Discover Concord's 2021 Guide to the Great Outdoors

Page 52

Concord’s Land of Dragons & Transcendentalists

I

BY JAIMEE LEIGH JOROFF

In the wild places of Concord linger old Puritan superstitions and Transcendental possibilities. We begin in the year 1620 when, bearing sea-weary Puritan separatists, the Mayflower arrived off Cape Cod’s coast revealing what Pilgrim leader William Bradford noted as “a hideous and desolate wilderness, full of wild beasts.” To the Puritans, the Wilderness was the devil’s territory. Satan would not linger in the exposed coastal regions where the Puritans first settled and kept him at bay with devout prayer, but he was always there, in the wild forests, the swamps, the unexplored places, tempting them to leave the seaside settlements of early Massachusetts and stray from righteousness.

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Discover CONCORD

In Wilderness dwelt the “feared other”: Native Americans, cougars, bears, wolves, owls, and birds that made noises unfamiliar to the new settlers, and old characters of folklore and superstitions— witches and the devil’s agents. But the woods also offered a freedom from constraints and expectations of daily life. Set in the 1600s town of Salem, Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 1850 The Scarlet Letter conveys this temptation of Wilderness when adulterous Puritan Hester Prynne, seeking to escape from her husband and society’s judgement, appeals to her lover, the Reverend Dimmesdale, to flee with her and their infant child and live in the forest. “Whither leads yonder forest track? Backwards to the settlement, thou sayest!

Yes; but onward too! Deeper it goes, and deeper, into the wilderness, less plainly to be seen at every step! …There thou art free!” In real life, freedom in Wilderness did hold appeal. In 1634, fur trader Simon Willard, a Puritan recently arrived from Kent, England, explored the unknown places beyond Boston. Twenty miles to the west, he came across Musketaquid, a Native American settlement of cleared fields and riverways. With Puritan Minister Peter Bulkeley, Willard arranged for Musketaquid’s purchase from the Algonquin tribe. Renamed Concord, the town was officially founded in 1635 as America’s first inland settlement. Generations passed; more inland towns were established in once-wild places, their Continued on p. 46

| 2021 Guide to the Great Outdoors

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Articles inside

Bringing Color to Concord via Gardening

2min
page 68

Concord Museum’s Summer Under the Stars Film Series

1min
page 66

Preserving White Pond Reservation

1min
page 66

Concord's Wild & Scenic Rivers & Ponds

2min
pages 64-65

Favorite Picnic Spots in Concord

2min
page 62

The Bruce Freeman Rail Trail

2min
pages 60-61

Bites, Bumps, and Bruises

3min
page 58

Encountering History: The Witness Houses of Battle Road Trail

5min
pages 56-57

The Temptation of Wilderness: Concord’s Land of Dragons & Transcendentalists

6min
pages 52, 54

Mapping Concord’s African American History - What’s in a Name?

2min
pages 50-51

Glimpsing Ecology Around Walden

5min
pages 48-49

Welcome to the Bug Hotel

2min
page 46

Conquering CONCORD: Where to Start?

5min
pages 44-45

The Attias Group Takes a Family Approach to Real Estate in Concord

6min
pages 34-35

Monsters in the Basement: Cycling in Concord

3min
page 32

Dining Al Fresco in Concord

4min
pages 28, 30

Historic Buttrick Gardens

1min
page 26

Concord Trail Guide: An Invitation to Enjoy Some of Our Favorite Nature Walks

9min
pages 20-22

A Stroll Along Concord River: The Ecological and Historical Significance of October Farm Riverfront

2min
page 18

Peter Alden: Local Traveler

5min
pages 16-17

Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge

4min
pages 14-15

Concord’s Commitment to Conservation

5min
pages 12-13
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