Thursday, June 6, 2013

Moore State Park (Paxton Massachusetts) Entry #2

To find this secret place on the map click here.

This isn't quite so hidden as my former entry but it really needs to be mentioned. You know, there are so many good places that are free to go, places that are free monetarily, but also free from the kind of crappy touristy stuff that normally costs money to see. This park is lovingly taken care of, and I use that word specifically. Just a tiny bit down the blocked off road into the park and you will be able to see what I mean. Also, you should go visit right now. This park, at one point, was owned by one of the first licenced, female landscapers in Massachusetts, and she loved rhododendrons and azaleas. They are in full bloom right now and this park sparkles with their presence.  Let me show you a bit of what I mean.






The park has an interesting history and isn't simply just filled with these enormous flowering bushes...
although they are pretty much everywhere. It's original purpose was that of a series of mills used by the surrounding farmers. The brook hits waterfalls here and gains enough push to power the mills. The stonework and canals are still there to be seen, funneling the brook toward the still-standing mill house. The water cascades over the slate falls and off into the woods. After the mills lost their feasibility in 1930, the property was purchased by as a private property by the Mortons, who were wealthy and owned a store in Worcester. It was Mrs. Morton that began planting the flowers that now define Moore State Park. The property was then sold to the Spauldings who named the house and surrounding lands "Enchanta." They continued the process of planting and finally sold the property to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1956. We should all be glad of this and for the conservatory efforts this state has made to preserve and open these special places to the public.  This is a place to come and stay for a while... let the sounds and beauty wash away the day. At this time of year there are plenty of people there, but the place has a magic that keeps everyone pretty quiet. It is peaceful and inspiring.


Even Henry and Nora are fascinated. There is an open pond and waterfall... Adirondack
     chairs and ample opportunity for exploration. Henry walked the low stone wall bordering
the pond for quite some time looking for Dragonfly nymphs. There is no beach. Dogs are allowed when leashed. (Not the place for Chaucer unfortunately. He would be in that pond in a heartbeat) On researching the park, I found that there are a pretty serious amount of trails winding their way through the park: as there are mapped out here. There is even a bird sanctuary up there... hmmmmm. I think this deserves a return trip. The people of Paxton keep this park as a jewel tucked away and kept special and beautiful. It is a place to spend an afternoon... maybe a picnic... and to enjoy.   


Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Hidden Cemetery (Rutland Massachusetts) Entry # 1

So I figured... why not start with something good... juicy... old and dead. Maybe those adjectives don't really mesh together well, but this is all of those things. This is the stuff Urban Legends are born from: An unmarked,  hidden cemetery tucked deep into the woods behind another cemetery. Not only is it old, unmarked, and tucked deep into the woods, it is a prisoner cemetery. Yes, now we have a blog entry. Here is the link to the map so you could go and find it yourself.


This is Goose Hill Cemetery in Rutland. It is, in its own right, a good old cemetery. It dates from the early 1700's through the 1800's. The ground is so thick with moss that I literally sunk into it as Henry, Nora and I examined the stones. It is old and out of the way, so many of the stones are broken, but there is something special about these old cemeteries. The flowers here aren't in pots. Some have been
planted years ago in front of the stones and have come back every year. Others weren't planted at all. Wild flowers have taken over where human interest has faded and lady slippers and wild columbine now mark a more wild remembrance. If you have never
investigated the old cemeteries of Central Massachusetts, you are missing out. There are gems hidden throughout: murderers, witches, victims... all the makings of a Stephanie Meyer best seller. This one though, only has hints of the past. One stone told of a man with four wives. Depending on your outlook, this man's life was either really good or really bad :).

Directly beside the cemetery is a small cart road. It is unmarked except for a small Rutland Historical Marker that could easily be taken as representing the Goose Hill Cemetery, and maybe it is. But, this road leads to another cemetery tucked away in the woods behind the Goose Hill Cemetery. There is no sign here. No way of knowing that anything is back there. Just another of those barely-there cart roads that branch off of nearly all of the roads in Central Mass. The road eventually turns into a path and the path eventually fades to nearly not a path. About a quarter of a mile in the way opens up to a small clearing. Even this is overgrown now and if not for the Boy Scouts of troupe 141, you could almost
walk right over the small rise of earth that was the Rutland Prison Camps Burial Ground. I say almost because, if you were paying attention at all, you might see the indentations in the ground where 59 prisoners were buried between the years 1900 and 1933. That, by the way, strikes me as a lot of dead prisoners for thirty years at one prison. A bit of research unveils that this prison was an experiment. Prisoners with tuberculosis were sent here and were given instructions for farming and for clean living. There were 100 prisoners imprisoned here. More than half of them succumbed to their disease the rest... potentially, through the care they were given and the healthy lifestyle the lived, lived through it.



The grounds here are over grown with shrubs and small trees. The cemetery isn't protected at all and the markers, 59 iron crosses shown in the old picture here, are now gone. I am sure they are decorating some washed up goth rocker's wanna be apartment somewhere. What is worse, is that someone has
been digging at the graves. The picture doesn't show it very clearly, but this one was definitely dug out. The hole is about five feet deep. Unmarked graves... prisoners dying in discontent... away from their families... disturbed graves... are you with me here?

In all truth, the pervading emotion that I felt, apart from unbridled frustration regarding the clouds of mosquitoes hovering around the woods at this time of year, was sadness. This part of Rutland's past is falling away. Yes they were prisoners, but as William Turner, the superintendent of the Rutland Prison Camps, held as his central ideology, they were people first. He treated them with kindness and with decency and respect. Perhaps effort should be made to continuing his methods. 



Sunday, June 2, 2013

The Map

This is an interactive map that I am making of all of the places that I find. I am going to be referring back to this quite a bit.   Feel free to click on the + and - signs on the left to zoom and find exactly where the places are. Also, you can click on the "view in larger map" tag on the bottom to get in nice and close.



View Secret Central Massachusetts in a larger map