Kennedy Park

LOCATION

The Highlands have many beautiful mansions and structures. There was great growth in the Highlands when a trolley route was made up Appleton Street and up Lincoln Street. The neighborhood grew so quickly that it needed a school – The Highland Grammar School. The Highland Grammar School was built in 1905. It was a large three floor building.

stop 1 – Highlands Methodist Episcopal Church

read stop 9 at this LINK

stop 2 – Lincoln Street

A one block walk up Lincoln Street from the park in a westerly direction is a fine way to view some nice homes. (LOCATION)

At 98 Lincoln Street is the Azro Coburn house from 1908.

Coburn

At 104 Lincoln Street is the James Ramage house from 1895.

Ramage

At 110 Lincoln Street.

At 118 Lincoln Street is the John Williams house from 1893. This is a Queen Ann Victorian home. John was a carpenter and painter with Doane in a Holyoke store.

Williams

stop 3 – corner of Waldo and Allyn Streets

This corner has many beautiful Victorian homes. (LOCATION)

homes.

stop 4 – Nonotuck Street and Allyn Street

While there are some nice homes along Nonotuck Street, this corner of the park is best to use as a grand entrance into the park’s many sections. The playground area of Kennedy Park comes first. (LOCATION) Then some memorial stones honoring Kennedy and the former Highland School. The school was positioned in the middle of the park. Beyond the park’s center is a modern baseball diamond.

stop 5 – Kennedy Park

The Edward Kennedy Park is now located in place of the school. He was a student at the school and then at Sacred Heart High School. He won the Silver Medal, the Bronze Medal, and the Purple Heart. He was killed in action in Germany on October 31 1944.

stop 6 – Highland Grammar School

The Highland Grammar School opened in 1900 and closed in the 1980s. LINK

IMAGE

[STORY about reproductions of artwork at the Highland Grammar School. Where is this art now?]

Sanborn map analysis:

Sanborn 1889 map – not covered

Sanborn 1895 map

Sanborn 1915 map and map B

Sanborn 1949 map and map B

Sanborn 1956 map and map B

Doyle residences

In 1928 the family lived at 130 Waldo Street for that year only.  It signifies their move from an apartment (at Thorpe) to a home but they did not own that house.  In 1929 they had moved again to Clinton Street. The grid below is the residences of the Doyle family from their youth to their deaths.

residenceyears
he at 173 Elm Street and she at 191 Dwight Street1905
104 Beech Street1906
783 Dwight Street1910
354 Hampden Street1915 to 1916
7 Thorpe1918 to 1927
130 Waldo Street1928
9 Clinton1929 to 1930rent
18 Lynwood Avenue1935

Sanborn map analysis of 132 Waldo Street:

Sanborn 1915 map

Mary Doyle’s Birth Place

7 Thorpe Avenue is the birth place of Mary Doyle. She lived there in her younger years. Until about 1915 this was the location of a wooden home but was replaced by this apartment complex. The Doyle family lived here for a few years then moved around the Highlands neighborhood.

Doyle residencesLINK

Sanborn map analysis:

Sanborn 1895 map shows an empty lot

Sanborn 1915 map shows the large brick building at 7 Thorpe

genealogy of the Doyle family:

namerelationFindagrave
Mary DoyleselfFindagrave
Edward DoylefatherFindagrave
Mary SullivanmotherFindagrave
John Joseph Sullivanmaternal grandfatherFindagrave
Johanna Sheehanmaternal grandmotherFindagrave
Findagrave

Edward Doyle her father was a wool sorter at the Farr Alpaca Mill.

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In the 1920 census the Doyle family is at 7 Thorpe Avenue.

In the 1930 census the Doyle family is at 9 Clinton Street.

Highland Park

The Highlands have many beautiful mansions and structures. There was great growth in the Highlands when a trolley route was made up Appleton Street and up Lincoln Street. The neighborhood grew so quickly that it needed a school – The Highland Grammar School. This was used as an auditorium for the Holy Cross Church for its signing groups. The Highland Grammar School was built in 1905. It was a large three floor building.

[STORY about reproductions of artwork at the Highland Grammar School. Where is this art now?]

From at least 1920 to 1926 there was an annual production at the Highland School Hall and then at the Holy Cross Church Hall. The production was called the Holy Cross Minstrel Show. Holy Cross also purchased (on July 28 1923) a 125 acre parcel of land in Goshen and turned it into the Holy Cross Boys and Girls Camp.

The Edward Kennedy Park is now located in place of the school. He was a student at the school and then at Sacred Heart High School. He won the Silver Medal, the Bronze Medal, and the Purple Heart. He was killed in action in Germany on October 31 1944.

