Saturday, September 24, 2022

Simsbury Barns, and Part of MLK's Legacy, to Be Preserved

From King Nutmeg:

Here I am again, with more barns. Just call me Barn-y. Whenever I'm back in my Connecticut hometown (or near it), I make photos of these old tobacco sheds (see September 3, 2021, "Many Barns, Two Minds" and July 19, 2016, "Tobacco Road").

The two barns featured in the photos above and below are along Firetown Road in West Simsbury. I was in town recently for a golf tournament, and before visiting a friend's house, I took the opportunity to shoot these endangered beauties. Along with others in this area (along both County and Hoskins roads), this pair was owned for decades by Cullman Brothers (aka Culbro), a shade-tobacco grower and cigar manufacturer. Click the link above for my "Tobacco Road" post to learn more about the history of Tobacco Valley, a fertile area stretching from Springfield, Massachusetts, south along the Connecticut River and its tributaries to Hartford.

Nowadays, the barns and surrounding acreage, known as Meadowood, are owned by the Trust for Public Land, a California-based conservation nonprofit. Part of the attraction for the TPL, according to its web site, was Martin Luther King, Jr.'s connection to these lands.

"As a student at Atlanta’s Morehouse College...King Jr. joined a group of his fellow students who ventured north to work in these fields. In letters home during those summers, King described the liberating experience of getting out from under the Jim Crow laws of the segregated South," the web site states. "'I had never thought that any person of my race could eat anywhere, but we ate at one of the finest restaurants in Hartford,' he wrote to his mother. Today, just two percent of sites listed in the National Register of Historic Places focus on the experiences of Black Americans. This collective oversight deprives all Americans of a full understanding of the history of our nation. The Trust for Public Land is working across the nation to accelerate the preservation of sites, such as Meadowood, that tell the story of Black life in America."

"To preserve the history that remains — and ensure that future generations have a chance to explore it for themselves — The Trust for Public Land is part of a coalition, along with the State Historic Preservation Office, that had been working to protect the property from development and restore some of its historic barns," the group's web site continues. "Now that it is protected, Meadowood can be included in the Connecticut Freedom Trail, a network of sites associated with Black history across the state."

In addition to restoring some of the barns, the TPL "will also protect 117 acres of prime farmland, which can be made available to local farmers in perpetuity."

I look forward to following the progress of the restoration of these barns.

Friday, September 16, 2022

Free-forming in Ashland

From Dave Brigham:

The times are rare that I explore a new town, city or neighborhood without a plan. I like to prepare ahead of time by zooming in on Google Maps/Street View, and doing a bit of research online to get some ideas of where to explore in a given place. This helps me maximize what is usually a somewhat tight schedule.

Recently, I had a plan to explore Norwood, Mass.** I had completed my online inquiries and found several places that I knew I wanted to make photos of. But when my daughter asked to go to the Natick Mall, I realized that I wouldn't have time to travel from there to Norwood and back and satisfy my curiosity, so I called an audible and ventured into nearby Ashland for the first time ever.

I found some great places, none better than the first building to catch my eye.

Known historically as the Abner Greenwood Block, this place on Front Street, as you can probably guess, is a Masonic Lodge, the North Star Lodge A.F. & A.M., to be exact.

I've made photos of many Masonic Lodges, but I've never seen one with the fraternal organization's logo rendered to large and obvious. Built in 1882, the Greenwood Block "is the only example of Panel Brick design observed in Ashland, and a major late 19th-century business block at the town center," per MACRIS. Greenwood was a blacksmith by trade. "One of his first contracts was the sharpening of spikes for the Boston & Worcester Railroad," MACRIS reports. "He remained in the blacksmith business for twenty-one years [and] subsequently established a large business selling coal...dealing in anthracite coal exclusively, and handling one thousands (sic) tons annually. He also sold hay, lime, and cement."

"From 1884 to 1920, the North Star Lodge, A. F. & A. M. (Ancient Free and Accepted Masons) occupied the building’s upper floors," per MACRIS. "Following a change in ownership that forced the lodge to vacate the Greenwood Block, the Masons returned and acquired the building in 1923, undertook a thorough renovation, and dedicated the building as a Masonic Home, serving the North Star Lodge as well as its sister organization, the Olive Branch Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star."

