b c d Davis 1973 p 3 Davis 1973 p 3 4 a b 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Gernade 1925 Jefferson and Hamilton The Struggle for Democracy in America Houghton Mifflin Burgess Ebenezer 1840 Dedham Pulpit Or Sermons by the Pastors of the First Church in Dedham in the XVIIth and XVIIIth Centuries Perkins amp Marvin Retrieved May 3 2021 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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