Norwood Stadium

Not many people know, but all of those Patriots and Red Sox championship banners almost ended up hanging from the upper deck of Norwood Stadium.

On April 1st, 1958 Boston newspapers first announced the plan for a sports Stadium in Norwood.

The idea came from Lowell Massachusetts born Billy Sullivan, a business man with sports in his blood. When he was young his father had been a correspondent for the Boston Globe and Billy grew up to become a sports writer and publicity director for Notre Dame, Boston College and the Boston Braves baseball team. He later got into the oil business and was a key supporter of the Jimmy Fund in it’s early years.

In 1958 (50 years before Patriot Place), Billy Sullivan came up with an idea to build a Stadium complex in suburban Norwood Massachusetts, 14 miles South of Boston.

Norwood Stadium would have been on the East side of US Route 1 just North of the Nahatan St rotary, roughly in the area where the Chateau Restaurant and Norwood Country Club are located today, possibly stretching back to the current location of University Avenue.

Located halfway between Boston and Providence, Norwood was a great location.

The $10 million, 165 acre Norwood Stadium project would have included the largest swimming pool in New England, 102 motel rooms, 180 office spaces, 104 bowling alleys (with two specially designed for television broadcasting of events), a restaurant capable of making 1000 meals a day, 96 executive roof boxes with air conditioning, and 7500 box seats.

A study was made about building a retractable roof for Norwood Stadium (3 years before the first roof of this type was actually built at the Civic Arena in Pittsburgh) but all the cost estimates put the roof out of reach.

The Red Sox immediately released a statement that they were happy in Fenway Park and didn’t want to move. After general manager Joe Cronin had an unscheduled meeting at City Hall with Boston Mayor John Hynes, the mayor’s office revealed that the Sox and the city had agreed that they would explore every option available to alleviate the parking problem around Fenway, which was the main reason most people wanted the park relocated in the first place.

With the Red Sox resisting a move, Sullivan approached the Philadelphia Phillies with a proposal to play 21 of it’s home games in Norwood Stadium the following season. They also declined.

Sullivan saw the possibility to use the stadium for other events like bowling tournaments and championship boxing, but what he really wanted was an NFL team to share Norwood Stadium with the Red Sox, packing sports fans into his sports complex most of the year.

NFL commissioner Bert Bell was impressed with the Norwood Stadium plans and after a few meetings with Sullivan, agreed that the next franchise would be a Boston team based in Norwood.  But Bert Bell died in the fall, and another of Sullivan’s supporters, Giants owned Tim Mara passed away soon after. With hope now fading for an NFL franchise, Sullivan turned to the upstart American Football League (AFL) to make his football dream a reality.

Sullivan happily paid the $25,000 franchise fee and was awarded an AFL team on November 16, 1959. On February 17th 1960, they were officially named the “Boston Patriots”, not a great sign for the Norwood Stadium backers. At that time, all of the other 7 AFL teams had stadiums to play in, and before long the pressure started to build to find a place for the new Boston team to play for their inaugural season.

On April 2,1960 Sullivan announced that Boston University had agreed to let the Patriots play rent free on B.U. Field for 2 years. Proponents of Norwood Stadium still had hope that if they could get the project started, they could convince Sullivan to move to Norwood for the 1963 season.

In 1963, a deal was struck for the Patriots to play at Fenway, where they stayed for 5 years. Norwood Stadium was all but dead.

After two single season stints at Harvard Stadium and Boston College’s Alumni Stadium, the Boston Patriots finally found a permanent home in Foxboro in the $7.1 million Schaefer Stadium in 1971. With the move out of the city, the team requested to change their name to the “Bay State Patriots” but were denied by the league. Finally, n March 22, 1971 they finally became the New England Patriots.

The Foxboro based New England Patriots have been the most dominant team in the NFL over the last 20 years, with 6 Superbowl wins. It makes me wonder – how many of these banners could have been hanging in Norwood Stadium today?

Happy Birthday Norwood Massachusetts

 

Aaron Guild, featured on Norwood’s Town Seal

Ezra Morse and Josiah Fisher were granted permission to use 14 acres of the Purgatory Swamp in 1697 and were the first known settlers to live in what is now Norwood. Morse’s grist mill in Dedham had been causing problems for farmers downstream who needed the water for growing crops, but the mill was useful and needed as well. The solution was to move the mill to the Southern part of town.  The mill was located roughly in the area near present day Morse Street, between pleasant and Washington. It was likely close to the rear of the Norwood Space Center and the Certainteed plant on Water St near the East Walpole line.

Ezra Morse built the first house in Norwood in 1678, a typical saltbox style dwelling for the time, on the nearby hill which became known as Morse Hill. In 1868, 4 years before Norwood became a town, his descendant George H. Morse tore Ezra’s house down and built a new house on the same property in roughly the same location. The George H. Morse House still stands at 1285 Washington St, overlooking South Norwood.

