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Historic Walk of Greenfield MA
Item 4 of 13

The Cold Spring Baptist Church was built in 1842 in the town of Barre MA, now on the banks of the Quabbin Reservoir. This meeting house served as the location of many anti-slavery speeches, including lectures by the prominent abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison. In 1936 when faced with possible destruction owing to the creation of the reservoir in its original location, this New England church was saved by members of the community. The historic building was disassembled and then reassembled board by board on Main Street by the Christian Science church.


Building, Plant, Tree, Tints and shades

Cloud, Plant, Sky, Property

In the process of relocating the church, two 6-ton granite blocks were also moved so that the base would remain unchanged. The only difference from the original building was the increased height of the church’s steeple. In 1938, the Cold Spring Baptist Church donated its bell to the Second Congregational Church to replace its cracked bell since their congregation did not use a bell for services. The Second Congregational Church melted down their cracked bell and recast it into small dinner bells and sold those bells to area residents. Some of the bells were used as signal bells for local schools. In 2023, the former church was purchased by the Franklin County YMCA. They plan to use the church to expand their services.

Jenkins, Paul. The Conservative Rebel. The Town of Greenfield, Massachusetts, 1982.

Cutler Kellogg, Lucy. History of Greenfield. Town of Greenfield, 1931.

Miller, Peter S., and William C. Garrison. Images of America Greenfield. Arcadia Publishing, 2000.

Photo of a circa 1940s thread-cutting tool (http://americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=18398)

Theodore Judah | American Experience | PBS. https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/tcrr-judah/. Accessed 13 Jan. 2024.

University, © Stanford, et al. “Maps of Theodore Judah.” The First Transcontinental Railroad - Spotlight at Stanford, 3 Apr. 2019, https://exhibits.stanford.edu/rr/feature/maps-of-theodore-judah.

“Science Church Marks 35th Anniversary.” Greenfield Recorder, 23 June 1973.

“Purchase of Former Church Spells Expansion for Franklin County’s YMCA.” Greenfield Recorder, 6 June 2023.

Moorhead, Andrea, et al. The Greenfield Common Court Square Bank Row. Greenfield Historical Commission, 2022.

A Walking Tour of Downtown Historic District -- Greenfield Massachusetts. greenfieldsfuture.org.

Ogline , Jill. The Road To Freedom . Greenfield Human Rights Commission , https://echogreenfield.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Featherman-Road-to-Freedom.pdf.