The Dividing Scar: Massachusetts and the Four Lost Towns (Full Documentary)

Boston didn’t have enough water and there was land in Western Massachusetts that was perfect for a reservoir - but 2,500 people lived there, in the former towns of Dana, Enfield, Greenwich and Prescott. In 1938, they had to give up everything so the state could take the land. This is the story of the Quabbin Reservoir and the people still affected by its construction.

Пікірлер: 51

  • @bratcatt4627
    @bratcatt4627 Жыл бұрын

    I volunteer for the Swift River Valley Historical Society for the last several years and I must say that this was a well-put together as well as astoundingly thoughtful piece.

  • @greenwich1754
    @greenwich1754 Жыл бұрын

    This place and history is in my blood. Unfortunately, I am getting to the age where limitless hiking and exploration of the watershed have reached my limits - and there is still so much to explore. What makes it extremely difficult, apart from age, is the extreme dense growth and invasive plants that thwart any attempt to find archaeological sites. Ticks, which I don't think I ever saw until about age 30, also are quite discouraging. There is such a spiritual aspect to this place - to see how the land was cleared, worked, homes and stone walls built, only to return to woods, as if to say "all our earthly efforts are for naught".

  • @damienlessard1984

    @damienlessard1984

    2 ай бұрын

    Well said and yes the Quabbin has an enormous amount of ticks

  • @Pixiepop0031
    @Pixiepop0031 Жыл бұрын

    My grandmother had to leave Prescott. I’ve grown up listening to the history. Luckily the homestead is not underwater but it is emotional every visit.

  • @greenwich1754

    @greenwich1754

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi! Might I ask the Prescott name (your Grandmother's family)? We (Swift River Valley Historical Society) did 2 hikes in Prescott this fall, as to commemorate what would have been Prescott's bicentennial. I am familiar with many names associated with Prescott, and am curious, that if I new the name, perhaps I could pin point the homesite.

  • @Pixiepop0031

    @Pixiepop0031

    Жыл бұрын

    The family name is Griswold. There were six children and my grandmother was Beatrice born 1921

  • @greenwich1754

    @greenwich1754

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Pixiepop0031 I know the name well. I knew the oldest sibling, Eleanor, quite well. She is the one who started Swift River Valley Historical Society bus pilgrimages to Prescott & Enfield. I have been to her home site many times. It is a beautiful spot. I remember asking Eleanor if she felt poor growing up in Prescott. She said she didn't, as everyone else in town were farmers. I remember her saying "we were poor, but we had 60 acres of land". The Griswold family was the last family to leave Prescott - staying there until after the hurricane of September, 1938. That's quite remarkable, since almost all original people were gone by 1930, only "summer" people renting the homes/farms until the state tore them down. Thanks for responding.

  • @Pixiepop0031

    @Pixiepop0031

    Жыл бұрын

    That is my great aunt. Eddie “Sarge” was also involved with the historical society and I have been many times. I believe it is so important to keep the history and their memories alive

  • @woowoochuggachugga
    @woowoochuggachugga11 ай бұрын

    My best friend just called me. He was quite shook up. While doing research of the Quabbin this morning he stumbled upon this video. When Zib Pierce said her name at 2:36 his blood ran cold. He got the call from Witty's late afternoon on Thursday to prepare her final resting place. Zib passed on July 6, from old age. He is very shook up that this woman, full of life and vigor on the video is the same woman he is digging a grave for this week. I read her obituary on Witty's website to him and we laughed and cried together. An amazing woman and devoted Orange Community member.

  • @josephlaviolette146
    @josephlaviolette1467 ай бұрын

    The Quabbin is my favorite place in the world

  • @marthag7287
    @marthag72876 ай бұрын

    I grew up in Holyoke, Mass and left Mass in 1976. Never knew this about the Quabbin. Thank you so much for this documentary. Very very interesting.

  • @EdisonRex
    @EdisonRex7 ай бұрын

    What a great documentary. Thank you for putting it up. I'm surprised it doesn't have a lot more views and likes after a year.

  • @TheHonestPeanut
    @TheHonestPeanut6 ай бұрын

    I can only imagine how it would feel to have your state government take the land I've cleared and worked for a lifetime just to water a city that can't take care of itself. That would leave a heck of a lot of anger in me. Our house is made from the old North Dana general store. We were lucky enough to meet the daughter of the man who moved and built it. There's so much history around here but so much of it has been lost or muddied over the decades and generations. I'm glad there are folks keeping this history alive.

  • @user-xj6gm9cc2q
    @user-xj6gm9cc2q2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making this documentary. Growing up in Western Mass in the 00s, there was a general feeling that the state didn't care about us. I was trained as a social worker in Western Mass, and moved to Greater Boston - and it was interesting to experience the differences in how state resources are allocated.

  • @azspud
    @azspud Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for telling this story! I now have a deeper appreciation for what was sacrificed by so many. As a photographer who has enjoyed capturing the wildlife there, I know for certain that on our next visit back to the Quabbin, my wife and I will certainly look at it from a different perspective.

  • @checkyourhopper
    @checkyourhopper Жыл бұрын

    Great piece! Beautiful shots and a very important story that is very well told in this documentary. nice job!

  • @MsGaella
    @MsGaella Жыл бұрын

    Very well done. -looking at the complexity of this event. Thank you very much.

  • @MartinReiter143
    @MartinReiter1436 ай бұрын

    I was on a field trip to Quabbin around 1970, with an ecologist, who mentioned the recent release of Wild Turkeys there, brought from Pennsylvania to reintroduce them to New England. It worked.

  • @Iz0pen

    @Iz0pen

    4 ай бұрын

    lol it sure did!

