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Since 2005: More than you really want to know about Wellesley, Mass.

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Wellesley Police investigate vandalism at recently purchased Arden Rd. home

April 9, 2026 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

The Wellesley Police Department is investigating an act of vandalism targeting a residence on Arden Road. On Wednesday morning, officers responded to a call regarding 20 Arden Road and found that the five-bedroom home overlooking Beebe Meadow, in the Dana Hall area of town, had been defaced.

According to police reports, the property—which was recently acquired by a new homeowner—suffered physical damage including a broken glass slider. In addition to the structural damage, the vandals spray painted the rear exterior of the white house.

A resident provided a photograph of the damage to Swellesley, however, the specific words spray-painted onto the structure were not legible. Police have not released information regarding potential suspects, or a description of the graffiti.

Anyone with information regarding the incident or suspicious activity in the Arden Road area on Tuesday night or Wednesday morning should contact the Wellesley Police at 781-235-1212.

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Filed Under: Crime, Police

     

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Wellesley eats up library’s Edible Book Festival

April 9, 2026 by Emma Mullay Leave a Comment

Luciana Gonzalez next to her Harry Potter themed edible creation.
Luciana Gonzalez next to her Harry Potter-themed edible creation (photos by Emma Mullay)

 
When asked why she picked Harry Potter as the theme for her edible creation, 9-year-old Luciana Gonzalez, standing proudly at her station—which showcased an intricate scene depicting characters and places like the Sorting Hat, Hogwarts Castle and Hedwig the owl made from cake, Rice Krispy treats, fondant and more—said it was simple. 

 “I like magic!”

The Wellesley Free Library hosted its second annual Edible Book Festival on March 29, with colorful and delicious creations depicting different scenes from over a dozen children’s novels. 

Emma Weiler library
Emma Weiler, children’s supervisor at Wellesley Free Library

 
Emma Weiler, the children’s supervisor at the Wellesley Free Library, said she heard about it online and wanted to take part.

“People organize these globally, it’s always around April 1, and I’ve always wanted to do one,” she said. “I like that, as a librarian, I can take my interests and turn them into programs.”

This is the second year Wellesley has held festivities for International Edible Book Day since librarians Judith A. Hoffberg and Béatrice Coron founded the holiday April 1, 2000.

Weiler said the library event was open to everybody, regardless of age. It awarded six different prizes for both youth and adult submissions. Two awards, Best Kid Creation and Funniest/Punniest Entry, went to 8-year-old Avery Lee who created “Make Way for Booklings,” a play on Robert McCloskey’s iconic “Make Way for Ducklings” book. 

8-year-old Avery Lee, who won Best Kid Creation and Funniest/Punniest Entry for her “Make Way for Booklings” design.
8-year-old Avery Lee, who won Best Kid Creation and Funniest/Punniest Entry for her “Make Way for Booklings” design

 
Isabella Conway, 10, based her creation off of Jasmine Warga’s “A Rover’s Story,” which she chose because she “wanted to have something that represented a lot of life lessons” and was “inspiring” to her and her peers. 

Conway said she chose to frost a rectangle cake because she knew it would be easier to design and wanted it to resemble the cover of a book. She said she heard about the event through the bulletin board at the library and is planning on taking part in it again in the future. 

edible books
Isabella Conway next to her “A Rover’s Story” edible creation

 
Gonzalez decided to recreate a variety of scenes from the Harry Potter series by JK Rowling, which are both her favorite books and movies, with the castle Hogwarts, the Sorting Hat and Harry’s pet owl, Hedwig, among those showcased in her design.

Her friends and family also all love the books, so she said it was an easy decision. Gonzalez said she had “so much fun” with the hopes to do it again next year. 

Weiler said she aims to continue the event next year, hoping for increased turnout and more engagement from the community. 

“I feel like every year, you tweak things and try and make it a little better,” she said “This is only our second year, but I’ve certainly been billing it as our second annual, and we’re going to do it again next year.”

This story is part of a partnership between the Swellesley Report and the Boston University Department of Journalism.

