EEL RIVER VALLEY
by Victoria B. Engstrom
Pilgrim Society Notes, Series One, Number 23, 1976 |
First, there is the river. Its headwaters are springs and small ponds
above Russell Mill Pond, feeding into the pond. It leaves this pond by going over a dam
about 20 feet high and runs down through a culvert under route 3, then widens to become
Haydens Pond. This pond is also held back by a dam where the water falls about 10
feet from a flume into a pool at its base, then wanders down to Sandwich Road, goes under
the bridge, and is joined by its tributary, Shingle Brook, about 500 yards downstream.
Shingle Brook originates with Cold Bottom and Forges Pond, flows down to and under the
bridge on Old Sandwich Road, and widens to become Howlands Pond. It drops over the
dam at Clifford Road, goes under the road and winds through the meadow to meet with Eel
River, where they become one stream.
Then, as Eel River, the stream flows roughly parallel with Clifford Road, under the River
Street bridge, past Plimoth Plantation, under the Warren Avenue bridge, and then about a
half mile inside the beach to its mouth below Manters Point.
This is a happy river. Men and boys fish in it, children row on it, catch herring from it,
and fall into it. Birds of infinite variety nest in the shrubbery along its banks; ducks
find shelter under the old willow trees. Migrating geese and blue herons rest and feed,
and I have seen a deer drinking from the bank on an autumn evening.
The rivers meadows are lush and fertile. The loam is deep and moist from underground
springs. Vegetable patches, flowers and trees grow bigger than life, hay grows thick and
high, and withal there is an air of peace and serenity. It has not always been so.
THE FIRST INHABITANTS
The first known inhabitants of the valley lived in camps extending from a point near the
mouth of the river and upstream for about one and a half miles. Their campsites were often
on a southeasterly slope, receiving the warmth of the early morning sun, and with forested
hills on the north for protection from the winter winds. A dozen of these campsites have
been excavated near the banks of the river, a burying ground, and a half dozen workshops
uphill from the camps. There were made bows, arrows, spears, pottery and other artifacts
used in their daily living. There are without doubt other sites which have never been
discovered.
These shellheap campsites have contained post molds, refuse pits, fire pits, and pits for
the storage of food. At one site was found a pit 6 feet deep and 6 feet across, containing
a fireplace, which was large enough for persons to huddle in to keep warm in the winter.
The evidence indicates that the Indians were great consumers of fish, eels, clams, mussels
and turtles, as well as venison and small animals, and, of course, corn. No oyster or
lobster shells have been found in the campsites in this area, although this does not
preclude the possibility that they were used.
Eel River Valley was probably a very pleasant home for the Indians, due to the abundance
of fish in the river and small game and deer in the woods. The soil in the fields was
excellent for the raising of corn by the squaws, and for the men, travel by canoe was
convenient down to the harbor for shellfish, and upstream for travel for war councils,
trading, and to begin trips to the Cape or inland.
The adult male Wampanoag Indians wore their hair short, except for a crest from the front
to back, often sporting a single feather. They wore breechcloth of deerskin with a square
across the buttocks and sometimes leggings. Moccasins were worn on the feet, and in the
winter a short shift of deerskin was slung from the shoulder across the chest. The women
wore deerskin skirts, just below knee-length, and in winter short deerskin capes over the
shoulders. The young girls wore small beaver coats and deerskin skirts. Both men and women
wore belts of wampum for decoration and trading. Married women and older squaws wore their
hair braided, but the young girls wore it loose.
THE ENGLISH SETTLERS
Among the first English settlers in the valley was THOMAS CLARK, born in 1599, who lived
to the age of 98 years. He was thought to be the mate of the Mayflower, and the
first person to step on Clarks Island on the first trip into Plymouth Harbor. He
probably returned to England on the Mayflower with Captain Jones, but came back to
settle here on the Ann in 1623. In the 1627 division of lands and cattle, he
received cattle and 20 acres of arable land at Eel River. The Clark allotment was 5 acres
along the water side and 4 acres deep, and in the area now called River Street. He named
his holdings "Saltash," probably from a small village near Plymouth in England.
Also in May of 1627, RICHARD WARREN of the Mayflower received one of the black
heifers, 2 she-goats and a grant of 400 acres of land at Eel River. The house built in
that year stood at the same location as the present house built about 1700 at the head of
Clifford Road, with its back to the sea, now owned by Charles Strickland.
