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The Town of Needham is
located just west of Route 128 and the City
of Newton, and south of Route 9 and Wellesley.
This location provides an ideal metrowest
commuting location for anyone working in
downtown Boston or on the 128 corridor that
rings the city.
Needham was not always a convenient suburban
town. In years past, it was principally
recognized as the country getaway for well-to-do
Bostonians living on Beacon Hill or Back
Bay. Many large houses first built in the
1800s as country homes for the rich still
survive. Because of its multi century past,
historical sites are sprinkled throughout
Needham. The picture to the left shows a
monument honoring war veterans in Needham
Cemetery Some of the headstones in this
cemetery date back to the 1700s!
Needham is located on rocky uplands within
a loop of the Charles River. Though the
area was used for some grazing for livestock
of neighboring towns and some land grants
were made, the river served as an effective
barrier and the town was slow to develop.
Early settlers relied primarily on agriculture
and grazing plus some winter lumbering with
orchards and tanneries as supplements. Saw
mills and grist mills were opened by a number
of settlers along the Charles through the
18th century.
Extension of the railroad and land speculation
encouraged settlement, and the town saw
the growth of industrial employment and
production at the same time during the mid-19th
century. Needham manufacturers made knit
goods, underwear, hats, shoes and silk,
although attempts to cultivate silk worms
were short-lived.
Land speculation, housing development and
knitted underwear continued to be the foundation
of Needham's economy into the 20th century,
with the famous William Carter Corporation
prominent in the children's knitwear industry.
The construction of Route 128 in 1931 opened
portions of the town to development as part
of the hi-tech highway in the post-World
War II electronic industrial boom. Modern
Needham remains a pleasant heavily suburban
community with good access to Boston for
commuters and a significant number of local
job slots.
Needham
History
Needham's development began in the 1640's
when the area was first explored by people
from Dedham who believed that they had discovered
gold. Settlers began bringing cattle to
graze here in the 1680's, and in 1681 the
land of present day Needham and Wellesley
was purchased from tribal leader William
Nehoiden for 10 pounds in money, 50 acres
of land, and 40 shillings in corn.
Our colonial history is that of a poor farming
community, off the main roads, distrustful
of both the morals and government of Boston,
and afraid of the French and Indian raiders
(over 40 percent of our men served in the
wars).
By 1711 more than 50 families had located
here, enough to require a church, school,
and local government. On November 5th of
that year the Town of Needham was incorporated
(another reason to celebrate Guy Fawkes
Day!). The Royal governor selected the name
Needham because a town of that name was
close to Dedham in England.
The Revolution came to Needham very dramatically
as 185 men from our three companies of militia
responded to the battle of April 19, 1775,
resulting in five militia men dead, and
leaving four widows and 28 children. Subsequently,
many other Needhamites served in the Revolutionary
War under General George Washington, including
the distinguished officer, political leader,
and town father, Col. William McIntosh.
Until the arrival of the railroads in the
1800's the center of town was along the
current Central Avenue at Nehoiden Street.
The gradual movement of the old town center
to the Great Plain Village from the 1850's
on was necessitated by the fact that the
Charles River Railroad did not come to the
old center. In the 1870's, when the First
Parish Church was moved to its current location
in what is now Needham Center only the Old
Burial Ground and the 1720 parsonage were
left as the reminder of the original settlement.
The people of the town made a modest living
as farmers, although eventually horticulture
and dairying became prominent. Highlandville,
(now Needham Heights, took on a completely
different character with the migration of
English knitters such as William Carter,
Mark Lee, etc.,in the 1850's. What started
as cottage industries developed into large
knitting factories that produced world famous
knit goods. The presence of a cricket field
reminds us of their legacy.
Within 10 days of the attack on Fort Sumter
in April of 1861, posters appeared all over
town, stating "Needham to the Rescue!",
which summoned our citizens to enlist. During
the rebellion over 40 of our men were credited
with service.
Almost from its beginning the western part
of the town was dissatisfied with the location
of town government. This culminated in the
separation of Wellesley in 1881, which approximately
divided the town in half. It was not until
the turn of the new century when a new high
school building and a beautiful town hall
were created, combined with the effect of
seven different trolley lines, that Needham
began to gain the momentum that made us
a successful dairy and suburban community.
A significant event that should not be overlooked
is the "Back Bay Fill", when a
considerable amount of Needham's land was
removed by train (day and night, from 1859
to the late 1870's) to fill in most of Boston's
Back Bay. Needham was chosen as the removal
site of the fill because of the abundance
of gravel and reasonable rail access to
Boston. Most of the land removed lay between
the Charles River and the present Route
128. When the gravel was exhausted a devastated
desert was left which was not developed
until the post World War II construction
of a large industrial center.
In the late 1800's William Emerson Baker
achieved extraordinary results when he built
his Ridge Hill Farms with its magnificent
hotel, elaborate gardens, two man made lakes,
and over 1900 acres of scenic views, wild
animals, and mysterious caves.
When Swiss-American botanist Denys Zirngiebel
lived in Needham he established a very successful
commercial horticultural business where
he first introduced the giant Swiss pansy
to America. The pansy is now the official
town flower. Zirngiebel was also the grandfather
of one of America's greatest artists - Newell
Convers (N.C.) Wyeth, who attended Needham
schools, and used many Needham people and
locations for his paintings and illustrations
when he lived here in the 1920's.
One of the current attractions of the town
is the significant collection of Wyeth works
displayed in the public library and the
Needham Historical Society Museum.
Gradually both dairy farming and the knitting
industries declined. In 1955 the well known
Walker-Gordon Dairy closed, and in the 1990's
even the world famous Carter Company relocated.
However, the creation of one of the nation's
first industrial parks in 1950, the later
addition of high technology firms, the improvement
of access to Route 128 and Boston, frequent
railroad passenger service to Boston, and
the excellent quality of Needham schools
have contributed to the town's emergence
as one of the more desirable suburbs of
Boston. Retention of the representative
Town Meeting form of government and an abundance
of trees and open spaces add to the feeling
of a typical New England village.
Information graciously provided
by Polly Attridge
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