Support the Annual Appeal and Help Keep Us On Track!
This past year, we had new exhibits and partnerships, and more events and programs for you to enjoy, including new program series with Historic Newton, and the Wellesley and Natick Historical Societies. Keep us going! Help to preserve the treasures and teach the stories of Needham's past, as we celebrate the history of Needham with You.
 
In the last few years we have focused on increasing our membership and our programs, and broadening our outreach.  Your outstanding generosity and support makes this possible!

The Needham Historical Society does not receive operating funds from the town or state.  Our financial support comes ENTIRELY from donations, memberships, grants and fundraising events. Your support of the Annual Appeal is a major source of our activity and strength.
So please, be as generous as you can . THANKS!
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Dr. Josiah Noyes and one of his Needham plant specimens pressed in a book. The plant is Prinos vercillatus (Winter Berry or Black Alder), a species of holly native to the northeastern US. The plant is relatively common and grows in wetlands. Mostly used as an ornamental now for its red berries, it was used medicinally to reduce fever, and as an antiseptic and emetic.
 
A Priceless Record of Needham's Botanical History 
 
I have had occasion in earlier columns to mention Dr. Josiah Noyes, both as an abolitionist who organized Needham's first anti-slavery society, and as Needham's first licensed physician, who practiced in town from 1825 to 1871. He was born in Acton and went to college at Dartmouth. In 1825, having received his degrees in medicine and chemistry, he came to Needham because his uncle (pastor at the west parish church) told him he'd be needed here.
 
Noyes was trained in medical school as a physician and chemist/pharmacist, so he diagnosed his patients' ills, and then compounded and dispensed their medicines. But Noyes was even more than that - he was a Natural Scientist in that broad 19th-century sense, when it was still possible for an educated person to know almost everything of importance in numerous disciplines. Through his own study, Noyes was also a botanist, geologist, zoologist, meteorologist, and geographer. He was a linguist who taught himself Hebrew in order to read the Old Testament. He advocated strongly for both abolition and temperance, and organized the Needham Lyceum as a forum for public education and debate.
 
Dr. Noyes began a systematic collection of Needham plants in the 1830s. In part, this was probably related to his work as a pharmacist, collecting medicinal plants; but his collections extended beyond that. In the approved 19th-century manner, Noyes pressed his samples between the pages of books. The Needham History Center has two of his collections (there were more). Each specimen was labeled - he used his scalpels to slit the stems and slip the label in; when the sample dried, the label was held firmly. He also recorded the precise location of his finds, so that later botanists could look for them as well.
 
Noyes was joined in this work by Timothy Otis Fuller. I've mentioned Fuller before as well, as the author/illustrator of the bird journals. Although we know Fuller's ornithology work best, the bird journals were made late in his life. Most of Fuller's natural history work was in botany, and he kept journals of this as well (alas! not illustrated).
 
Fuller was a generation younger than Noyes, and was also his neighbor. Fuller's family had been in Needham since the 1600s. Fuller became Noyes' protégé in the matter of Needham's natural history, and Noyes gave Fuller his natural history collections. Fuller especially valued Noyes plant collections and documentation, because they allowed him to make observations of changes in the local flora over time.
 
Fuller was patient and meticulous to a degree that I think would make most of us scream. But it meant that he was tireless in investigating corners and wastelands and places less accessible than most. He was especially keen on the topic of rare plants - not for their rarity per se, but because he wanted to know why certain plants persisted even in tiny numbers, while most either increased or died out altogether. He identified several very rare plants that occurred in limited or even single stands, and tracked them over years.
 
Fuller noted that even in his lifetime the town had changed, and that increasing suburban development was causing the extinction of several species that he and Noyes had collected in earlier years. Indeed, Fuller lived in a time of rapid ecological transition. Most of New England had been largely deforested by the mid-1800s. 19th-century paintings of Needham, as well as early maps and photos, show a cleared landscape of fields and meadows. Modern views of these scenes show significant regrowth of the tree cover. In Fuller's time, the landscape was still changing; the decline of farming in favor of mercantilism and manufacturing, soon to be followed by the local transition to a suburban residential community, favored this process of modest reforestation. Thus the Needham landscape that Fuller knew was different even from Noyes' day, and much different from the one we know today.
 
