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HomeHistory of Great Neck

Great Neck
Ipswich, Massachusetts
A
History
compiled by Doris H. Wilson

Printed for The Association of Great Neck, Inc.
1984

(The Town's 350th Anniversary)

Originally printed by

Defiance Graphics Corporation Rowley, Massachusetts

1984

April 2021 - One of Great Neck’s most ardent supporters, Doris Wilson passed away in 2020. The Association of Great Neck fondly remembers the contributions of Doris and her husband, Angus. We hope you enjoy her comprehensive history of her beloved Great Neck.

Great Neck is a tract of three hundred and fifty acres of bluff, hill, upland, and beach with presently more than four hundred and forty homes, located three miles from the center of Ipswich and thirty miles from Boston. It is skirted on three sides by water - Plum Island Sound, Ipswich River, and Eagle Hill River. Its hills command a view of the Atlantic Ocean from Cape Ann to Mount Agamenticus in Maine. From the very beginning of the Town's history, this great, isolated tract has been the most noteworthy portion of the old common lands. Its forests were an important asset, its value as a safe and extensive pasture was very great, and the fishing station on its beach and hillside was a large factor in the industrial development of the Town. After the first decade of the eighteenth century, it held a unique position as the only valuable portion of the old common lands which was retained by all the Commoners in a body.


But its history goes back over 10,000 years. "Prior to the 1950's, it was generally assumed that man in the Northeast was a fairly recent ar­ rival, perhaps within the last four or five thousand years,'' explains John Grimes of the Peabody Museum. Ipswich is rich in history - 350 years of colonization and growth as a nation. But few historians realize the Town is also rich in prehistory - that infinitely longer period preceding written records. In early 1950 stone artifacts and a fluted projectile point, similar to points found near the bones, which dated around 8,500 B.C., of extinct mammals in the western United States were found at Bull Brook in Town and on Great Neck. By piecing together evidence from numerous scientific fields, archeologists can theorize about the environment and the culture of the early Americans, who existed at a time of great geographical transition following the retreat of the Ice Age. Ten thousand years ago, sea levels were still rising in southern New England, and the tundra landscape was slowly transforming to forestland.


During the Ice Age, the ice covering Great Neck was thousands of feet thick. The hills (drumlins) of Great Neck were formed by glacial drift. Around 8,000 B.C., the climate moderated, conifers appeared, huge animals disappeared. Family groups gathered into bands of fifty or so for survival. They hunted small game and deer. Middens on Great Neck, Little Neck, Treadwell Island, and Eagle Hill indicate that these areas may have been summer camping grounds of Paleo-IndiansDeciduous trees appeared between 2,500 and 1,000 B.C. Controversial megalith sites on Great Neck (dolmens) plus patterns in stone indicate visits of Vikings or Celts.


Cows on Jeffrey's Neck Road. Date taken unknown. Courtesy of Mona Mulholland Snyder.

Looking north from Clark Pond toward the Clark residence. Date taken unknown, pro­bably early 1900s. Courtesy of the Ipswich Historical Society.

It is said that the Mayflower stopped here and then went on in 1620. Before the settlement of Ipswich was begun in 1633 by John Winthrop, William Jeffrey, who had come over in 1623 in the company of Robert Gorges and settled in Weymouth, had purchased for a very small sum from the Indians a title to the great neck of land which then bore his name. Winthrop's band, however, assumed possession of the Neck; and in 1666 the General Court confirmed the Town's right to it and gave Jeffrey five hundred acres of land elsewhere.


Huge heaps of clam shells on Eagle Hill, Treadwell Island, and Great Neck indicate summer camping sites of the Agawam Indians. Puritans and pilgrims did not eat clams, regardless of the extent of their hunger.

Although grants of land on the Neck were made to individuals during the first years of the settlement, by 1639 the whole tract had been set apart as a common pasture. The Town Report contains many entries regulating the use of the pasture and the taking of wood from the great forests which covered the hills.


In 1655, sheep were allowed to go on Jeffrey's Neck with the working cattle and saddle horses. In 1660, there were about four hundred sheep on the Neck, and a shepherd was appointed annually. No dogs were allowed and orders were given to kill any that were found.

