OLD TOWN NATICK
Photographs of Our Hometown from Days Gone By –
History of Natick
Main Street Looking North from the Town Common
St. Patrick’s Church
Shopper’s
World
To View a Natick Historic Slide Show, click on the
link below
http://www.natickhistoricslideshow.com
NATICK’S
EXTRAORDINARY
HISTORY
Courtesy of Natick
Historical Society
Natick was established in 1651 by the Puritan missionary John
Eliot and his followers, a group of “Praying Indians”.
Natick is generally believed to mean “Place of Hills”. The Speen Family owned much of the land in the Natick area and they
deeded it to the Praying Indians taking house lots for themselves.
In the area now called South Natick, the Indians settled on
both sides of the Charles River. Over the river they built a wooden bridge with
a
stone
foundation and laid out three streets, now called Eliot, Union and Pleasant
Streets. The Indians then built a meetinghouse with the help of
an
English carpenter. The two story building was used as church, school, and
warehouse, and as a place for Eliot on his
fortnightly visits. The building, which stood about where the present
Eliot Church stands, was palisaded with a circle of tall trees.
For more than twenty years Eliot instructed and preached to the
Indians. A school was set up, a government established
and
the Indians were encouraged to convert to Christianity. Eliot learned their
language and with the help of the Indians,
who
had no system of writing, transcribed the Bible into the Algonquin language. A
copy of the 1685 edition is on display at the
Natick Historical Society Museum in South
Natick.
The prosperity of the village was destroyed when King Philip,
son of the chief,
Massasoit, attacked the white settlers. The attacks caused such fear
among the settlers that in 1675 the Indians were first restricted to
their
villages, and then in October, over Eliot’s protests, the General Court ordered
the Natick Indians sent to Deer Island. Many
Indians did not survive the lack of food and the cold and those
who returned seven months later found their homes destroyed.
The Praying Indians did not flourish after their return to
Natick. Before Eliot died in 1690, he ordained the first Native American
minister, Daniel Takawampbait, who carried on
until his death in 1716. Two other Indians preached before the New England
Company
sent
first Rev. Oliver Peabody and later Stephen Badger to fill the Indian Church
pulpit.
Thomas Sawin was one of the first
white men to own land in Natick. The Indians asked him to build a grist mill
and he was
deeded land for this purpose. By 1725 the Indians had sold most of
their land to pay their debts and many drifted away or
succumbed to disease. Other families stayed, intermarried and adopted
English ways. Several of these families remain in Natick today.
As more settlers moved into the central part of Natick, an area
called the Needham Leg, the Meetinghouse Dispute
erupted. Those in the more northern part of town wanted the church in
the center rather than supporting the Indian church to the
south.
This dispute continued over a period of almost sixty years. The people in the
“Leg” requested the Court to restore this area of the
Natick Plantation to Needham. This was approved in 1761.
During the revolution Natick sent 174 men out of a population
of 534 to fight. Eighteen Minute Men were raised under the
leadership of Capt. David Morse on April 19 1775. Even so, when the Town
Meeting voted to reject the Constitution in 1778 Natick’s
loyalties were questioned. Town leaders pledged their support to the new
government in spite of their dissatisfaction with the
output of the Continental Congress.
Attention turned once again to the Meeting house dispute. The
church could not be relocated without the approval of the court
so
the parish petitioned to become a town, and to change the name to Eliot. The
name change was not granted, but Natick became a
town
in February of 1781.
In 1796 it was voted to build the new meetinghouse in the
center. The inhabitants of the southern part of town did not
want
to support the new church and petitioned to be separated from the town. The
court resolved the issue in 1797 by restoring
the
“Leg” to Natick but the south and east sections remained in Needham. The Indian
Church dissolved as the congregation dispersed to
other
parishes and the building fell into disrepair. In 1828 the present Eliot Church
was built, the fifth church on the site of Eliot’s
Meetinghouse. Originally a farming town, industries began to emerge in the
late 18th century. Mills had developed along the Charles River with
gristmills first and later nail-making, papermaking and wood-turning.
The shoe industry which started as a cottage industry with
piece work given out and picked up each day by runners gradually became
mechanized.
By 1836 when the Boston and Albany Railroad came through Natick
became one of the largest producers of boots and shoes and by 1880
had
23 shoe manufacturers. During the early part of the 20th century the
shoe industry suffered and the last shoe factory
in
Natick, the Winchell Shoe Co. closed in 1971. H. Harwood and Sons developed the
figure eight stitching for baseballs and was
the
first such company in the country.