The Needham History Center preserves two of Noyes' large pressed-book samples, but most of the Fuller/Noyes herbaria were eventually given to the New England Botanical Club, of which Fuller was a founding member; they are now a part of the Harvard Herbaria. Harvard's Noyes/Fuller collection preserved about 2500 samples, which is the largest systematic collection from any locality in New England.
 
Many of these plants continue to thrive in our fields, yards, and roadsides. Others - more than 40%, especially among the orchids and ferns - are now extinct in Needham, while others are extinct in New England, and are threatened elsewhere. Preserving these rare and vanishing specimens, the collection is a priceless document of nearly two centuries of climate and habitat changes in our town.

 

A sample of Anthemis arvensis, a variety of chamomile, collected by Fuller and housed in the Harvard Herbarium as part of the New England Botanical Club collections.
 
Upcoming Events
  These events are free and open to the public 

Sunday, November 17th, 2 pm - Bring on Broadway
at the Needham History Center, 1147 Central Avenue 
Join Big Smile Entertainment for a stunning afternoon of the Best of Broadway from yesterday to today. Their professional vocalists, many who have performed on Broadway, will sing some of the most beloved Broadway favorites. Featuring: Fiddler, Oklahoma!, Chicago, Cats, Sound of Music, Les Miserables, Jersey Boys, West Side Story, King and I, South Pacific and many more.   [NB - this is a change of program from the Calendar announcement; this replaces the Civil War program]
 
Sunday, December 1, at 2 pm - Creepy Christmas , with Jeff Belanger 
at North Hill auditorium, 865 Central Avenue
Jeff is back! This time with tales of the Krampus, the Belsnickel, and a host of Ol' Saint Nick's less-jolly sidekicks.  Learn about these Yuletide monsters and legends that have almost been lost to the ages, and explore the history of these ghostly holiday traditions, some dating back more than two thousand years. (This program may not be suitable for young children)

Sunday, December 8th, from 11 am to 4 pm - Holiday Gift Sale! 
in the Needham History Center's Gift Shop   
Get ready for the Holidays with unique Needham gifts! From apparel, to books and movies, to a special collection of ornaments - we have something for everyone!  Or find a  special vintage treasure in our Heirloom Shoppe - you never know what might turn up here.
 
Community Events
From time to time, we will post event information from our community partners and friends, that might be of interest.

Extended! The Frances Perkins Center Traveling Exhibit, Nov. 18-22, 10 am to 2:30 pm,
at the Needham History Center.  Learn about the life and accomplishments of Frances Perkins - FDR's Secretary of Labor (1933-1945), and the first woman to serve in the US Cabinet. Perkins was a staunch advocate for workers' rights, and a driving force behind the New Deal - programs that continue to provide financial security for all Americans.

The Best Possible Death: Conversations for You and Your Family A series of five events, October 27-November 17.  Difficult conversations, addressed with compassion and inspiration.  The Lane Lyceum/First Parish in Needham. For information and details, see www.lanelyceum.org.

The 8th Annual Needham Diversity Summit "Restoring the Rhythm of Life", Saturday, November 16, from 8:30 am - 2:30 pm at the Pollard Middle School, 200 Harris Avenue, Needham.  Hosted by the the Needham Diversity Initiative, this free event includes lunch.  Click HERE for information and registration.

The Jog for Joy 5K, Sunday, December 8, beginning at 9:15 am. Sponsored by HighRock MetroWest Church (754 Greendale Avenue, Needham).  All the proceeds of this fun run will go to The Needham Youth & Family Services Department to connect teens to the resources they need to live more hopeful lives.  Click HERE for information and registration.
We thank our Corporate Sponsors  
for their generous and ongoing support!
.
Lead Sponsor - The Needham Bank 
Program Sponsor - North Hill 
The Dedham Inst. for Savings  .  The Middlesex Bank 
Louise Condon Realty  .
Petrini Corporation  .  The Vita Needle Company
The Needham Women's Club  .  JC Timmerman, Inc.
Briarwood Rehab & Healthcare  .  BID-Needham 
Needham History Center & Museum | 781.455.8860 | www.needhamhistory.org
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