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Meet the real Pinehurst, replete with pines

What do these places have in common?

  • Canobie Lake Park
  • Whalom Park
  • Salem Willows
  • Pinehurst, Billerica

They all began as amusement parks. More specifically, amusement parks built circa 1900 by electric trolley companies. Why would trolley companies build amusement parks? To sell you the trolley tickets to get there! In the euphoric early days of public transit, “trolley parks” popped up near every major city, about 1,000 across the country. They offered no-tech amusements like baseball, bowling, vaudeville shows, concerts, dances and merry-go-rounds. Plus one high-tech amusement — the trolley rides to and from.

The Hudson, Pelham & Salem Electric Railway built Canobie Lake Park:

Canobie Lake trolley park

The Fitchburg & Leominster Street Railway built Whalom Park:

Whalom Park with streetcar (Jon Bell photo)

The Boston & Northern Street Railway built Salem Willows:

Salem Willows

And the Lowell to Boston Street Railway built Pinehurst Park in Billerica, at the junction of Boston Road and Cook Street. This marked the beginning of the name “Pinehurst” in Billerica:

Pinehurst Park, Billerica

Pinehurst color crowds

Pinehurst Dance HallHere’s a 1901 press release for the local trolley line, with the new Pinehurst Park as the main attraction:

Pinehurst trolley blurb

Pinehurst Park quickly became a cultural convention center, an ideal venue for just about anything:

By 1903, Billerica real estate was becoming de rigueur.

First lot at Pinehurst Annex along river, 1903

 

So why didn’t Pinehurst Park grow up big and strong like Canobie Lake Park? Very few trolley parks could navigate these headwinds:

  • The advent of the automobile. Suddenly you could find amusement anywhere.
  • The Great Depression. Suddenly you couldn’t afford amusement.
  • Prohibition of alcohol. Suddenly you had to be sober during amusement.
  • The worst-ever hurricane of 1938. Suddenly your amusement was buried under logs, like the PInehurst dance pavilion:
Pinehurst after hurricane 1938
Debbie Barnes photo

And so for every Canobie Lake Park there are many defunct Pinehurst Parks. In fact, there was indeed another Pinehurst Park in Worcester, built by the Worcester and Southbridge Street Railway:

Pinehurst Park, WorcesterSome trolley parks were reincarnated as other forms of amusement. Wonderland Park in Revere became a greyhound racing park:

Wonderland Revere (Stephen R. Wilk photo)Wonderland greyhound racing

Part of Pinehurst Park in Billerica came back to life as a drive-in movie theater. See the screen on the right?

Other trolley parks left no trace of themselves at all. Here’s Lakeview Park in Dracut, then and now:

Lakeview Park, Dracut:LowellLakeshore Apartments

Luckily, a large-scale amusement park came to the rescue in 1959. Never mind little trolley parks. Here came Pleasure Island in Wakefield, dubbed the Disneyland of the Northeast. Click the image to watch a video:

Pleasure Island, Wakefield, MA

Alas, it folded a decade later, a victim of New England winters. The amusement business is no walk in the park, even when it’s a walk in the park.

Nowadays, Pinehurst refers to the area in Billerica surrounding the former Pinehurst Park. Because of the area’s cultural significance and population density, it’s a “census-designated place.” That means the feds gather population data about Pinehurst even through it’s not a separate town.

Pinehurst, Billerica

 

Ma Newman's, PinehurstOne  corner in Pinehurst seems to be permanently earmarked for a certain function. This little Pinehurst store grew up to become a very popular barroom. For some people, Ma Newman’s was the sole reason to board the trolley. Here’s that same corner today:

Emerald Rose 2022

Here’s a gallery from Debbie Barnes, whose great-grandparents had a general store/gas station/post office in the early 1900s:

808 Boston Road, Billerica, MA
“My great grandparents (Campbell) had a little open-air stand in the early 1900s where they sold hot dogs, hamburgers etc. They later built a store over it called the Brite Spot. More recently, it was a police survival equipment store.”

Campbell's store Pinehurst, Billerica

Campbell store Pinehurst, Billerica 1920
“A few years later, it was a general store, gas station and the first post office in Pinehurst.”
Campbell's second store, Billerica MA
“This is their second store, on the corner of Beaumont Ave. This later became a First National store and is currently Triple L Insurance at 800 Boston Road.”
Saint Mary's Church at 796 Boston Road, Billerica, MA
“This was taken beside Saint Mary’s Church at 796 Boston Road, before the current rectory building existed.”
Beaumont Ave, Pinehurst, Billerica
“The corner where Saint Mary’s Church is now.”

 

Editor’s note: If you’re reading this article on a cell phone, it might not display correctly. Scroll to the very bottom and tap “exit mobile version.”

Special thanks to Kevin Murphy for the colorized Pinehurst postcards and the old Ma Newman’s postcard.

14 thoughts on “Meet the real Pinehurst, replete with pines Leave a comment

  1. Seventy years after I moved to Burlington I learned about the origin of Pinehurst.

    Thanks

  2. I think it is a “census designated place” is also because it has its own Post Office like Nuttings Lake.

  3. My paternal grandmother used to say “she would take the Trolley from Athol to Revere” (way back, perhaps in the early 1900s) ; my maternal grandmother used to take us to Salem Willows (more recently) …

  4. I recently made a FB page about this park! Thanks so much for doing this! Incredible information and pictures!

    • Heck, I was born 70 years ago and never knew the history of Pinehurst. Interesting article….

  5. Excellent article, thanks for sharing. My sister now lives on Cook St across from the pines.

  6. As a resident of Pinehurst, I’m always delighted to read about my area’s place in history. Pinehurst is full of recreation, with kayaking and canoeing on the Shawsheen River and lovely walks in the woods and wooded neighborhoods. Thank you for writing.

  7. I actually drove out to where the Pinehurst park used to be just to see if there was anything left at all and there was no sign of it and an office park exists on part of that area now. What is kind of sad is the fact that the drive in was erected with the thought that the residents needed an updated form of recreation so the park was dismateled and he drive in was put up. However when the drive in was no longer viable there was no effort to replace it with something else for the residents who seek recreation . A bike park, a community pool or water park, or even a skateboard park would have been better than nothing but the early town leaders who started the efforts of Pinehurst Park and the drive in were long gone and left wihout passing the baton to the next generation.

  8. Born in Lowell and raised my whole life here in Billerica, Mass. Love my Home Town .

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