Dedham, Massachusetts

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Town in Massachusetts, United States



































































Dedham, Massachusetts
Town
Town of Dedham

First Church and Parish
First Church and Parish




Flag of Dedham, Massachusetts
Flag

Official seal of Dedham, Massachusetts
Seal
Motto(s): 
Contentment


Location in Norfolk County in Massachusetts
Location in Norfolk County in Massachusetts

Coordinates: 42°14′30″N 71°10′00″W / 42.24167°N 71.16667°W / 42.24167; -71.16667Coordinates: 42°14′30″N 71°10′00″W / 42.24167°N 71.16667°W / 42.24167; -71.16667
CountryUnited States
StateMassachusetts
CountyNorfolk
Settled1635
Incorporated1636
Named for
Dedham, Essex, England
Government

 • TypeRepresentative town meeting
 • Town
   Manager
Jim Kern
 • Board of
   Selectmen


Dennis J. Teehan Jr., Chair
James A. MacDonald, Vice-Chair
Michael L. Butler
Dennis J. Guilfoyle
Brendan G. Keogh
Area

 • Total10.6 sq mi (27.6 km2)
 • Land10.5 sq mi (27.1 km2)
 • Water0.2 sq mi (0.5 km2)
Elevation

120 ft (37 m)
Population
(2010)[1]

 • Total24,729
 • Density2,355.1/sq mi (912.5/km2)
Ethnicity[2]

 • White83.2%
 • Black5.6%
 • Hispanic6.0%
 • Asian3.2%
 • Mixed1.7%
 • Other0.3%
Ancestry[3]

 • Irish35.1%
 • Italian16.6%
 • English11.1%
 • German6.6%
 • American3.9%
Time zone
UTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)
UTC−4 (Eastern)
ZIP code
02026 (02027 for P.O. Boxes)
Area code(s)
781 / 339
FIPS code25-16495

GNIS feature ID
0618318
Websitehttp://www.dedham-ma.gov




Dedham /ˈdɛdəm/ DED-əm is a town in and the county seat of Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States.[4] The population was 24,729 at the 2010 census.[1] It is located on Boston's southwest border. On the northwest it is bordered by Needham, on the southwest by Westwood and on the southeast by Canton. The town was first settled by Europeans in 1635.




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Geography


  • 3 Demographics

    • 3.1 Religion



  • 4 Seal and flag


  • 5 Government

    • 5.1 Town Meeting

      • 5.1.1 Town Meeting members


      • 5.1.2 Warrant


      • 5.1.3 Mini Town Meeting



    • 5.2 Board of Selectmen


    • 5.3 Town Clerk


    • 5.4 Town Moderator


    • 5.5 Other boards and committees



  • 6 Politics

    • 6.1 Presidential elections


    • 6.2 U.S. Senate elections


    • 6.3 U.S. House elections


    • 6.4 Governor elections



  • 7 Economy


  • 8 Education

    • 8.1 Public education


    • 8.2 Private education


    • 8.3 Former schools


    • 8.4 Higher education



  • 9 Places of worship


  • 10 Community organizations

    • 10.1 Boy Scouts Troop 3



  • 11 Points of interest


  • 12 Transportation


  • 13 Notable people

    • 13.1 Sports


    • 13.2 Arts and literature


    • 13.3 Government

      • 13.3.1 State


      • 13.3.2 Federal



    • 13.4 Military


    • 13.5 Religious


    • 13.6 Miscellaneous


    • 13.7 Fictional



  • 14 References


  • 15 Works cited


  • 16 Further reading


  • 17 External links




History



Settled in 1635 by people from Roxbury and Watertown, Dedham was incorporated in 1636. It became the county seat of Norfolk County when the county was formed from parts of Suffolk County on March 26, 1793. When the Town was originally incorporated, the residents wanted to name it "Contentment."[5] The Massachusetts General Court overruled them and named the town after Dedham, Essex in England, where some of the original inhabitants were born.[5] The boundaries of the town at the time stretched to the Rhode Island border.


At the first public meeting on August 15, 1636, eighteen men signed the town covenant. They swore that they would "in the fear and reverence of our Almighty God, mutually and severally promise amongst ourselves and each to profess and practice one truth according to that most perfect rule, the foundation whereof is ever lasting love."


They also agreed that "we shall by all means labor to keep off from us all such as are contrary minded, and receive only such unto us as may be probably of one heart with us, [and such] as that we either know or may well and truly be informed to walk in a peaceable conversation with all meekness of spirit, [this] for the edification of each other in the knowledge and faith of the Lord Jesus…" The covenant also stipulated that if differences were to arise between townsmen, they would seek arbitration for resolution and each would pay his fair share for the common good.


