Barrett's Mill Conservation Area Trail Guide Town of Concord

Barrett's Mill Conservation Area Trail Guide Town of Concord

Town of Concord Barrett’s Mill Area Named for the Barrett family grist and saw mills once located near where the parking lot is now on Barrett’s Mill Road, the area Barrett’s Mill includes an active farmstead, an archaeological site, the Col. James Barrett Conservation Area House of Revolutionary War fame, and an 18th century smallpox grave, all in open Trail Guide fields and hilly woodlands. The history of the Barrett’s Mill tract dates to the 1635 founding of Concord. William Spencer of Cambridge accompanied Simon Willard at the negotiations with the indigenous people to purchase the six miles square of Musketaquid that became the Concord settlement. Spencer became one of the first landowners, obtaining 400 acres north of the North River, now the Assabet River. Spencer Brook that is named for him served as the power source for a succession Barrett’s Mill, ca. 1937. of mills from as early as 1678. The naming (Ruth Wheeler’s Houses in Concord File) of Barrett’s Mill Road dates to 1730, when Courtesy Concord Free Public Library two generations of the Barrett family had operated mills at the Spencer Brook site. Location and Access Access with parking for about a dozen vehicles is located on Barrett’s Mill Road just east of 363 Barrett’s Mill Road. The sign “Barretts Mill Concord Conservation Land” identifies the location. Dog Owners: At Barrett’s Mill conservation land, keep dogs leashed at all times, away from private yards and buildings, and out of all cultivated fields. Dogs must be leashed or under effective control at Finigan Way. It is the duty of each person who owns, possesses, or Tel: controls a dog to remove and dispose of any feces left by his or her dog. Prepared by the Division of Natural Resources, 2021 Barrett’s Mill Conservation Area Points of Interest When the British marched on Concord, Barrett’s Mill April 19, 1775, their objective was to arrest in 2012 by the National Park Service as an The history of mill operation at Spencer Col. Barrett and search his house and addition to the Minute Man National Brook began when Richard Temple built property for stores of weapons and Historic Park. The Barrett Farm is listed in and began operating a corn mill and munitions that he kept as superintendent of the National Register of Historic Places as sawmill here in 1678. By the time of the stores for the Massachusetts Committee of one of the most important Revolutionary Revolution, Deacon Thomas Barrett and Public Safety. Having received advanced War landmarks. his son Samuel were the proprietors of the warning, he was able to hide all but a few mills, as well as of a gun shop that utilized cannon carriages on his property, while he Route of the Acton Minutemen the waterpower to drive machinery for removed himself from the premises to A stone monument making arms, some used in the command the provincials against the beside Barrett’s Revolutionary War. Samuel Barrett’s son British troops remaining at the North Mill Road at the Samuel continued the family milling Bridge, and later to harass the British end of tradition until his death when the mill was Regulars as they retreated along the road Strawberry Hill sold to Daniel Angier, for whom the large back to Boston. Road is one of pond to the north was named (formerly many that mark known as Barrett’s Mill Pond). It was said The Barrett house was built in 1705 by the route taken that at this time, Henry Thoreau obtained Benjamin Barrett, father of Col. James by the Acton cedar cuttings at the mill for his lead pencil Barrett, and his brother Deacon Thomas Minutemen on factory. Angier was followed in ownership Barrett, and a descendent of the Barrett their march to join by Newton Gross from 1877 to 1922 and family that had settled in Concord around the fight at the North later by John Forbes into the 1940s. When 1640. As a farmhouse for the 200-acre Bridge on April 19, 1775. In the early the roof fell in about 1898, the corn mill Barrett Farm, it was originally a one-story, morning hours that fateful day, an alarm was abandoned and the remaining structure one-room house. The western end and a came to Captain Isaac Davis, leader of the converted to a sawmill. Surprisingly, the second story was added about 1720, Acton Minute Company. General Thomas sawmill remained in operation until about followed in 1760 by a three-story wing on Gage was leading British troops to 1956, the only upgrades being conversion the west side. The entire structure was Concord to secure weapons and from a waterwheel to a more efficient recently renovated by Save Our