ROBERT BARTLETT came in the Ann in 1623 and was granted an acre of land on Eel
River. His home was at the foot of the Pine Hills and the site is marked by a tablet. He
was a wine cooper by trade. On his marriage to Mary, daughter of Richard Warren, in 1628,
they received land from Mr. Warren in Manomet, where their descendants have been living
ever since that time. I found a note in a publication by the Descendants of Robert
Bartlett that he had once been summoned to Court for speaking contemptuously of the
practice of singing psalms, but was admonished and not punished.
EDWARD WINSLOW, chosen Governor of the colony in 1633 and 1636, was allotted land on the
south side of Eel River in 1627. He took several trips to England to settle affairs of the
colonists with the Adventurers, and brought back the first livestock, the progeny of which
were allotted in 1627. I do not know whether he ever farmed his land, as he was granted a
large tract of land in Marshfield in 1637, and lived there for the remainder of the time
he was with the colony.
In 1625, Governor Bradford wrote that the people of Plymouth "never felt the
sweetness of the country till this year, with cattle thriving on the lush grass of the
Jones and Eel River meadows, and the cows calved every spring."
I would like to mention the Sparrowhawk at this time. She was wrecked at Orleans on
the Cape in 1627, carrying 25 passengers and crew from England to Virginia. Governor
Bradford sent the shallop down to get the people, and they were taken in by the local
inhabitants for the winter. The following spring they were loaned fields in which to raise
corn for their own use, and I think it likely that at least some of the fields they
cultivated might have been in the valley. They were taken to Virginia in the fall by
another ship.
By 1630 the natives of Plymouth and the Eel River were selling corn and cattle to the
newcomers at Massachusetts Bay Colony. The cattle were driven overland over the old Indian
Trail to Boston, and some were transported along the coast in shallops. The sheep and
cattle were grazing the fields in summer, and put into the woods to fend for themselves in
the winter. The crops were potatoes, rye, corn, wheat and hay. This agricultural boom
lasted until about 1641, when a civil war in England discontinued emigration to the
Massachusetts Bay Colony. At that time, the local people turned to fishing for a
livelihood.
THE INDIAN MASSACRE
Almost everyone has heard about the Indian Massacre at Eel River. Trouble began with the
Indians soon after 1630. The Indians complained, probably with justification, that the
settlers were encroaching on their hunting grounds, and that the cattle were destroying
their corn fields.
Philip, son of Massasoit, and leader of the tribes after the deaths of his father and
brother, instigated many skirmishes against the settlers. In 1675 the war really began in
earnest and extended throughout both the Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth colonies. However,
in December of 1675, Philip was so badly beaten in the Great Swamp Battle in Rhode Island
that the settlers believed that his power had been broken and they hadnt much to
fear from him. In 1676, though, he had recruited more warriors in the central parts of the
state and fresh fighting broke out, with numerous attacks on the suburbs of Boston.
On Sunday, March 12, 1676, some of the warriors attacked the William Clark garrison house
at Eel River while the men were at a meeting in Plymouth. This house and two or three
nearby houses had been fortified. In the event of an attack, all persons in the
neighborhood were to go to these fortified houses for safety, even though they had to
leave their own property, and with the almost certain knowledge that their homes would be
looted and burned, and the livestock killed.
In this attack it is said that eleven women and children were killed and the garrison
house burned. One of the Clark sons had been wounded by a tomahawk and left for dead, but
he recovered and a silver plate was affixed over his wound. He was called
"Silver-headed Tom" during the rest of his life. Sam Barrow, a Sagamore Indian
charged with leading the attack, was killed by one of General Churchs Indians, and
Philip was killed in battle in August of 1676.
NATHANIEL CLARK was the son of Thomas Clark of Saltash on Eel River. He was born in
1644 and educated by Nathaniel Morton. When Morton died, Nathaniel Clark succeeded him as
Register of Legislative Proceedings of the Colony, Clerk of Courts, and Register of Deeds
and Probate.
In 1686, Sir Edmund Andros came to Boston to become Governor of the New England Colonies.
He was despotic and arbitrary, levying huge taxes and forbidding town meetings. Nathaniel
was on his council, and his behavior enraged the townspeople. Among other unpopular deeds
he perpetrated was to secure ownership for himself of Clarks Island in 1687.
Since the earliest times this island had been kept by the town to supply firewood and
pasturage for cattle of the poor of the town. a town meeting was called which issued a
resolution for the return of the island to the town.
In 1669 he was imprisoned for his misdeeds and put in irons. A year later he and Governor
Andros were sent to England, where they were rewarded for their services to the King.
Clarks Island was sold by the town in 1690 to pay the costs of getting it returned
to town control. As for Mr. Clark when things quieted down he returned to Plymouth
and engaged in the practice of law.