In November 1798, David Brown led a group in Dedham protesting the federal government; they set up a liberty pole, as people had before the American Revolution. It carried the words, "No Stamp Act, No Sedition Act, No Alien Bills, No Land Tax, downfall to the Tyrants of America; peace and retirement to the President; Long Live the Vice President," referring to then-President John Adams and Vice President Thomas Jefferson.[6][7][8] Brown was arrested in Andover but because he could not afford the $4,000 bail, he was taken to Salem for trial.[9] Brown was tried in June 1799.[6] Although he wanted to plead guilty, Justice Samuel Chase urged him to name those who had helped him or subscribed to his writings in exchange for freedom.[6] Brown refused, was fined $480,[10][11] and sentenced to eighteen months in prison. It was the most severe sentence up to then imposed under the Alien and Sedition Acts.[6][9]


Dedham is home to the Fairbanks House, the oldest surviving timber-frame house in the United States, scientifically dated to 1637. On January 1, 1643, by unanimous vote, Dedham authorized the first taxpayer-funded public school, "the seed of American education."[12] Its first schoolmaster, Rev. Ralph Wheelock, a Clare College graduate, was paid 20 pounds annually to instruct the youth of the community. Descendants of these students would become presidents of Dartmouth College, Yale University and Harvard University.


The first man-made canal in North America, Mother Brook, was created in Dedham in 1639. It linked the Charles River to the Neponset River. Although both are slow-moving rivers, they are at different elevations. The difference in elevation made the canal's current swift enough to power several local mills.


In 1818, though citizens were still taxed for the support of ministers and other "public teachers of religion," Dedham set a precedent toward the separation of church and state. Residents of the town selected a minister different than that chosen by the church members; the selection by residents was confirmed by the Supreme Judicial Court. This decision increased support for the disestablishment of the Congregational churches.


The local Endicott Estate burned to the ground in 1904 after the local volunteer fire department, responding to three separate fires burning simultaneously, reached the Endicott fire last. By the time they arrived, only ashes remained. It is said that the estate's owner, Henry Bradford Endicott (also founder of the Endicott Johnson Corporation) took the burning of the homestead as a divine command to rebuild (which he did). The rebuilt Endicott Estate is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The estate and surrounding grounds are open to the public, upholding Henry's stepdaughter Katherine's wish to use the house and property for "educational, civic, social and recreational purposes."


In 1921, the historic Sacco and Vanzetti trial was held in the Norfolk County Courthouse in Dedham.[13]Dedham Pottery is a cherished class of antiques, characterized by a distinctive crackle glaze, blue-and-white color scheme, and a frequent motif of rabbits and other animals. Dedham is sometimes called the "mother of towns" because 14 present-day communities were included within its original broad borders.[citation needed]



Geography


Dedham is located at 42°14′40″N 71°9′55″W / 42.24444°N 71.16528°W / 42.24444; -71.16528 (42.244609, −71.165531).[14] On the northeast corner of High Street and Court Street the U.S. Coast & Geodetic Survey, now the U.S. National Geodetic Survey, has placed a small medallion into a granite block showing an elevation of 112.288 feet.


Dedham is made up of a number of neighborhoods:


  • In the geographical center of town is Oakdale. It is roughly defined by East Street to the west, Cedar Street to the south and east, and Whiting Ave to the north. The houses in the area around Woodleigh Road, which was declared to be one of the best streets in Greater Boston, have many homes designed by Henry Bailey Alden, who also designed the Endicott Estate.[15] Nearby the subdivision consisting of Morse Avenue, Fulton Street, and Edison Avenue, is named Whiting Park.[16]


  • Riverdale is an island surrounded by the Charles River and Long Ditch.


  • Greenlodge runs along the axis of Greenlodge Street and the area between Greenlodge Street and East Street.


  • The Manor comprises the neighborhood south of Sprague Street.


  • East Dedham falls between Mother Brook and the Boston line.


  • Precinct One, or Upper Dedham, is in the northwest corner of the town, between High Street and Common Street and the Westwood and Needham lines.


  • Ashcroft is the neighborhood between Cedar Street and Sprague Street. It includes Paul Park and the Capen School.


  • Fairbanks is the neighborhood between East Street and Wigwam Pond.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 10.6 square miles (27 km2), of which 10.4 square miles (27 km2) is land and 0.2 square miles (0.52 km2) (1.79%) is water.



Demographics

























































Historical population
YearPop.±%
18504,447—    
18606,330+42.3%
18707,342+16.0%
18806,233−15.1%
18907,123+14.3%
19007,457+4.7%
19109,284+24.5%
192010,782+16.1%
193015,136+40.4%
194015,508+2.5%
195018,487+19.2%
196023,869+29.1%
197026,938+12.9%
198025,298−6.1%
199023,782−6.0%
200023,464−1.3%
201024,729+5.4%
* = population estimate.
Source: United States Census records and Population Estimates Program data.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26]

As of the census[27] of 2000, there were 23,464 people, 8,654 households, and 6,144 families residing in the town. The population density was 2,244.6 people per square mile (866.9/km²). There were 8,908 housing units at an average density of 852.2 per square mile (329.1/km²). The racial makeup of the town was 94.51% White, 1.54% Black or African American, 0.16% Native American, 1.87% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 0.80% from other races, and 1.08% from two or more races. 2.42% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.


There are 8,654 households, of which 30.1% have children under the age of 18 living with them. 56.3% were married couples living together, 11.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 29.0% were non-families. 23.9% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.61 and the average family size was 3.14.


Dedham's population is spread out with 22.2% under the age of 18, 5.8% from 18 to 24, 31.1% from 25 to 44, 24.2% from 45 to 64, and 16.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females, there were 93.4 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.0 males.