The care of the forest which covered a considerable portion of Great Neck was a constant problem and there were many rules and regulations for the cutting of trees, which were well enforced. Thus with utmost care the Town was anticipating the modern move for the conservation of the forests in the most minute and exacting fashion. After 1759 no mention was made of these regulations; presumably, the forest growth had completely disappeared. Prior to that there were regulations mentioned for old wood and dead wood.


Beginning around 1641, the Neck area was dedicated to fishing - catch unloaded, dried, salted, and stowed on sailing vessels to go to Europe. By 1696, a thriving fishing station was in operation on the Neck. Wharves and fish houses had been built along the waterfront, and stages for the drying of fish stood on the hill still known as Stage Hill. Ships from many countries anchored in the sheltered cove, to take on cargo from this fishing station, which flourished for a centurySalt water fishermen did not need to serve in the militia.


In 1710 the common lands of Ipswich were divided and over four hundred persons drew rights in the area of Great Neck. Two-fifths of the lands were divided among the descendants of the original settlers and three-fifths among the more recent Commoners. The numbering of lots began on the western side of the "North Ridge" as it is named in the Anderson map of 1832, or the "Great Hill" or "Manning's Hill" as the ancient deeds recite. The lots that bear the highest numbers were located on the slope of the hill, where the fishing stages were located. The land occupied by the fish flakes or stages was not granted to the fishermen in the divisions of 1710, and their tenure was only "during the pleasure of the proprietors." This caused frequent disagreements regarding the ground rent for the fishing privilege as well as ownership. According to later legal research, certain rights were not issued so that if the committee issuing the rights had overlooked any descendants of the original Commoners, then there would be rights available to satisfy any claims by such descendants. The holders of the rights treated the land as common undivided land and no holder of a right attempted to assert a title in fee to any specific or defined locus.


A bridge at the creek across the causeway was provided for at the annual meeting in March, 1775; and in the following year, it was voted that every person bringing a load of hay or gravel from the Neck should be obliged to bring a load of gravel to the causeway to make it passable.


Steamer "Carlotta", Grape Island. Date taken unknown. Courtesy of Ipswich Historical Society.

View of Mary Alice's cottage looking south - c. 1937. Courtesy of Carl Johansson.


In 1777, Rev. Nathaniel Shitaker of Salem petitioned for a grant of a large section of "sunken marsh" that he might erect and carry on large salt works, "which all must see is most necessary for the Publick Safety in the Present crisis." Favorable action was taken but the scheme lapsed.


Beginning with the year 1786, thistles were invading the Neck to such a degree that the pasturage was much impaired. Men were paid ninety cents a day in 1797 for cutting them down.

In 1788 the Ipswich Commoners voted to grant all their interest in all real estate within the Town of Ipswich to the Inhabitants of the Town of Ipswich under condition that the Town sell the same as soon as it could and pay the debts of the Commoners and apply the balance to the town debt. This apparently referred to the debt which was assessed against all towns to defray the expense of the Revolutionary War. In the lists of sales, after accepting the gift, however, no mention is made of any sale of Jeffries Great Neck Pasture in the list of sales by the inhabitants of Ipswich.

Early in the 19th century, the drift stuff along the shore attained a market value. In 1830, the practice was inaugurated of laying out the seaweed and drift stuff in three sections. No. 1 included the south side of the Neck to Indian Spring; No. 2 from Indian Spring to the run below Butler's point; No. 3 from the run to Little Neck. It was then sold at auction to the highest bidder.


In 1837, the owners of rights in Great Neck organized under Chapter 43 of the Revised Statutes as a corporation known as The Proprietors of Jeffries Neck Pasture. The land continued to be used as a pasture and for almost a century livestock from all parts of Essex County was sent there to graze from May to November. In 1891, the Corporation built a road from the mainland across the marshes and over the hills of Great Neck to the shore opposite The Bluffs. The next year, the Town took under consideration a plan to buy Great Neck as a park site, but the project fell through. Mr. Alexander B. Clark had gradually bought the interest of the Proprietors, and at the meeting of the Corporation on August 20, 1896, he held four hundred shares, only four other shares being repre­sented. It was voted to sell the whole real estate to him. He claimed sole possession under his deed, and the long-standing variance with the Town was soon revived.