THOMAS FAUNCE, son of John Faunce and Patience Morton, was born in 1647. His father died
when he was a small child and he was reared and educated by Captain Thomas Southworth.
In 1672 he married Jane Ford Nelson and thereafter lived in a house on the west side of
River Street, near the Eel River Bridge, now the location of the house on the corner of
Langford Road. they had two sons and two daughters, and many of their descendants still
live in Chiltonville, among them Dotens, Finneys, and Clarks. Dr. Wm. H.P. Faunce, former
President of Brown University, was a descendant.
In 1681 he was one of three Councilmen who collected taxes and provided for the general
defense. he was town Clerk of Plymouth, Deacon of the first Church in Plymouth, and chosen
to be Ruling Elder of the Second Church in 1699.
At his instigation, a watercourse was dug from South Pond in 1701, about a half mile long,
to the headwaters of Eel River, for the purpose of coaxing the alewives to continue their
spring migration upwards to South Pond for their spawning. This was probably the one
failure of his long life, as the herring declined to make the long trip.
He had been told by his father which was the rock below Coles Hill upon which the
Pilgrims first stepped from the shallop. In 1741, at the age of 95 years, he heard that
the rock was to be covered by a new wharf, and told friends that he wished to see it once
again in his lifetime. He was brought from his home 3 miles away at Eel River, and carried
in a chair down to the shore. Many persons gathered to see him. he pointed to the rock and
told them that it should be preserved forever, and then said his own farewell to the rock.
A story has been handed down that on each anniversary of the landing he placed his
children and grandchildren on the rock and told them the story of their ancestors
arrival in Plymouth.
He died at the age of 98 years in 1745.
THE WARREN FAMILY
James Warren, son of James and Penelope Winslow of Plymouth, married Mercy Otis of
Barnstable in 1754. She was later the author of many plays, poems and a history of the
Revolutionary War. Upon their marriage they moved into the farm at Eel river, which they
called Clifford Farms. The land had been passed down from Richard Warren of the Mayflower,
although this was the second house on the site.
There were fields of rye, orchards, woodlands, sheep and vegetable gardens, and Mercy was
hopeful of securing a young male slave to help with the work. The Warrens eventually had
five sons.
Although they moved to the family home at North and Main Streets in Plymouth, and lived in
many other houses during the long and illustrious career of Mr. Warren, he kept the farm
in the family for summer visits, and it was eventually turned over to his son Henry in
1789. James Warren was High Sheriff until the Revolution, became a member of the General
Court and was Speaker of the House of Representatives for several years. In 1775 he was
elected President of the Provincial Congress, and he greeted General Washington,
Commander-in-Chief of the Army, in Boston. After the Revolution he was Elector from
Massachusetts for President Jefferson.
One son, James Junior, received a shattered knee during an engagement between his sloop
and two British sloops during the war, which necessitated amputation of the leg. Another
son, William, was killed in an Indian war in Ohio in 1791. A whole lecture could be given
on the lives and accomplishments of this very interesting family.
PRE-REVOLUTION
In 1774, there was much dissension in Plymouth and Chiltonville. People were called Whigs
if they favored separation from England, and Tories if they didnt. There is a myth
in our neighborhood that Tories painted their chimneys white with a black band on top. I
think this hardly likely, due to the Whigs practice of stuffing the chimneys with
hay and rubbish to smoke out the Tories from their houses. It would only be looking for
trouble. It is said that some Tories had been tarred and feathered, and some had seen
their horses tails shaved.
I have the feeling that the Eel River community would have been opposed to any action
which might lead to hostilities, as they were for the most part fishermen and sailors.
They were almost entirely supported by the codfish catch. For many years there were fish
drying facilities at the docks at the harbor edge near the mouth of Eel river. They knew
that they would be unable to work if war began, so they probably waited "to see how
the wind blew."
In 1774, James Warren, a Whig and in favor of independence from England, became angry with
certain men of Plymouth who would not allow a public celebration of Forefathers Day,
so he, some friends, and some Sons of Liberty planned to move the Rock. On December 22,
with 20 yokes of oxen, chains, etc., they lifted the rock from its place at the
waters edge. It was cracked, and the bottom fell back into the mud. However,
the top half was taken up to the foot of the Liberty Pole in what is now Town Square and
was on display there for many years.
Less than two months after this caper there were several British vessels anchored just
outside the harbor, and following the appearance of the vessels much suffering was felt
from the loss of commerce and fishing.