The median income for a household in the town was $61,699, and the median income for a family was $72,330. Males had a median income of $46,216 versus $35,682 for females. The per capita income for the town was $28,199. About 3.2% of families and 4.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 3.9% of those under age 18 and 6.5% of those age 65 or over.



Religion






































Religious Affiliation in Dedham, MA, 1980-2010[28]
Religion
1980
1990
2000
2010
Catholic
50.14%
54.67%
58.58%
52.97%
Mainline Protestant
13.34%
7.3%
6.18%
4.93%
Evangelical Protestant
.85%
1.88%
1.45%
1.69%
Orthodox Christian
n/a
n/a
1.16%
.53%
Other
1.27%
6.88%
7.13%
4.56%
Unaffiliated
34.39%
29.28%
25.52%
35.33%


Seal and flag




The Town of Dedham's flag


The town's seal was originally designed by a member of the Dedham Historical Society.[29] In the center is a crest containing the Old Avery Oak.[29] When the tree was finally felled, the gavel used by the Moderator at Town Meeting was carved out of it.[30] Above the tree are the scales of justice, representing Dedham as the county seat and home to Norfolk County's courts.[29] On the left of the tree are agricultural instruments, and on the right is a factory, showing Dedham's history first as a town of farmers and then as one with a number of mills and factories, particularly along Mother Brook.[29] Below the tree is a banner with the word "Contentment," the name of the original plantation.[29]


The town flag is red with the seal prominent and in the center. In the lower left corner is part of the Avery Oak, and in the lower right is part of the Fairbanks House. It hangs in the selectmen's chambers at town hall and in the Great Hall of the Massachusetts State House.



Government


A charter adopted in 1998 lays out the basic structure of the Town government, although it has been amended occasionally over the years. A seven-member Charter Advisory Committee, appointed in 2012, recommended six substantial changes and numerous minor changes be made to the document. The Selectmen consolidated them into six articles for Town Meeting's consideration, and five were presented to the Meeting in 2013. Voters approved four of them in 2014. A version of the sixth and final proposal was adopted at the Spring 2014 Annual Town Meeting.



Town Meeting


According to Dedham's Charter, the "administration of all the fiscal, prudential, and municipal affairs of the town, with the government thereof, shall be vested in a legislative branch, to consist of a representative town meeting." Town Meeting is to consist of no less than 270 members, but not more than necessary to achieve an equal number coming from each precinct. There are currently seven districts, but could be as few as six or as many as nine, with lines drawn by the Board of Selectmen and the Registrars of Voters every ten years.


Votes are by voice unless members call for a standing or roll call vote, either of which can be called for by the Moderator. All Town officers are required to attend Town Meeting and multiple member bodies must send at least one representative who have all the privileges of a Member except the right to vote. If 5% of Town voters petition the Board of Selectmen within 14 days of Town Meeting, any action taken may be submitted to voters. The final result is to be determined by majority vote, but Town Meeting can not be overruled unless 20% of registered voters participate.


Town Meeting sets its own rules and keeps a journal of proceedings. The Town Meeting may establish various ad-hoc and standing committees on which any Town Meeting Member or voter may serve.


Before each Spring Annual Town Meeting, the Public Service Recognition Award is given to recognize citizens who have performed outstanding acts of service to the community.[31][32]



Town Meeting members


Currently Town Meeting consists of 273 members, or representatives, with each of the seven districts, or precincts, electing 39. Thirteen are elected from each precinct each year and serve a three-year term. Each precinct elects from its own members a Chairman, Vice Chairman, and Secretary.


To be eligible, candidates must have 10 registered voters from their precinct sign nomination papers. Town Meeting Representatives can not serve on any other elected board or on the Finance and Warrant Committee. Members who move from the district or are removed by redistricting may serve until the next Town Election; however, any member who moves out of the Town immediately ceases to be a Member.


In case of a vacancy, the remaining term is to be filled at the next town election. If no election is to take place within 120 days of the vacancy, then the district chairman is to call together the members of the district, and they are to elect a member who will serve until the next town election.



Warrant


The Warrant at Town Meeting includes the articles to be voted on. Any elected or appointed board, committee, town officer, or any ten voters may place an article on the warrant. Each article to be voted on is directed by the Board of Selectmen to an appropriate board or committee to hear and provide the original motion at Town Meeting. All articles expending funds are directed to the Finance Committee; articles dealing with planning and zoning to the Planning Board; articles relating to by-laws to the By-Law Committee. The Finance Committee recommendation has the force of the original motion on all articles except those related to zoning. The Planning Board makes the original motion for those.



Mini Town Meeting


The Chairmen of the several districts elect from amongst themselves a chairman. This Chairman of the Chairmen hosts what is officially known as the District Chairmen's Warrant Review Meeting, but is much more commonly referred to as Mini Town Meeting. The "Mini," first held in 1978, is generally a week or two before the actual Town Meeting.[33] The purpose of the Mini is to air out several of the contentious issues before bringing them to the floor of Town Meeting.



Board of Selectmen


The executive branch of the Town Government is "headed" by a Board of Selectmen. The Board of Selectmen have five members who are elected for three-year terms and are the chief policy making body for the town. They appoint a Town Manager who runs the day-to-day affairs of the Town. They also appoint constables, registrars of voters and other election officers, the board of appeals, conservation commission, historic district commission, and members of several other multiple member boards.


