Dudley Pond Stories
The Wayland Museum & Historical Society was thrilled to join our friends at the Dudley Pond Association’s annual event on July 12 celebrating the community, featuring live music on a cruising pontoon boat. The event sparkled with the same light that Henry David Thoreau described on November 8, 1851: “Ah, those sun-sparkles on Dudley Pond in this November air! What a heaven to live in! Intensely brilliant, as no artificial light I have seen, like a dance of diamonds.”
Like Thoreau’s Walden Pond, Dudley Pond is a kettle pond that owes its existence to glacial deposits. Still, its actual depth lies in the centuries of stories it has witnessed — stories the Wayland Museum preserves through artifacts, maps, journals, quilts, postcards, newspapers, photographs, and more. The centuries of change that surround this one geographic site emphasize the breadth of history that Wayland can share with our broader community and region.
A few of these stories and layers of history include:
The environmental changes over time (think glacial deposit to contemporary weeding of invasive tape grass and milfoil)
The Native American sacred burial site that held significance at this location — brought to wider attention during the 1959 Mansion Inn fire
The industrial revolution’s impact on Wayland (workforce, economy and waterways)
20th-century recreation and summer cottages
Urban renewal and grassroots pushback
The community spirit that ensures the future of this “Great Pond” (a Massachusetts State designation for ponds that once measured 10 or more acres).
If you’re curious about a specific period of Dudley Pond history or have a story you’d like to share with the museum, please get in touch with us at info@waylandmuseum.org. The museum is committed to bringing Wayland’s history to life — connecting the past to the present and inspiring future generations.
Town-wide scavenger hunt
Our fun in the sparkling sun continues throughout the summer with our Town-Wide Scavenger Hunt. I can’t give away any answers, but I can say it has been fun to see folks exploring the museum and grounds as they solve some of the clues. You can pick up a copy at the museum or the Wayland Free Public Library. Test your Wayland knowledge, get outside with friends and family, and don’t forget your sunscreen! Return completed scavenger hunts to either the museum or the library for a prize.
Attention all rail fans!
Drop into the museum to view our “All Aboard!” exhibit featuring a Wayland train railroad model by Steve Angelini and objects on loan from local train expert Rick Conard.
Scarlett Hoey is the executive director of the Wayland Museum (waylandmuseum.org).