THE DELIVERY OF MAIL
In May, 1775, the first Post Office was established, with a mail route from Cambridge,
through Plymouth and Sandwich to Falmouth once a week on Wednesdays. The route was
retraced from Falmouth to Cambridge on Fridays. In 1776, because of better roads, the mail
was transported in covered carriages from Boston to Sandwich and Falmouth over the same
route three times each week.
The route to Sandwich from Plymouth was through the "half-way" ponds (past Long
Pond and Bloody Pond). The stage took the right-hand fork at Bramhalls Corner,
passed over the Eel River Bridge at Haydens Mill, and turned to the right at the
four corners. It turned into the road by the present Meyer house, by Forges Pond, and went
through the woods in a southerly direction into Long Pond Road and on to Sandwich. This
road through the woods was called Mast Road. It still survives, although it has been cut
through by Route 3.
It was mentioned in a history of Sandwich that the roads in Plymouth area were so bad that
Sandwich residents preferred to travel to Boston by packet whenever possible. They
complained that untrimmed tree branches constantly slashed at the sides of the stage,
causing it to rock and sway.
The present Old Sandwich Road was extended south from the four corners in 1825,
establishing the main route between Plymouth and Sandwich.
In 1801 there were three weekly trips of the stage carrying both mail and passengers.
THE TAVERN
There was a tavern on Old Sandwich Road called Cornishs Tavern. I recall that W.T.
Davis told a story about Joseph Brown who served with him as Selectman from 1856-1860. Mr.
Brown had left Cornishs Tavern on a trip to Sandwich at 4:00 a.m., probably dozing
and leaving the horse to pretty much make its own way. Two hours later, seeing a light in
a window, and believing himself to be in Sandwich, he was astounded to recognize Mr. John
Harlow of Chiltonville when his knock on the door was answered. Mr. Brown realized that
his horse had, after leaving the tavern, kept to the left down Beaver Dam Road, over the
Pine Hills, and back almost to his starting point in Chiltonville.
This tavern was called Wrights Tavern at a later date.
THE RIVER AND THE BEACH
Plymouth Beach has had a quite interesting history. In 1703 erosion was noted, and persons
were to be fined for the cutting of trees or setting fires there. In 1723 they were
further enjoined from allowing their cattle to graze there. Sometime around 1750 some
Chiltonville farmers cut the river straight across the beach to the ocean, diverting it
from its natural channel down to the harbor. Up until 1770 the beach had huge sand dunes
covered by beach grass, with a small, heavy forest and swamp on the harbor side. The
forest consisted of beech trees, pitch pines, beach-plums and wild cherry. In that era
there were sometimes 100 vessels anchored in the cowyard at the end of the beach.
In 1779 it was thought that the river channel should be returned to its original outlet
just below Manters Point, but nothing was done, and by 1806 the tides were sweeping
over the beach and channels worn right through. A gale in November, 1784, leveled the
woods, and in three years the trees were all dead.
In January, 1805, Andrew Farrell, owner and commander of the ship Hibernia, from
Ireland, was wrecked on Plymouth Beach, and he is buried, with five of the seamen who died
with him, on Burial Hill.
Finally, in 1812, the Legislature authorized the town to institute a lottery to raise
money for beach repairs. $40,000 was raised by this means and by the purchase and sale of
lands in Maine, but more was needed, and in 1824 the Government assumed the cost of future
repairs.
SCHOOLS
In 1714, forty pounds was voted by the town to build two schools, one at the south end of
town, and one at the north end of the town.
In 1716, the town voted to build three schools, one at each end of the town to teach
reading and writing, and one in the center of town to be a Grammar School.
In 1724, there was a disagreement at the Town Meeting as to whether to build one or three
schools. It was decided that there would be one free school in the center of town to teach
the 3Rs, and that womens schools would be run at each end of the town. By this
time the feelings became somewhat inflamed at all the argument and delay, and the village
of Jones River withdrew from the town and later incorporated as the town of Kingston.
Chiltonville was not brash enough to secede, but I think the area has always felt somewhat
remote from the problems of the rest of the town.
In 1746 it was voted to have one new school at the training green, one at Eel River, and
one at Manomet. The first permanent school at Eel River was built one year later.
We will now skip ahead to the year 1857. At that time there were five schools in
Chiltonville. There was a primary school on Cliff Street, one on Clifford Road at the
junction of Doten Road, one at Russell Mills, one on Sandwich Road near the then
Haydens Green, now Forges Green, and a Grammar School for the older scholars, as
they were called, on Sandwich Road at the junction of Russell Mills Road. There is now an
academy being built at the back of the lot on which the old Grammar School stood.