Selectmen set policy for all departments below it, but are not involved in the day-to-day affairs of the Town. They issue licenses and can investigate the affairs and the conduct of any town agency.



Town Clerk


The Elected Town Clerk serves a three-year term and works full-time for the Town. The Clerk is "the keeper of vital statistics of the town and the custodian of the town seal and all public records, administer[s] the oaths of office to all town officers... [and is] the clerk of the town meeting." In the role as clerk of town meeting, he notifies the public and members of the Town Meeting and keeps a verbatim record of proceedings.



Town Moderator


Town Meetings are presided over by the Town Moderator, but he has no vote unless all the Members present and voting are equally divided. At the first Town Meeting following the annual town election, he is to appoint, subject to Town Meeting's confirmation, a Deputy Moderator from the elected Members. The Deputy serves in case of the Moderator's absence or disability. The current Town Moderator is Dan Driscoll.



Other boards and committees


The seven members of the School Committee are elected for three-year terms and appoint a Superintendent of Schools. They also set policy for the School Department. The School Committee is currently chaired by Stephen M. Bilafer, with Kevin R. Coughlin serving as Vice Chair. The other members of the committee are Mayanne MacDonald Briggs, Lisa Laprade, Tracey White, Joshua Donati, and Melissa Pearrow.[34]


The three elected members of the Board of Assessors serve three-year terms and annually make a fair cash valuation of all property within the town. The current chair of the board is Richard J. Schoenfeld, with John M. Healy serving as Vice-Chair and Christopher J. Polito serving as Clerk.


The three elected members of the Board of Health are responsible for the formulation and enforcement of rules and regulations affecting the environment and the public health. Currently the board is chaired by Leanne Jasset, B.S.P. RPH, with Katherine M Reda R.N serving as Vice Chair. Patricia M Roberts R.N also serves on the board.


The Board of Library Trustees has five members, each of whom serves three-year terms, and has care of the Town's public library at the Endicott Branch and Main Branch. The Board is responsible for all library policy, the library budget, and hiring and firing the library director. The board is currently chaired by Margaret M. Connolly, with Sarah Santos serving as Vice Chair. Monika E. Wilkinson, Mary Ann Silwa, and Tracy L. Driscoll also serve on the board.


The five elected members of the Planning Board make studies and prepare plans concerning the resources, possibilities, and needs of the town. It also prepares the Master Plan. Currently the board is chaired by John R. Bethoney, with Robert D. Aldous serving as clerk. Jessica Porter, Michael A. Podolski, Esq. and James E. O'Brien IV are also members.


There are five elected members of the Parks & Recreation Commission. Section 3-10 of the Town Charter states that the goal of the commission is to promote physical education, play, recreation, sport and other programs for people of all ages. The commission is currently chaired by Chuck Dello Iacono, with Salvatore P. Ledda serving as Vice Chair. James Maher, Jon Briggs, and Tye Donahue serve as Members of the commission.


There are five elected Commissioners of the Trust Funds who manage and control all funds left, given, bequeathed, or devised to the town, and distribute the income in accordance with the terms of the respective trusts. The commission is currently chaired by Michael E. Malamut, with Ronald B. Slack serving as Vice Chair. Bob Desmond, Emily Reynolds, and Salvatore A Spada currently serve as members.


There are five members of the Housing Authority. Four are elected by the Town and one is appointed by the Commonwealth Commissioner of Community Affairs. As members of the Board, they have all of the powers and duties which are given to housing authorities under the constitution and laws of the Commonwealth. The board is currently chaired by John G. Wagner, with Mary Louise Munchbach serving as Vice Chair. Catherine Luna serves as the board's Treasurer with Donna M. Brown as Assistant Treasurer. The current State Appointee to the board is Margaret Matthews.



Politics



Presidential elections




































































































































































































































Presidential election results
Year

Republican

Democratic

Libertarian

Green-Rainbow

Constitution

Reform

Natural Law

Workers World

New Alliance

Socialist Workers

Citizens

American

Labor

American Independent

Socialist Labor

People's

Independent

Write-in votes

2016[35]

4,778 (33.12%) Trump and Pence

8,621 (59.76%) Clinton and Kaine

570 (3.95%) Johnson and Weld

149 (1.03%) Stein and Baraka













1 (0.01%) McMullin and Johnson

308 (2.13%)

2012[36]

5,734 (41.83%) Romney and Ryan

7,757 (56.58%) Obama and Biden

122 (0.89%) Johnson and Gray

54 (0.39%) Stein and Honkala














42 (0.31%)

2008[37]

5,361 (42.00%) McCain and Palin

7,108 (55.69%) Obama and Biden

62 (0.49%) Barr and Root

25 (0.20%) McKinney and Clemente

20 (0.16%) Baldwin and Castle












116 (0.91%) Nader and Gonzalez

71 (0.56%)

2004[38]

4,866 (39.31%) Bush and Cheney

7,410 (59.87%) Kerry and Edwards

66 (0.53%) Badnarik and Campagna

35 (0.28%) Cobb and LaMarche

2000[39]

4,110 (34.38%) Bush and Cheney

7,028 (58.79%) Gore and Lieberman

72 (0.60%) Browne and Olivier

645 (5.40%) Nader and LaDuke


67 (0.56%) Buchanan and Higgins

8 (0.07%) Hagelin and Tompkins











25 (0.21%)