  • @stephicath
    @stephicath7 ай бұрын

    My father was pastor at the South Athol Methodist Church around the time of the taking. It was his first church after graduating seminary. He and my mom had several friends in Prescott and Enfield they would recall. I spent summers in my youth with my family at Morgan Memorial's Fresh Air Camps in South Athol working with the kids who would come out from the city to spend some time in the clean air under the stars. That area holds a special place in my heart and memory.

  • @curtyct5389
    @curtyct53892 ай бұрын

    This was a great documentary. I found it looking for information on the town. I grew up in with a very similar situation. They flooded to the town of barkhamstead ct and created the Saville dam in the barkhampstead reservoir as well as Colebrook river lake dam a little further up. But a very similar situation and I couldn't find. Any significant videos on my reservoir So this was really awesome to see thank you

  • @seamusrw
    @seamusrw9 ай бұрын

    Its good the history of these towns can be preserved. We've lost a lot of history with the building of the MA highways too. Not to mention when towns were incorporated.

  • @svenmartin840
    @svenmartin840Ай бұрын

    My grandfather helped build the place. And I'm surprised the New York Central did not build a new Athol Junction around. The Quabbin Reservoir

  • @Jiji-the-cat5425
    @Jiji-the-cat54256 ай бұрын

    I remember walking both dams of the Quabbin many times ever since I was a kid, and remember going to visit the observation tower as well. It's a gorgeous place. It's very sad to know what happened to the people of those towns, haunting in a way. I wonder if there is anyone left who remembers those towns, even if just a fringe memory. Sadly, I found out Elizabeth "Zib" Pierce from this documentary passed away this summer at the age of 99. She seemed like a really lovely person.

  • @geemanone2039
    @geemanone2039 Жыл бұрын

    I grew up and lived most of my life in WMASS. Mostly West Springfield. I always had a innate dislike of Eastern Mass/Boston. 23:55 breaks it down very well.

  • @supbrahimhammer.421

    @supbrahimhammer.421

    Жыл бұрын

    I say this as a person who’s ancestors graves were moved to Quabbin park cemetery, it was a necessary sacrifice my ancestors made by selling their farms to bring a permanent solution to a problem that seemed almost unsolvable. ~2,500 sold their property to create the largest, efficient, and most sustainable source of clean water in the entire world at the time, a project that single-handedly has prevented Massachusetts from shortages of clean water for almost a century will likely for the rest of its life. It was a necessary sacrifice to bring security to the most essential element to the survival of the human race in the state of Massachusetts.

  • @arkhangelskii

    @arkhangelskii

    Жыл бұрын

    I hear you. I disliked Boston especially long before I ever cared about the lost towns. Learning about the history of the Quabbin as you might expect only intensified my dislike, and for the same reason.

  • @jimmclaughlin5930

    @jimmclaughlin5930

    5 ай бұрын

    I hear ya there Massachusetts as a whole has nothing to offer western MA is worst than nothing when it comes to something to offer south Florida on the other hand has everything for anyone whom love the outdoors. Especially SW Florida.

  • @TheSusan11233
    @TheSusan11233 Жыл бұрын

    Born in Greenfield grew up in Holy oke visited Quabbin a lot beautiful place💞💞

  • @webdev217
    @webdev217 Жыл бұрын

    I have family in Belchertown and you can walk down their road to a gate to the Quabbin area.. You walk down this street downhill.. you pass by what was a gas station and a couple houses with only the foundations left. Surreal.

  • @ChadsNewEnglandTracks
    @ChadsNewEnglandTracks7 ай бұрын

    I see why so many in Hardwick vote NO that would potentially change the way of living there. After watching this I completely understand. I can’t wait to build a home on the 10 acres we have next to the quabbin. It is so beautiful there. I hope Hardwick never gets modernized.

  • @danielledeslauriers8466
    @danielledeslauriers84662 жыл бұрын

    Amazing 👏 ughh. I grew up in ware ma 1967

  • @Budrob998
    @Budrob998 Жыл бұрын

    Same thing happened up in NH (Hill/Franklin) flooded the whole town around the same time or circa

  • @nowistime8070
    @nowistime80709 ай бұрын

    did they move the bodies too?

  • @angelisacephas3188
    @angelisacephas3188 Жыл бұрын

    I'm proud to be from Massachusetts

  • @arkhangelskii
    @arkhangelskii Жыл бұрын

    Very well done piece. Piques two questions: Was the Quabbin NECESSARY and was the Quabbin RIGHT? The FIRST question, was the Quabbin NECESSARY, is quite easy to answer. In all honesty, probably yes. Certainly some project like it was, whether it was the Quabbin or another reservoir on a similar scale. The SECOND question, was it RIGHT, is a much more difficult question to answer and I'm not sure everyone will come up with the same answer. Certainly it would be made even more difficult if certain technologies were available at the time.

  • @Iz0pen

    @Iz0pen

    4 ай бұрын

    Involuntary Redistribution is theft. The fact that the robbers all agree it’s right and necessary doesn’t add morality to what is otherwise a crime.

  • @Gwaithmir
    @Gwaithmir9 ай бұрын

    "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few." (Vulcan Proverb)

  • @infinitelyblessed359
    @infinitelyblessed3592 ай бұрын

    Ti's DISGUSTING what they did to ALL those towns!!!

  • @Iz0pen
    @Iz0pen4 ай бұрын

    It’s not to late to reimburse the descendants of those who were robbed, but I think we all know the alligator tears and thankfulness is all bs and no one will be made whole .

  • @lanctermann7261
    @lanctermann7261Ай бұрын

    Just finding out about this. I grew up in Springfield. More joy from “our” government.

  • @Music-yq2yz
    @Music-yq2yz Жыл бұрын

    It's a secure water source unless you're an Indian at the entrance gate right around midnight.