The building is also currently home to Ashland Reiki and Wellness Center and Anthony's Barber Shop.

Around the bend on Main Street, in front of the Needham Bank branch office, is a plaque and a clock recognizing Henry Ellis Warren, inventor of the self-starting, synchronous electric motor to power clock and timer devices. Warren held 135 patents.

"Warren's early career started as an engineer for Nathaniel Lombard, designing water-driven machinery for the N. Lombard Improved Governor Co. in Roxbury, MA," per Wikipedia. "He worked his way up to Plant Superintendent, eventually purchasing the company in 1937, at which time it was renamed Lombard Governor Company. He was owner and president of Lombard up until his death in 1957."

The Lombard Governor Co. eventually moved to Ashland, which I will discuss below. Concurrently, Warren founded Warren Telechron Company in 1912. That business was acquired by General Electric in 1943, and went out of business in 1992. "Just between 1916 and 1926 the company sold 20 million clocks," according to Wikipedia. "The clocks remained popular into the 1950s. In 1940 he also invented the 'singing clock' which instead of a pendulum had a vibrating metal string." I will talk about that company below, as well.

Walking south-southeast along Main Street, I spied a nicely restored train station, as well as a large complex further down Homer Avenue that I knew I had to check out next.

Ashland Station was built in 1887 for the Boston & Albany Railroad. "The Ashland station represents a major construction campaign undertaken by the Boston & Albany Railroad between 1881 and 1894, when over thirty new passenger stations were built on the line," according to MACRIS. "Nationally known Boston-area architect Henry Hobson Richardson designed nine stations before his death in 1886, after which his three chief assistants continued the firm as Shepley Rutan & Coolidge, designing another twenty-three stations consistent with the architectural program Richardson had established."

I have written about some of these other stations, including ones in Natick, Newton and Wellesley. While trains pass by this historic station, they no longer stop here. There have been businesses located in the station over the years, but I believe it is currently vacant.

From the station, I looked due east down Homer Avenue, and I saw a large brick buildilng looming in the distance. "Probably an old factory," I said to myself. Despite the rising heat and humidity, I knew I had to walk the quarter-mile or so past an auto service center and a bunch of nice houses that I cared not a whit about, and hope the short trek would be worth my time.

It was.

This is part of the complex where Warren Telechron Company once operated. Known as Building #3, it was erected in 1937. Warren started the company in 1916 in a barn in Ashland, per MACRIS. "By 1927, he employed 150 people; in 1930, there were 250 employees in the Ashland plant plus others throughout the United States and Canada. By 1942, Telechron had 1,500 employees."

(Close-up of clock on the old Warren Telechron building.)

(Former Warren Telechron buildings.)

The old clock-making facility is currently home to several companies, including BioSurfaces, which makes "devices and coatings out of FDA-approved polymers via electrospinning"; medical device maker NuVascular Technologies; Encompass Fitness; gourmet chocolate maker Dulce D Leche; and other companies.

Across Union Street from the old Telechron complex is a sad sight indeed....

...a shuttered Dairy Queen. No more soft-serve pineapple sundaes?! No more Blizzards?! No more, gulp, Dilly Bars?!

So very sad. This building, with its ridiculously oversized roof, sits on a fairly large lot, and I imagine the site will be redeveloped before too long. But what the hell do I know.

I headed back downtown, said "Good morning" to a postal worker outside the post office even though it was mid-afternoon, and then spied the fantastic mural below on the side of Main Street Wine & Spirits.

This work was done by Jared Goulette.

Just north of the liquor store is Stone's Public House, which has a long history of hospitality...and ghosts.

"When [John Stone] heard that the railroad was to be built through the center of town (on his own land) he decided to build a hotel right alongside the tracks," according to the restaurant's web site. "The Railroad House (the property also included a barn and a cow-yard and later a home for his family) opened on September 20, 1834, to an enthusiastic crowd of (some say) 300 people.

"John operated the Railroad House for less than two years (though he continued to live on the property), then leasing it to a long list of innkeepers. John died in 1858, and W.A. Scott bought the business in 1868," the web site continues. "Over the years the building fell into disrepair and disrepute. The man credited with helping to return the building to its former glory is Leonard 'Cappy' Fournier, who bought the building in 1976. Cappy is also the man credited with first exploring the paranormal side of the building."