A Raisin in the Sun
A Raisin in the Sun

 

Edible Book Festival sign
Photo by Emma Mullay
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Filed Under: Books, Kids, Wellesley Free Library

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Wellesley Men’s Group Speaker Series topic—””The Boy Crisis: A Report from the Clinical Front Line”

April 9, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

EVENT: Wellesley Service League Men’s Group Speaker Series
SPEAKER: Timothy Davis, Ph.D., clinical psychologist
TOPIC: “The Boy Crisis: A Report from the Clinical Front Line”
DATE/TIME: Tuesday, April 14, 2pm
LOCATION: Wellesley Friendly Aid, 219 Washington St., Wellesley
SPONSOR: Wellesley Service League

DESCRIPTION: The “boy crisis” (also “the crisis of masculinity”) has received much recent attention in major news outlets and in best-selling books. In this talk, Dr. Davis will discuss what is meant by the “boy crisis,” the evidence supporting its existence, and what parents and grandparents can do to support their boys’ growth and development into happy, healthy, and productive men.

Timothy Davis, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist with over three decades of experience specializing in the psychology of boys and men. His clinical approach is informed by research in male development across the life course at the renowned Harvard Study of Adult Development (the “Harvard Happiness Study”) and a 25-year tenure on the faculty at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Davis is the author of Challenging Boys: A Proven Plan for Keeping Your Cool and Helping Your Son Thrive and maintains a private practice in Wellesley, Massachusetts, where he specializes in supporting challenging boys and their families.

Please join us for an informative and engaging talk in which Dr. Davis will share his expertise and guidance regarding this critically important topic. Senior Men from Wellesley and surrounding communities are invited for refreshments and conversation. Guests welcome.

Please email Julie Barron or Jennifer Scheer Lieberman for more information at juliefbarron@gmail.com or scheerdecor@comcast.net

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Filed Under: Clubs

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Today, April 9, is Local News Day in Wellesley & beyond

April 9, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

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While every day is Local News Day at The Swellesley Report headquarters, a coalition of journalists, nonprofit leaders, and media innovators in Wellesley and far beyond have united to promote April 9, 2026 as the official Local News Day.

The goal is to reconnect people to trusted local outlets, empower newsrooms to grow, and spark a national movement that sustains local news for generations in a world that’s become used to getting its news for free.

We’ve been publishing Swellesley in Wellesley for more than 20 years now, and have appreciated all of the community support we’ve had along the way, from news tips (not just press releases…) to photos to contributed articles. Send ’em here: theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

This is our actual job. Believe us, we don’t plow through more than 12 hours of recent Annual Town Meeting proceedings entirely for the fun of it. (And what the heck are those “cost-of-living adjustments” they were talking about at Town Meeting anyway? We don’t see any of those doing what we do…)

Reader support: The financial support of readers—who since last year have been able to make tax-deductible donations thanks to our partnership with the non-profit Tiny News Collective. Donations have been career sustaining for this self-employed couple. Your contributions help us to cover costs for the glamorous stuff—web hosting, newsletter software, tech support—that enables us to do our jobs. Contributions even make a dent in our health care premiums, which have risen some 80% this year.

Advertising support: So have all the sponsorships from local businesses and non-profit organizations who advertise on our site and in our email newsletter. Their support allows us to provide the news stories we report on for free—no paywall here.

We also are thankful for state agencies (MassDOT) and town departments and bodies (Celebrations Committee, Climate Action Committee, Health Department, Natural Resources Commission, etc.) that support us by paying for legal notices and promotions. As you may or may not know, municipal governments are required by outdated state law to post their paid legal notices in “print” newspapers even though the information would reach many more people through online sites like ours. Some state reps, including Wellesley Rep. Alice Hanlon Peisch, are working to change this.

Grants: New for us over the past year as well have been grants from organizations such as the Wellesley Cultural Council, Needham Bank, Truly’s, and The Village Bank. These allow us to pay stipends to student interns. We’re thankful to organizations that recognize not only non-profits are providing valuable community services, and that organizations like ours amplify what many non-profits do.

Education: We also thank Boston University and its BU Newsroom for partnering with us. This semester we have three students who as part of a journalism class have been writing for Swellesley. We’ve been in this program since last spring, and also have begun partnering with Wellesley College journalists.

