Braintree

I’ve always thought that places called Braintree sounded odd. I knew it couldn’t have derived from a tree with brains dangling from its branches. Nonetheless, that’s exactly what came to mind. If that’s the case then the Osage Orange or Hedge Apple (Maclura pomifera) might come closest to that twisted image. My overactive imagination still went directly to literal brains even with that understanding.

Osage Orange (Maclura pomifera). Photo by J. N. Stuart; (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Osage Orange (Maclura pomifera)

My familiarity with Braintree drew from the town of the same name in Massachusetts. I surmised correctly that it wasn’t the original Braintree. Its peculiar phrasing must have sailed across the Atlantic with the original European settlers.


Braintree, Essex, England

Day 82,365,Postcard From Braintree. Photo by Andreas-photography; (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Postcard From Braintree

Indeed, Braintree migrated from a place in England, a town dating back at least a thousand years (map). I’m usually pretty adept at digging into obscure corners of the Intertubes discovering etymologies, especially for a name so delightful as Braintree. I didn’t do so well this time however, running up against the dreaded, “nobody really seemed to know” excuse.

Wikipedia included a long paragraph without attribution. In essence the tenuous claim came down to “the origin of the name Braintree is obscure” and it might “indicate that Braintree literally means ‘town (or village) by the river’” It could mean that, or it could mean something completely different. Take your pick.

However, the Braintree in Essex definitely conveyed its name to the Braintree in Massachusetts, USA. People who emigrated from the English Braintree to the colonial Braintree included influential citizens. Their descendants gained influence too, for example future US presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Both of them were born in the Massachusetts Braintree (a portion now in Quincy) as I noted in an earlier article, Presidential Birthplaces.


Braintree, Massachusetts, USA

Sacco and Vanzetti. Photo by Unknown author / Public domain; via Wikimedia Commons
Sacco and Vanzetti

The Adams Family notwithstanding, I first encountered Braintree and wondered about its unusual name because of a more recent and completely unrelated historical event. Many people probably recognized the names Sacco and Vanzetti. That’s true even if they didn’t fully remember the notorious events that happened in Braintree in 1920. Two robbers shot and killed a paymaster for the Slater-Morrill Shoe Company and his guard as they transported payroll boxes to the factory building on Pearl Street (map).

Stereotyping and Scapegoating

Authorities quickly arrested Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, known anarchists born in Italy. They belonged to an extremest group called the Galleanists that advocated violence against government officials and institutions. The alleged motive involved the funding future bombings. So as a result the government sentenced both men to death.

This caused an international uproar with allegations of unfair treatment deriving from prejudices against Italian immigrants. Historians have long debated whether Sacco and Vanzetti committed the crime. However the consensus seemed clear. Their “prosecution, trial, and aftermath constituted a blatant disregard for political civil liberties” at the very least. The state electrocuted the pair in 1927.

Exoneration

The Governor of Massachusetts issued a proclamation in 1977, the 50th anniversary of the execution,

“…that any stigma and disgrace should be forever removed from the names of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, from the names of their families and descendants, and so, from the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts; and I hereby call upon all the people of Massachusetts to pause in their daily endeavors to reflect upon these tragic events, and draw from their historic lessons the resolve to prevent the forces of intolerance, fear, and hatred from ever again uniting to overcome rationality, wisdom, and fairness to which our legal system aspires.”

A small marker now memorializes Sacco and Vanzetti at the intersection of Pearl Street and French Avenue (map), in Braintree.


New Braintree, Massachusetts, USA

There was a New Braintree in Massachusetts too? Why, yes there was, and it sat about 75 miles (120 kilometres) west of the other Massachusetts Braintree. I figured that Massachusetts residents must have migrated away from the coast and brought the name along with them, just like there forebears had done when they crossed the ocean from England. Now I’m not sure.

The Town of New Braintree said,

“In 1709, 6000 acres were granted to the residents of the village of ‘Braintree Farms’. Additional tracts of land which were formerly part of Brookfield and Hardwick were acquired and in 1751 the town was incorporated as New Braintree.”

I dug a bit deeper and discovered more information from a book printed in 1902, published to commemorate the town’s 150th anniversary. It referenced the “Braintree Grant” that dated back to 1666. It formed the later Braintree Farms and a portion of the future town of New Braintree.

The incorporation of Braintree outside of Boston happened in 1640 so it’s possible that it influenced the name of the Braintree Grant. It think it’s more likely that the Braintree in England provided the name directly though. Grants generally (although not always) came through Royal decree. But that remains just a hunch for now.

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