In 1903 the Town of Ipswich brought a bill in equity against the Proprietors of Jeffries Neck Pasture and Alexander B. Clark, claiming to have an ownership in the area common lands, which were retained by the Commoners in 1710, and then sold by the Commoners to the Town of Ipswich in 1788. The Town claimed to own certain rights in Great Neck by virtue of unissued rights of the Commoners being in the Town through the sale.


Drawing of area surrounding Alexander B. Clark's summer residence, now the Ipswich Bay Yacht Club (IBYC)


Aerial View of Bowdoin Road area - c. 1960. Courtesy of Carl Jobaisson.


The Supreme Court in 218 Mass 487 stated that the deed to Alex­ander B. Clark was not good because it did not recognize the rights of the Inhabitants of the Town of Ipswich in the unissued rights.


In 1927 the Proprietors of Jeffries Neck Pasture were reactivated by vote of the proprietors and certain lands were given to the Town of Ipswich and certain lands were given to Alexander B. Clark. Cross deeds of release were filed with the Land Court in Boston. Pavilion Beach was part of the land given to the Town.


Alexander B. Clark had roamed the hills and marshes of Great Neck as a young boy gunning for shore birds. His mother had little sympathy for this idle waste of time, but Alec assured her that some day he would own the place. Young Alec Clark had been apprenticed to a tanner and became a leather measurer. He had a keen eye and a quick brain and made the complicated calculations fast and soon was sought by leather manufacturers for his speed and skill. With the aid of his young wife, Mary, he accumulated capital to start his own tannery. His first and se­cond attempts failed but his third was successful, and the A. B. Clark Co. of Peabody became the largest tannery in New England; and he was called the "Sheepskin King." During the summer of these years, he had brought his family to Little Neck; but the great bare hills to the north held his interest. What had been a mere sport to the boy became a deep and serious study of birds and their habits. In 1901, Mr. Clark presented to the Peabody Museum in Salem, where it is still displayed, the first and for many years the only American Avocet taken in this part of the country.

Mr. Clark developed a gunning pond, which is now Clark Pond, by damming up the marsh at the foot of the hill and building gunning blinds along the shore. He built in the side of the hill underground living quarters where a party of sportsmen could be accommodated. There was a flock of wild geese, sometimes as many as several hundred, kept in pens and released as decoys when the migrating geese flew overhead. During the winter, ice blocks would be cut from the pond for use during the summer months and stored in an ice house, which stood on shore near the Bowdoin Road area. 

Although the Clarks lived in Peabody, a two-and-one-half hour carriage ride away, Mr. Clark decided that the women should share in the activities and he built a summer home on Great Neck, now the Ipswich Bay Yacht Clubhouse. He chose a site at the top of the bluff, a spot with easy access to the water and a commanding view of the sound. The house was made of long timbers, and a porch surrounded it entirely to catch the cool breezes. A road was constructed, branching off the road from Ipswich to Little Neck where North Ridge Road now does but it went through the valley between the hills, along the north side of the pond and up over the hill to the new house. There was a path or road from the new house down to the pond which later became Bowdoin Road. There were also barns for the horses and carriages and several out buildings, as well as houses for the men who worked on the property. Years after, several of these houses from the Quay Road area were moved to the beginning of North Ridge Road on the waterside. One was moved farther out on Jeffrey's Neck Road and became a store called "The Ho Hum", which was later moved across the road and made into a residence. The barn for the horses had been moved down from the top of the hill. It had belonged to the house which Judge Sayward rented from a man named Strought and which burned in 1914. It was moved again, ever so slightly by friends of Elizabeth and Harold Balch, who made it into a residence in 1939 and who live there now at 7 Clark Road. The timbers from the coach barn were used to build the Mulholland­ Balch house at 111 North Ridge Road in 1946 where Elizabeth Balch, Mr. Clark's only living grandchild, still resides.