Please consider supporting Swellesley with a tax-deductible donation by scanning the QR code or by clicking on it.

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Filed Under: Media

Wellesley Kitchen and Home Tour

Wellesley Annual Town Meeting dissolves following lengthy RIO zoning amendment discussion

April 8, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Wellesley Annual Town Meeting dissolved on Tuesday, April 7 after two thirds of the three-hour meeting was spent hashing out a proposed zoning amendment on a topic—Residential Incentive Overlays (RIOs)—that’s been much debated by the town’s legislative body over the past couple of years. The session also featured the first motion, under a separate Planning Board-sponsored article, to get shot down at this year’s Annual Town Meeting.

(See Wellesley Media recording to view the meeting and the Town Meeting scorecard to track voting)

It was clear ahead of Town Meeting that the motion under Article 32 to eliminate RIOs in Single Residence and a few other districts would likely spark one of the longest and most colorful discussions, and it didn’t disappoint. Because, you know, housing.

This was a motion that spurred local advocacy groups to rally their troops to hit up Town Meeting reps in support of eliminating RIOs not only in certain districts, but all of them via a possible amendment to the motion. RIOs allow for higher-density building than underlying zoning would permit.

Opposition to proposed uses of the RIO bylaw, which went on the books in 1998, came to a head in October, 2024, when proposed zoning map changes for a pair of multifamily housing developments got shot down at Special Town Meeting. RIOs were also front and center at Annual Town Meeting last April because of a citizen petition that sought to return the RIO bylaw to its original state. As the proponent explained during presentations, the focus of RIOs would again be on allowing multi-unit residential development in commercial areas but not in single residence and general residence districts.

A diverse 16-member RIO Task Force was then formed by the Planning Board. The task force met more than a dozen times and made recommendations to the Planning Board, which voted 3-1 for the motion language under Article 32 presented to Town Meeting this week (the task force’s preferred approach was to nix RIOs altogether, though the Planning Board went with a less extreme approach with the intention to keep working on the topic). Earlier motion language was revised after the Select Board Board pushed back on a recommendation regarding the proposed addition of a development agreement requirement to the project approval section of the RIO bylaw.

Article 32 gets its hearing

You knew Article 32 was different when Moderator Mark Kaplan asked the Planning Board’s Tom Taylor to read the motion under it: Usually the motion language isn’t read in order to move Town Meeting along, making the assumption that members have already read the motions. But in this case, an amendment or more to the motion was anticipated, as was a point of order regarding the amendment, so Kaplan sought to get everything spelled out clearly. As Taylor read, Article 32 would allow RIOs in a few zoned districts, those defined as Commercial, Industrial, General Residence, and Educational.

Taylor followed the reading with a brief presentation on the motion, which he indicated had its roots in a citizen petition from last year’s Annual Town Meeting that sought to remove RIOs from all zoning districts other than commercial ones. The motion captured 61% of Town Meeting votes, but not enough to satisfy the two-thirds rule to pass. So it was clear this was a subject on which the town was divided, and could warrant further review and ideas.

The appointed Advisory Committee, which vets Town Meeting motions ahead of the big event, recommended unfavorable action, 0 to 11, with 1 recusal and 1 abstention on the motion under Article 32.  Committee members cited different reasons for their lack of support, including that the RIO Task Force and Planning Board could potentially come up with a better solution given more time.

Taylor said that the Planning Board’s position was that the motion under Article 32 was “an important first step—going farther or less far are inferior alternatives.”

But some opposed to Article 32’s motion language brought forth an amendment, presented by Kara Reinhardt Block, a RIO Task Force member and Town Meeting rep for Precinct D, situated in Lower Falls. She presented an amendment designed to remove RIOs from all districts, not including the the four previously approved RIO projects, such as the Terrazza on Linden St. Reinhardt Block has spoken out in the past about the potential for limited changes to the RIO bylaw to increase the likelihood of multifamily housing developments in only certain sections of town, and she reiterated this point at this Town Meeting.


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Town Meeting member John Lanza rose to make a point of order, arguing that the proposed amendment should not be allowed for “going beyond the four corners of the proposed warrant article…” The original motion language was specific, he said, whereas the proposed amendment “seeks to abolish” the RIO district town-wide and is “the language of repeal.”