1996[40]

3,672 (32.36%) Dole and Kemp

6,620 (58.33%) Clinton and Gore

111 (0.98%) Browne and Jorgensen



914 (8.05%) Perot and Choate

21 (0.19%) Hagelin and Tompkins

11 (0.10%) Moorehead and LaRiva

1992[41]

4,409 (33.77%) Bush and Quayle

5,675 (43.47%) Clinton and Gore

39 (0.30%) Marrou and Lord


11 (0.08%) Phillips and Knight Phillips


7 (0.05%) Hagelin and Tompkins


4 (0.03%) Fulani and Munoz








2,907 (22.27%) Perot and Stockdale

4 (0.03%)

1988[42]

6,440 (49.53%) Bush and Quayle

6,341 (48.77%) Dukakis and Bentsen

146 (1.12%) Paul and Marrou






66 (0.51%) Fulani and Dattner









10 (0.08%)

1984[43]

7,040 (54.71%) Reagan and Bush

5,782 (44.94%) Mondale and Ferraro







36 (0.28%) Serrette and Ross









9 (0.07%)

1980[44]

6,367 (46.74%) Reagan and Bush

5,071 (37.23%) Carter and Mondale

123 (0.90%) Clark and Koch







24 (0.18%) DeBerry and Zimmerman

4 (0.03%) Commoner and Harris






2,013 (14.78%) Anderson and Lucey

20 (0.15%)

1976[45]

6,137 (45.55%) Ford and Dole

6,853 (50.86%) Carter and Mondale

1 (0.01%) MacBride and Bergland







42 (0.31%) Camejo and Reid


37 (0.27%) Anderson and Shackelford

43 (0.32%) LaRouche and Evans




355 (2.63%) McCarthy and Stouffer

5 (0.04%)

1972[46]

6,041 (44.35%) Nixon and Agnew

7,209 (52.92%) McGovern and Shriver








61 (0.45%) Jenness and Pulley




51 (0.37%) Schmitz and Anderson

2 (0.01%) Fisher and Gunderson

1 (0.01%) Spock and Hobson




U.S. Senate elections

















































































































































































































































































































U.S. Senate election results
Year

Republican

Democratic
Twelve Visions

Libertarian

Constitution
Timesizing Not Downsizing

Conservative

Natural Law

LaRouche Was Right

Socialist Workers

U.S. Labor Party

Prohibition

Independent

Write-in votes

2018[47]

4,665 (38.19%) Geoff Diehl

7,157 (58.60%) Elizabeth A. Warren











378 (3.09%) Shiva Ayyadurai

14 (0.11%)

2014[48]

3,624 (38.80%) Brian J. Herr

5,706 (61.09%) Edward J. Markey












10 (0.10%)

2013[49]

2,846 (49.26%) Gabriel E. Gomez

2,885 (49.93%) Edward J. Markey

26 (0.45%) Richard A. Heos











21 (0.36%)

2012[50]

6,951 (50.82%) Scott P. Brown

6,715 (49.09%) Elizabeth A. Warren












12 (0.09%)

2010[51]

5,979 (55.47%) Scott P. Brown

4,647 (43.11%) Martha Coakley











147 (1.36%) Joseph L. Kennedy

6 (0.06%)

2008[52]

4,326 (34.93%) Jeffrey K. Beatty

7,707 (62.22%) John F. Kerry


342 (2.76%) Robert J. Underwood










11 (0.09%)

2006[53]

3,048 (31.59%) Kenneth G. Chase

6,587 (68.27%) Edward M. Kennedy












14 (0.15%)

2002[54]


7,522 (79.88%) John F. Kerry


1,791 (19.02%) Michael E. Cloud









67 (0.71%) Randall Forsberg

37 (0.39%)

2000[55]

1,295 (11.24%) Jack E. Robinson, III

8,277 (71.89%) Edward M. Kennedy


1,457 (12.65%) Carla A. Howell

409 (3.55%) Philip F. Lawler

35 (0.30%) Philip Hyde, III







39 (0.34%) Dale E. Friedgen

5 (0.04%)

1996[56]

5,173 (45.26%) William F. Weld

5,757 (50.37%) John F. Kerry





472 (4.13%) Susan C. Gallagher

28 (0.24%) Robert C. Stowe







1994[57]

4,498 (43.06%) W. Mitt Romney

5,858 (56.08%) Edward M. Kennedy


65 (0.62%) Lauraleigh Dozier





25 (0.24%) William A. Ferguson, Jr.