In May 1898, the year the new summer home was finished, the Clark's son, Samuel, died from Bright's Disease at age twenty-nine, leaving a young widow. He had been the center of much of the family's activity and there was no heart for the house. It was rented to the Myopia Hunt Club of Hamilton, and for two seasons members enjoyed their water activities there. The two Clark daughters, Mary Alice Clark Boyle and Eliza Clark Mulholland, were married; and there was a grandchild, Mary (May) Mulholland Bartlett, followed by four more, one boy and three girls. With them, the big house was enjoyed by the family. The "May M" rode at anchor in the sound or steamed up the Parker River to overtake Captain Burnham's "Carlotta". There was a large building for Mr. Clark's boats, and railroad tracks were used in launching if necessary. Many friends came to enjoy the summer and the fall gunning. It is interesting to note that a black woman worked for the Clark family then and she was the only one in Essex County.

Mr. Clark's daughter, Mary Alice, who had no children, summered with her husband at what is now 6 Bowdoin Road; and several of his grandchildren later lived in houses at 2, 3 and 12 Bowdoin Road.


Although the widow of Alexander B. Clark Mulholland, Sr. still owns No. 3, the others have different owners today and have been rebuilt. Mr. Clark died in October 1912 at Mary Alice's cottage, his wife having died almost three years earlier. They and other members of the family are buried in Saint Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Salem.


At Mr. Clark's death, Great Neck became a part of the trust set up under his will for the benefit of his grandchildren. His trustees con­tinued the leasing of lots and opened new sections of Great Neck to tenants. In 1909, Mr. Clark had built a road to Little Neck, along which he laid out lots for lease as sites for summer cottages, from which the later real estate development stems.


View from hill across north lawn of A. B. Clark residence showing oar house and The Bluffs beyond.


In the early 1900's, sites for summer cottages were available for lease in sections of Great Neck. North Ridge offered a fine view of Plum Island Sound, the ocean beyond, and the marshes and hills of Rowley and Newbury. Stage Hill was skirted by Little Neck Road. Its subdivi­sion, Bay View, adjoined a sandy beach and directly overlooked Ipswich Bay. Clark Head, opened for the season of 1940, occupied the highest section of the Neck and commanded a panoramic view of ocean and country side. Lots then were leased, never sold. Cottages had to comply with regulations of size, design, and color laid down by The Proprietors, and kept properly maintained. Following a practice not unusual for that period, tenants were carefully investigated and only those were accepted who met the standards of a "first-class Christian American community." The yearly land rent per lot at North Ridge and Stage Hill, including Bay View, was twenty-five dollars and thirty-five dollars at Clark Head plus a sum equivalent to the land tax levied by the Town of Ipswich. Each tenant also paid the tax levied by the Town on his buildings. The old road to the big house had been abandoned and North Ridge Road was built over the crest of the hill to provide access to the area. Skytop Road and Mulholland Drive, the newest streets on the Neck, were developed in the 1960's and the 1970's respectively.


Mr. Clark's daughter, Mary Alice, died in 1923 and after his older daughter, Eliza, died in 1938, the trust was dissolved and great Neck passed into the ownership of Mr. Clark's grandchildren, who organized as The Proprietors of Great Neck, Inc. in 1939 and took over the management of Great Neck, leasing and later selling building sites for both summer and all-year suburban living. The first lot to be sold was 8 Bowdoin Road in September 1951, having been previously leased to the buyer. Today there is scarcely any buildable land remaining and great Neck is becoming an area of substantial privately-owned year-round homes, as additions are made to existing houses and some new ones are built.