These were one-room schools, containing several grades, with only a few children in each
grade. There was no running water, and the facilities were "out back," one for
boys and one for girls, next to the woodshed. The woodshed was a very necessary
appurtenance, as the entire heating system of the school was a huge oblong black stove at
the back of the room, with a long stovepipe running to the front of the room to generate
some heat on the way to the chimney. The big boys were expected to keep the woodbox filled
and to feed the fire and keep it going during the school day. They also had to go each
morning to the nearest house to fill the pail with the days drinking water. Desks
and chairs were bolted to the rough wooden floor. One teacher not only coped with teaching
reading, writing, arithmetic, spelling, history and geography for five or six different
grades, but also attended to the discipline of these youngsters. And in many, many cases
this was all done very well!
CHURCHES
The Fourth Congregational Society in Plymouth, with REV. BENJAMIN WHITMORE as minister,
was formed at Eel River in 1814. A meeting house was built and it was meant to accommodate
the inhabitants of the neighborhood as well as of the South Ponds. This was the ninth
church to stem from the original church the Pilgrims established here.
A new building, the present church at Bramhalls Corner, was built in 1840 and the
congregation kept growing for some years. In 1852, however, there was a split in the
congregation, whether because of a difference of opinion on theological doctrine, or
disagreement about a minister, is not known. The dissenting faction built a church just
across the street from the parent church.
In 1894, the original church received a new charter from the Commonwealth, and has since
then been known as the Chiltonville Congregational Church. The main cemetery of
Chiltonville has always been at the read of this church.
REV. WILLIAM FAUNCE, who was born in Plymouth about 1815, organized a Christian Baptist
Society in 1840, and built a meeting house on land next to the cemetery on what is now
Jordan Road, near Russell Mills.
In the 1890s, at the Forges, the Casino was built, and used as an Episcopal Chapel for
many years for the English people living in the area, many of them working on the Jordan
estate, and others who could not make the trip into Plymouth for services.
MANUFACTURING
The building of mills began in the early 1800s. Prior to that time, most of the men in
Chiltonville had either followed the sea, or stayed at home to farm their land. The town
of Plymouth was prosperous, shipbuilding had been expanding, and 6 sloops (packets) had
been sailing regularly between Plymouth and Boston. As a neutral country during the war
between France and England our ships had been trading with both those countries and the
West Indies, although there had been the problem of harassment of the ships by both
warring nations.
When Thomas Jefferson became President he secured passage of the Embargo Act, forbidding
any American vessels from leaving port to take part in foreign trade, with the belief that
the embargo would force the warring countries to respect the rights of the neutral
country.
The immediate effect, though, was to put the ship carpenters and other seamen out of work,
to financially embarrass the shipowners, and to cause a terrible shortage of the imported
goods to which they had become accustomed.
Because of this destruction of foreign trade, coupled with the unwanted War of 1812, many
of the ships were sold, and the money was invested in the manufacture of cotton cloth,
iron implements, nails, barrels and cordage
all of which eventually were
manufactured on Eel River. Water power made the change in the valley from a farming and
seafaring to an industrial community.
The largest factory on the river was the Hayden Mill, built in 1812, on Sandwich Road. It
was six stories high. Adjacent to, and part of it, was a spinning mill. This complex
contained 2000 spindles and 40 looms, producing 1000 to 1200 yards of high grade cotton
material each day. About 65 persons were employed. Many of these were teenage girls who
worked in the upper stories of the mill, winding the yarn from the huge reels onto the
spindles which, when filled, were carried downstairs to the men who operated the looms
below.
Sometime during the mid-1800s the mill converted to the manufacture of duck, or sailcloth,
and was called the Old Colony Duck Company, under the management of Edward B. Hayden,
father of landscape painter Charles Henry Hayden and Hon. Albert F. Hayden, who became one
of the judges in the Sacco-Vanzetti case, among many others.
The yacht America was suited with sails from this mill for her launching in May
1851 and was using them when she won the first America Cup race.
There was a small factory on the river for the manufacture of a superior wicking for sperm
candles, although I do not know its location.
A silica works was built on the bluff near the location of the Hotel Pilgrim to process
beach sand for use in the making of glass, and I have been told that there was a
brick-yard near where the Eel River Beach Club now stands.
A rolling mill and nail factory, N. Russell and Company, constructed of granite, was built
at the top of the dam at Russell Pond. In 1827 these buildings were sold by the N. Russell
and Company to the Russell Mills Corporation, which took down the buildings and erected a
large brick building to be used as a cotton mill.