I'm listening...or rather, reading.

The web site quotes from a newspaper article written in 1984: "Bizarre happenings at John Stone's Inn 'began seven years ago when Fournier bought the old inn' with doors that will not remain bolted and lights that turn themselves on. A number of psychics and mystics poured through the 152-year old inn sniffing out spirits after Fournier went public about strange events at the inn five years ago. While Fournier said the stories of each expert vary wildly, they all detected one thing in common. 'When I bought (sic) them to the upstairs function room they all felt the strangest feelings in the back half of that room,' he said. 'Every single one said the same thing in that upstairs room. That's what made a believer out of me.'"

Spooky.

North of Stone's, across the railroad tracks, is Lunker's.

Started in 1995 as a small bait and tackle shop, the store now offers sales and installation services of fireplaces, stoves, grills and fire pits, and much more. Named for a word that means an especially large fish, Lunker's is located in the John West-Arnold Bean Block, which is known historically as the Ashland News Store, per MACRIS. Built in 1835, this place has housed a number of businesses in the ensuing centuries, from a general store to a boot shop, a tailor shop to a news stand.

Next is the wonderfully restored Ashland House, part of the town's affordable housing stock.

Known alternately as the Rev. James McIntire House, the James Jackson House and the Henry E. Warren House, this fantastic Federal style home dates to 1836. "The James Jackson House is significant for its associations with the development of Unionville, as this section of Hopkinton was known prior to its incorporation in 1846 as part of the new town of Ashland," per MACRIS. "...James McIntire appears to have been the first resident. McIntire, a Maryland native who then resided in Framingham, was a student in the senior class at Andover Theological Seminary [when] he began, reportedly in April 1834, to conduct Congregational worship services at Unionville....His father-in-law, Edmund Bartlett of Newburyport, a manufacturer, built this house for McIntire and his new bride, Lydia Coombs Bartlett, directly across the street from the church (now the Federated Church of Ashland...). Following the untimely death of his wife in August 1837 at age 27, McIntire sold the house to James Jackson in 1838 and returned to Maryland.

"Jackson came to Unionville from Sutton...to serve as superintendent...of the Middlesex Manufacturing Company cotton-cloth mill that preceded the granite mill buildings on the site of 10-60 Main Street," per MACRIS. From 1944 to 1957, Henry E. Warren, the aforementioned inventor and clock manufacturer, used this house as an office."

Just up the street, at the intersection of Main, Pleasant and Cherry streets, is The Corner Spot.

Billed as "a place in downtown Ashland where businesses can test-drive their market and residents can come together," the Corner Spot features a small "pop up" store front where local entrepreneurs can test the market for their ideas; hosts events for kids (gymnastics, parachute parties) and grown-ups (shopping, beer garden) alike. Owned by the Town of Ashland, the site is open for folks to enjoy during daylight hours, and is also available to rent for events.

Across Main Street from The Corner Spot is a newer building from the old Lombard Governor Company complex, which manufactured water regulating devices that controlled the irregularities of free-flowing water to produce a constant power source, according to the Ashland Historical Society.

I'll get to more of this complex, and the company's history, in a moment. I made this photo because I was intrigued by the variety of purposes this building now serves, including as church space. Listed on signs around the doorway are: Middlesex Mattress Outlet; Professional Furniture Services; Cascao Brazilian jiu-jitsu training; Grace & Truth Chapel; and a Foursquare Church.

Attached to this building is a mill complex unlike any I've seen in my travels for this blog.

I dubbed it the "Mansard Mill" before I got home, did my research and learned this was the home of the Lombard Governor Company, which relocated here from Roxbury, Mass., in 1904. The buildings housed other manufacturers over the past 150 years. Today, tenants include a cosmetic dentistry office, a home audio store, a pest control business, a boxing club and other operations.

