hopkinton-independent-logo2x
Hopkinton, MA
loader-image
Hopkinton, US
11:35 pm, Thursday, November 21, 2024
temperature icon 44°F
Humidity 96 %
Wind Gust: 21 mph

SIGN UP TODAY!
BREAKING NEWS & DAILY NEWSLETTER





Tales from a Townie: From pine cone to firefighters plaque

by | Jul 19, 2022 | Featured

Firefighters plaque

This plaque was presented to the Hopkinton Fire Department on June 12, which was Firefighters Memorial Sunday. PHOTO/WILLIAM T. HAMILTON JR.

I am a pine cone high up on a branch of a stately pine tree. It is summer 1749. I am located on Ash Street, just off Main Street, in Hopkinton.

In the autumn, a strong wind blows me down onto the ground. During the winter, I will be covered by pine needles, leaves and snow. In the spring, I will sprout into a pine sapling. The growing conditions are favorable, and I will grow straight and strong.

From my lofty position overlooking the Town Common, I observe all the activities there, including men drilling in preparation to go off to the Civil War.

Fast forward to the summer of 1869 and I am a majestic 100-foot tall, 20-inch diameter tree. Some men come into the forest and cut me and several of my neighbors down and make us into lumber at a nearby sawmill.

I end up being part of the roof of a building with a tower that has a bell in it. When the bell rings, men come and take this machine out of my building and put out fires with it. In a few years, they build another building behind me to house horses. When the bell rings, the horses now pull out a larger machine to put out the fires.

Around 1900, the present machine and horses are replaced by a new machine that is powered by an engine to drive it and run a pump.

By 1954, there are three of these engines parked in my building. In the summer of 1954, this big machine comes along and raises my building and the house next door to make room for a new and bigger building to house these engines.

A man takes me — a 12-by-48-foot board — out of a pile of rubble and puts me in this dark place. In 1975, he gives me to his son and I am put in another dark place.

In 2022, this son takes me, smooths out one side of me and shapes me. He makes a space in my center and puts a picture of the original building I was part of in this space. Then tags with the names of people who put out the fires are fastened to me and I am put in a place of honor.

I have come a long way in 273 years since I was a pine cone.

1 Comment

  1. Linda Chuss

    What a creative and informative story!

Related Articles

Tales from a Townie: My most tragic night in the Navy

This tale takes place a little farther from Hopkinton than my usual stories. I was a third-class quartermaster aboard the SS Barry DD933. At sea, my duties while on watch consisted of helping the officers with navigation, keeping the bridge clean and keeping the...

SS Barry DD933

Tales from a Townie: Little League comes to Hopkinton

Early spring 1954, and word of Little League Baseball coming to Hopkinton spread rapidly among all the guys in town between the ages of 8 and 12. There were many questions: Where to sign up, where are we going to play our games, is 12 too old? The answers: We...

Hopkinton’s inaugural Little League champions in 1954

Tales from a Townie: Winter fun on Fenton Street

Back in the 1950s, the winters seemed to be longer, colder and snowier. Our fun consisted of skating and sledding. The skating part was pretty well covered in my article “The day we burned the bogs” published Jan. 25, 2023. The sledding part took place in the...

Fenton Street

Tales from a Townie: Hopkinton Drug building has interesting history

I went to Hopkinton Drug on Jan. 31, the closing day for the store. I bought a couple of small items. I sit here today, and my mind wanders back, back, back — 70 years, to be exact. I was 13, going to eighth grade in the Town Hall building. Half of my class was...

Osbourn’s 5 & 10 Cent Store

Tales from a Townie: The ’47 Chevy and the W.A.I.W.W.

This story is about Jim and my greatest adventure in the ’47 Chevy (the first tale about this vehicle was published in the Jan. 10 edition of the Independent). We were cruising in the Chevy one night in the fall of our junior year at Hopkinton High School (1958)....

ales from a Townie-WAIWW

Tales from a Townie: The ’47 Chevy and the baseball glove

This tale takes place between the years 1957 and 1959. The main characters are my friend Jim, the ’47 Chevy and me. Unbeknownst to us, in 1957, the Chevy — more than “just a car” — would be the “magic carpet ride” that would transport us from childhood to the next...

1950s Main Street
Key Storage 4.14.22