The history of Natick starts here!



From Many Backgrounds<br/>by James W. Morely 

From Many Backgrounds

The Heritage of the Eliot Church of South Natick

by James W. Morley

What is now the Eliot Church of South Natick has its roots in the efforts of the “Indian Apostle” John Eliot who, as a Puritan Missionary, began his ministry here in 1651. From then till now, this historic site has seen five different church buildings and a variety of denominational affiliations.

Jim Morley, a current member of the church, chronicles its history and the related history of South Natick and the “Old Town” of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s eponymous book.

The price per book is
$20
plus $2 shipping and handling

The $20 is a qualified, tax-deductible charitable donation that is divided equally between the Eliot Church of South Natick and the Natick Historic Society.



About the Book

A brief history of the Eliot Church that traces its origins back to the meetinghouse stockade  and the missionary venture that John Eliot, the Puritan divine, and Thomas Waban, his  Praying Indian partner, initiated here in 1651 in  a unique effort to solve the cultural  conflict between the indigenous Indians and the English settlers at the very beginning of our nation’s history.

Drawing on unique archival sources, it details the failure of that effort and the transformation of the plantation  into a largely white community of English settlers---or rather,  as the population expanded,  into two such communities: a new one to the North, now Natick Center and beyond, which built its own meeting house, and South Natick, the ”Old Town,” where  life changed more slowly, where stage coaches used to stop on their way from Boston to Hartford  and whose  stories Harriet Beecher Stowe  told so endearingly in  Old Town Folks.

The  beautiful  Federal period Church that now raises its spire at the South Natick crossing, of course, is not the original Meeting House of the Praying Indians. It was in fact erected in 1828  and  inaugurated a wholly new phase in the congregation’s religious history,  a story told here from the adoption of Unitarianism in the nineteenth century to the union with the John Eliot Congregational Church following world War II and the formation of the Eliot Church of South Natick of today---a liberal church, still in the Christian tradition, but as different from Eliot’s dream as is Natick from the New Jerusalem.


About the Author

Jim Morley is Ruggles Professor of Political Science emeritus at Columbia University in New York and author and editor of numerous books on Japanese politics and international relations in the Asia-Pacific region. He retired to Natick in 1999, where he has immersed himself in Natick history, serving currently as President of the Natick Historical Society.