Circle the Wagons! (Repost from 2010)


Transcript, 1963

I’m pretty sure that Dedham is the only town in the U.S. with a town ordinance that reads like this:

“No person shall set fire to or burn, or cause to be moved through any way or street of the Town, any waste material, paper, wood or any inflammable substance on any wagon, cart, buggy, push–cart or on any vehicle, with the intention of setting fire to or burning same on any way or street of the Town.”

The bylaw was adopted in 1959 in response to the resurrection of a dangerous, unique, and beloved Dedham tradition- the burning of old farm wagons in Oakdale Square on either “the night before” of July 3rd, or the night of the 4th itself. Beginning some time in the early 20th century (my research found the oldest recorded reference to be 1922) thousands of people would gather in the square to witness the event. In the 20’s and 30’s, police and fire officials merely watched and made sure nobody got hurt. The spectacle usually began at midnight when some brave youth would climb the roof of the Good Shepherd Church and ring the bell.

The wagons came from local farms in Dedham and surrounding towns. As authentic farm wagons became scarcer, teenagers would make their own and hide them in back yards and garages until the big night. In 1938, no wagons were found or made, so an old outhouse had to do. Usually the fires got so intense the windows of the stores in the square would crack and the tar underneath would melt. The last Oakdale Square burning was in 1963, when revellers threw rocks and full cans of beer at police and firefighters when they arrived on the scene. After that the burnings disappeared for a few years before the tradition was revived in the Manor. After an explosion and the melting a vinyl-sided house in 1990, police chief Dennis Teehan finally put an end to the burnings.

1963 was a pretty memorable 4th of July in Dedham. On the positive side, 40.000 people turned out for the annual parade which featured 20 bands and some 5,000 marchers. The town’s fireworks display was described as “the best ever.” However, the rowdy element put a damper on the festivities with their actions; hurling rocks and bottles at firemen, ignoring police directions, and tossing cherry bombs into the crowd, one of which landed on the parade float carrying Miss Massachusetts, who abandoned the float for the safety of a car for the remainder of the parade. Ah, the good old days.

I remember hearing about the wagon burnings when I was a kid, but I never witnessed one. After the publication of my Dedham book, the wagon burnings was the most popular topic brought up at book signings and talks.  Maybe you have some more tales to add to the collection? Pass them along and have a Glorious Fourth!

 

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22 Comments on “Circle the Wagons! (Repost from 2010)”

  1. Dave (in MA) Says:

    I just wanted to say that I was enjoying this blog and would be interested if you were planning on posting new articles.

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  2. MarkB Says:

    4th of July were very common in the Boston area, going back to the revolution. Most were just piles of old wood, but wagons piled high must have been common as well. It was done on the night of the 3rd – the holiday eve.

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    • Jim Parr Says:

      There’s a great book by Len Travers called “Celebrating the Fourth” which details Independence Day celebrations from the very beginning of our country up through 1826. Lots of references to bonfires and burnings of effigies. Len teaches at UMass Dartmouth and was my boss when I was a pilgrim at Plimoth Plantation.
      What makes the wagon burnings so unusual is that while many communities had both impromptu and officially sanctioned bonfires, I have not found any other references to that particular custom of stealing farm wagons and alighting them, and that the custom continued so far into the 20th century (1990s).

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  3. David Bryant Says:

    I only witnessed it once, in 1962. It got sort of ugly when the first department tried to reduce or extinguish the fire in Oakdale Square because of damage to adjacent buildings. The big plate glass window in the Oakdale Pharmacy cracked from the heat. Some in the crowd objected to the firemen’s actions, and some bottles and rocks were thrown. Some offenders were rounded up and arrested. The bylaw quoted above followed that incident. I went off to college and did not ever know how it all ended, whether there were more burnings after the one in 1962.

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  4. peter ness Says:

    I was at the 1963 wagon burn and watched it from my friends front porch just off the square.

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  5. Jean Dolan Says:

    The picture of the boys pushing and guiding the wagon was taken by my father (Frank Van Pelt), owner of Parkway Photo Service and I am the boy at the back in the plaid shirt. The wagon in the picture was “manufactured” by us and not “acquired” from any outside source.

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  6. peter ness Says:

    I was on the front porch of the first house from the square and watched the wagons coming into the square after the church bell started ringing that was in 1963,my last time.I believe the next year it was stopped for good.

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  7. Kathy prevett marks Says:

    I was so happy to see this site! I grew up in the Oakdale section and gave been to the wagons several times. I remember the year that the pharmacy window got broken from the heat. Those were the good ol days!!

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  8. Peter McNally Says:

    My parents returned to Dedham on vacation with their kids in late ‘50s. That year the town organized a huge 4th of July bonfire in hope that would prevent the wagons, but they happened anyway.

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  9. Tom Dwyer Says:

    I witnessed the burning of the wagons several times during the late 50’s. As I recall, the wagons burned were the genuine article. it was an interesting experience for a young lad to experience mob psychology for the first time. I am not surprised that it was ultimately banned.

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  10. Kathy PrevettMarks Says:

    I still remember my parents taking me to see the wagons burn in oak dale square. It was so exciting !

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  11. baystatebaby Says:

    I don’t have many memories of my childhood in Dedham through 5th grade, but the ones for the “burning of the wagons” as my family called it are “bright.” We watched several times in the late 40s-early 50s. I recall old farm wagons and homemade ones coming down various streets to crash into each other and burn in a big pile. We went to the Episcopal Church which was located near the intersection.

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  12. I took a Memoir Writing class in DE where I live. I wrote a story about “The Wagons.” My class loved it. They couldn’t believe the town let it occur for so long. They were quite astonished by the whole idea. I went every year from ages 4-10 maybe? Not sure, but it was THE BEST!!!

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  13. markbul Says:

    I see I commented on this in 2012 – I forgot! I’ll just add that when I moved to the Manor in 1971, the kids were still burning by the variety store and what was at that time still a gas station. Good God. Not a tradition I’d boast about. It was just luck that houses weren’t incinerated.

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  14. Brian Keaney Says:

    The Town’s 375th Anniversary Committee wanted to bring the tradition back, at least for the anniversary year, but neither the police nor the fire chief liked the idea and it never happened. Oh well.

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