1990[58]

4,905 (42.21%) Jim Rappaport

6,715 (57.79%) John F. Kerry













1988[59]

5,221 (40.52%) Joseph D Malone

7,553 (58.62%) Edward M. Kennedy











64 (0.50%) Mary Fridley

22 (0.17%) Freda Lee Nason

1984[60]

6,621 (51.79%) Raymond Shamie

6,159 (48.18%) John F. Kerry












4 (0.03%)

1982[61]

4,692 (41.48%) Ray Shamie

6,545 (57.86%) Edward M. Kennedy


72 (0.64%) Howard S. Katz










2 (0.02%)

1978[62]

4,494 (40.82%) Edward Brooke

6,504 (59.07%) Paul E. Tsongas












11 (0.10%)

1976[63]

4,728 (36.59%) Michael S. Robertson

7,932 (61.39%) Edward M. Kennedy








134 (1.04%) Carol Henderson Evans

126 (0.98%) H. Graham Lowry




1972[64]

7,748 (58.25%) Edward Brooke

5,417 (40.73%) John J. Droney








135 (1.01%) Donald Gurewitz




1 (0.01%)

1970[65]

4,311 (38.50%) Josiah A. Spaulding

6,807 (60.80%) Edward M. Kennedy








25 (0.22%) Lawrence Gilfedder


47 (0.42%) Mark R. Shaw


6 (0.05%)


U.S. House elections





















































































































































U.S. House election results
Year

District

Republican

Democratic

Conservative

Socialist Workers

Unenrolled

Write-in votes

2018[66]

8


9,721 (98.61%) Stephen F. Lynch




137 (1.39%)

2016[67]

8

3,379 (24.46%) William Burke

10,414 (75.37%) Stephen F. Lynch




24 (0.17%)

2014[68]

8


7,371 (98.44%) Stephen F. Lynch




117 (1.56%)

2012[69]

8

2,949 (23.01%) Joe Selvaggi

9,844 (76.81%) Stephen F. Lynch




23 (0.18%)

2010[70]

9

2,474 (24.95%) Vernon M. Harrison

6,616 (66.73%) Stephen F. Lynch



810 (8.17%) Philip Dunklebarger

14 (0.14%)

2008[71]

9


9,609 (98.74%) Stephen F. Lynch




123 (1.26%)

2006[72]

9

2,474 (26.41%) Jack E. Robinson, III

7,407 (79.08%) Stephen F. Lynch




20 (0.21%)

2004[73]

9


8,957 (100.00%) Stephen F. Lynch





2002[74]

9


7,434 (98.88%) Stephen F. Lynch




84 (1.12%)

2001[75]

9

1,132 (32.84%) Jo Ann Sprague

2,266 (65.74%) Stephen F. Lynch

33 (0.99%) Susan Gallagher C. Long

16 (0.48%) Brock R. Satter



2000[76]

9

2,775 (24.18%) Janet E. Jeghelian

8,454 (73.65%) John Joseph Moakley



242 (2.11%) David A. Rosa

7 (0.06%)

1998[77]

9


7,029 (98.96%) John Moakley




74 (1.04%)

1996[78]

9

3,952 (35.55%) Paul V. Gryska

7,165 (64.45%) John Moakley





1994[79]

9

3,147 (31.40%) Michael M. Murphy

6,874 (68.60%) John Moakley





1992[80]

9

2,647 (21.76%) Martin D. Conboy

8,437 (69.34%) John Moakley



663 (5.45%) Lawrence C. Mackin

420 (3.45%) Robert W. Horan

1990[81]

9


7,799 (68.67%) John Moakley



3,556 (31.31%) Robert W. Horan

2 (0.02%)

1988[82]

9


10,200 (99.99%) John Moakley




1 (0.02%)


Governor elections













































Govrnor election results
Year

Republican

Democratic

United Independent

Unenrolled

Unenrolled

Green-Rainbow

Write-in votes

2018[83]

8,264 (68.76%) Baker and Polito

3,711 (30.88%) Gonzalez and Palfrey





43 (0.36%)

2014[84]

5,107 (52.09%) Baker and Polito

4,299 (43.84%) Coakley and Kerrigan

270 (2.75%) Falchuk and Jennings

66 (0.67%) Lively and Saunders

53 (0.54%) Mccormick and Post


10 (0.10%)

2010[85]

4,674 (45.18%) Baker and Tisei

4,513 (43.62%) Patrick and Murray


1,032 (9.98%) Cahill and Losocco


113 (1.09%) Stein and Purcell

13 (0.10%)

2006[86]

4,111 (41.39%) Healey and Hillman

4,874 (49.07%) Patrick and Murray


736 (7.41%) Mihos and Sullivan


197 (1.98%) Ross and Robinson

14 (0.14%)


Economy


The theater company and Viacom/ CBS Corporation parent National Amusements is based in Dedham.
Dedham is also home to The Norfolk & Dedham Group, a regional mutual insurance company.



Education



Public education


The Dedham Public Schools operates seven schools and is known for the first implementation of a tax supported, free public school system, now used nationally.


  • Dedham High School

  • Dedham Middle School

  • Avery Elementary School

  • Oakdale Elementary School

  • Greenlodge Elementary School

  • Riverdale Elementary School

  • Dr. Thomas J. Curren Early Childhood Education Center


Private education


In addition, there are several private schools in the town, including:



  • Noble and Greenough School, a private, co-educational day and boarding school for students in grades 7-12

  • Dedham Country Day School, a private, co-educational, day school for students in pre-kindergarten to eighth grade


  • Ursuline Academy, an independent college preparatory day school for young women in grades 7–12.

  • The Rashi School, a Reform Jewish elementary and middle school.

  • Little Sprouts Early Education and Childcare, a preschool and kindergarten.


Former schools



  • Ames School, a former public elementary school named after distinguished Dedham resident Fisher Ames.