"While the Dwight Printing Company constructed the oldest buildings on this site in 1869-1870, the site has supported industrial activity since the early 19th century, after the Middlesex Manufacturing Company purchased the property in 1811 for the production of cotton cloth," according to MACRIS. "A four-story mill was built ca. 1816, later acquired by Boston parties and incorporated in 1828 as the Middlesex Union Factory Company. The presence of industry on this Sudbury River site contributed to the growth of the village of Unionville, as this section of Hopkinton was known prior to its incorporation in 1846 as part of the new town of Ashland."

Dwight Printing was founded in 1868 as a bleaching, dyeing and printing business for cotton cloth. One of the original three stockholders was Jordan, Marsh & Co., the Boston department store established in 1851 by Eben Dyer Jordan, per MACRIS.

"[T]he Dwight company would be processing cloth for the department store. Dwight Printing acquired several parcels in Ashland between 1868 and 1871 and began construction of a substantial complex of granite mills. The complex was not completed and the business never opened."

Wow.

More from MACRIS: "There is disagreement in period sources as to whether the 1872 land takings in Ashland to create the metropolitan Boston water supply system precipitated or followed the company’s decision to suspend construction. The Metropolitan Water Commission maintained that Dwight Printing had depleted its financial resources before the land takings occurred."

Warren Thread Company occupied some of the buildings in the 19th century. The Lombard Governor Company moved here in 1904, as was previously noted. At that time, the company employed Henry Ellis Warren, he of the Warren Telechron Company mentioned earlier. Upon founding that company, he moved it into some of the space here at Mansard Mill.

"In the early 1910s, the Angier Corporation, manufacturer of waterproof paper products, occupied other buildings immediately to the south of Lombard’s," per MACRIS. "A fire at Angier mills destroyed their complex in 1922, and the company subsequently moved to Framingham."

The Lombard operation was here into the 1960s before it was acquired and moved to Toledo, Ohio.

Check out the video below for more information, and some drone footage of the complex.

Directly across Myrtle Street from the portion of the mill shown in the photo above, is Mill Pond Park. I decided to take a stroll around here to take advantage of the cooler temps the shade offered.

(Dam of Sudbury River at Mill Pond.)

There are some nice walking trails here, and a fantastic foot bridge.

Before getting back in my car near the Masonic Lodge, I spied something that brought a smile to my sweaty, weather-beaten face.

Christmas is right around the corner!

**I eventually made a few trips to Norwood; stay tuned for a few posts about that town.

Saturday, September 10, 2022

I Seek Newton, Part XII: West Newton (Section 3: The Rest)

From Dave Brigham:

In the first two installments of this series on West Newton, I discussed a major redevelopment project (see August 27, 2022, "I Seek Newton, Part XII: West Newton (Section 1: The Barn Redevelopment") and West Newton Square (see September 3, 2022, "I Seek Newton, Part XII: West Newton (Section 2: The Square)"). In this final post, I will cover a wide variety of sites spread across the village, from houses of worship to a conservation area to a statue to historic homes that have new purposes, and much more. For links to the previous posts in this years-long effort, see the bottom of this post.

Let's start with some West Newton sanctuaries; I'm not getting to all of them here, just the ones that caught my eye.

The Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses on Washington Street near the intersection with Commonwealth Avenue, dates to 1958. I believe it was formerly a branch of Whitinsville Savings Bank, although I can't recall where I found that information.

On the appropriately named Temple Street is Temple Shalom, which was completed in 1956 for a congregation founded six years earlier.

Thanks to an attentive reader who pointed out my error in originally naming this as Temple Reyim, which is located on Washington Street, on the West Newton/Auburndale line. I took this photo many years ago and forgot to double-check just what it depicted.

Traveling back north into what is most assuredly West Newton, we come to a set of buildings that includes a church, a rectory, a former convent, a school and two other buildings.

Built in 1890 as St. Bernard Roman Catholic Church, this house of worship is known these days, after a consolidation, as Corpus Christi - St. Bernard Parish. Formerly sited on Ash Street in Auburndale, Corpus Christi was founded in 1922. As for St. Bernard, the congregation formed in 1866 and built a church at this location eight years later. Sadly, the church burned in 1889. This beautiful replacement rose less than a year later. The parishes joined in 2006.

On the opposite side of Prospect Street is the church's rectory, which dates to 1923.

Across Washington Street are two buildings built for the Catholic parish, but which are now used by a private school adjacent to the church.