The Mulhollands continued to spend summers in the big house after Mr. Clark's death, and eventually Mrs. Mulholland made it her year-round home until she advanced in years. In 1938,Grace Leland, a daughter, opened the empty house as an Inn, The Jeffrey House; and in 1940 the pier was built by The Proprietors. For several seasons, Elizabeth Balch, another daughter, andher husband operated it as a guest house and gave hospitality to the boating group that had been organized as the Ipswich Bay Yacht Club. The present oar house of the Yacht Club was moved down from farther up the hill where it had been used as a little one-room school house for Elizabeth and Grace, when Mrs. Mulholland prevailed on Miss Cora A. Jewett, who lived on East Street in town and taught in the school on Grape Island, to be the teacher of her two youngest children. With the coming of World War II, the big house was taken over by M.I.T. as living quarters for the men working on the pioneer radar project on the hilltop. With the return of peace, the Yacht Club was reborn and again sought quarters in the house, and since then has occupied it as a clubhouse. The Yacht Club purchased the house in 1976 from Peter N. Soffron, who had bought it from The Proprietors of Great Neck, Inc. in 1964 and built a house, where he presently resides, on a former piece of the property.


Ipswich Bay from North Ridge Road, Ipswich, Massachusetts - c. 1950. Courtesy of Ipswich Historical Society

A.B. Clark Beach and Marshes

The pioneer radar project is still operating under the United States Air Force. Much research is going on at this Ipswich Testing Facility, which several years ago moved into a new large building. It fronts on what is now Skytop Road.


The Association of Great Neck, Inc. was formed in 1975 and incorporated in 1977. The organization is a non-profit, charitable corpora­tion formed for the promotion of social, recreational, educational, and civic activities for the benefit of Great Neck residents and for the pro­tection of natural resourcesAny property owner or resident of Great Neck may become a member simply by paying annual membership dues.


A.B. Clark Beach, in honor of Alexander B. Clark, the boy from Peabody who foresaw his ownership of the hills of Great Neck and the development of them so that many could enjoy their beauty.

As quoted from the publication, "Jeffrey's Neck and the Way Leading Thereto," dated 1912 of the Ipswich Historical Society:

"Some trees have been planted, and a few have attained con­siderable size and vigor but with these slight exceptions, the great uplands and the water worn, boulder strewn slopes and gulleys re­main as they have been since the ancient forest disappeared, still furnishing pasturage to the great herd of cattle and a few sheep and horses."

"But these bare moorlands, with their grand outlook over leagues of land and sea, their fertile soil, easily accessible over a substan­tial and attractive road, some day, it is to be hoped, will be utilized for the summer homes of many who love Nature, and need the joy and refreshment Nature is waiting to bestow."

And today, 1984, it appears that the hope of 1912 has been more than realized.

History compiled by Doris H. Wilson, 8 Bowdoin Road, Ipswich, Massachusetts

May 1, 1984


Reference Resources:

I.      Lecture on October 15, 1983 (Ipswich River Watershed Association) by Sarah Fraser Robbins, Naturalist

2.     "Essex Life," Summer 1983

3.     "Beverly Times," January 2, 1979

4.     Lecture on April 22, 1981 (Ipswich Historical Society) by George H. W. Hayes, Attorney

5.     "Jeffrey's Neck and the Way Leading Thereto" by Thomas Franklin Waters, 1912

6.     Ipswich Assessors Office

7.     Essex County Registry of Deeds

8.     Title Search Report, Great Neck - The Proprietors of Great Neck, Inc.

9.     "The Ipswich Bay Clipper," August 2, 1955 (Ipswich Bay Yacht Club Newspaper)

10.    "Ipswich Speaks", Great Neck Tapes No. 52 and No. 53 11.     "Ipswich Chronicle," September 20 and October 11, 1912

12.     Talks with:

a.  Alice Cora Mulholland Devaney (1903-1976)

b.  Elizabeth Mulholland Balch

c.  Mona Mulholland Snyder (Widow of Alexander B. Clark Mulholland, Sr.)




A History of Clark Pond
Great Neck, Ipswich, Massachusetts

April 5, 2012

by Stanley W. Wood

 

The end of the Great Ice Age in Massachusetts, or Pleistocene epoch, some 10-15,000 years ago, signifies the beginning of the present Great Neck area. For thousands of years, the land was covered with a glacier up to several miles thick. Deposits of earth and rock moving beneath the glacier formed the clay drumlins of Great Neck and Little Neck which are the cornerstones of this landscape. Since that time, rising tides and the formation of sand barrier beaches created an environment for salt marsh. Clark Pond was originally an intertidal salt marsh supported by fresh water sources draining from the surrounding hills and tidal salt water from the ocean. The former pond was likely a tidal flat with fresh water creeks running through it that became a salt water bay during high tide.