  • Charles J. Capen School, operated from 1931-1981, now home to the Dr. Thomas J. Curren Early Childhood Education Center[87]


  • St. Mary of the Assumption School, a former Catholic elementary school that operated as a part of St. Mary of the Assumption Parish until 1975.

  • The Quincy School, a former public elementary school that operated until 1982.

  • The Dexter School, a former public elementary school now operating as a private preschool and kindergarten, Little Sprouts Early Education and Childcare, Dedham location.


Higher education



  • Queen of Apostles Seminary, a former Catholic minor seminary run by the Society of African Missions, closed in the 1980s


  • Northeastern University Dedham Campus, a satellite campus located in the Queen of Apostles Seminary's former building


Places of worship




The former First Church of Christ, Scientist building in Dedham.


































































Place of worship
Denomination
Size
Founded

First Church and Parish

Unitarian Universalist

1638 (Split in 1818)

Allin Congregational Church

United Church of Christ

1638 (Split in 1818)

St. Paul's Episcopal Church
The Episcopal Church

1758
Fellowship Bible Church
Nondenominational

prev. Baptist



1843

St. Mary of the Assumption Church

Roman Catholic
2,329 families[88]1866
Church of the Good Shepherd

The Episcopal Church

1877
St. Luke's Lutheran Church

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

1893
St. John of Damascus Church

Eastern Orthodox Church

1907

St. Susanna Church

Roman Catholic

1960
Calvary Baptist Church

Independent Baptist


Dedham Temple

Seventh-day Adventist


The Link Church

Assemblies of God


Former places of worship
Place of worship
Denomination
Founded
Closed

First Church of Christ, Scientist

Church of Christ, Scientist
1939
2000s

St. Raphael's

Roman Catholic
1878
1887

Boston United Hand in Hand Cemetery is located on Lower East Street straddling the West Roxbury line. Dating back to 1875, the original plot was full by 1896 but subsequently expanded a number of times. There are graves as recent as 1980 in the West Roxbury portion; the Dedham portion is still active. Chestnut Hill's Congregation Mishka Tefila currently owns the property.[89]



Community organizations


Dedham is home to a number of community organizations, including


  • The Dedham Combined Veterans Council

  • The American Legion Post 18

  • The Disabled American Veterans Chapter 42

  • The USS Jacob Jones (DD-61) Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2017

  • The AMVETS Post 1636

  • The Knights of Columbus

  • The Rotary Club

  • The Moose Club

  • The Italian – American Citizens Club of Dedham

  • The Boy Scouts of America

  • The Friends of the Dedham Public Library

  • The Dedham Junior Women's Club

  • The Dedham Square Circle

  • The Dedham Community House

  • The James Joyce Ramble

  • The Dedham Historical Society

  • The Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves


Boy Scouts Troop 3


Troop 3 of the Boy Scouts of America was founded on March 5, 1917 by Charles H. Stackpole, a 52-year-old Methodist clergyman who served as the troop's first Scoutmaster.[90] As of 2017[update], Peter Low was Scoutmaster.[90] It is currently chartered at the Church of the Good Shepard in Oakdale Square.[90]



Points of interest




Mill Pond Park


  • The American Legion Post 18

  • Dedham Country Day School

  • Dedham Health and Athletic Complex

  • Dedham Historical Society and Museum

  • Dedham Public Library

  • Dedham Village Historic District

  • East Dedham Firehouse, possibly the oldest wood framed firehouse in use in the United States.[91] Originally built in 1855, it was designed with stables in the basement for the horses that carried the apparatus.[91]

  • Endicott Estate

  • Fairbanks House

  • Legacy Place, outdoor shopping center.[92]

  • MIT Endicott House


  • Moseley’s on the Charles, the oldest continuous-running ballroom in the country


  • Mother Brook (first man-made waterway in the United States)

  • Noble & Greenough School


  • Norfolk County Correctional Center, situated in the median of Route 128.

  • Ursuline Academy and Convent

  • The USS Jacob Jones VFW Post 2017

  • Flag Day Parade: The Flag Day Parade began in 1967 and quickly became one of Dedham's most beloved traditions.[93] In 2017, for the 50th anniversary, the parade was moved from the traditional June 14, Flag Day, to Saturday, June 17.[94] This was to accommodate the fireworks at Memorial Park that were part of the celebration.[94]


Transportation


Commuter rail service from Boston's South Station is provided by the MBTA with stops at Endicott and
Dedham Corporate Center on its Franklin Line. Also MBTA Bus route 34 Dedham Line to Forest Hills serves Washington Street. Bus route 34E Walpole Center to Forest Hills serves Washington Street, Dedham Square, and the Dedham Mall. Bus route 35 Dedham Mall to Forest Hills serves Washington Street.