Heritage ammunition he believed were being water turbine, and from vertical saw blades and is now restored as it would have stockpiled for a military campaign. In to a circular saw. appeared when it was home of Col. James response, Captain Davis assembled the Barrett, farmer, Revolutionary War patriot Acton Minute Company for the seven-mile Col. James Barrett House and key figure in the events of April 19, march to Concord, passing by this point 1775. The house was along the way. The Acton contingent purchased would lead the fight that turned the tide of battle at the bridge, but at the cost of Davis’s life. Captain Isaac Davis was the first commissioned officer to die in the service of the new Republic-to-be and would be the inspiration for Daniel Chester French’s bronze statue of the Minute Man that resides at the North Bridge. Col. Barrett’s House 1880s Restored Col. Barrett’s House Barrett’s Mill Farm stonewall into an open field, then turns east along This fertile land has been farmed since enclosure. Barrett's Mill Road. Though the BCT was prehistoric times A classic slate originally proposed in 1929 as an "outer as evidenced tombstone Emerald Necklace" greenbelt arcing west by numerous engraved at around Greater Boston, development only ancient the top with a began in 1990. It is a work in progress even stone winged angel today, with this section recently relocated to its artifacts marks the present track off of nearby roads. Thoreau gravesite of found on James James Chandler Gravesite Suggested Walks this site. Chandler, who died Barrett’s Mill Farm Field Loop in 1792 at the age of 79. Because he died of A farm road behind the parking area follows the This active farm is smallpox, he could not be transported from perimeter of an agricultural field, returning now operated by Barrett’s Mill Farm his home on Barrett’s Mill Road to a along the Barrett’s Mill Road sidewalk to the under lease from the Town of Concord, cemetery in Concord center, and was laid to parking lot. A mix of vegetable plantings can having been farmed since 1905 by the rest in this solitary grave. In April 1775, he be seen in the field, none as obvious as the rows McGrath family. The farmstead includes was among those Concord residents hiding of asparagus and strawberries, important crops 19 acres of tillable land, a beautifully militia supplies in their homes, keeping since the early 1900s. Walking time for the renovated two-family residence, a barrels of gun powder safe from confiscation entire loop is 35 minutes. A shorter loop greenhouse, farm stand, and barn. The by the British. returning through the center of the field can be farm both sells from the farm stand and Note: Be respectful of this historic treasure completed in 15 minutes. Note: Be respectful of runs a Community Supported Agriculture that has remained preserved in its wooded the private residences in use by the farmers. operation. An adjacent Town parcel is also setting for more than 200 years. View but Stay on marked trails only . under a license agreement with a local do not touch the tombstone. farmer. Col. Barrett House and Finigan Way Trail Reformatory Branch Railroad From the parking lot turn left (west) along the Archaeological Dig Site A raised bank along the Assabet River Barrett’s Mill Road sidewalk to the far edge of A small piece of land beside the Barrett’s behind the Barrett's Mill Farm field is a an agricultural field across the road. Cross Mill Farm stand is the site of an remnant of the Middlesex Central Railroad Barrett’s Mill Road onto a yellow-blazed trail archaeological dig by Brandeis University dating to 1879 that once serviced the that soon joins a farm road. The road turns right faculty and students. Starting only from Concord Reformatory from Bedford Depot at the back of the field to a cut through the oral histories, the goal of the team is to through Concord Center. Abandoned in hedgerow on the left, where the trail continues uncover evidence of sleeping quarters for 1927, rotted ties can still be found along the into the woods to a junction with an unblazed freed slaves after the Civil War and later red trail that tracks along the rail bed with trail that loops to the left. The James Chandler German prisoners of WWII bused in from pleasant views of the Assabet River. For gravesite can be found a short distance down Fort Devens. If artifacts are found, it will more information, see the Reformatory the trail to the left. indicate that the groups once labored on the Branch Trail Guide. Barrett’s Mill land. The project is funded Bay Circuit Trail (BCT) Reverse direction back to Barrett’s Mill Road.

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