Moderator Kaplan then issued a prepared statement in which he contended that Article 32 did indeed give Town Meeting members “clear warning that the scope of Section 3.2.B of the zoning bylaw might be brought up for consideration at this Annual Town Meeting…” Earlier discussions at the Planning Board and Advisory Committee considered the possibility that an expanded motion might be filed, Kaplan noted, as part of his explanation for denying the point of order and allowing the amendment to be presented.

Reinhardt Block, given the go-ahead to speak by Kaplan, started out by saying that “there are many reasons to pause the RIO and fix it, but first and foremost among them is that the RIO is broken, and we have widely acknowledged that as a town body…” RIOs simply aren’t needed, Reinhardt Block said, given many other ways to build 17.4 units per acre in town (such as under the MBTA Communities Law) and the new availability of more developable land as a result of a huge amount of commercial property going on the market (she later shared photos of new or planned multi-family housing developments across town). [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Government, Town Meeting

Rotary Club, Taste of Wellesley
Sustainability

Town of Wellesley & Village Church to hold geothermal forum on April 15

April 8, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

The town of Wellesley and Wellesley Village Church on April 15 will shine a light on geothermal systems as a way to provide heating and cooling at scale.

The half-day symposium (8:30am-noon) will take place at Village Church, which has recently installed a geothermal system at its 2 Central St. location. The “Geothermal Solutions for Affordable Heating and Cooling” forum, which will focus on applications and costs in networked, commercial and institutional settings, will include perspectives from industry professionals, including engineers, developers, and architects. It will also include a tour of Village Church’s installation.

Register online for the free event.

8:30-9 am: Check-in, visit information tables, enjoy coffee and light breakfast   
9-11 am: Program
11 am-12 pm:  Tours of Village Church geothermal system, plus access to information tables


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Filed Under: Environment, Technology

A marathon session for Public Works at Wellesley Annual Town Meeting night #3

April 7, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Wellesley Department of Public Works Director Dave Cohen drew a comparison early during night #3 of Wellesley Annual Town Meeting on April 6 between the upcoming Boston Marathon and his planned presentations, as the race courses through eight communities—including Wellesley—and he had eight presentations lined up. As far as Town Meeting sessions go, a bit over three hours was nothing out of the ordinary, though that would be a solid marathon time. (See Wellesley Media recording to view the meeting and the Town Meeting scorecard to track voting)

Fittingly, a version of Heartbreak Hill popped up more than halfway through the session when a fire curtain started to descend, interrupting a presentation on Article 20 regarding a proposed feasibility study for a possible DPW campus overhaul. Fortunately, the issue was addressed and the meeting was able to continue.

Speaking of running, mice scurrying across the stage also threatened to disrupt proceedings. But their antics only resulted in a sort of point of order raised to call attention to this “disorderly conduct.” It was later suggested by a Town Meeting member that the mice may have jumped ship from a dilapidated DPW building and made their way to Wellesley High… (Our theory is that the mice might have been there for a shot at some of the cake trotted out for the town’s 145th birthday.)

Public Works marathon

DPW Director Cohen began his night running uphill with Article 11, which asked Town Meeting to approve $14.4m in funding for the Water Enterprise Fund’s operating and capital expenses (including upgrades to a water distribution system that in some places is more than 100 years old). Water would be a theme early on during this night for several articles.

While Wellesley offers competitive water rates, the Board of Public Works anticipate customer bills rising by up to 20% for FY27, with PFAS treatment and projects a significant cost driver (PFAS refers to the “forever chemicals” that Wellesley and other communities seek to filter out of their public water supplies). The current drought conditions also portend lower-than-usual water usage in town, due to restrictions, and less water usage means less revenue for the town.

water town meeting

Before Town Meeting passed the motion under Article 11 unanimously by voice vote, Cohen fielded questions, including about capacity in the face of increased housing development in town (“plenty of capacity”) and how much PFAS settlement money might help reduce rates (it’s a drop in the bucket, so to speak).

From there it was on to Article 13, regarding about $3m in funding of the Enterprise Stormwater Fund, for which the town started collecting fees in FY25. The most common fee is $225 per year.

