Beneath broad acceptance of Indian rights and benign admiration for aspects of Native culture lies inherited hostility toward Native people. Unrecognized, it has gone unchallenged, but locally I have found it evident in these six ways.
Paul and Cathleen McGinley earn 2017 Mary Conley Award
The Witchcraft Trial of Elizabeth Howe, Hanged July 19, 1692
Ipswich Pillow Lace
The Spanish Flu Epidemic Raged in Massachusetts in 1918
The Highs & Lows of the Rowley River
Tales of Olde Ipswich by Harold Bowen
A Brief History of the Choates of Ipswich, Essex, and Newburyport
John Choate, the early settler of that name arrived in Ipswich during the Great Puritan Migration of the 1630s and ‘40s as a young man, and soon eventually acquired land in Chebacco, originally a part of Ipswich which broke away in 1820. By the 3rd generation, Choate family members lived in Newbury and Newburyport, marrying… Continue reading A Brief History of the Choates of Ipswich, Essex, and Newburyport
The Sham Robbery of Elijah Goodrich on his Own Person, Tried in Ipswich
Benjamin Fewkes, the First Ipswich Hosiery Manufacturer
Benjamin Fewkes (1788-1869) was born in Loughborough, Leicestershire, England, the son of William Fewkes. He apprenticed in the stocking knitting trade, working for an uncle who owned a stocking shop in a small village called Quorn. It was in this town that he married Elizabeth Smith on 21 May 1809, daughter of Jarvis and Mary… Continue reading Benjamin Fewkes, the First Ipswich Hosiery Manufacturer
Ghosts of Independence Day
By Gavin Keenan My wife and I were reminiscing about Independence Days long past, when our children were little, some of our parents still alive, and our families mostly living nearby. Backyard cook-outs scheduled around shifts at Beverly Hospital or the I.P.D., Betty Dorman's Recreation Department Fourth of July Children's Parade - thankfully still going… Continue reading Ghosts of Independence Day
An Amazing Coincidence on July 4, 1826
“In the Good Old Summer Time” – Swampscott Estates
This Old House visits the Ipswich 1634 Meadery
1816, the Year Without Summer
On June 5, 1816 a heat wave raised the temperature in Ipswich to 92° but that afternoon a cold front swept across New England and the temperature fell to 43° by the next morning. For the next four days there were severe frosts along the Eastern seaboard, and snow was recorded in some locations. By the 9th of June ice began to form on water left standing outside overnight. Rapid, dramatic temperature swings continued throughout the summer.