Natick developed as three distinct villages, each with its own
stage route from Boston to Hartford. The original village in
South Natick, to the north Felchville and in the center Natick. In each village and along each coach route a tavern was built.
Felchville
Tavern to the north, the Morse tavern in
the center the Eliakim Morril
Tavern in the south. These taverns
were used as
meeting places and inns. The Peletiah Morse
tavern on Eliot Street is the last remaining tavern from this era.
Two disastrous fires occurred in 1872 in South Natick and in
1874 in Natick Center. Businesses quickly rebuilt and the population
increased rapidly. After World War II there was another tremendous
population increase, the Massachusetts Turnpike was
built
through the northern section of the town and there was a spurt in commercial
development and demand for housing.
Commercial development along Route 9 has been extensive.
While the causes were by no means universally supported, Natick
was home to many abolitionists, women’s rights advocates, and
social reformers. The tunnel connecting the old Walcott Mansion to
the railroad tracks was believed to have been part of the
Underground Railroad. After the raid on Harper’s Ferry, many leading citizens in
Natick signed the “Natick Resolution”
protesting the execution of John Brown. Augusta Cheney never ceased in
her efforts to get the vote for women in school committee
elections. She was rejected repeatedly until the state made it
mandatory. And the Natick Woman’s Club, established in 1895,
offered a Community Kindergarten, education and English language
classes for new immigrants, and a class in Mothercraft
which
became a model for Home Economics classes in the public schools. In the 1950’s
Natick became the first town to sponsor Fair Housing
legislation to eliminate discrimination against minorities in renting and
purchasing property.
Natick has a remarkable sports legacy starting in 1891 when the
fire department won a ladder-raising contest and earned us
the
title “Home of Champions”. Natick is home to Harwood baseballs, record-breaking
runners like Jack Snow in 1905, and sprinters
Pooch and Piper Donovan. Pooch went on to coach track and football at Harvard in the 1900’s
and 1910’s. The “Dean of the American
League Umpires” Thomas H. Connolly, and, of course, Doug Flutie
are all from Natick.
Natick also boasts several historic figures. Henry Wilson began
life as an indentured servant. At 21 he relocated to Natick and
established himself in the shoe business. Wilson went into politics,
serving as an abolitionist Senator during the Civil War. He was
elected Vice-President under Ulysses S. Grant. Harriet Beecher Stowe,
the author of “Old Town Folks” and “Uncle Tom’s
Cabin”, and many other books, married
preacher Calvin Stowe, a native of the town. Alexander Wheelock Thayer was
Consul to Trieste and the author of the
definitive biography of Ludwig von Beethoven. Horatio Alger, Jr. minister and
author of children’s books with a “rags to riches” theme often
visited his parents and sister in South Natick.
Families from all over the world have come to call Natick home.
The Nipmuc were already here when the Praying Indians
settled. Settlers from England came next and with the growth of the
shoe industry, Natick become home to Irish, Italian, Albanian,
German, Scots, French Canadian, Swede and
other groups. A band of gypsies camped on Lake Cochituate every summer from the late
1800s into the 1930s. And new families continue to arrive each month seeking peace
and opportunity.
Welcome
to the Home of
Champions!
Compiled
by Anne K. Shaller from material at
the Natick Historical Society and from
Crawford’s
History
of Natick, 1976, and with special thanks
to Dorothy Deslongchamps
and Jennifer Hance.
Natick Historical Society
58 Eliot Street
Natick, MA 01760
Phone: (508)647-4841
info@natickhistoricalsociety.org
www.natickhistoricalsociety.org
Museum Hours:
Tuesday: 2:00pm - 8:30pm
Wednesday: 2:00pm - 4:30pm
Saturday 10:00am - 12:30pm
(closed Saturdays in summer)
Natick town common
Center School (former high school-subsequent town
offices)
Harwood baseball factory
Carling Brewery 1954-1975
Wallace’s
Shoppers World
Senator Jack Kenedy
campaigns in Natick-1960
CASEY’S DINER (Photo courtesy of Rick Price)
COLONIAL THEATRE
Colonial Theatre interior
The former Colonial Theatre
Wonder Bread bakery
The six photos below courtesy of Rick Price
Charles River – South Natick