You don’t hear something like this every day in town, but the rates for Wellesley are holding steady, and Cohen said he anticipates that remaining so for the foreseeable future. Enterprise funds are set up to pay for themselves via the fees paid by customers, so each fund is run as a separate but related business within the DPW. For stormwater management, fees are based on a property owner’s amount of impervious area, and municipal properties are excluded.

This motion passed unanimously by voice vote.

Cohen got a brief respite during the presentation of motion 2 under Article 15, calling for the use of $750k in Community Preservation Fund money to partially fund the roughly $1.5m dredging of Duck Pond (0.8-acre body of water at Town Hall, and last dredged in 1986 and 2006) and Reeds Pond (1.9-acre body of water north of Rte. 9 not far from the Natick line, last dredged in 1998).

Though Cohen didn’t present, the DPW is a funding partner on this, along with the Natural Resources Commission. And in fact, NRC Director Brandon Schmitt presented on the motion. Dredging is a key strategy for ensuring the health of the town’s bodies of water within its open space. The revelation by Schmitt that Reeds Pond contains notable levels of arsenic got Town Meeting’s attention, and he said that like with PFAS, it’s unclear exactly what the source of the arsenic is (though agricultural pesticides are suspected). The motion passed unanimously by voice vote.

While dredging might not pull on Town Meeting members’ heartstrings, playground upgrades do. Motion 3 under Article 15 sought approval of $450k in funding for improvements at Perrin Park, the Hunnewell Field tot lot, and the Sprague playgrounds. The town’s in its third and final year of an effort to improve 18 playgrounds across school and NRC property, including upgrades to support accessibility. Funding for work at Fiske, Ouellet, Upham was approved last year, and work is slated for this year (there’s some hesitation to go full bore on the Upham upgrades until there’s more clarity on what might become of that property after the school closed in 2024). Town Meeting approved the latest funding request.

Next up was Article 16, under which a motion sought a half million dollar appropriation from free cash to replace and reconstruct the 40-plus-year-old Hunnewell Field irrigation system over the summer. Cohen was back again on this article, and shared this fund fact: the irrigation system is fed by stormwater and groundwater from the nearby aqueduct, not from town drinking water supplies. Design funding was previously approved, and construction was delayed in favor of other projects. Town Meeting approved the funds to complete this project.

The seemingly tireless Cohen returned for Article 19, under which $600k was sought for design of improvements to the Linden Street/Weston Road intersection. The design will include adding a left-hand turn from southbound on Weston Road to Linden Street, and full signalization to protect motorists, cyclists, and pedestrians. Questions were raised about whether improvements at this intersection could muck things up further at Weston Road and Rte. 135, though Cohen said improvements to that nearby intersection will be part of the broader Wellesley Square redevelopment project, and that the work on the two intersections will be synced up. Town Meeting approved the funding.

DPW campus project feasibility study & sticker shock

A few more Public Works motions would end the night, but the star of the show—taking up about an hour—was Article 20 regarding a proposed DPW Campus/Municipal Service Building Feasibility Study. Cohen returned to the podium for this article, though Facilities Director Joe McDonough did the heavy lifting on this presentation. Their work paid off in Town Meeting vote of 142/38/1 to approve spending $858,000 from free cash for this study.

Board of Public Works Chair Jeff Wechsler—no doubt one of the happiest Town Meeting members after all BPW motions were approved AND the University of Michigan Wolverines won the men’s NCAA basketball title that night—introduced Article 20. He prefaced remarks by Cohen and McDonough by describing the proposed study as being about “thoughtful, careful planning” about capital spending that should take place in the near and long terms.

Jeff Wechsler ATM
Jeff Wechsler definitely wanted to be at Town Meeting instead of watching the Big Game

 

Cohen followed by providing context for the latest ask, which following a master planning process started post-pandemic to see how the Municipal Way campus might best be used to address the outdatedness of a mishmash of facilities (including a 78-year old Park & Highway building) and best accommodate DPW, Municipal Light Plant, and perhaps other land use departments in town currently housed in leased property on Rte. 9 that costs hundreds of thousands of dollars annually. Considerations people might not think about are that there aren’t sufficient facilities to house and clean those pricey town trucks that kids and adults love to touch during Wellesley Wonderful Weekend—and that having such facilities could extend the vehicles’ useful lives. The master planning also looked at issues like safety related to members of the public visiting the area.

