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Natick Historical Society Receives Grant from the Foundation for MetroWest’s Fund for Arts & Culture

The Natick Historical Society has been awarded a $13,000 grant from the Foundation for MetroWest’s Fund for Arts and Culture. The funding will support the NHS as we reimagine how we serve the community, reposition our staffing, and retool our technology needs while ensuring sustainable growth.

 The Foundation for MetroWest's 2021 grant programs in the areas of Family Support, Arts & Culture, and Environment focused on providing general operating grants with a focus on recovery, rebuilding, and resilience. Of the 99 applicants, the Natick Historical Society was one of 39 grant recipients.

 Established in 1995, the Foundation for MetroWest is the community foundation serving the cities and towns in the region, encompassing 700,000 residents from Westborough to Waltham and Acton to Dedham. The Foundation promotes philanthropy across the area, helps donors maximize the impact of their local giving, serves as a resource for local nonprofits, and enhances the quality of life for all our residents. The Foundation is supported by various businesses, individuals, community groups, and other philanthropic organizations. Since its inception, the Foundation has granted $23 million to its nonprofit partners and currently stewards more than $30 million in charitable assets for current needs and future impact. To learn more, please visit http://www.foundationmw.org/ or call 508-647-2260.

 Founded in 1870, the Natick Historical Society (NHS) is one of Massachusetts's oldest local historical societies. Today, the NHS operates a museum and archives and serves a growing number of community members, scholars, and young people by offering (increasingly virtual) programs, exhibits, and research services and bringing local history to community projects and events. Since its incorporation, the NHS has remained an independent nonprofit that receives no public funds.

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Get to Know our Summer Collections Interns

This summer, we have been grateful to work with three Collections Interns: Emma Choe, a rising senior at Natick High School, Celia Lanza, a rising senior at Needham High School; and Caroline Niedermeyer, a rising junior at Natick High School.

NHS Collections Interns can contribute to several projects, but this summer, Emma, Celia, and Caroline have worked with our photograph collections. To date, they have inventoried over 500 photographs -- and they are still hard at work! They've also rehoused the photographs in archival boxes, now shelved at the Natick History Museum on the lower level of the Bacon Free Library. We've shared a number of the images they've inventoried on social media. Take a look HERE and HERE!

Thank you Interns Summer 2021.png

We asked Emma, Celia, and Caroline to answer questions about their passion for the past and work at the NHS. You can read their responses below:

1. When did you first get interested in history?

Emma: I initially became interested in history in 5th grade, watching the History Channel on TV. I loved (and still love) how seemingly trivial objects from the past can tell a larger narrative today!

Celia: History has always been my favorite subject in school. My freshman-year World History teacher got me to love history, and three years later, I still think about what he taught me.

Caroline: I got interested in history during my freshman year and quarantine because I had much free time to explore and research Natick.

2. Do you have a favorite set of photos among the NHS Collections you've worked with this summer?

Emma: My favorite collection I’ve worked with has been the Canoe & Boat Livery photographs. It’s always nice seeing the continuation of traditions & activities into the present, but specifically, one photo of a dog in a canoe with a gramophone swayed me.

Celia: My favorite set of photos I worked on this summer was the Casey's Diner collection.

Caroline: My favorite collection with the NHS is either the old Natick Mall photos or Casey’s Diner!

3. What's great about learning local history?

Emma: Learning about local history gratifies me because it proves how much we’ve grown as a community. Because the composition of buildings today is so different from back then, local history is vital to understanding how the town developed into what we know.

Celia: I have always been fascinated to learn about the stories of the individuals who made up our communities in the past. Learning local history is an excellent opportunity to study people from the past that you would have never heard of otherwise.

Caroline: Learning about local history is interesting because you’re around it every day. It’s fun to look around and speculate where things used to be or what they looked like.

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Exciting Changes at the Natick History Museum

Since 1880, the Natick Historical Society has been housed on the lower level of the Bacon Free Library. Early visitors marveled at specimens of flora and fauna and relics from all over the world. They studied historical documents and read rare books. For many, our museum offered a glimpse of lands they could never hope to visit.

2018, we renovated our museum, revealing its gleaming windows and 19th-century woodwork. Since then, we've used a temporary space to reorganize materials amassed over our 150-year history. Every day, we continue to curate collections that will serve our community for generations.