On the left is a building known historically as Fuller House - Newton Catholic Club. The Second Empire building dates to 1875. Attached to the right is the circa-1909 former Newton Catholic Club Hall. These buildings are currently used by the Learning Prep School, which educates students in grades 5-12 "with complex profiles," per its web site. Below is Learning Prep's main building, which was originally the St. Bernard Parochial School.

(Learning Prep School.)

In addition to the former parochial school and the Catholic club buildings, Learning Prep leases the former St. Bernard convent.

Just around the corner from the St. Bernard/Learning Prep complex is the Myrtle Baptist Church - and a neighborhood that was torn apart in the 1960s by construction of the Massachusetts Turnpike extension.

Located on Curve Street in the heart of Newton's largest historically Black community, Myrtle Baptist was founded in 1874, when many of the 130 or so residents broke off from First Baptist Church (now Lincoln Park Baptist Church, which will be discussed below). The parishioners did so because they felt "the need to worship in their own tradition" and sought the "freedom to sit in the front of the church as well as in the rear," according to the church's web site. They separated “not with feelings of of unkindness toward [their] white brethren but simply for the best good of all concerned," the web site continues.

"The first church structure was built in 1875 on land given as a gift by D.C Sanger, a Deacon at Lincoln Park Baptist Church," per the church's web site. "On October 22, 1897, a fire destroyed the original church. Within a year, the church was rebuilt upon the same site as the original building. At that time, two beautiful stained glass windows, depicting 'Philip Baptizing the Ethiopian Eunuch' and 'The Ascension,' were installed."

The church continued to grow, despite another group breaking off to form a new congregation. In the 1950s, while he was a student at Boston University, Martin Luther King, Jr., preached at Myrtle Baptist. In the early 1960s, unfortunately, "many members of the church had their lives disrupted due to their homes being taken by eminent domain for the extension of the Massachusetts Turnpike. As a result, the church lost about half of its members due to relocation outside of the area."

The City of Newton fought the Pike's extension, as did property owners along the route in Boston. Obviously, their efforts were futile. Below is a wall separating this neighborhood from the turnpike.

The aforementioned Lincoln Baptist Church is located a short distance away, on the corner of Washington and Perkins streets.

Built in 1871, this Gothic Revival house of worship was named for an adjacent park that was also destroyed by the Mass. Pike extension. "The church, known originally as the First Baptist, was formally organized in 1853 at Newtonville," according to MACRIS. The congregation moved to West Newton in the 1860s. Lincoln Park was laid out during the Civil War and featured a tree-lined oval, according to MACRIS. "The congregation's name was formally changed to the Lincoln Park Baptist Church in 1906," according to MACRIS. "A split in the group occurred about this time over the acceptance of new members who had not been baptized by immersion. Reverend Edwin Shell, its pastor, was criticized by the Boston-area Baptist Conference for this practice, considered radical at the time, and the church lost several members over the dispute, which received considerable coverage in contemporary newspapers."

Of course, the church's membership shrank after the turnpike made accessing the sanctuary more difficult. Traffic flies by the church as folks head in and out of West Newton Square, and head onto the highway. Church leaders sought ways to increase their numbers over the years. "[O]ne of our options was to look for and embrace an emerging minority congregation in the vicinity to see if we could work something out with them," according to a post by George Waggoner (R.I.P.) on the church's web site. "As providence would have it, a young Chinese woman by the name of Jie Jiao, a theology student, made a call to Dr. Tony Pappas, who [was] the executive director of the American Baptist Churches of Massachusetts.

"Jie worked with new immigrants and converts, many with no church background, and they hadn’t come as Christians. At the time, they were gathering at a place that was originally a retirement home for missionaries, which over time, became a gathering place for foreign students as they went to school. Jie, along with her husband and son, lived there and hosted regular Bible studies for immigrants. When she called us, she said they were looking for a new space to call home."

And so today, Lincoln Park Baptist Church's congregation is largely (entirely?) comprised of worshipers of Asian descent.

Below is a photo of where Lincoln Park and its tree-lined oval once stood.

For more about what was lost in West Newton once the pike cleaved the village in half, check out this blog post.

Speaking of lost....