McDonough described the DPW campus effort as one of the anchor projects to be considered under the Wellesley’s new Town-Wide Capital Planning Committee that’s designed to think broadly about potential upcoming and expensive capital projects.

“Many of you have heard about the $100m project—that was a very early concept number that was the full all-in build-out,” McDonough said, noting that a reason for doing the feasibility study is to figure out how to go forward with a project in “manageable bites.” He displayed some possible phased approaches to the proposed project.

feasibility study

The feasibility study would provide comprehensive assessment from the start, with the idea of containing design and construction costs deeper into whatever project or projects are undertaken. “Feasibility is a very small fraction of the total project cost,” he said, and should be good for five-plus years even if the project gets delayed.

The Advisory Committee voted favorable action by a 10-2 vote, though there were concerns about the timing of the proposed study and some “sticker shock” at the cost. Such sticker shock was echoed by several Town Meeting members in their comments following McDonough’s presentation, with references to the impact this will have on already escalating property taxes.

Though some who have visited the DPW campus also confirmed the horrible condition of some of the current buildings in question, and backed funding the feasibility study. One Town Meeting member advocated for the feasibility study as a way to come up with a “coherent facility,” as was done when building the high school itself where Town Meeting was taking place.

It was clear from some Town Meeting members’ questions and comments that there’s study fatigue as well in Wellesley stemming from the seemingly endless feasibility, design, construction and you-name-it consulting contracts handed out by the town. A query was made about the potential for doing some of the study with in-house resources, for example.

Proposed RIO amendment to highlight final night of Annual Town Meeting

Town Meeting is expected to wrap up on April 7, with a proposed zoning amendment under Article 32 potentially providing some final fireworks. The Planning Board seeks to amend the Zoning Bylaws to eliminate Residential Incentive Overlay (RIO) designations in all single residence zoning districts (and some other districts), while keeping the RIO option available for zoning districts of other classifications. This housing-related topic has been a hot button issue at other Town Meetings in Wellesley of late.

Our earlier Annual Town Meeting coverage:

  • Wellesley Annual Town Meeting night #2: Split budget motions go smoothly, get approved
  • First night of Wellesley Annual Town Meeting features twists & turns

Thousands turn to The Swellesley Report daily to keep current on Wellesley:

  • Sign up for our free weekday email newsletter
  • Send us story tips, photos, ideas: theswellesleyreport@gmail.com
  • This is our actual job: Please support our work via a tax-deductible donation
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Filed Under: Government, Housing, Town Meeting

History

Reflecting on the Wellesley Inn’s demolition 20 years ago

April 7, 2026 by Emma Mullay 1 Comment

Wellesley Inn (Wellesley Historical Society Photograph Collection)
Wellesley Inn (Wellesley Historical Society Photograph Collection)

The first room to the left in the Wellesley Inn housed a large, ornate fireplace, a central part of the living room where residents would meet up to chat or solve jigsaw puzzles over tea and corn muffins. The room was adorned with dark and moody wooden accents, and community members would gather in one of the Inn’s three unique dining rooms, or by the rocking chairs on the front porch looking out over Washington Street. It was a place to eat, a place to meet, and a place to simply get together with friends and family. 

But that was 20 years ago. 

Now, in its stead, stands a luxury condo development with over 20 housing units above the businesses on the lower level. Gone are the days of the historic community gathering hub that held that lot for over a century, now home to a modern monolith, and to some, a shadow over the town. 

Long-time Wellesley residents, like Beth Hinchliffe, mourn the loss of the Inn and what it stood for. Originally the Wellesley Tea Room, it was established in 1897 and remained the focal point of the town until it was sold to developers and demolished in 2006. 

“It was really important in the life of the town, because it had grown up with the town,” Hinchliffe said. “It had a graciousness about it, and an awareness of history, of where we came from. It was a connection with all the generations that have come before.”

