EASTON HISTORICAL SOCIETY AND MUSEUM
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HIDDEN TREASURES

8/30/2025

 

​Late August- the water in Cape Cod Bay is at its warmest, garden tomatoes are in abundance- there might come a perfect summer day- hot but not too hot, clear, dry air- and memories seep in so I go looking to remember. There’s a place I haven’t been to in decades, mostly because I wasn’t sure how to get there and concerned that it was now private property, but after looking at a Natural Resources Trust easement map kindly provided by EHS member Paul Berry, I set out believing I was permitted to be there. Basically, I was along the Queset as it runs west of Main Street, between Main Street and the Town Pool. I remember being a kid riding my bike to the library and heading into the meadow behind Queset House, back where Hobart Ames’s house once was, and exploring along the banks of the brook with siblings and cousins looking for crayfish and turtles. One time bringing home a small snapping turtle. I remember just sitting in the grass with the silence- but for the buzzing of the bees. This place- a hidden treasure.

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​There are still hidden treasures, and sometimes you can still get to them. Off Elm Street in North Easton new homes are currently being built. Not too far beyond the construction tape at the very rear of the site is Wayside’s old root cellar. Still there. A year and a half ago there was a sign on a tree near the wooden bridge over the brook, that read “Louis Frothingham’s Goldfish Pond.” The sign is now gone. Change is inevitable but I’m glad the root cellar still stands.

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​Curious stonework still hides away off South Street near where it meets Highland. Many industries thrived at least temporarily at this location, beginning as early as 1742 when members of the Keith and Williams families built a sawmill on the Mulberry Brook. Later the site hosted a gristmill, linseed oil mill, shingle mill, and several other industries, all relatively modest enterprises. Prior to his death in 1927 Eleazer Keith used the building as a duck house. Thereafter it was abandoned. The area is overgrown and difficult to access but interesting. The little Mulberry Brook was quite useful in its day.

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Easton, like all places will continue to transform and change. Although this sometimes feels unfortunate it is the way life is. Once Indigenous people traveled the Old Bay Road and farmed near Easton green. We must look hard to find evidence of them. The same will be true of us someday.
 
Anne Wooster Drury

 
Easton Historical Society and Museum
Easton’s Neighborhoods, by Ed Hands

Fanny Holt Ames & Edna Louise Holt

8/16/2025

 

Fanny Holt Ames (1888-1986) was the second wife of William Hadwen Ames, son of Oliver Ames, and he built his residence, Spring Hill, on Elm Street. The house still stands today. Young Fanny, born in Natick, MA, attended business school, went on to work as a secretary, and that is how she met William Hadwen Ames- in his Boston office. They married in 1916. Mr. Ames’s first wife, Daisy, had died in 1914. Unfortunately, Fanny had little time with her new husband, he died in 1920 when she was quite young- only 30 years old. In memory of her husband Fanny gifted the Children’s Wing at Ames Free Library in 1931 and her portrait hangs near the children’s room today. In addition, Mrs. Ames served on the Board of Trustees of the library for 40 years.

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In 1962 Fanny and her sister Edna Louise Holt (Louise) moved to Grafton, VT where they lived when they were not travelling. Mrs. Ames visited historic sites and enjoyed cruising. Some ports of call were Karnak in Egypt, Vienna, Isfahan, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Naples, and Ceylon. Fanny kept diaries of her travels and photographic plates. Discovered in 2000, the diaries were transcribed and published by the Ames Free Library. The book, The Travel Journals of Fanny Holt Ames 1954-1973, which includes her photos, is available at the Easton Historical Society and Museum or on our website. The Ames Free Library has a copy in the reference section.

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Fanny took good care of her inheritance from her husband William and continued endowing her husband’s charities, including Ames Free Library, after his death. In 1983 Fanny and her sister Louise suffered a car accident in Vermont and Fanny was killed. Louise was hospitalized for weeks and was very appreciative of the fact that she could afford excellent health care. Grace Cottage Hospital in Townshend, Vermont became very dear to her. Her doctor, Dr. Bob Backus, made regular house calls and remembered Louise as, “a diminutive, cultured, twinkling-eyed New England lady”. Realizing not everyone was as fortunate as she was, Louise set up a trust which she named The FANNY HOLT AMES and EDNA LOUISE HOLT CHARITABLE FUND. In both sisters’ names, its purpose was to meet the medical needs of the Grafton area community and particularly benefit Cottage Hospital in Townshend VT. In 2000 the trust was worth over $30 million. Louise was 97 when she died.

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Fanny Holt Ames and her sister Louise very much enjoyed travelling but are said to have been relatively frugal in their Vermont life. Both were philanthropic, sharing their good fortune. The Grafton area community is still enjoying their generosity today.

 
Anne Wooster Drury
 
Sources/Links:

Grace Cottage Hospital Otis Health Care Center Newsletter, Fall/Winter, 2000
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Introduction to The Travel Journals of Fanny Holt Ames 1954-1973, by the Directors of Ames Free Library, 2000

Obbatinewat

8/2/2025

 

Obbatinewat, Shamut Sachem, (circa 1610-1630), subject of bronze bust created by Adelbert Ames. The bust was donated by Virginia L. Fresina and family in honor of Francis Robert Fresina. ​

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Recently the museum acquired an interesting gift that is currently on display in the Men’s Waiting Room. It is a replica of a bust sculpted by Adelbert Ames Jr. (1880-1955), the brother of Blanche Ames Ames. Blanche was of course married to Oakes Ames of Easton, and a force in her own right. The original sculpture, completed in 1912, was a bronze bust of Obbatinewat (circa 1610-1630) who was Sachem of the Wampanoag settlement of Shawmut on the Shawmut Peninsula where the city of Boston now lies. The copy shows the signature of the artist Adelbert Ames on the back. The Wampanoag Sachem Obbatinewat signed a treaty of peace with Captain John Smith for mutual defense and befriended the settlers of Plymouth Colony. He was likely present at Wessagusset (Weymouth) in 1623 when Miles Standish ordered the killing of several Massachuset warriors.

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Ames’s original sculpture of the Native American was the model for the trademark Shawmut Bank ‘Indian’ bust. There are many of these in different sizes used in various ways by the bank. The logo was also used in coin banks, calendars, and various advertisements up until 1995. Many consider these collectibles today. Adelbert Ames was quite successful in his lifetime, working as a lawyer, then as a painter; he collaborated with his sister Blanche on the System of Color Theory. This led him to an interest in how the human eye perceives color. His research led him to work at Clark University and Dartmouth College where he was made Professor of Physiological Optics. Like Blanche, he excelled at many things.

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I think both Obbatinewat and Adelbert Ames look very regal in their images. Both left a stamp on their respective times. 
 
Anne Wooster Drury


Sources/Links:
Easton Historical Society and Museum 
Adelbert Ames' Mind-Bending Illusions
Optica - Adelbert Ames, Jr.
The life and death of the Massachuset, by Ed Quill


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    Author

    Anne Wooster Drury

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Easton Historical Society and Museum
​
PO Box 3
80 Mechanic Street
North Easton, MA 02356
Tel:  508-238-7774
[email protected]


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