Left at the dock
The canoes didn't all disappear from the Charles at once, of course, but things changed. The automobile replaced the trolley as a mode of transportation -- and it replaced the canoe as a place to be alone with a girl. In the Teens and Twenties families that a decade before might have climbed onto a trolley and gone to Norumbega instead climbed into their Fords and Pierce Arrows and Packards and drove the Mohawk Trail. Norumbega Park and the other urban amusement centers around Boston -- Revere Beach, Salem Willows -- went into a genteel decline.
Norumbega held on longer than most, helped by new rides on the midway and electric lights for night baseball. It got a new lease on life in 1930, when The amphitheatre was enclosed and the theater seats were replaced by 150 sofas. Big bands and dancehalls were the rage, and the Totem Pole Ballroom became one of the most popular.
The Depression hit canoe traffic on the river hard, as canoe owners stopped paying rent to boathouses and moved their craft to garage lofts and backyards. The 1936 flood destroyed many of the boathouses that had been the scene of so much weekend activity, and they were never rebuilt.
World War II gave The Rec and Norumbega a big economic boost -- because they were accessible by public transportation they drew crowds that lacked either cars or gas ration coupons. But when peacetime returned the Charles was more and more undisturbed.
The Riverside Recreation Center, donated by Charles Hubbard to the MDC in 1914, was closed in 1958 and destroyed by a suspicious fire in 1959. Norumbega Park and the Totem Pole Ballroom changed hands twice in the '50s and finally closed -- the park in 1963 and the ballroom in 1964. The Totem Pole burned to the ground on Nov.11,1965, and a fire damaged the restaurant months later. In 1966 the two Norumbega Park boathouses burned.
By then the Massachusetts Turnpike's intersection with Route 128 had made major changes in the landscape around the canoeing grounds, and the site of Norumbega Park was soon occupied by the Marriott Motor Hotel. On summer nights the sound of distant traffic, not gramophones and ukuleles, echoed across the Charles. The golden era of canoes on the Charles -- and of postcards -- was over.
References
(1) For an illustrated discussion of the role of the Charles River in Newton's history, see "Images of America: Newton," written by Thelma Fleishman for the Newton Historical Society and published by Arcadia Publishing, 1999.
(2) See "Newton's 19th Century Architecture: Newton Upper Falls and Lower Falls" (Newton Historical Commission, 1982) for a thorough survey of the rise and fall of river-related manufacturing in the two communities. See also Ken Newcomb's Makers of the Mold, a book-length history of Newton Upper Falls maintained on the Web site of the Friends of Hemlock Gorge.
(3) Pollock, Robert F., "Down by the Riverside" in "Historic Auburndale," booklet published by the Auburndale Community Association, revised edition 1996. See also his article on Norumbega Park at www.defunctparks.com
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