The Old Colony Memorial noted that in May of 1872 the Russell Mills employed 100
persons, mostly girls, and were at that time manufacturing cotton duck. They used 2000
pounds of raw cotton daily. Many of the girls had come from Nova Scotia and places other
than Chiltonville to work there and at the Duck Mill on Sandwich Road. Many lived in a
boarding house built for them at the Russell Mills complex. I saw a letter to the editor
of the Old Colony Memorial of September 1872 protesting the fact that there were no
sidewalks on the street between the mills, and that many of the girls were getting their
skirts muddy going to and from work. It is fortunate that the town did hard surface the
road, as there are still no sidewalks in the area.
After 1900 the Russell Mills were still used as a duck factory in the upper story, but the
lower part of the mill was used as a rubber reclamation plant by the Boston Woven Hose and
Rubber Company.
In 1850, Oliver Edes and Nathaniel Wood formed the firm of Edes and Wood to manufacture
zinc shoe nails and tacks, and later a rolling mill for zinc plates at Forges Pond brook.
In 1859, at Double Brook (Shingle Brook) Dam at what is now Clifford Road, Nathaniel wood
and his son built a zinc mill making zinc shoe nails. Shingle nails, warranted not to
rust, were later manufactured at these mills.
Farther down on Eel River there was a rivet factory where rivets were made on a machine
invented by Mr. Timothy Allen.
There was a factory making staves for nail kegs in the 1830s, owned by Captain Samuel
Bradford, which may have been converted for the manufacture of window sash and blinds in
the 1850s. This was located near Shingle Brook and Clifford Road.
Many of these mills were still operating in 1885.
I remember Judge Hayden telling about his boyhood at the Hayden Green area, next to his
familys mill. He told that before the coming of the railroad the raw cotton was
transported by land barges (flat-bed wagons) drawn by at least four horses, from the docks
at Plymouth. The finished cotton cloth was also carried back to the docks for shipment to
foreign ports and to the southern states. After the coming of the railroad in 1845, most
of the cotton was shipped by rail, but still transported between the mill and Plymouth in
these wagons.
The Hayden Mill was burned in the night of July 3, 1913, some time after it had ceased to
operate, and the Russell Mills were burned some years later.
PROPOSED RAILROAD TO SANDWICH
It wasnt long after the railroad came to Plymouth in 1845 that it was felt that it
should be extended to Sandwich. Certainly the stages must have had a rough time going over
the rutted dirt roads to carry the passengers and mail. This extension would have brought
the line from the Plymouth Station along the shore as far as Eel River, along the river to
the Warren Avenue bridge, crossing at the bridge and running between Clifford Road and the
river to roughly Doten Road, where it crossed the field near the Paul Whipple house and in
back of Howlands Pond, entering Old Sandwich Road at about Lister Road, proceeding
along Sandwich Road, then following quite closely the route of the present Route 3. This
seemed a strange route to me until I realized that these wood-burning engines had to take
the low, level ground, and probably couldnt have gone over the Pine Hills.
Plymouth wished to be the terminus of the railroad and rejected the plan to continue the
line to Sandwich. Local people had been selling wood to the railroad and wished to
continue doing so, and there might have been some prestige associated with being the
terminal station.
PHYSICIANS
There were two physicians in practice at River Street. The first, Dr. Alexander Jackson,
graduated from the Harvest Medical School in 1843. He was with the Boston Dispensary and
Boston Eye and Ear Infirmary, and came to Chiltonville, living in the house next to the
Church owned by Plimoth Plantation, shortly after his graduation. He practiced there until
October 1858, when he moved to Plymouth and practiced there until 1890. He died in Boston
in 1901 at the age of 82.
Dr. Charles James Wood came to Eel River in 1866 and may have settled in the same house -
I am not sure. he was born in Leicester, Mass., near Worcester, and graduated from
Leicester Academy. W.T. Davis remembered watching him work with Dr. Jackson in Manomet,
caring for the sailors who were wrecked in the bark Velma in 1867. I do not know
how long he practiced in Chiltonville before he moved, first to Sandwich, then to
Pocasset, where he died in 1880.
He had a son Leonard, worn in Winchester, New Hampshire, in 1860. Leonard was 6 years old
at the time his father moved to Eel river, and attended the Cliff Street school. He
graduated from Harvard Medical School and was personal physician to President McKinley,
and a close friend of President Theodore Roosevelt. In 1898 he was associated with
Roosevelt in raising and leading the Rough Riders in Cuba, after which he became a Major
General. He was the Military Governor of Cuba for four years, then Governor General of the
Philippines from 1921-1927, the year of his death. Our son was stationed at Camp Leonard
Wood in Missouri prior to service in Vietnam, not knowing it was named for a former
Chiltonville resident.
