A Historic Minute 2024–People and Places

E. Moody Boynton: Entrepreneur, Inventor, Orator
E Moody Boynton Declared Sane
E Moody Boynton Declared Sane

Eben(ezer) Moody Boynton, who was born in 1840 in Ohio’s Western Reserve of old Newbury heritage, returned to live atop Pipestave Hill in his teens, and called West Newbury home for most of his life. Moody Boynton was an entrepreneur, promoter, inventor, tycoon, orator, thwarted politician, pro se litigator, bankrupt—and the only person known to have been committed as a lunatic by the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission, which by 1920 was fed up with his lobbying on behalf of the perhaps visionary but ultimately ill-fated monorail Boynton Bicycle Railroad.

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Nbpt refusal to sell water

Haverhill Gazette, March 31, 1936

The Taking of the Artichoke: How Newburyport came to take the Artichoke River’s waters and roughly 200 acres of land in West Newbury is a long and tangled tale with roots in 19th century industrialization and urbanization. After a “winter cholera”/typhoid outbreak in the winter of 1892-93, suspicions focused on the water supply, at that time furnished by the private Newburyport Water Company. In April of 1893, the state legislature conducted several days of hearings on this topic, in which it was learned that in addition to local wells, the Water Company was drawing on the polluted Merrimack River. With high-powered advisors and lobbyists, Newburyport urged consideration of water sources in Georgetown and West Newbury. Both towns protested, but in June of that year Newburyport was granted statutory authority to take water and land in West Newbury for its water system. Upon the first taking in 1908, Newburyport downplayed adverse impacts to West Newbury, saying that it would take only a negligible amount of water. By 1914, thanks in good measure to Newburyport’s admittedly wasteful water use, the Artichoke was being pumped dry and a second dam was in the works at Plummer Springs. Because Newburyport refused to sell West Newbury water, the Town purchased water from Groveland between 1936, when the Town’s water system came into being, until 1979, when trichlorethylene pollution closed Groveland’s wells. In that crisis, West Newbury made an emergency interconnection with Newburyport, and for the first time was able to use waters from the Artichoke. The Town hoped that with construction of the 150-acre Indian Hill reservoir entirely in West Newbury, Newburyport would make a commitment to provide the Town some of this water. That has not occurred to this day, and West Newbury is still in search of its own ample and reliable water supply.