Newton, like countless other communities across time and space, buries its brooks. Below is a terrible shot of Cheesecake Brook, across Commonwealth Avenue from the fire station (I also featured a photo of the little waterway in the first West Newton post).

I live in Newtonville, and walk or drive by the Cheesecake just about every day as it makes it way north to the Charles River. But I had no idea of the brook's origin or course until researching this post, since, as I mentioned, much of the waterway lies underground. Thankfully, a Newton resident named Kathleen Maguire set out back in 2015 to learn about the brook, and wrote about it on the Village 14 blog. Here's the part of her essay most relevant to my pursuit: "Cheesecake Brook begins to the left of Brae Burn Country Club on Fuller Street and winds its way, mostly underground, through West Newton and Newtonville and ends at the corner of Bridge and California Streets in Nonantum where it flows into the Charles River."

When I read that, I thought, "The brook empties into the Charles River at the northern terminus of Albemarle Road, next to the bike path." But then I remembered that just to the east of the point where the brook does, indeed, dump into the river, you can hear water running underground, beneath manhole covers. I guess for some reason the Cheesecake was diverted in part to the Bridge and California street intersection.

As for the odd name of the waterway, Maguire tells readers that it is "a shortened version of 'Cheese and Cake' Brook. Early settlers picnicked beside the brook and enjoyed special treats of cheese and cake on Sundays."

While we're on the subject of waterways, let's talk about Dolan Pond Conservation Area.

Slated for development as housing lots at one point in the 1970s, the conservation area between Webster Street, Auburndale Avenue and Oak Avenue was acquired in 1979 by the City of Newton by eminent domain. "The move was strongly supported by a neighborhood group that was against its use for dumping and house lots — even today the lot lines can be found on the city’s maps," according to the Newton Conservators web site. "The area is named for Dolan Pond, which was originally part of the farm owned by Charles Dolan."

The area includes four small ponds, all of which were quite diminished by our current drought when I visited. "A biodiversity study in 2000 found 120 plant, animal, and insect varieties," per the Conservators web site. "Red maple swamp with netted chain fern, round-leaved sundew, swamp milkweed, poison sumac, and cotton grass abound. Birdwatchers have spotted over 130 species of birds near Dolan Pond."

I took only a short walk through here, but I'd like to return, as it is quite peaceful.

Let's switch gears from buried and dried-up waterways...to a cemetery.

The West Parish Burying Ground, located at the corner of Cherry and River streets, was established in 1777, per Wikipedia, despite what the sign in the photo above indicates. Owned by the City of Newton, the graveyard was originally owned by the Second Church in Newton, which is located on Highland Street, just outside West Newton Square.

I haven't stopped by here in a few years, but I don't believe there is a way in to the boneyard, short of hopping the fence. But I could be wrong.

How about a statue of a different sort?

Located on a small triangle of land at the intersection of Highland and Chestnut streets on West Newton Hill, this sculpture is officially known as Child with Calla Lily Leaves, but is known more commonly as the Lambert Fountain. It was sculpted in 1903 by Anne Whitney, who was one of the rare successful, American female sculptors of the 19th century. Her best known statues include ones of Samuel Adams, Charles Sumner, William Lloyd Garrison, Harriet Beecher Stowe and Leif Erikson, the latter of which I photographed and wrote about in 2019 (see May 2, 2019, "'Weird Steel Pasties'").

"The first Child with Calla Lily Leaves appeared at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893 as one of the pieces on exhibit in the building of female architect, Sophia Hayden," according to MACRIS, citing information from a document filed with the Save Outdoor Sculptures! project. "This sculpture was donated to the City of Boston and was on view in Franklin Park until it was moved to the Children's Museum. From 1932 it was missing, never to be found. In the meantime, in 1903, following the death of her sister, Marianne Porter commissioned her close friend Anne Whitney to make a replica of the World's Fair sculpture in memory of Catherine Porter Lambert (1817-1900). The Lambert house was nearby at 128 Chestnut Street and Catherine Lambert had been one of the early residents of this part of Newton."

The statue was restored and rededicated in 1995.

A little ways south, on Berkeley Street, is The Neighborhood Club.

(It's difficult to get a shot of the clubhouse itself, so I just made a drive-by shot of the courts.)

