Contact Info
Historical Commission
37 Main Street
Charlton, MA 01507
P: 508-248-2207
F:
Email
Office Hours
N/A
Meetings
Held at the Charlton Municipal Offices, 2nd Floor.
Agenda - Jul. 30, 8:30 AM
Minutes
Historical Commission Members
William O. Hultgren, Chair
Curtis K. Abbott
Armand Bessette
Brian Beck
Michael Caron
Samuel T. Alton |
Historical Commission
The Charlton Historical Commission works to preserve the historic heritage of Charlton and bring to the public a greater awareness of the unique history of Charlton.
Charlton Historic Districts Brochures
The
Charlton Historic Commission is pleased to announce that the Charlton Historic Districts brochure is available! Design and
printing of the brochure was funded by a grant to the Charlton Historic
Commission from the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority Tourism Grant
Program. We wish to also thank design consultant Angell House Design
and the Central MA Regional Planning Commission for their assistance
in creating the brochure as an invaluable local historic and tourism
information source.
Brochures are available at the following locations:
Charlton Public Library, Charlton Town Hall, Ted's store adjacent
to the Citgo on the westbound side of Route 20; Honey Farms, both
of the MA Rest Areas as well as various other locations in the area.
The Ice Cellar on Fitzgerald Road in Charlton

Winter Harvest
By Cindy Cooper March 2010
Harvesting is not something we think of in winter, but in New England this kind has traditionally occurred in January and February. That is the time when the conditions for production are most likely to be ideal. In the early 1900s, ponds and lakes in the area were harvested when the ice was at least 12 inches thick. After the snow was scraped, it was scored to make squares, separated using special ice saws and pikes, and loaded into icehouses. Packing the ice tightly, and stuffing with sawdust or hay, helped to maintain temperatures so that the ice was available later in the year.
Here in Charlton, the towns Historical Commission is preserving an ice cellar located at 93 Fitzgerald Road. It is believed to be the only intact ice cellar that remains in town. That does not mean that ice was not a business in this area. It appears ice was transported out of the area by train, since a big icehouse was reported to have existed near the Depot: The Brigham Milk Company, of Boston, is negotiating for the purchase of land on the shores of a pond at Charlton Depot, whereon to build an immense ice house. The company already has a large ice house at Charlton Depot, but larger storage capacity is needed. (Cold Storage and Ice Trade Journal December 1906).
Smaller operations also existed in town. Bill Hultgren related that his father-inlaw, Wilbur Johnson, harvested ice from Upper Ashworth, todays Upper Sibley Pond, for William Gustafsons ice cellar in the 1920s. Some sources indicate the Village Improvement Society harvested ice at Wabash Pond. There is a picture that shows a crew that worked on Tucker Pond, off Stafford Street. Charlton Historical Society now owns some of this equipment, and would like to know more about it. If anyone has information about Charlton ice harvesting operations, please call Cindy Cooper at 508-248-7840.
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