Notable people



Sports



  • Buck Danner, infielder for the Philadelphia Athletics[95]


  • Pete Hamilton, NASCAR driver[96]


  • John Frederick Kiley outfielder for the Washington Nationals (1884) and Boston Beaneaters (1891)[97]


  • Lefty Mills, early American one-armed baseball player[98]


  • Freddy Roach, professional boxer[99]


  • Sarah Parsons, member of the 2006 Winter Olympics women's hockey team[100]


  • Warren Cummings Smith, alpine skier in the 2014 Winter Olympics men's giant slalom and slalom[101]


  • Bill Hunnefield, infielder for Chicago White Sox (1926-1930), Cleveland Indians (1931), Boston Braves (1931) and New York Giants (1931).[102]


Arts and literature



  • Louisa May Alcott, author of Little Women, lived and worked for seven weeks during 1851 as a domestic helper in Dedham[103]


  • Tim Costello (1945–2009), labor and anti-globalization advocate and author[104]


  • Jacques d'Amboise, ballet dancer and choreographer


  • George Derby, humorist


  • Alvan Fisher, artist


  • Reuben Guild, librarian and author


  • Lilian Westcott Hale, artist


  • Connie Hines, television actress


  • Peter H. Reynolds, children's author and illustrator


  • Anita Shreve, author


  • Richard Trethewey, plumber on This Old House


Government



State



  • Deborah R. Cochran, Representative to the Great and General Court[105]


  • Maryanne Lewis, Representative to the Great and General Court[106]


  • Horace Mann, education reformer and abolitionist[107]


  • Theron Metcalf, Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court[108]


  • Charles M. McGowan, businessman and Representative to the Great and General Court[109]


  • Paul McMurtry, Representative to the Great and General Court[110]


  • Betty Jo Nelsen, member of the Wisconsin State Assembly [111]


  • Mason Sears, 1899-1973) Representative to the Great and General Court and chairman of the Massachusetts Republican Party [112]


  • Waldo Colburn, (1824-1885) Massachusetts State Representative, Massachusetts State Supreme Court Justice[113]


Federal



  • Fisher Ames, U.S. Representative[114]


  • Louis Brandeis, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States [115]


  • LeBaron Bradford Colt, U.S. Senator[116]


  • Samuel Dexter, U.S. Representative, Secretary of War, Secretary of the Treasury, administered oath of office to Chief Justice John Marshall[117]


  • Frederick D. Ely, U.S. Representative[118]


  • David Hackett, head of President's Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Crime, inspiration for Phineas in A Separate Peace[119]


  • John William McCormack, Speaker of U.S. House of Representatives[120]


  • John Lothrop Motley, historian, Minister to Great Britain[121], Minister to Austrian Empire[122]


  • Frederick J. Stimson, Ambassador to Argentina (1914–1921), Assistant Attorney General of Massachusetts[123]


  • George F. Williams, U.S. Representative, Ambassador to Greece and Montenegro, known as "sage of Dedham"[124]


Military



  • John Andrew Barnes, III, war hero, Medal of Honor winner


  • Ebenezer Battelle, Revolutionary War veteran


  • Leon A. Edney, former Supreme Allied Commander, NATO Atlantic Forces, United States Atlantic Command, Commodore Admiral, US Navy


  • William B. Gould, formerly enslaved and Union Navy sailor


  • James William Augustus Nicholson, Rear Admiral, U.S. Navy


  • Stephen Minot Weld, Jr., Civil War hero


  • Thomas Sherwin, General in the Civil War


Religious



  • Eliphalet Adams, (1677–1753), clergyman and missionary to the Native Americans[114]


  • John Allin, patriarch of New England and signatory to the covenant.


Miscellaneous



  • Weaver W. Adams, chess master


  • Nathaniel Ames, almanac-maker and physician


  • Faxon Atherton, businessman and namesake of Atherton, California


  • Jason Fairbanks, murderer


  • Jonathan Fairbanks, builder of the Fairbanks House


  • Temple Grandin, professor of animal science, inventor and autism advocate [125]


  • Samuel Haven, archaeologist and anthropologist


  • Eli Sagan (1927-2015), clothing manufacturer, lecturer and author in cultural anthropology and political activist who served on the national finance committee for George McGovern's 1972 presidential campaign, a role that earned him a spot on Richard Nixon's Enemies List in 1973.[126]


  • Tommy Vietor, National Security Council spokesperson, podcast host of Pod Save America.[127][128]


Fictional



  • Alan Shore from Boston Legal and The Practice television series


References




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Works cited



  • Curtis, Michael Kent (2000). Free speech, "the people's darling privilege": struggles for freedom of expression in American history. Duke University Press. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-8223-2529-1.

  • Parr, James L. (2009). Dedham: Historic and Heroic Tales From Shiretown. The History Press. ISBN 978-1-59629-750-0.

  • Stone, Geoffrey R. (2004). Perilous times: free speech in wartime from the Sedition Act of 1798 to the war on terrorism. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-393-05880-2.

  • Simon, James F. (2003). What Kind of Nation: Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States. Simon and Schuster. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-684-84871-6.

  • Tise, Larry E. (1998). The American counterrevolution: a retreat from liberty, 1783–1800. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-0100-6.


Further reading



  • Kenneth Alan Lockridge (1985). A New England Town: The First Hundred Years : Dedham, Massachusetts, 1636-1736. W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-95459-3.

  • Cremin, Lawrence A., "American Education: The Colonial Experience 1607–1783," First Edition, New York, Harper & Row, Publishers, 1970.

  • Hanson, Robert Brand, "Dedham, Massachusetts, 1635–1890," published by Dedham Historical Society, 1976


External links




  • Dedham's official website

  • Boston.com's Dedham news page


  • "Taxation for Religion in Early Massachusetts" – Ronald Golini mentions the role of the 1818 "Dedham case"








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