The club was established in 1890 when five West Newton Hill men "all interested in the game of lawn tennis, held a meeting for the purpose of making plans to organize a club, to build tennis courts and a club house," per the club's web site. Each man recruited five men and thus was the club founded. Today, "Membership consists of 200 individuals and families within the West Newton zip code (02465)," per the web site.

I'm fascinated by social clubs of any sort, as regular blog readers likely know, from country clubs to neighborhood association (like Waban's Windsor Club) to fraternal organizations (Fraternal Order of Eagles, Masons) to groups based around shared ethnicity. As an introvert, I wouldn't want to join such a group, but I'm curious as to what goes on behind all of those closed doors.

Further south, as you head off the Hill and toward Commonwealth Avenue, is the All-Newton Music School.

Built in 1898 for Boston banker Henry B. Day and his wife, Julia, this "stone and shingle house is one of the most elaborate and grand of the late Colonial Revival houses to be built on West Newton Hill," per MACRIS. Day is the person who leased land to the organizers of The Neighborhood Club in 1890.

As for the music school, it provides lessons, classes and concerts to all ages. Founded in 1911 by Elizabeth Fyffe, a concert violinist, composer, and author of music instruction books, per the web site, "[t]he school was originally housed in a kindergarten school in West Newton, and developed a working relationship with Newton Public Schools." The school acquired this building in 1965.

Continuing with the West Newton school theme, below is a private home, which I don't usually feature, except in this case this lot is the former home of the Barnard School. I discovered this in the beginning stages of my "I Seek Newton" project, when I would obsessively scan the free Atlas maps available on the City of Newton web site.

Located on Shaw Street, between Winthrop and Washington streets, the Barnard School was built in 1884, according to this photo and information at Digital Commonwealth. I don't know when the school was torn down.

Back on the northern side of the Hill, along Chestnut Street, is the former Peirce School.

Opened in 1896, the school was named for Cyrus Peirce, "a noted educator" who "was instrumental in Horace Mann's experimental Normal school for teachers" in West Newton, per MACRIS. Born in neighboring Waltham in 1790, Peirce taught in Newton in 1807-1808, and again from 1844 to 1849 after long stints in Nantucket. In 1850, he became involved with Nathaniel Topliff Allen's school in West Newton, referenced in the first post in this West Newton series.

The old Peirce School shuttered as an educational institution in 1951, per Wikipedia. The building is now affordable housing. A newer Peirce School isn't far away, on Temple Street.

Along Waltham Street, near Newtonville, is the Fessenden School, which was established in 1903 by Frederick Fessenden and his wife, Emma Hart Fessenden, who had a plan to "start a small, pre-preparatory 'feeder' school for Phillips Exeter Academy," per the Fessenden web site.

Below is the school president's house.

"The Fessendens not only provided their young charges with academic instruction and athletic training, they also taught boys the basics of personal hygiene, good manners, and life skills," according to the web site. "Their approach was innovative -- an early version of 'whole child education' that proved extremely successful, and, in short order, the school added dormitories, classrooms, and playing fields to accommodate the growing numbers of students. Frederick led the school to prominence in the independent school world for 33 years, turning the reins over to his son, Hart, in 1935."

"Graduates include statesmen, business leaders, and philanthropists such as Howard Hughes, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Governor William Scranton, and Secretary of State John Kerry."

As for the Second Empire house, it was built in 1874 for Andrew P. Conant, who was in the shoe business, per MACRIS. A family called Webster farmed the land, according to MACRIS, "and apple orchards climbed the hill."

Just north of the Fessenden School is the Scandinavian Living Center, a facility offering community-centered living and assisted living services, which I refer to as the Swedish Home for reasons that will become apparent below.

"In 1912, a nonprofit called the Swedish Charitable Society of Greater Boston was founded to provide a home for the aged, offer relief for the needy, and fundraise for charitable projects," per the SLC's web site. "The Society proudly opened the Swedish Home in 1917 on the same site where the Scandinavian Living Center now stands."

The facility extends well beyond the house shown in my photo above. Known as the Edwin Fleming House, the Queen Anne structure was built in 1870, although MACRIS indicates that "records at the City Engineering Department suggest that at least part of this house dates from 1859." Fleming was a bookbinder in Boston.