 

As the tides rose and the salt marshes formed, Indians used this area for summer camps. The Clark Pond area was ideal for this as a sheltered tidal flat adjacent to a fresh water stream. Indians could pull their canoes out of reach of the tide, and fish and clam within the basin. Excavations of shell heaps on the banks of Clark Pond have produced well documented evidence of this existence from 6000 years ago to the early 1600s.

 

During the European settlement of the area, the Great Neck area was purchased from the Indians by William Jeffery (Jeffries Neck). The land was administered by the Town from 1634 to 1713 as common grounds and from 1713 to 1896 by the Proprietors of Jeffries Neck Pasture. Although originally forested, it was primarily used as pastureland for grazing cattle since 1633 when the Indians were displaced. By 1896, Alexander B. Clark had gradually bought the interests of the Proprietors and by vote of the Proprietors, the whole real estate was sold to him for the sum of $8,000.

 

The Clark Pond area remained as a tidal flat until the 1890s. A map of Essex County showing Clark Pond in 1893 clearly shows the pond open to the ocean at high tide (see 1893 map). Around 1897, A. B. Clark built a stone dam at the northeast corner creating a fresh water pond for duck hunting and built gunning blinds into the bank (see 1890s photo). Also around this time, ice was harvested from the pond and stored in buildings for summer use. In the 1930s, the pond was drained by the State with ditches to limit the breeding of mosquitoes.  The dam was apparently breached at that time.

 

In the 1940s, the pond area was leased to Ben Moseley who repaired the dam and created a roadway along the beach to access a gunning booth/duck blind in the vicinity of what is now the middle parking lot. Use of the road apparently diminished as in the early 1950s it was mostly overgrown (see 1956 photo).

 

After a subsequent division of portions of this land from the Proprietors back to the town in 1927, property was subdivided, originally leased as house lots, and then eventually


sold (beginning in 1951), for the present community. The 1940s and 50s were the beginnings of significant development of the area. More and more house lots were leased for summer camps. Land was sold and leased with rights to beach access, one of which was the beach road off Clark Road (then Belleau Woods Road). To accommodate beach goers, and as an incentive to purchase more house lots, in 1956 a parking lot was enlarged at the southern end of the pond and the boat ramp to the ocean was paved. To accommodate further desire for beach access, around 1964, the former beach road along the eastern side of Clark Pond was reconstructed to a second parking area in the vicinity of the Mosely duck blind.

 

After its construction in 1964, the beach road was frequently overtopped and washed out with winter and spring storms. Practically every year to the present, the road was washed out and rebuilt, sometimes two or three times a year. Various repairs to the roadway included re-building the road with sand from the beach. This aggravated future washouts as waves from the ocean would not break until they hit the road. More recent improvements included hauling in gravel for the road and extending a stone rip rap sea wall eventually beyond the reach of most large ocean waves.

 

The wave action has reduced significantly due to the southerly extension of Plum Island since the early 1990s and its shoals blocking direct ocean access. Sand has built up significantly in the area in front of the beach road and creates a more gradual transition from ocean waves. Also, the increasing formations of salt marsh on the tidal flats in front of the road have diminished wave action and increased the collection of sand. The road still overtops, although less frequently in recent years. The post-Christmas storm of 2010 is the most recent significant example. This nor’easter which combined with an astronomical high tide, deposited large logs and other debris over the beach road into the pond from where they had been on the southern end of Plum Island. This flow into the pond was exacerbated due to the recent eradication of the phragmite vegetative barrier.

This flow of logs and debris demonstrates how the ocean waves, which during that storm crossed the Plum Island bar, have a direct bearing on the beach road. This storm also brought the salt water and debris well up the northern creek and over the dam and into the pond at the northeast end.

