Theย American Elm tree at the corner of County and East Streetsย succumbed to Dutch Elm disease in 2012, but a polished cross section is on display at the Ipswich Town Hall.
Samuel Symonds’ House
Ipswich at War
The Ipswich Jails
Little Neck Nostalgia
Mothers Day Flood, May 14-16, 2006
Sullivan’s Corner, the Last Years of the Farm
Mary Hayes, the “Little Old Lady from Ipswich” Who Was Seen Around the World
The Ipswich Chronicle wrote, "In Ipswich is the one woman whose face has been portrayed to more men, women and children in this nation than any other woman alive, with the possible exception of the President's wife. The face of the 'Little Old Lady from Ipswich' has been viewed by more than 80,000,000 people in America, Canada, Great Britain and Australia,"
Taking to the Air in Ipswich, 1910
In 1909, W. Starling Burgess joined with Augustus Moore Herring to form the Herring-Burgess Company, manufacturing aircraft under a license with the Wright Brothers, thus becoming the first licensed aircraft manufacturer in the United States. Burgessย took the initial flight ofย his first plane inย 1908 at Chebacco Lake in Hamilton, MA. Flight tests of Burgess biplanes were conducted in November and December, 1910 near Essex Road in Ipswich
Roads to Paradise
The Topsfield Linear Common and the Grand Wenham Canal
William Clancy, WWI Hero
Warned Out
Killing Wolves
One of the first laws instituted by the Massachusetts Bay Colony was a bounty on wolves, and in early Ipswich, a rather disconcerting aspect of entering the Meeting House was the site of wolf heads nailed to the door. Even in 1723, wolves were so abundant and so near the meeting house, that parents would not suffer their children to go and come from worship without some grown person.