In this same neck of the woods, on the corner of North Gate Park and Adena Road is another one of those private houses that I claim to rarely feature.

Known as the Henry Gane House, this Second Empire home was built in 1865, per MACRIS, and is "one of Newton's most elaborate Mansard-style residences." I'll elaborate on the house in a moment, but first I want to relate the reason I made photos of it. My wife grew up in this area, and she and her family call this place the "Chinese Embassy" and the "Korean Consulate," so I assumed there was some connection with this old home and the Chinese or Korean diplomatic corps. Well, if there is, I haven't found it.

Anyway.

From MACRIS: "This residence, once surrounded by 16 acres of landscaped grounds and greenhouses, was constructed...at a location a few hundred feet from this site, at the southwest corner of Waltham and Derby streets....Gane was a well-known West Newton resident and a successful Boston merchant. Born in England, he came to the U.S. as a young man and started in the book binding trade, which he developed into a large business. Later he went into the mercantile line of book binders' supplies....On his retirement about twenty years before his death, he turned to the cultivation of flowers....

"His obituary continued: 'Mr. Gane made his name somewhat famous both here and abroad among chrysanthemum growers for his many seedlings which have taken prizes and which are recognized as among the choicest varities by florists.' After Gane's death in 1897, the land was subdivided. The house and two acres was bought by Alice M. Watkins, and much of the rest of the land was taken up by S. Edward Howard, instrumental in building the Northgate Club [which we'll get to next] and laying out Northgate Park. Henry Gane's house was moved to the corner of Northgate Park and Adena Road when the intersection was developed for house lots during World War I."

Lastly...the Northgate Club.

I believe the club was built in 1920, where South Gate and North Gate parks meet, just off Waltham Street, across from the Gane House. On the 1917 Atlas map for Newton, the site is listed as "Odd Fellows Building Association." There was an Odd Fellows Hall in West Newton Square; perhaps the organization owned this land and sold or leased it to the Northgate Club. Or perhaps Odd Fellows members started the club.

There were tennis courts behind the club, where two-family houses now stand. At some point, the Knights of Columbus took over the building. Houses were eventually built behind the club, resulting in the removal of the tennis courts. Several years ago, the Knights sold the building to developers and moved to a location in Newton's Nonantum neighborhood.

I made photos of the building in between the time the Knights sold the building and a developer turned it into condos. Below are the older shots.

Since the building was deemed historic, the developer renovated the building - and put a garage underneath - rather than tear it down. Below is what the place looks like now.

That wraps up West Newton! Stay tuned for the final installment in this series: Newtonville.

Below are the previous posts in this series:

December 31, 2021, "I Seek Newton, Part XI: Newton Corner (Section 3)"

December 18, 2021, "I Seek Newton, Part XI: Newton Corner (Section 2)"

December 11, 2021, "I Seek Newton, Part XI: Newton Corner (Section 1)"

April 10, 2021, "I Seek Newton, Part X: Newton Centre (Section 3)"

April 3, 2021, "I Seek Newton, Part X: Newton Centre (Section 2)"

March 27, 2021, "I Seek Newton, Part X: Newton Centre (Section 1)"

November 15, 2020, "I Seek Newton, Part IX: Nonantum (Section 3)"

October 29, 2020, "I Seek Newton, Part IX: Nonantum (Section 2)"

September 24, 2020, "I Seek Newton, Part IX: Nonantum (Section 1)"

March 14, 2018, "I Seek Newton, Part VIII: Upper Falls (Section 3)"

March 8, 2018, "I Seek Newton, Part VIII: Upper Falls (Section 2)"

March 1, 2018, "I Seek Newton, Part VIII: Upper Falls (Section 1)"

March 7, 2017, "I Seek Newton, Part VII: Thompsonville"

December 5, 2016, "I Seek Newton, Part VI: Chestnut Hill"

September 26, 2016, "I Seek Newton, Part V: Oak Hill"

June 3, 2016, "I Seek Newton, Part IV: Waban"

March 23, 2016, "I Seek Newton, Part III: Newton Highlands"

September 20, 2015, "I Seek Newton, Part II: Auburndale"

May 21, 2015, "I Seek Newton, Part I: Lower Falls"

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