 

 

The northern end of the pond with its outlet to the ocean has also experienced changes. Early wooden footbridges constructed over the creek allowed for pedestrian beach access from the north. These have washed out several times over the years during coastal storms. The wooden bridges were replaced with various attempts at a stone path and concrete culvert in the 1960s which also washed out in severe storms. Several other attempts at footbridges replaced the culvert further inland, which was mostly protected from storm surges. An aluminum bridge constructed in the late 2000s serves as the current access over the creek. Changes in wave patterns from the ocean, similar to their effect on the southern end of the pond, have resulted in an enlarging sandy beach area.

This and the developing salt marsh have created a barrier which helps to protect the creek and footbridge from storm surges.


In the early 2000s, the outlet to the pond had overgrown with debris and plant growth to the extent that the outlet to the ocean was no longer clearly defined. High spring floods from the pond were redirected across the beach. Subsequently, in 2006, the channel was dredged and cleared, and a well-defined channel now exists. This allows pond water to flow over the dam to the ocean, as well as allowing flood ocean tides up to (and over) the dam. Although the pond level is regulated by the elevation of the dam, the level has increased in recent years as a family of beavers has occasionally built a small mud and stick dam on the pond side of the dam. In some past summers, large portions of the pond have dried up and exposed a layer of thick mud.

 

On the western end of the pond, a road which is now the extension of Clark Road (formerly Casino Road) was constructed around 1960 to facilitate development and allow for connection of drinking water from the water tower to North Ridge. This road crossed the freshwater stream to the pond with a culvert. A portion of the wetlands associated with the northwest corner of the pond was also filled in to create the road.

 

After the beach road was constructed, and more and more people came to Great Neck, there was increasing uncontrolled use of the beach. Overrun with four-wheel drive vehicles, and late-night parties, the area became an increasing problem for the Proprietors of Great Neck to manage. Various inquiries as to how to manage and protect this land resulted in the then Association of Great Neck purchasing the pond and the surrounding beach from the Proprietors in 1983 for a nominal fee. This allowed the Association to control and manage the property and to set up regulations protecting the use of the pond and beach. This also allowed for funds to be collected and applied for beach and pond management. To lower the tax burden and to provide additional protection, the pond and surrounding area was placed in a conservation easement back to the residents.

Subsequently in 2007, several parcels of land bordering Clark Pond on the west and south ends that had remained with the Proprietors, were acquired by the Town as part of the 85-acre Great Neck Conservation Area. Currently, a bird observation deck is being constructed overlooking the western end of the pond on one of those parcels.

 

Changes in Vegetation.
During the 1950s, the marsh area around the pond was predominately vegetated with purple loosestrife. That was gradually replaced with cat-o- nine tails. Subsequently, some of these cat-o-nine tails stands have been replaced with phragmites. All are invasive species. In 2009, an attempt to eradicate the phragmites was undertaken.

 

Changes in Wildlife.
The area over the years has supported a broad variety of wildlife. The combination of fresh and salt water environment attracts many species.

Ornithologists from all over Massachusetts come to the area to observe the fresh and salt water nesting and migrating birds. Many upland and water-based mammals are also present. Over the years, the number and variety of wildlife has diminished due to the increased development, human interference, changing climate, and changing and destroyed vegetation.


Changes in Use.
During the times of the Indians and early European settlers, the pond and its immediate surroundings were used as a source of food (shellfish, birds, and mammals) and drinking water. The pond may have also served as a sheltered tidal bay for canoes and other small boats. The late 1800s and early 1900s saw the use of the pond for duck hunting and harvesting of pond ice.   Currently, the pond supports a more passive use by the residents and visitors as hunting, fishing, and boating are no longer allowed. Ice skating and ice boating are the only active uses. The pond and its surroundings are enjoyed by many for its scenic beauty and observation of its wildlife inhabitants. In addition to many birds and mammals, several families of mute swans have nested on the pond in recent years and their raising of their many generations of young have been followed by many residents and visitors. Because of their prominence, the swan of Clark Pond was adopted as the logo for the Association of Great Neck.


Hopefully, the beauty of this area will be maintained for all to enjoy.

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