Hinchliffe said she attended all sorts of events at the Inn throughout the years, from baby showers to wedding receptions to graduation and birthday parties. But above all, she said, it was a place for the community to come together, and one that hasn’t been replicated since. With three different restaurants — a tavern, a ballroom, and the original tea room — there was something for every occasion. 

“It led to losing the sense of a town center, a community center, because it really was our community gathering place,” Hinchliffe said. “It was so much a part of all your life.” 

Wellesley Inn (Wellesley Historical Society Photograph Collection)
Inside the Wellesley Inn (Wellesley Historical Society Photograph Collection)

She recalled going there after graduation to celebrate and how her parents went out to dinner there every year for Mothers’ Day. There was caroling in the winter, Easter egg hunts in the spring, and it was where everyone gathered after the annual Wellesley Veterans Parade. Her favorite memories, however, were sitting by the fireplace in the living room with friends and family, drinking tea and solving puzzles in the warmth of the flame.  

“That room was like a big embrace,” she said. “I remember times I’d been out shopping with friends and we would just go in to get our tea in front of the fireplace.”

Katherine “Gig” Babson has lived in the same house in Wellesley for almost 79 years and remembers the Inn as “a glorious structure,” with the columns and stairs providing an intense visual impact in the heart of town. In her 50 years of involvement in local politics, she served as a Select Board member for nine years and was on the committee when the building was torn down. 

Babson said she has “very strong feelings” about the Inn being demolished instead of purchased by Wellesley College. 

“My unfiltered view is that Wellesley College had a great opportunity to purchase it and make it into a boutique hotel for the benefit of Wellesley College students,” she said. “I think it’s a missed opportunity.” 

At the time, there were movements from local residents to see if there was any way to preserve some part of the original building, but most people understood that it was incredibly expensive and would have been far too large of an undertaking to be feasible. 

Wellesley Inn (Wellesley Historical Society Photograph Collection)
Wellesley Inn (Wellesley Historical Society Photograph Collection)

Tory DeFazio, a resident of almost 89 years and a Town Meeting member for over 50, said that the Inn originated as a family home and eventually expanded to serve the parents of the students at Wellesley College looking for somewhere to stay. Since then, those families and anyone else visiting Wellesley have had to stay in nearby towns like Needham or Newton, he said. 

“When we had family weddings, the guests would stay there at the Wellesley Inn, and you could sit out on the front porch in a rocker and look at the traffic going by,” he said. “It was just a lovely environment, and they were always very gracious.” 

It has been 20 years since the demolition itself, which fell exactly on Wellesley’s 125th birthday on April 6, 2006. That decision, though likely unintentional, was a blow to many who were already devastated by the loss of the historic building, with Babson referring to the choice as “a huge booboo.” 

“If you’re going to take down something that a lot of people have strong feelings about, maybe you shouldn’t take it down on the town’s birthday,” she said. “They could have been more sensitive.”

Hinchliffe remembered the day itself, noting that while people knew the demolition was imminent, nobody expected them to pick that day to tear it down. Friends called to her to avoid the “heartache” of the demolition, and “the town really got riled up when they tore it down on exactly the 125th birthday.” 

“It was shocking to a lot of people,” DeFazio said. “It was gone before you knew it.” 

While there are some visual similarities between the Wellesley Inn and The Belclare, the new development that took its place, they serve vastly different functions.

“The columns are the only thing that remind me of the old Inn,” DeFazio said. “But there’s no porch, no rockers.” 

The Belclare
The Belclare (photo by Emma Mullay)

On the ground level of the development, there are a number of shops that are rented out, although there has been a significant amount of turnover with them, DeFazio said. Above them are the luxury condos, selling for up to $3 million. 

Lois Lee and Young Jo Kim, Wellesley residents of 22 years, didn’t live in town during the Inn’s prime and don’t remember it when “it was really being used.” 

“It’s nice for having the option of a luxury condo right in the center of town,” Lee said. “They did a beautiful job with the building, and it is nice to have the retail on the first floor.”

But while these condos provide a new life for the lot, others, like Hinchliffe, still deeply mourn that place it used to be. 

“I just loved it, and I miss it,” she said. “I think everybody misses it.” 

This story is part of a partnership between the Swellesley Report and the Boston University Department of Journalism.

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Filed Under: History, Housing

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