Dr. John Bachelder was born in Mason, New Hampshire, in 1818 and graduated from Dartmouth
in 1841. he was married to Martha Swift Keene of Sandwich in 1846, and is listed as a
resident of Chiltonville in 1860 and he died in 1876, but I have been unable to learn
anything more about him.
1860 MEN AND THEIR OCCUPATIONS
I have a list of the male inhabitants of the village in 1860, with their occupations,
given to me by George and Mary Olsson. It is very interesting that among the 180 men
listed, there were 55 seamen, 42 farmers, 22 mill operatives, 16 shoemakers, 8 carpenters,
7 traders, 4 thimblemakers, and 3 zinc workers. There were 2 coopers, 2 ship carpenters,
21 mill superintendents and 2 laborers. There were listed one of each of the following :
physician, teacher, clergyman, milk dealer, meat dealer, engineer, mason, blacksmith,
cotton workers, merchant, truckman and tackmaker.
I think that the occupation of seaman included men who fished for cod at the Grand Banks,
men who went out for coastal fish from the docks near the mouth of the river, and men who
were actually engaged in the sailing of merchant ships, as well as those serving in the
Navy.
The farmers had small acreages and sold milk, eggs and produce locally, as well as
supplying the needs of their own families. There was one large turkey farm, Bensons,
which raised turkeys somewhat in the manner of wild turkeys they roosted in the
trees and had woods and fields in which to roam at will.
Without doubt, much of the news of the day was disseminated from the area around the stove
in the general stores. There was a store at Bramhalls Corner for several
generations, and one at Clifford road operated by the Sampson family. These stores carried
sewing needs, carpentry needs, seeds, cloth, salt meats, dried fruits, nails, farming
necessities, molasses almost anything that had a market in the neighborhood, and if
one traded at either, the purchases would be delivered by horse and wagon. An 1879 map
shows a store in the neighborhood of Haydens mill.
In 1861 the men must have talked a great deal about the civil War, because many of them
left to fight, as they werent in favor of slavery and some of them
didnt come back.
THE TIN PEDDLER
EDMUND SWIFT was the Cape Cod tin peddler. In 1864 he bought the house directly across
from the Green. He made his frequent trips down to Sandwich and through the Cape towns as
the weather and business permitted, then returned to Chiltonville to replenish his stock
and sort the goods he had taken in barter. He sold either for cash, by barter, or a
combination of both, although the housewives hoarded mostly rags for him to weigh and for
which they received credit on their purchases. Many times, if a bag of rags weighed heavy
for its size, he would say nothing, realizing that almost anything put inside to increase
the weight would almost certainly be worth more to him that the rags. I have seen two
beautiful Sandwich Glass paperweights which had been put into a bag of rags to increase
its weight.
Although he was called the "tin peddler," his wagon, drawn by two horses and
shaped much like a stagecoach, with a folding hood to keep the weather from the driver,
contained almost the stock of a general store. There were drawers for cutlery and small
items on its sides, racks for holding brooms and baskets and, of course, racks for holding
pots and pans, tin plates and platters.
On or about April 17, 1865, he was planting a row of oak trees on the street edge of his
front lawn. The stage came along. The drive stopped a minute or two, then said
"President Lincoln has been shot - he is dead!"
CHARLES H. HAYDEN, PAINTER
Because Charles Hayden once lived in the house we now occupy, and because of his career as
a landscape painter, I would like to tell you a little about him at this time. He was born
on August 4, 1856 and began the study of painting with John V. Johnston, the cattle
painter in Boston, followed by two years at the newly opened School of the Museum of Fine
Arts. This was followed by four years painting landscapes and attending life classes, then
four years as a stained glass designer in Boston.
In 1886 he went to Europe to study in France and Italy. He exhibited a painting Near
the Village at the Paris Salon in 1889. In 1889 he returned and settled in Belmont,
Massachusetts, where he built a studio. He painted on Cape Cod, in the Berkshires, and at
Mystic, Connecticut.
In 1895 he received the Jordan prize of $1500 for his painting of The Turkey Pasture
which was later presented to the Boston Museum by Eben Jordan. This was quite probably
painted at Bensons turkey farm on Sandwich Road. His paintings are hanging in the
Cincinnati Art Museum and at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington.