The George H Morse House

The population of South Dedham grew and by 1717, the settlers were tired of traveling into Dedham Village to attend services at the Church of Christ so they petitioned to start their own Parish in South Dedham. The removal of so many parishioners would be a large tax loss for the Church, and Dedham steadfastly refused several times. To solve the problem, parishioners started holding services in private homes in South Dedham 1722.  Dedham agreed to the request in 1728 and on October 18, 1730 the General Court incorporated the area as the South Parish of Dedham.

West Dedham (now Westwood) could not agree with South Dedham as to the location of a new meetinghouse, so West Dedham returned to the Dedham Christ Church.  In 1736 South Dedham erected their first meetinghouse near the present day Morrill Memorial Library. Chosen as the pastorate of the new Congregational Church was Reverend Thomas Balch of Salem, a Harvard graduate. The town records state “he was deservedly highly esteemed for he was a man of talents and intellectual attainments. He was orthodox and highly regarded as a preacher.” The Balch school in South Norwood is named in his memory.

The first Balch Schoolhouse, built in 1867, was named in honor of Rev Thomas Balch. Photo courtesy of the Norwood Historical Society

Two year later, in 1738, South Dedham requested their own schoolhouse and in 1740 built the first school near the site of the present day Callahan school. The school was far from perfect. Teachers had to travel from Dedham each day, sessions were short and only boys were allowed at school, but it was a start. In 1754 South Dedham hired their first schoolmaster and 4 years later girls were allowed to attend the school. This school was closed in 1788.

Now with it’s own meetinghouse and it’s own school, South Dedham continued to grow, establishing the Old Parish Cemetery in 1741. This served as South Dedham’s only burial ground until 1880 when Highland Cemetery was created.

Old Parish Cemetery in Norwood.

South Dedham had no commercial center, so residents still had to travel the 5 miles into Dedham village for dry goods, materials or other supplies. They also continued to pay taxes to Dedham even though they were now establishing their own services and not benefiting from improvements in the village. Resentment was building.

Two events in 1870 and 1871 finally led to the break between Dedham and South Dedham.

South Dedham had replaced the original schoolhouse with two more. Schoolhouse Number 6 was located near present Lenox and Cross street. Schoolhouse Number 7, also known as the “Little Red Brick Schoolhouse”, stood on the corner of Pleasant and Sumner streets until 2009 when it was moved and meticulously rebuilt on the grounds of the George H Morse house. But South Dedham still didn’t have a High School. In 1870, Frank O. Winslow (of the Winslow Brothers tannery) petitioned Dedham to allow a High School to be built in South Dedham. When the vote failed to pass, talk of secession from Dedham began.

Brick Schoolhouse Number 7, also known as the “Little Red Brick Schoolhouse”, 1942

Norwood also had two fire companies- Washington Number 7 near present day St Catherine’s Hall and America Number 10 near present day Walnut Ave and Washington St. Very low tech operations, their tools were mainly tubs of water with bucket brigades and later hand pumps carried via a horse carriage. More than just an emergency service, the firehouses served as social halls, and the men were a proud band of brothers. Washington Number 7 had a tradition of ringing the firehouse bell on the Fourth of July to celebrate the holiday. Dedham Selectmen voted to ban the bell ringing in 1871, and fire Company steward George E. Metcalf defiantly rang the bell anyway.

Washington Number 7 Firehouse.

For many South Dedham residents, these two events were enough to convince them to break away from Dedham. On December 22, 1871 a meeting was called in Village Hall and a committee was selected to petition the formation of a new town, made up of South Dedham and small portion of Walpole. Eighty percent of the village signed the petition.

Village Hall, Norwood, 1885

On February 10th, 1872, the following Bill was presented to the State Senate (you can click here for a PDF or scroll below)

The Bill was approved by the General Court and signed by Massachusetts Governor William B. Washburn on February 23, 1872, 148 years ago today.

1958 Neponset Street – Deerfield Park – Boston Globe Ad

In September of 1958, contractor John Cieri ran this ad in the Boston Globe for “Deerfield Park”, a newly constucted neighborhood of ranch style, split level and tri-level homes on the West of Neponset Street between US Route 1 and the newly constructed I-95.

This 2018 Google street view of a home on Deerfield Rd shows one of the homes today, looking almost identical to the home in the ad 60 years earlier.

Image courtesy Google Maps

Plimpton Press Demolition August 31, 2018

As August comes to a close, the Plimpton Press is now completely gone.

The new apartments on the North side of Lenox and Nahatan are already clearly visible, as is the rear of the Shaw’s Plaza. Once the debris is gone it will be easier to see all the way through Lenox street in both directions for the first time in decades.

The railroad tracks that went to the original Guild street railroad overpass/bridge (replaced in the summer of 2016) can be seen in the 5th and 6th photos.

The next phase of the project is likely to begin soon on the East side of the site, up against the dead end of Rock street, where the first set of new buildings will be constructed.

 

 

 

To see my full post on the Plimpton Press demolition, click here.

And for the history of the Plimpton Press, check this out.

 

Plimpton Press Demolition August 20, 2018

The main tower of the Plimpton Press came down today. It stood for over 120 years, and could be seen as far away as Morse Hill in South Norwood (site of the current Coakley Middle School).

 

To see my full post on the Plimpton Press demolition, click here.

And for the history of the Plimpton Press, check this out.