dissenting
Connecticut congregation under the leadership of Rev.
John Russell in 1659 founded Hadley as an agricultural
community on the east bank of the Connecticut River.
John Pynchon purchased the site of the new settlement, a
fertile peninsular plain defined by a bend in the
Connecticut River, from the Indians on behalf of the
settlers. The first settlers laid out this area,
formerly known as the Norwottuck Meadow, as the center
of the new settlement before their arrival, with the
Town Common, referred to as "the Broad Street," as the
central feature. The common measured 20 rods wide and
one mile long, with the Connecticut River defining both
ends, and was reportedly based on the original plan of
Wethersfield, Connecticut. Eight-acre home lots were
ranged along both sides of the common, with farmlands
behind.
In 1675-76, during King Philip's War, to guard against
Indian attacks, a palisade that ran far enough behind
the houses to include most of the barns and farm
buildings enclosed the street and common. One such
attack occurred on June 12 of 1676. Legend has it that
the town was saved from destruction when, at a critical
moment, one William Goffe showed up in the midst of the
townspeople, warned them of the danger, and led the town
in fending off the assault, disappearing shortly
afterward. Goffe, later known as "The Angel of Hadley,"
became the subject of many legends. As one of the
English judges who sentenced King Charles I to death, he
had fled to hide in New England when the English
monarchy was restored in 1660.
Though the years, the common remained the focus of town
life. The meetinghouse occupied a prominent site animals
were pastured on the open land, militia drill were held
periodically, and Hadley's Liberty Pole was erected
there during the Revolutionary War. Taverns at the north
and south ends and at the center of the common served
the needs of passengers on the ferry, stagecoach, and
riverboat routes.
By the 1670s, the town rapidly developed northward. The
North Hadley Mill Pond, a.k.a. Mill River, became the
site of the Hopkins Corn Mill, and millers and farmers
settled in Hopkins Meadow. The rent paid by mill workers
to live here went to support the Hopkins School, which
founded by Edward Hopkins of England, a former governor
of Connecticut.
Hadley has long been the subject of much folklore,
especially when it came to witchcraft. The most notable
"witch" in the town of Hadley was Mary Webster, who,
although acquitted of "familiarity with the devil" in a
Boston Court in 1683, was nonetheless hung,
unsuccessfully, by young Hadley men in 1685.
As the number of settlers south of Mount Holyoke grew,
the desire for a local place of worship also grew. As an
answer to the problems of settlers traveling many miles
to church, the towns of Hatfield, Granby, South Hadley
and Amherst formed from he sprawling town of Hadley. The
town continued to grow as an agricultural town during
the 1700s. While subsistence farming was most common
during this time, the exporting of everything from
produce to beef to furs grew. Most of the products were
taken by flatboat down the Connecticut River and to the
Boston area as well. It was around 1792 that broomcorn
became the dominant crop in Hadley. So abundant was this
crop that Hadley would come to be known as the nation's
broomcorn and broom manufacturing capital. Broom and
brush making became a thriving industry here, exporting
all across New York and New England, and as far as Ohio.
Over time the soil that produced so much broomcorn,
slowly depleted. By 1840, tobacco would take its place
as the major crop as well as seed onions and other
vegetables. The Massachusetts Central Railroad crossed
the northern half of the common in 1887, providing a
faster way for Hadley farmers to ship their produce to
market. The Connecticut Valley Street Railway, laid out
along Russell Street about 1900, made local travel to
Northampton and Amherst easier.
It was during the late 1800s that, because of labor
shortages and a drop in land values, Hadley experienced
somewhat of a decline in farming. It was also about this
time that a large number of Irish and, later, Polish
immigrants that were recruited from Ellis Island for
labor purposes settled in Hadley. It was the Polish
immigrants that are credited with saving Hadley's
farmland as they worked the fine Hadley soil back into
fertility. By 1920, asparagus became the popular crop in
Hadley, soon making the town the asparagus capital of
the world up until the 1950s when disease wiped out much
of the crop.
Today, in spite of commercial development along Route 9,
Hadley remains largely agricultural and residential. It
has the largest number of acres in agriculture in the
Pioneer Valley, which includes crops of corn, potatoes,
tobacco and scores of other vegetables. Malls and
commercial businesses now lie along Russell Street on
Route 9 to the east of the towns center.
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1659
First settlement made, called Norwottuck
1660
Parson John Russell came to Norwottuck
1661
Town named Hadley for Hadleigh, England
1664
Parson Russell secreted Regicides Goffe and Whalley
twelve years
1664
Hopkins School established
1670
Hatfield set off
1670
First church erected
1675
Deliverance of people by Angel of Hadley during King
Philip's War
1676
Last Indians left Hadley
1696
First school house erected
1713
Second Church erected
1753
South Hadley set off
1759
Amherst set off
1777
Burgoyne left his sword in Hadley
1797
First brooms manufactured in this country, made in
Hadley
1808
First one horse wagon brought to Hadley
1814
Major General Joseph Hooker born in Hadley
1817
First Hopkins Academy Building constructed
1861-1865
Major General Hooker and 214 men served in Civil War
1870
First tobacco raised in Hadley
1887
Train service in Hadley
1895
First onions raised as cash crops
1899
Trolley car service to Northampton and Amherst
1900
Beginning of black top roads in Hadley
1902
English speaking Roman Catholic church erected
1905
Water supply obtained from reservoir on Mt. Holyoke
1906
First automobile owned by Hadley resident
1910
Electric street lights
1915
Polish speaking Roman Catholic Church established
1917
First tractor in Hadley
1917-1918
Seventy-one men and one woman served in World War I
1920
Set onions introduced into Hadley
1929
Produce trucking began
1936
Worst flood in Hadley
1941
469 Hadley residents served in World War II
1950-1953
Forty-four Hadley residents served in the Korean War
1951
American Legion Home dedicated
1953-1954
Addition made to underground water supply
1954
New Hopkins Academy building constructed
1958
First house delivery of U.S. Mail
1959
Tercentenary Celebration
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