The Parish and the Hill (by Mary Doyle Curran) tour

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[A tour can be given. Also a one hour indoor presentation can be given.]

The Parish and the Hill is a novel written by Mary Doyle Curran about the life of her family in Holyoke. Through three generations, the life of the family has changed from a rough one in the mills to one of some gentility. Pulaski Park was were the Irish first lived in the late 1840s. St Jerome’s Church was a parish church for the family. After the Irish helped build the mills through the 1850s and 1870s, many new mills came into town. Her father worked as a mill sorter at the Farr Alpaca Mill. The Doyle family moved uptown to the Highlands in the early 1900s as many of the Irish of Holyoke did. There Holy Cross Church started as an offshoot of the Saint Jerome Church. Mary Doyle was born at 7 Thorpe Avenue and lived there in her youth. She attended the Highland Grammar School. Her relatives lived around the Highlands area and her own family did move a bit.

John Sullivan obituary

This tour may be done as a walking, driving, or bicycle riding tour. It is about 3 miles to cover the stops and then another 1 mile to return to the start. Use the 10 underlined TOUR links in the grid below to get to much more information on each stop. This tour outline was designed by Mark Clinton and Patricia Kennedy professors of the Holyoke Community College in 2017. It has been enlarged and described by Robert Comeau. [Use the Holyoke Public Library as a halfway rest area. Doyle worked here in her youth.]

tour map for Holyoke downtown section

tour map for Holyoke Highland section
stoplocationaddress (Google map at link)TOUR linkcommentsVIDEO
1Pulaski Parknorthern end of Maple StreetTOURMary Doyle’s grandfather worked at the Parsons Paper Mill number 1 which was just over the start of the canal.multiple videos at the tour link
2Veteran’s Parkcorner of Hampden and Chestnut StreetsTOURmultiple videos at the tour link
3Saint Jerome Church Campuscorner of Hampden and Chestnut StreetsTOURThis was Mary’s grandfather and mother’s church.multiple videos at the tour link
4Holyoke Canal SystemHolyoke Heritage State ParkTOURmultiple videos at the tour link
5Farr Alpaca Millscorner of Appleton and Bigelow StreetsTOURMILL – Mary’s father worked at the Farr Alpaca Mill.Video
RestHolyoke Public LibraryChestnut StreetTOURLibrary TOUR – Mary took out books from heremultiple videos at the tour link
6Holy Cross Churchcorner of Pleasant and Appleton StreetsTOUR(first 5 stops at this tour link)Video
7Mary Doyle’s Birth Place7 Thorpe AvenueTOURincludes genealogical information and her other homesVideo
8Hampden Street businessesHampden StreetTOURfrequented storessame video as above
9Highland Parkcorner of Lincoln and Waldo StreetsTOURnow Kennedy ParkVideo
10Saint Jerome CemeterySaint Jerome AvenueTOURMary Doyle Curran has a gravestone marker near her parents.Video
BonusBrightsideBrightside DriveTOURThe Doyles visited here for a theatrical play. Mary grandfather was in the old mens’ home (Beavan-Kelly) for a short time.multiple videos at the tour link

External LINK to the gravestone cemetery ceremony.

South Hadley Falls Cemetery

The South Hadley Falls Cemetery walking tour booklet is available from me. They cost $5 for a black-and-white stapled copy. Each additional copy after that is $3 more when shipped together. For a color copy, the cost is $8 and each additional copy in color is $6.

Email me from my contact page for details. The booklets that you order will be mailed to you via USPS so I need a physical address. Other booklets are available at the BOOKLET page.

Follow the tour HERE.

Otto Dreikorn house

Edward Twing had two different lots worked on in Holyoke. This was done from 1923 to 1925. One was at 62 Central Park Drive and the other at the double land lot 198 and 208 Central Park Drive.

The Twing house at 62 Central Park Drive. The home is Tudor revival. This is the first of two homes that Edward Twing had the Olmsted Brothers fully design. This one was designed in 1923. It was perhaps ready in 1930 but the worldwide Depression did not allow for Twing to find a buyer for the grand home. I believe Twing built these homes in the Wyckoff area for resale only.

Soon after it was built Otto Dreikorn purchased the house. Otto Dreikorn was a bread maker of Holyoke. He was also a fire commissioner for decades. FINDAGRAVE

More importantly for us is that he was the president of the Wyckoff Park Realty Corporation and owner of the Mt Tom Golf Course.

His father named Max Otto started the Dreikorn bread store from scratch and also worked on the Parks Commission for the city of Holyoke.