He died, unmarried, at Belmont on August 4, 1901, his 45th birthday, and is
buried in oak Grove Cemetery in Plymouth.
He left $50,000 to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and their records show that between 1901
and 1968 more than 150 paintings of prominent American painters, including Sargent,
Whistler, Homer, Inness, Bellows, Tarbell, Benson and many, many others have been
purchased from this fund.
It would appear that this painter from Eel River Valley has contributed a great deal to
the enjoyment and culture of his countrymen.
A PERIOD OF TRANSITION ABOUT 1880 TO 1900
IRA C. WARD was well known in Plymouth before he courted and married the girl he met at
the Franklin House on Manters Point. He was leader of the group which played music
for the dancing, and his Kate was a Cliff Street girl. He had been the owner of a circus,
Ira C. Wards Great London Show, and could be remembered by old-timers as leading his
band in the Monument Dedication Parade in august of 1889. Upon his marriage in 1891,
however, he settled down, built a house on Cliff Street, farmed his land, and became a
selectman and forest fire warden of Plymouth. He served for many years as the
representative to the General Court from the Plymouth district. He was a tall, arresting
figure with his ten-gallon hat, goatee and mustache, and is remembered taking two little
girls to Boston to meet the House Speaker, Leverett Saltonstall, and many of his
colleagues in the House.
Captain NATHANIEL HOXIE and his son, also Nathaniel, were sportsmens guides. Captain
Nat lived on River Street at the top of the hill across from the Adams-Nickerson house and
"Young Nat" lived first near the Russell Mills and later on Sandwich Road, next
to the Hayden family. Their homes were open each weekend to students from Harvard and
Boston colleges, as well as to men from Cambridge, Boston, New York and other locations.
They would arrive on Friday evenings to take fishing and hunting trips during the day and
socialize around the fire in the evenings, departing on Sunday afternoons. The Hoxies had
two wagons for transporting their guests, and they knew all the best locations for bagging
game and catching fish. Captain Nat also had a boat for ocean fishing.
They kept a register of the guests who stayed with them, and the signatures show that Eben
Jordan Senior visited 5 or 6 weekends a year between 1884 and 1890, that T.M. Rhinelander
of New York was there in 1885, and E.J. and J.W. Mitten of Cambridge in 1885, among many
others in those years. In September 1895, President Grover Cleveland was a guest, with
Joseph Jefferson, his friend and famous actor, and Daniel Lamont, Secretary of State. Eben
Jordan Junior, who developed the Forges Farm, first visited in October 1895. Dr. Paul
Dudley White, cardiologist, was still vacationing at the Hoxie house in the 1950s and
riding his bicycle around the neighborhood.
A change was taking place in the valley. The mills were, one by one, discontinuing their
operations, and people were coming here to visit, to spend vacations at the Clifford House
and the Franklin House. From these visits many of them decided that vacationing was not
enough they wanted to be a part of the area. They became new owners of the land,
with such names as Jordan, Rutan, Hornblower, Hartwell, Whipple, Frederick Cook, and many
others. They farmed, and it became quiet again in the river valley. The river returned to
the lazy stream it had been in the beginning.
Just over twenty years ago I answered a knock on the front door, and was surprised to see
a uniformed chauffeur there and a large black car in the driveway. He asked if I would be
so kind as to speak to the gentleman in the car. The man sitting in the back seat seemed
very, very old and leaned on a gold-headed cane. He said that he had lived here as a boy
but that his family had moved away. He now felt that he "had to see the neighborhood
again" and could I tell him anything about its history. I couldnt, but rode
around with him, telling him who lived in various houses, and he pointed out places he
remembered from long ago. I dedicate this lecture to him and to others "who would
like to come back once more."
References :
Story of the Old Colony of New Plymouth by S.E. Morrison.
Cast for a Revolution by Jean Fritz.
History of the Society of Descendants of Robert Bartlett of Plymouth, Mass.
Historical Collections of the Indians of New England by Daniel Gookin for details of
Indian dress. Gookin came to Boston in May of 1644, served as Superintendents of Indians
of Massachusetts 1656-1687.
Plymouth Memories of an Octogenarian by W.T. Davis.
New England by the Boston Chamber of Commerce, 1911.
Epitaphs from Burial Hill by Bradford Kingman.
History of the Town of Plymouth by James Thacher.
Diaries of my father Jesse Brewer for information on Indians in the Eel River Valley.
Dictionary of American Biography for information on Charles Hayden.
and with thanks to Mary and George Olsson, Mary Hoxie, Harriet Holmes, Elizabeth Dunham,
Esther Franks, and Rose Briggs. |