Rockport’s “Magic Place ”
Millbrook
Meadow
Rockporters
have loved the beautiful green Meadow that lies between Front Beach
and the Mill Pond. There have been Maypole Dances, the Scandinavians have had
their festive Midsommer celebration with
dancing Finns, Swedes, Norwegians.
People
have brought all manner of dogs, cats, horses and even a stuffed unicorn down
to the Blessing of the Animals.
The
annual Acoustic Festival has brought people in, as well as the Peace
Festival.
People
from all over have brought their kids down to the fastest Easter Egg hunt on Cape Ann . You
blink your eyes and the kids have scooped up every egg in sight.
Kids
from all over the North
Shore have come down on
the train for our Library’s “Story Hour” with storytelling and clowns and all
kinds of fun. One long line of excited
kids! As one group was leaving the
Meadow, others were just getting off the train.
Rockport native Penny Olsen and her husband owned the Linden Tree Inn near the Meadow. She left money to the Rockport Garden Club
for a beautiful garden at the Beach
Street entrance to the Meadow, in honor of her
grandmother, Meg Day. The Garden Club
people do a careful, thoughtful job of keeping that garden up. And other Garden Club people help battle the
invasive plants that grow there.
Millbrook Meadow wasn’t always a
nice green place. For the first several
centuries of life in Rockport, this was a pretty grungy place. It may be hard for visitors who come now to
imagine that Rockport in the 19th and early 20th centuries
was a bare town of fishermen, granite workers and farmers. Life was hard for
the men who cut, drilled and blasted huge chunks of granite from the quarries.
What
is now “the Meadow” was “Millbrook
Valley ” then. From the earliest days—the early 1700s, John
Pool was milling lumber to send down to Boston .
There were always mill wheels spinning, turning out ground meal, lumber,
pianos, buggy seats, glue, ground fish bladders and more glue. And did that place stink! The oldtimers always complained about the
smell coming up from there.
. About 1920 the mill for grinding fish bladders,
or isinglass, stopped work. With Prohibition, there was little need for this product,
used for making beer. The empty mill sat idle, until during the Depression of the
1930s, it caught on fire and burned down.
The man who then owned the property had trouble paying his taxes, so he
deeded it to the Town, and even agreed to take down the remnants of the old
burned-out factory. The ladies of the
Rockport Garden Club bought it, for $1500, and then, in 1938 they donated it to
the Town, and work began to turn it into a park.
It
became a park, but in 1951 some businessmen downtown were looking for
additional parking for visitors. This is
something businesses have been doing for many years here. [See “Lura”
below.]
The
Mill Pond
Mill
Pond in November, 1975
Rockporters
have a long relationship with the Mill Pond, going back to 1702 when workers
dug it to create a water source for a grist mill and a lumber mill.
Many
have skated on the pond. There have
always been people fishing there. In the old days, when the fisheries people
stocked the Pond, they caught some pretty good sized fish there.
In
the winter, the Norwoods hired a lot of people to help cut ice on the Pond and
store in two ice houses, one over by their house on Mill Lane and the other below Anderson ’s house on King Street . Times were tough and men really counted on
the money they made sawing chunks of ice from the Pond, then hooking up a team
of oxen to haul it to the ice houses.
The
dam built originally was made of boulders, logs and mud, but was improved to
one of large granite slabs in 1830. That dam blew out in May, 2006, and it took
six years to get the funding and all the permits to rebuild it. Work began in July 2012.
The
new dam, built according to 21st century standards, was completed by
T. Ford & Co. of Georgetown, with the supervision of Rockport’s Department
of Public Works in January, 2013. The
project cost about $980,000, paid for from FEMA, State and local funds.
And now….
We’ve all
gotten a lot out of this brilliant green jewel
right in the middle of town, but now, it needs help.
We are going to have to do some
things to make sure that it can continue to be there for us.
When
the Mother’s Day rainstorm of 2006 blew out our old dam, water from the pond
flooded the Meadow and scoured out huge troughs.
When
the work was going on last fall to build a new dam, they drained the Mill Pond
so that it was mostly mud with a few puddles.
We got a chance to see better than ever how it has been loaded with a
century of sediment, washed down from Railroad
Avenue and all of that part of Rockport. And the Pond is clogged with all kinds of
invasive plant life. Those who skated on
the Pond as kids know how much smaller the Pond has become.
The
Mill Brook as it passes through the Meadow floods its banks often. Stones lining the brook are all askew, and
the high embankment near Beach
Street is in danger of compete collapse.
Two
huge old willow trees in the Meadow are at the end of their lives, and large
boughs could come crashing down on some unsuspecting child any time.
It is time
for us to take steps to repair our Meadow and our Mill Pond.
Millbrook
Meadow Committee has joined forces with the Department of Public Works (DPW) to
plan the Restoration of the Meadow and the Mill Pond. The first thing we did was request $60,000
from the Lura Hall Phillips
Trust.
Next,
with the DPW, prepared a request for $120,000 from the Community Preservation
fund. Those funds, if they are approved,
come from a special local source collected in a surcharge we pay in our
property taxes, and augmented by state funds. This money is to be used for
affordable housing, or purchase of open space for the town, historic
preservation or recreational spaces.
In
April we will request an additional $60,000 at Town Meeting.
These
three amounts, totaling $240,000, will allow us to conduct a study of the
Meadow and Pond, looking at the geotechnical details, the hydraulics, how water
flows through the Brook, how water drains in the Meadow, the plant life, both
in the Meadow and in and around the Mill Pond. Then will come design of the
restoration. Based upon early surveys,
we will begin to learn what we can and should do, and how much it will cost.
