News
& Features
June 2005
The
Stones Hold Stories of the Past
By Pauline Merrick
Donate
now!
The
Brookfield Cemetery Preservation Fund $25,000 Match Campaign
is under way! Thank you to all of the town citizens and
friends who have made a donation or pledge already. Details
of the campaign were outlined in an insert in last month's
Citizen. If we can raise $25,000, an anonymous
donor will match this amount. All of the monies are to be
used for the preservation projects outlined in the Preservation
& Management Plan developed specifically for the Brookfield
Cemetery.
If you would like to make a donation or pledge in memory
of a friend, family member, or loved one, please make your
check payable to: Town of Brookfield Cemetery Preservation
Fund, and send to:
Treasurer, Town of Brookfield
Brookfield Town Hall
6 Central Street
Brookfield, MA 01506 |
The
historical significance of the Brookfield Cemetery, National Register
of Historic Places, does not lie simply in the fact that it is
“old.” The gravestones located there are inscribed
with information about residents of Brookfield through the years,
and also about the formative years of the emerging nation. One
such stone stands not far from modern Route 9.
Here
lies ye Body of Doct Thomas Weld, son of ye Revd Habijah Weld
of Attleborough,
The
first member of the Weld family to set foot in the New World did
so in the port of Boston in 1632, during what historians now call
“The Great Migration” of emigrants from Europe, mostly
English. His grandson, Habijah, was born in Dunstable, Mass.,
in 1702. Graduating from Harvard in 1732, Habijah became pastor
of the church in West Attleboro and served in that capacity until
his death in 1782. He married Mary Fox in 1728, and together they
reared a family of 15 children.
Their seventh child was named Thomas, who trained to become a
doctor, finishing his training by the age of 19. When the call
came from the military for young men, Thomas joined up in his
professional capacity.
Having been upon ye Expedition against Crownpoint, Anno 1756,
By the middle of the 18th century, England was eager to expand
her holdings in the American colonies. The western lands–namely
the Ohio valley–were rich in natural resources for those
strong enough to take them. Unfortunately, the French had already
claimed these lands, and were prepared to fight for them. The
French controlled traffic on Lake Champlain, an important transportation
link between Canada and the disputed lands, by holding Crown Point,
at the narrowest part of the lake. War was officially declared
in 1756, and several attempts were made to take the French fortifications
in the area.
And upon his Return home died at ye House of DoctorJabez Upham,
in Brookfield, December ye 24th, 1756, in ye 21st year of his
age.
“Home” in this case refers to the settled lands
of New England, Brookfield being an important stopping place for
travelers. The sick, cold, and discouraged troops would have found
rest and food here on their journey back to the east. Among the
sick was Thomas Weld, who apparently was taken to the home of
the town’s best doctor, Jabez Upham, where the young doctor/soldier
died. Out of respect for his profession or maybe for his military
endeavors, Thomas was laid to rest in the Upham family plot, with
a simple yet eloquent piece of slate to mark the spot. Thomas’
headstone today, nearly 250 years later, is worn and chipped,
but still stands to remind us of the short, noteworthy life of
Thomas Weld, Dr.