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Books, maps, and DVDs we recommend

The Puritan Village Evolves: A History of Wayland MassachusettsThe Puritan Village Evolves: A History of Wayland Massachusetts First Edition
by Helen F. Emery (1981)
A chronological history of the town from 1638 to 1980, written by a local historian and scholar.
$ 20.00
Available: Wayland Historical Society, Wayland Depot

 

 

Wayland Historical Tours (1976); revised 2013WAYLAND HISTORICAL TOURS BOOK
Edited by Barbara Robinson (Paperback)
The story of Wayland’s first three centuries told through three historical tours.
$ 10.00
Available: Wayland Historical Society, Wayland Depot
Click here for a free PDF version.

 

 

Wayland A-Z

Wayland A to Z (2004)
by Evelyn Wolfson, Dick Hoyt (Paperback)
THE book to own if you can have only one Wayland history – full of meticulously researched stories and details about the town of Wayland, MA
$ 10.00
Available:  Wayland Historical Society, Wayland Depot

Legendary LocalsLegendary Locals of Wayland (2015)
by Evelyn Wolfson (Paperback)
A multitude of photos accompanies visionaries who have influenced both Wayland and the country, along with current town folks who continue in their footsteps.
$18.67
Available: Amazon, Arcadia Publishing, Wayland Depot.

 

Growing up in Wayland: Life in a Massachusetts town during the Depression Growing up in Wayland: Life in a Massachusetts town during the Depression (1997)
by George K Lewis (Paperback)
Beautifully written memoir of a very active and observant boy who grew up to be a professor of geography at Boston University and local historian.
$ 10.00
Available: Wayland Historical Society, Wayland Depot

 

Wayland’s 375 Cookbook (2014)
This is Wayland 375th anniversary year’s celebratory recipe book, written for town residents (including those from centuries past). Linking the 17th to 21st centuries with popular foods, drinks, and “this and that” (i.e. boiled hot soap or teething cookies), this book contains more than 250 recipes.
$ 15.00
Available: Wayland Historical Society, Wayland Depot

Map: 1881 Copy of James Sumner Draper’s 1776 Map of Wayland
Unframed 18 x 24” copy of map made by James Sumner Draper (1811-1896) of what he thought Wayland was like in 1775/6.  The original is owned by the Wayland Historical Society. There was no Boston Post Road, (Route 20), west of the First Parish Church in Wayland Center, nor did Commonwealth Avenue, (Route 30), go west of the School Street intersection in Cochituate.
$ 10.00
Available:  Wayland Historical Society, Wayland Depot

FIVE MILES ASTRIDE THE RIVER (2014)
DVD: by Zander Cowen and Jacob Sussman
Our most ambitious work, Five Miles Astride the River is a 20-minute film exploring the development of our hometown, Wayland, Massachusetts. Showcasing the village’s evolution over 375 years of history, the film explores three distinct eras of American life and illustrates how the town’s past has shaped its present.
$15.00
Available:  Pelham Island Pictures, Wayland Depot

Wayland: Images of America (2002)              
by George Lewis (Paperback)
More than 200 photographs, selected primarily from the extensive collection of the Wayland Historical Society, of farmers, factory workers, trolleys, and schools help to tell the unique and fascinating history of Wayland’s two separate neighborhoods, Wayland Center and Cochituate Village.
$21.89
Available:  Amazon, Arcadia Publishing, Wayland Depot

 

Puritan Village: The Formation of a New England Town (1963)
by Sumner Chilton Powell
A detailed account of the early government and social organization of the town of Sudbury, Massachusetts, present- day Wayland.
$ 20.84
Available: Amazon.com

Lydia Maria Child: The Quest for Racial Justice (Oxford Portraits) (2002)
by Lori Kenschaft (Hardcover)
This dynamic nineteenth-century writer who, through her pen and at great personal cost to her literary career, spoke out for those silenced in society — slaves, Native Americans, women, and the poor—lived in Wayland for much of her life.
$32.95
Available: Amazon.com

 

Two Sudburys’ Tour

A Day to Remember Uncertain weather and a scary bus mishap made for a rocky start to an ultimately successful tour about the origins of present day Sudbury and Wayland. We gathered at the Sudbury Town Hall, then boarded a bus (and some cars followed the...

Digital World

Society’s historic maps enter the digital world Institutions, such as the Wayland Historical Society, have been collecting historic documents for centuries. Mostly these materials are made from paper, which is fairly delicate. Paper documents that have...

Missiles on Oxbow

Missiles On Oxbow: The Nike Missile Site in WaylandMy name is Bob Farrington but I am more easily recognized in Wayland as Mr. Molly Faulkner.  Molly and I live on Bennett Road. I am a retired commercial real estate, finance and business lawyer.  I grew up in Wayland...

Gloria Backman

Gloria and I became friends in the 1970s when we formed a weaving group with a small group of friends.  Several times a month we got together to experiment making a variety of basket types using natural and bought materials.  Gloria became an accomplished...

New Board Member

Welcome new board member. Kay Gardner-Westcott, a self-described history nerd and long-time resident of Wayland, is chair of the Wayland Historical Commission–the official agent of town government responsible for community–wide historic preservation...

Child’s Birthday

Lydia Maria Child’s 216th birthday party. A celebration of Lydia Maria Child’s life was enjoyed by many on Sunday afternoon. Born in Medford, Mass in 1802 Child was a progressive author who defied social norms for women as an abolitionist and activist for the rights...

Open House

Annual Open House Celebration Our annual open house celebrates the holiday season with music, treats, and general merriment! Many volunteers join in the decorating, serving and cleaning up. Thanks to all the volunteers and guests that joined us at the...

Girl Scouts

Girl Scouts 4th grade Wayland Girl Scouts, “Played the Past” at the Wayland Museum and Historical Society’s Grout Heard House November 17 where they learned about two 19th century Wayland women  -- Jerusha Grout Heard and Lydia Maria Child.  After being taught some...

Lydia Maria Child

Lydia Maria Child Wayland’s own Lydia Maria Child wrote the most famous poem in America about Thanksgiving- “Over the River and Through the Wood’ (originally titled “The New-England Boy’s Song About Thanksgiving Day”). Mrs. Child was a prominent 19th century author,...

New Board Members

Welcome to New Board Members Beth Butler and Jack Russell from Molly Faulkner      Jack Russell, of Russell’s Garden Center,  is the son of Sam and Polly Russell and nephew of Lew and Charlotte Russell.  Jack was the farm manager and a docent for the...

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