Old Town Hill
Newbury, Massachusetts

Credit: (c) Richard Cheek
Thousands of years ago, a large and beautiful salt marsh crossed by tidal creeks was created in the lowlands and valleys surrounding the glacial drumlin known as Old Town Hill. This unusual half-upland, half-marine landscape makes for a rich and diverse ecosystem.
The upland consists of second-growth forest and fields that support ground-nesting birds and serve as hunting grounds for hawks and owls. Salt meadow grass, cordgrass, seaside goldenrod, and sea lavender thrive in the tidal salt marsh. Estuarine invertebrates, such as mud snails, green crabs, and ribbed mussels, live in the tidal creeks and provide food for wading birds, such as egrets and great blue herons.
Native Americans called this site "Quascacunquen," meaning waterfall, referring to the falls on the Parker River. In 1634, Newbury's first Meeting House was built on the Lower Green at the base of the 168-foot "Great Hill" and, shortly thereafter, a sentry box was erected on the crest of the hill. At one point, approximately 12,000 cattle and 3,000 sheep grazed the area, many on cleared parts of the Great Hill. Men working with hand tools, and later horse-drawn mowing machines, gathered abundant harvests of salt hay from the broad marshes. Old Town Hill is a link in the Bay Circuit Trail.
Nearby Area Sites
- Dole-Little House

c. 1715 house that has been restored to reflect the original period of construction. - Newbury Historic District

High Rd., Green and Hanover Sts. Contains some of New England's most important examples of First Period architecture clustered newar a pre-Revolution common. - Old Town Hill

Thousands of years ago, a large and beautiful salt marsh crossed by tidal creeks was created in the lowlands and valleys surrounding the glacial drumlin known as Old Town Hill. - Parker River National Wildlife Refuge

The 4600-plus acre refuge offers recreational and educational adventures such as wildlife observation, hunting, fishing and shellfishing. - Spencer-Peirce-Little Farm


Built at the end of the 17th Century to impress visitors, today the house reveals three centuries of construction technologies and building stabilization. - Swett-Ilsley House

Original portion built in 1670 and expanded in the 18th and 19th Centuries. - Tristram Coffin House

Built in 1654, this is the oldest structure in the Newbury Historic District.
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Newbury Farms
ENHA Farm Guide- Iron Moon Farm, 186 High Road Newbury, MA 01951, (978) 465-8695
- Colby Farm, 50 Scotland Road Newbury, MA 01951, (978) 465-8868
- Tender Crop Farm, 108 High Street Newbury, MA 01951, (978) 462-6972
- Oulde Towne Gardens, 157 High Street Newbury, MA 01951, (978) 499-0038
Newbury History
Newbury’s distinctive rural inland, riverine and coastal landscape features were instrumental in shaping the history of the community from the earliest Native American use of the land to the present day. Although there are no confirmed Native American sites in Newbury, there were presumed settlements on the Artichoke River near its confluence with the Merrimack River and on the Parker River where it flows into the Ipswich River. European settlement of the area occurred in 1634. By the early 1700s the town was dispersed into five parishes of which only the First Parish and Byfield Parish remain as part of Newbury. The first meetinghouse was constructed in 1635, and was replaced a number of times over the next two centuries, until one built in 1806 burned in 1868. The meetinghouse built after that date on High Road remains the First Parish Church today.
Agriculture was the mainstay of the early economic base with thousands of acres cleared for the raising of hay for grazing animals. Water sources also sustained grist and saw mills, fulling mills, and tanneries, which continued to be an important part of the economy through the early 20th century. In the late 18th century, Byfield Village emerged as a mill village with a factory producing machine made nails, a snuff factory, a chaise maker and some small ship building on the Parker River. By the mid 1800s the Byfield Woolen Company was well established and the Byfield Snuff Company was growing with three mill sites. Minor shoe industry up to the mid 19th century also contributed to the local economy. In the 1870s silver and gold were discovered and mined for a short period.
The major north-south routes were High Road (Rt. 1A) and the Bay Road, the latter was laid out in 1639 in the general area of the present-day Middle Road and Boston Street. In the 18th century, Scotland Road became an important east-west route, however it was not well maintained until the mid to late 20th century. The Newburyport Turnpike (Rt. 1) was laid out in 1804 connecting these northern communities to Boston. Two railroad lines, one built in 1840 and the other in 1851, passed through Newbury and Byfield. In 1853 the toll for animals passing over Thurlow’s Bridge over the Parker River was removed. The street railway connected villages with nearby towns for a brief time beginning in 1891. The most significant transportation change in the 20th century was the opening of Rt. 95 in the 1950s providing faster access to and from Newbury.
The population in the 1700s rose to over 3,000 persons; however this number included those living in part of the town that was annexed to Newburyport in 1851. Thus population figures of Newbury are not relevant until after that annexation at which time the population dropped to 1,485 in 1855 and 1,430 in 1870. From the last quarter of the 19th century through the mid-20th century, growth was steady. In the last part of the 20th century the population nearly tripled from about 2,500 residents in 1960 to about 6,500 in 2000. Today the town is divided into three villages each with its own distinct character: Byfield, Plum Island and Old Town.
From Newbury Reconnaisance Report, Essex County Landscape Inventory, Massachusetts Heritage Landscape Inventory Program (pdf document)
