Greenwich
The Quabbin Reservoir in central Massachusetts marks the
ending of a long timeline of four towns that used to be there: Prescott,
Greenwich, Enfield, and Dana. Last week,my re-published interview with Eleanor Griswold Schmidt, a former resident of
the former town of Prescott, covered her childhood in the 1920s and 1930s, when
the reservoir was being built. This
year, 2013, marks the 75th anniversary of the official ending of the
towns of the Swift River Valley.
But the ending did not just happen at the stroke of midnight
on April 27-28, 1938. That moment had
been only the quiet culmination of decades of events. You could take it back much further to a
centuries-old problem of Boston’s chronic need for water. But for now, we’ll just concentrate on what
the residents of the Swift River Valley experienced for themselves.
1895: A report came
from Boston that a new source of water was needed for the burgeoning city, and
the Swift River Valley was investigated for the site of a reservoir, but this
is delayed and work commences instead on the Wachusett Reservoir, closer to
Boston.
1898: The Wachusett Act ends the existence of town of West
Boylston, and parts of the towns of Boylston, Clinton, and Sterling. It is the first forced removal of entire
communities for the construction of a reservoir.
August 1901: Two
thousand people gather to celebrate Dana’s town centennial.
August 1904: Greenwich (pronounced green-witch) celebrates
its 150th anniversary.
Town Hall and Congregational Church, Greenwich
By 1909, the investigation by engineers of the Swift River
Valley prompted a response from the Athol
Transcript: “There has been more or less local talk of the town and other
places being taken by the Metropolitan Water Board of Boston. But it is safe to say that the day is far
distant when it will be done. North Dana
people don’t need to move before the snow flies, at any rate.”
July 1916: Enfield celebrates its town centennial.
Main Street, Enfield, Mass.
1918: A preliminary
study is conducted of the Swift River Valley, proposed by Xanthus Henry
Goodnough, who had worked for the state health agency as an engineer. Today, Quabbin’s Goodnough Dike is named for
him. Town meetings were held in Ware and
in the Swift River Valley with resolutions passed opposing the taking of their
property.
1921: The first
survey is published. In April, Mr.
Charles J. Abbott wrote an editorial poem to the Athol Transcript:
“Prescott is my home,
though rough and poor she be,
The home of many a
noble soul, the birthplace of the free.
I love her rock-bound
woods and hills, they are good enough for me:I love her brooklets and her rills, But couldn’t, wouldn’t and shouldn’t
Love a man-made sea.”
Enfield, Mass.
August 1922: Prescott celebrates its town centennial. Attorney Vaughn addresses the crowed, urging
citizens to “take up the torch of the men who had fallen in war, to rebuild the
stone walls of their grandfathers, to till the soil and make the town prosper,
despite the pending issue of the Swift River project.”
1925: Prescott’s population drops to 230, Dana’s drops to
657 under the threat of the impending reservoir project.
1926: The Ware River Act creates the legal entity of the reservoir
and responsibility over the residents’ removal from the valley.
July 1926: Dana celebrates its 125th anniversary,
but the party seems more like a wake.
1927: The Swift River Act decrees that the Swift River
Valley will become a reservoir. The
exodus begins – some leave willingly, others unwillingly. Some are determined to wait until the very
last. One man, whose interview was
published in the Springfield Union,
April 26, 1938 spoke for still others who said, “I hope I’ll be carried out so
I’ll never have to go.”
1928: Construction officially begins.
1930: There are 48 people left in Prescott. Schools here are closed by the early
1930s. The Prescott Congregational
Church is purchased by manufacturer Joseph Skinner and moved to South Hadley to
be used as a museum.
In October of this year, the MDWSC establishes that the
project will be called the Quabbin
Reservoir.
1933: The dedication of the Quabbin Park Cemetery in Ware,
where 6,557 bodies from 34 Swift River Valley graveyards are re-buried.
1935: The opening of the Daniel Shays Highway, bypassing the
Swift River Valley, ironically named for the area’s most famous rebel against
the Commonwealth, and its most famous exile.
June: The last run of the local train called the Rabbit.
1937: Remaining farmers are told not to plant. The Eagle House in Dana and the Swift River
Hotel in Enfield are torn down.
Eagle House, Dana
March 1938: Final town meeting in Dana.
April: Final Enfield town meeting. Final Greenwich town meeting.
April 27th, the Farewell Ball held in
Enfield. At 12:01 a.m., April 28, 1938,
the towns of Prescott, Dana, Enfield, and Greenwich are wiped from the map of
Massachusetts.
Town Hall, Enfield, Mass.
1939: Flooding commences in August.
World War II: The
Prescott Peninsula is used for bombing practice by Army Air Corps planes from
Westover Field in Chicopee.
1946: The first water is pumped to Boston.
All photos in this post are postcards in public domain, currently available on the Image Museum website. For more history on the Swift River Valley and the Quabbin
Reservoir, please visit the Swift River Valley Historical Society in North New
Salem, and the Friends of Quabbin at the Quabbin Reservoir Visitors Center.
***
My novel, Beside theStill Waters, is a fictional account of the people in the “Quabbin
towns.” I’ll be posting more about that
in weeks to come in this, the 75th anniversary of the
disincorporation of Dana, Enfield, Greenwich, and Prescott, Massachusetts in
April, 1938.
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