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HISTORY OF THE
TOWN OF WENHAM
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Wenham was officially set off from
the Town of Salem on May 10, 1643, but was not incorporated by the
legislature until September 7, 1643. Wenham was the first village
to be set off as a definite township from Salem, as it was the first
laid out. The territory appears to have belonged to the Agawam
Indians from whom the land was purchased for a nominal sum. In
approximately 1639, the earliest settlements were made by the lake and
later that year the Legislature passed an act giving the land, not
belonging to any other town or person, to the village. The first
settlers called their village "Enon." However, when it was
incorporated in 1643, the Legislature ordered that "Enon shall be called
Wenham and be granted to be a Town and hath liberty to send a deputy."
The name Wenham is from a parish
in Suffolk County, England, from which early settlers supposedly came.
The first Meeting House was built and was located to encourage
settlement in the middle of the Town.
Town history is vague for many
years and inhabitants were careless about attending town meetings to the
point where fines were assessed for such laxness. Early
perambulation of the bounds, still done today, was necessary, as there
arose many boundary disputes with neighboring villages.
The setting aside of the Charter
of the Massachusetts Colony in 1684 brought a period of great unrest and
the establishment of "Committees of Safety." The year 1692 saw the
witchcraft hysteria in which Sara Good, raised in Wenham, was hanged as
a witch. King Phillip's War and the French and Indian Wars had
Wenham men serving in order to protect their homes and land. John
Fiske, wounded and incapacitated in these conflicts, was granted a
license to keep a public house of entertainment by the General Court.
The following fifty year were
relatively calm and peaceful until the passage of the Stamp Act of 1765.
Although it was soon repealed, the tax remained on tea. So great
was the unrest that "Committees of Correspondence" were formed, and
Wenham citizens checked to see that their ammunition was safe under the
pulpit of the Meeting House. A call to arms came in 1774 and
fifteen Minute Men were requested of Wenham. Although Wenham was
too far removed from the battles at Concord and Lexington to
participate, they took part in the Battle at Bunker Hill. Wenham
sent men to join Washington's army, some serving as long as two years.
In 1776, the Declaration of
Independence was read and approved in Wenham by the voters. The
year 1776 was also the year that there was a terrible epidemic of small
pox, and many people died. In order to control the spread of the
disease, primitive inoculations were given, and a special house was set
aside to house those with the disease.
Although it was noted in 1642 that
all children should be educated, nothing was really done, and children
were taught at home. The first formal school was finally
established in 1700, but the students had to pay for their education.
It wasn't until 1739 that the Town finally appropriated the funds.
A period of peace and prosperity
again followed the Revolution and the opening of the land beyond the
Alleghenies. Some Wenhamites joined Hamilton's Dr. Cutler on his
trek to Marietta, Ohio. Wenham men were also instrumental in
petitioning for the building of a bridge between Beverly and Salem to
replace the ferry which was the only way to reach Salem.
The war of 1812 had some effect on
Wenham, and it is noted that the Town hired men to enlist. In
1854, it was voted to build a Town Hall since the Meeting House was no
longer adequate. In 1821, the Town voted to procure fire fighting
equipment, ladders and fire hooks, but no fire company was organized
until 1835.
The middle of the 1800's saw
Wenham as primarily an agricultural society, but there were many shoe
shops in Town that did piece work for shoe factories in Danvers and
Lynn. The harvesting of ice was also a very important industry
lasting into the early 20th century. Wenham Lake ice was prized
around the world.
Life remained rather quite as the
years progressed. Wenham sent many men to the Civil War, the
Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, as well as Korea and Vietnam.
Their names are suitably recorded in the Town Hall and on the War
Memorial outside on the Town Hall lawn. Wenham continued to be a
small town up until the end of World War II when the population
increased dramatically to over 4,000 by the time of the 1990 census.
There is still very little industry and business in Town; Wenham remains
predominantly residential, a bedroom community for the many adjacent
towns and cities.
Source: The 1993 Tersemicentenary
Celebration Commemorative Booklet, "In Celebration of Wenham," which
gleaned much of its information from M.O. Allen's History of Wenham,
from 1639 to 1860, available at the Wenham Museum. |