We are transforming our original home into a 21st-century portal that inspires curiosity beyond our walls. Since January, more than 350 individuals have registered for our virtual programs, and we've responded to 35 online research requests. We have brought our work to Natick schools with projects like Remembering Harwood and our new digital education platform for third graders, On This Land Online. We are also excited to bring history into the community with 13 new interpretative panels detailing Natick's past situated along the Cochituate Rail Trail. And we continue to expand historical content on our website, social media pages, and now on our new YouTube channel.

This year, we're ready to recenter our work in our original home at 58 Eliot Street. We'll retrofit some historic glass cases to hold research materials, add additional storage for maps and artifacts, and upgrade our technical capacity. With our research materials, collections, and staff and volunteers together again, we'll have more open hours, more public programming, and more opportunities to serve researchers and students.

With your generous support, we can maintain our beautifully renovated museum and better serve our community. We aim to raise $10,000 for our Annual Fund to support a transition back to our original home in the lower level of the Bacon Free Library.

Together, we can make history count in Natick. We look forward to welcoming you back into our historic museum soon!

If you would like to contribute to the NHS, please click HERE.

**Please note our primary phone number (508.647.4841) and mailing address (58 Eliot Street).

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NHS and Local Students Partner on Remembering Harwood

April 15, 2021 — We’re thrilled to partner with Natick High School students and community members to remember the Harwood Baseball Factory. Thanks to the MetroWest Daily News for their feature on the project. Do you have a story about the Harwood Baseball Factory to share? Please let us know: contact@natickhistoricalsociety.org

Read the MetroWest piece HERE.

Read more about the project HERE.

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Natick Historical Society receives Digital Capacity Grant from Mass Humanities, Massachusetts Cultural Council

The Natick Historical Society has been awarded a Digital Capacity grant of $2,500 from Mass Humanities, the state-based affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, for its upcoming virtual education initiative: On This Land Online. Funding from Mass Humanities has been provided through the Massachusetts Cultural Council. The Natick Historical Society would also like to thank Middlesex Savings Bank for its $1,000 sponsorship and the generous private donors whose contributions will bring this program to life.

On This Land Online will give more than 500 Natick third-graders virtual access to film clips, artifacts, documents, maps, and other materials detailing Natick’s past. These digital learning modules will enable third grade teachers to meet curricular goals whether they are teaching remotely, in-person, or in a hybrid model. Three of these modules will be ready by June 1 so they can be used before the end of the school year. The fourth module will be ready by August 1, for use in the 2021-2022 academic year. All modules will be available to complement student learning for many years to come.

For some of Natick’s students, the third grade field trip marks their first visit to a museum, their first close encounter with an artifact, and/or their first opportunity to recognize that the land they walk on everyday has a history. On This Land Online will ensure that those “firsts” aren’t missed, and that, in the post-pandemic era, future “firsts” are enhanced with supplementary NHS digital learning modules.

Founded in 1870, the Natick Historical Society (NHS) is one of the oldest local historical societies in Massachusetts. Today, the NHS operates a museum and archives and serves a growing number of community members, scholars, and young people by offering (increasingly virtual) programs, exhibits, and research services, as well as by bringing local history to community projects and events. Since its incorporation, the NHS has remained an independent nonprofit that receives no public funds.

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Do you Remember Harwood in Natick?

The Natick Historical Society is delighted to partner with a former Natick resident and researcher, students from Natick High School, and community members to create a short film about the history of the Harwood Baseball Factory in Natick and how it is remembered today.  

Several years ago, Facebook exchanges inspired Emily Rosenthal about the Harwood Baseball Factory in her hometown of Natick. She began seeking out and collecting memories shared by former and current Natick residents about what it was like to grow up in the shadows of the world’s first baseball factory. 

Some remembered buying half-price balls to play pick-up games, others remembered the smell of the leather, or how their mother or grandmother stitched balls from home. Do you have a memory of the Harwood Factory that you would like to share?

We would love to hear from you. CLICK HERE to read more about how to share your memory with us.

We’ll be collecting memories until April 15, 2021.

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Highlighting New Voices from Natick's Past

Historically, societies like the Natick Historical Society have focused on collecting artifacts and documents telling stories about wealthy and influential people. “While these stories are important,” NHS Director Niki Lefebvre says, “there is much more to tell about Natick’s past.” In 2021, the NHS will focus on developing new ways to build trust among historically underrepresented groups, including Black and Indigenous people, people of color, and immigrant communities. “We want to start working towards painting a more inclusive and accurate picture of Natick’s history,” Lefebvre says.

We'd love to hear from you if you have ideas or stories to share with us! Please email: contact@natickhistoricalsociety.org

To learn more about what to look for from the NHS in 2021, check out this story in the Natick Town Pages.

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