In
all the 75 years the Meadow has been in existence no comprehensive study has
been done, and work has been done with limited local resources, and much
volunteer help. This plan for
restoration is intended to give the Meadow and the Mill Pond new life to last
another few centuries.
We
have already begun to look for federal and state grants to assist us in this
restoration, and we are planning a drive to solicit private contributions.
Lura
Lura
Phillips was the lady who, back in 1951, went head-to-head with businessmen who
wanted to convert the Meadow into a parking lot. She was a one-woman bulldozer, raising funds
for Millbrook Meadow. Lura was expert at
wringing donations out of people, whether art from artists, or goods from other
merchants, or dollars from regular citizens.
All for the Meadow.
Rae
Francoeur, a Rockport writer who now spends most of her time writing in New York City , lived in
Lura’s house for several years. Lura
told her this:
Saving the meadow
Lura was standing on the upstairs deck of her
house with me and she pointed in the direction of Millbrook Meadow.
“Do you know how I got interested in saving the
meadow?” she asked. “One day, I was standing out here just like this and I
heard noises coming from the meadow. I ran over and saw a backhoe. I thought
they were going to turn it into a parking lot. So I rolled up my sleeves and
got busy.”
“Whenever I go into the meadow,” she said, “I
realize what a magic place it is. It doesn’t matter how I feel when I arrive.
But once I get inside, I feel the magic and everything changes.”
When
my wife Marty and I came to town in 1990, Lura was already into her nineties,
but still full of energy. She lived in a
house up on Main Street . She was having one of her frequent yard sales
one day when we walked by. We stopped to
admire some antique glass doorknobs.
When she found out that we had just moved in on Mill Lane, around the
corner, before we knew what was happening, we were signed up to join the
Millbrook Meadow Committee.
When
you joined a committee run by Lura, you pretty much gave up your freedom.
Lura
was continually holding events in the Meadow.
She held a fund drive to build a pretty stone bridge, dedicated to the
Founders of Rockport—the Tarrs and the Pooles, and some of the other old names
in town.
She
launched a fund drive to build a nice winding stone stairway from King Street down to
the Meadow. It was in honor of the
Quarry workers.
She
grabbed us to help run “Pets and Hobbies Day”.
She had 19 members in her committee when we joined, and all we had to do
was line up people to bring their pets to the Meadow on “Pets and Hobbies
Day”.
And
line up vendors to sell hamburgers and soft drinks, all for the Meadow.
And
line up ladies to bake pies and pastries to sell, for the Meadow.
And
write stories for the newspaper, and print and put up posters all over
town.
And talk people into displaying their hobbies, and charging everyone who set up a display.
And talk people into displaying their hobbies, and charging everyone who set up a display.
Of
course someone needed to rent the tables and chairs, and put up the markers for
each booth, and run the electrical lines from the abutting businesses, like Peg
Leg Restaurant. Bob Welcome (restaurant owner) had already agreed to donate the electricity.
Lura
had an interesting leadership style. She
would ask about five people to do the same task, figuring that at least four
would forget, or do it so poorly that someone else would have to fill in.
Lura loved that Meadow, and protected it,
and raised funds to keep it up.
Lura
left money in a trust, and now we are using that as seed money to start our
restoration of the Meadow.
I
mentioned above that in 1951 some businessmen downtown were looking for
additional parking for visitors.
They
decided that it was time for a nice parking lot right where Millbrook Meadow
was. That was when Lura “rolled up her
sleeves and got busy.” She harangued and
badgered and cajoled the Selectmen; she found a good local lawyer to support
her cause. She fought and argued, and gathered signatures and supporters, and
finally, the Selectmen saw that the law was on Lura’s side, and she stopped the hot top.
All
during Lura’s later years, she saved her money.
In her 90s, she sold her house to Rae Francoeur and moved into
DenMar. (Local Rehab. Center).
When
she died in 1994 she left money to the
Lura Hall Phillips Trust, for the improvement of her beloved Millbrook
Meadow.
Lura
loved Rockport, and she loved the Meadow.
Now, her money can be used to help restore the Meadow and make it the Magic Place for
future generations.
We’re holding a “Visioning Session” at the
Rockport Library on Wednesday, March 20th at 7 p.m.
We’re
going to ask Rockporters to tell us what they like and don’t like about the
Meadow, past and present, and we want you to share ideas about how you’d like
it to be in the future.
Do
you have ideas about the Meadow and the Pond to make it better?
Please
plan to come, and urge your friends and neighbors to come!
We’d also like to invite you to join us at
Town Meeting on Saturday, April 6th, and support our request for
funds for Restoring the Meadow and the Mill Pond.
Thank
you!
Samuel W. Coulbourn
Chairman, Millbrook Meadow Committee
P.S. Gunilla Caulfield, Trustee of the Lura Hall Phillips Trust, talked recently with June Sullivan, an old friend and neighbor of Lura. June (now 92) recalled that day when the bulldozers arrived in 1951. June said Lura had told her all about it, still shaking. June related: "Lura got a phone call that bulldozers were entering the meadow, and, frantic, she hurried out of the house and took a right-of-way shortcut to the meadow, running. When she arrived, she stood fast, holding her ground, put her arms up, and stopped them from entering."
s.c.
I certainly have ideas about this restoration.....the most important is the plant selection which should be appropriate for the site and this would include many native species of plants which would not only help with sediment erosion and other issues but will provide a habitat for all kinds of birds and other wildlife. You design the restoration around this one premise not the other way around.....
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