Tattersall Farm
Haverhill, Massachusetts
- Address: 542 North Broadway
Haverhill, Massachusetts 01830
978-374-2334 - Website: www.tattersallfarm.org
- Map:
Map
The Tattersall Farm offers 19th century plantings, working hayfields, rolling meadows, and wooded paths used for walking, jogging, and cross-country skiing.
The Tattersall Farm was owned and operated by the Tattersall Family for a substantial portion of the twentieth century. The surviving family member, Mary Alice Tattersall, died in 1999, and in her will entrusted her family's 150 acre farm to the City of Haverhill, imposing specific conservation and open space preservation restrictions to this gift so that the Tattersall Farm would be preserved and maintained in as close to its present condition as possible. At the same time she granted the farmÕs managerial rights to the Tattersall Farm Charitable Foundation Trust, which is obligated to preserve the Tattersall Farm, to protect it wildlife and conservation interests, and to inform and educate persons on matters relating to farming and environmental conservation.
Nearby Area Sites
- Haverhill Historical Society, Buttonwoods Museum
- Whittier Family Homestead
- Washington Street Shoe District
- Tattersall Farm
- Rocks Village
- Winnekenni Park and Castle
Haverhill's distinctive landscape features – the Merrimack River, the many ponds, wetlands and varied topography – were instrumental in shaping the history of the community from the earliest use of the area by Native Americans through the long tradition of shoe manufacturing to land uses that continue today.
Native American activity along the Merrimack River prior to European settlement was intense with several tribes known to have been in the Haverhill area, including the Pentuckets, Pawtuckets and Agawams, all sub-tribes of the Penacook group. The first European settlement took its name from one of the Native American tribes, when Pentucket was established in 1640 and one of the four shires of the plantation was called Haverhill, named after the birthplace in England of Haverhill’s first minister, John Ward. The area was not incorporated as a city until 1870, the same year in which Bradford was annexed to Haverhill.
Agriculture, fishing and shipbuilding were the economic base well into the 19th century. In the early 1800s there was a strong cattle market which gave rise to the shoe industry. By the 1830s and into the early 20th century Haverhill became a leader in shoe manufacturing. Known as the “Queen Slipper City” Haverhill was noted for its shoe designers and makers. After World War I the shoe industry began its decline in Haverhill. In the 1950s the arrival of Western Electric was a boost to the local economy; however the large plant moved out of Haverhill in the late 20th century.
The Merrimack River served as a key mode of transportation from prehistoric times into the early 19th century. Once the railroad opened in 1839 there was a shift in transportation which also fostered the shift in the economy to the shoe industry. Mid 20th century interstate highway development resulted in the city’s strategic location between Rt. 93 and Rt. 95 on Rt. 495.
One of the larger municipalities in Essex County, Haverhill’s population by 1850 had risen to 5,754 and continued to increase substantially throughout the 19th century. Between 1880 and 1920 the population more than tripled to 53,884. However, as the shoe industry declined, the population decreased slowly but steadily throughout much of the 20th century until the 1990s when it recovered and exceeded the 1920 level. In 2000 the population was nearly 59,000.
From Haverhill Reconnaisance Report, Essex County Landscape Inventory, Massachusetts Heritage Landscape Inventory Program (pdf document)
See also:
1985 Massachusetts Historical Commission Reconnaissance Survey Town Report
