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Photo 1 [Click on image to enlarge] |
This photo shows a portion of the old Newburyport Turnpike (Route 1), looking north at the Preston Street intersection in the Hathorne section of Danvers. The driveway going diagonally to the left led to "Pine Knoll" – the Nichols family homestead at 98 Preston Street. This photo was taken by one of the Brewster boys, three brothers who were grew up at Pine Knoll, sons of Annie Nichols Brewster. I frequently walked up that driveway to visit with cousins Annie and Marian, and great aunts May and Margaret Nichols. Annie was my piano teacher.
The date of this photo must be about 1951 -- just as the traffic was being re-routed in the midst of the constructions project that widened Route 1 and built a bridge and a cloverleaf system to replace the traffic lights at the intersection with Route 62 (behind the photographer, down the slope to the south).
The next photo shows the view looking south from Pine Knoll. The traffic sign in center island says,
BOSTON
BEAR LEFT
so it seems that the right-hand side of the highway wasn't completed yet.
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Photo 2 [Click on image to enlarge] |
Note the piles of tree trunks cut from the Pine Knoll property.
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Photo 3 [Click on image to enlarge] |
Below are additional images scanned from Brewster family slides.
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Photo 4 [Click on image to enlarge] |
This seems to be an earlier photo, showing the old two-lane Route 1 and the beginning of construction beside it. View south, looking from Pine Knoll property. Compare to next photo, which lacks the utility poles (moved? place underground?)
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Photo 5 [Click on image to enlarge] |
The next two photos show a house that had to be relocated.
Whose house? Where did it go? My cousin Stuart Brewster responds, "This was owned by the family and was just beyond the [Pine Knoll] tennis court. It was rented to numerous families. ... I do recall that Uncle Andrew and Aunt Bunny lived there for a time. There once was talk by Aunt Margaret that she would open a restaurant here since in those days there were few clean places to stop. It never happened. The house was re-located up the Pike at North St."
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Photo 6 [Click on image to enlarge] |
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Photo 7 [Click on image to enlarge] |
The next two photos are looking north, perhaps showing the same location after that house (and several on other side?) had been removed?
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Photo 8 [Click on image to enlarge] |
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Photo 9 [Click on image to enlarge] |
Determining the sequence of these undated photos is a challenge. I suspect that the old Route 1 pavement seen in photos 4-8 above was used for a while during the construction, and then – after the new east side of the highway was completed and in use (photo 9 above), the old roadbed was ready for re-construction, as seen in photos 10 and 11, below.
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Photo 10 [Click on image to enlarge] |
Note the cat observing the scene above. This view is looking north towards Topsfield.
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Photo 11 [Click on image to enlarge] |
Photo 11 is looking south, probably on same day as photo 10. Pine Knoll on the right.
These next two photos were taken a few years after the construction had been completed. The photographer stood at the new paved driveway into Pine Knoll, looking northward, capturing a procession of antique cars on a Glidden Tour, 1954.
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Photo 12 [Click on image to enlarge] |
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Photo 13 [Click on image to enlarge] |
Note the cut-through in the median, allowing U-turns in either directions. (That cut-through was later eliminated, for safety reasons.) My father's new factory for UNEX Laboratories would eventually be built (1964?) on the lot at the right edge of these photos. Later, the Berry building replaced the UNEX building there. Many changes over the years – including of course the removal of the Hathorne School building (see my previous post) to make way for these improvements to Route 1.
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