October Cemetery Tour Draws 65
On Sunday, October 19, the Weston Historical Society and Golden Ball Tavern co-sponsored a cemetery tour attended by 65 people of all ages.
After refreshments and tours of the Golden Ball, Pam Fox, president of the society, led the group to Farmers Burying Ground and Central Cemetery.
She explained why gravestones in the earlier Farmers Burying Ground are oriented east-west...
so that on the Judgment Day the dead would wake and sit up facing the rising sun.
She explained how carvings on the stones changed from winged skulls, popular in the early 18th century...
...to cherubs...
...to the classical urn and willow tree preferred by the end of the century.
WHAT'S NEW
Ready, Willing, and Able
Weston Historical Society volunteers are hard at work on a new exhibit,
"Ready, Willing, and Able: The History of the Weston Fire, Police, and DPW Departments" to be
installed in the Weston Public Library gallery during the month of April 2015. A reception has
been scheduled for Saturday afternoon, April 11, and a related lecture is planned for later that
month. In addition, the Spring 2015 issue of The Weston Historical Society Bulletin
will be devoted to a history of these town services.
The society began last spring to contact the three departments. We have discovered a rich trove
of photographs, memorabilia, and objects such as leather fire buckets and fire hats from Engine
Company #1, police badges, handcuffs, and "Wanted"posters, and a stock certificate
from the privately owned Weston Water Company, founded in 1895.
One of the goals of this exhibit is to highlight the day-to-day services we often take
for granted and the emergency services we hope to never need. A second goal is show the evolution
of town services as an expected and necessary responsibility of local government.
In the early years of Weston’s history, there were no formal town departments devoted to keeping
the peace, fighting fires, or maintaining roadways. The first volunteer fire company was started
in 1890 after a rash of arson-related incidents. To keep the peace, citizens were appointed
as constables or special police officers and paid for services rendered. Designated residents
were paid to use their own horses and equipment to grade roads and "roll" the snow
for sleighs. Homeowners dug their own wells or organized small private water companies.
Not until the late 19th century, when Weston entered the "estate era," did services
such as better roads and better fire protection come to be seen as necessary.
The Fire, Police, and DPW exhibition will be smaller than the society's tercentennial exhibition
but will display the same high professional standards. The exhibition committee consists
of the following volunteers: Pamela Fox, Tania Deary, Rebekah Gardiner, Mary Gregory,
Mary Marder, and Robin Reisman.
The two photographs above are both from 1963:
members of the Fire Department posing in dress uniform in front of the fire house; and members of the Police Department
marching in Weston's 250th anniversary parade.
A Weston Timeline
For the 2013 Tercentennial, the Weston Historical Commission has published A Weston Timeline by Pamela W. Fox, a 46-page color illustrated booklet produced in cooperation with the Weston Historical Society.