| By
Don D’Amato
Introduction
Today, Warwick, with a population exceeding 86,000, is Rhode Island's
second largest city. It is conveniently located near all the major
business, cultural and recreation centers of New England. Providence
is only ten minutes away; Boston but one hour. Cape Cod can be reached
in about seventy-five minutes and the Connecticut Casinos in less
than an hour. With the airport, interstate highways and rail service
New York is easily reached, as are the ski slopes of the northern
states. Warwick is at "The Crossroads of New England."
Warwick's natural beauty along Greenwich Bay, its historical significance
and modern potential continue to attract tourists, business, movie
producers and those looking for the serenity of a suburban area
with the advantages of a modern city. Warwick provides that and
more as it has made a dynamic impact on Rhode Island in the late
20th and 21st centuries.
A large part of the city’s significance and charm can be traced
back through its more than 370 year history. Thanks to many spirited
leaders in both the community and City Hall, Warwick has come to
realize that its heritage mirrors that of the state and the country.
Warwick, probably more than any other community in Rhode Island,
has had many trials and tribulations in its fight to establish the
freedoms we so dearly cherish today. Much of the struggle and the
success can be found by studying the history of its villages and
their impact on the city.
Hopefully, this series of articles on Warwick’s villages and
historic places, then and now, will develop into a useful tool in
order that we, as well as our children, grandchildren and great
grandchildren, will have a better understanding of our world. An
understanding of the past may help us cherish and preserve the values
that have been established and are part of our heritage.
A Village Renaissance
Over the years, we have looked at Warwick’s villages from
a number of different points of view. When Oliver Payson Fuller
wrote his History of Warwick in 1875, he described Warwick's villages
as "...thriving manufacturing villages, strung together like
beads upon a string. . ." He notes that they were ". .
full of busy industry, nestling along the two branches of the river
(Pawtuxet).” His accounts of the villages give us an interesting
and informative view of life in 19th century Warwick.
Fuller, of course, wrote before the Town of Warwick was divided
in 1913. At that time, seven villages were placed in the Town of
West Warwick and the boundary line between the two towns ran through
and divided the village of Natick. The remaining areas of Old Warwick,
Apponaug, Cowesett, Pontiac and Hill's Grove were clearly recognized
as having a certain entity and, as Fuller notes, "...each possessing
its peculiar features of interest, and altogether forming a community."
Fuller’s concept and pride in the villages changed by the
next century. Warwick has changed dramatically since the time when
Fuller wrote his history. As the 20th century progressed, Warwick,
deprived of its industrial base by the creation of West Warwick
from the western mill villages, placed a great deal of emphasis
on attracting industry and commerce while preserving pleasant suburban
residential areas. Robert 0. Jones, author of Warwick. Rhode Island,
Statewide Historical Preservation Report K-W-1, points out that,
"Unfortunately, no attention was paid to the effect of growth
on the old villages and open farmland that defined Warwick's environmental
character." Jones uses Apponaug village as an example of this
neglect, charging that it now, (ie: 1980)"...totally lacks
the connotation of pleasurable community life in a small scale civic
setting which is evoked by the term 'village'." In 1981, very
few would have taken exception to the statement by Jones that, "Apponaug
was once truly a village, but its sense of community has been severely
impaired by the physical changes made to accommodate the automobile
. "
Fortunately for Warwick, a number of civic minded citizens believed,
as Jones did, that "The evidence of the past makes Warwick's
history an integral part of the daily life of local residents."
Jones, in his work, recommended that, "The citizens of Warwick
should recognize the value of their community’s heritage,
take pride in it, and protect it for future generations to study
and enjoy." Dorothy Mayor – Apponaug Activist
This has happened in Warwick as the 1980s progressed. Led by the
late Dorothy Mayor, a number of very dedicated individuals, working
through the Apponaug Area Improvement Association, the Warwick Museum
and the Warwick Preservation Commission, have succeeded in restoring
much of the village's pride and have preserved its historical heritage.
The success of the Apponaug project might be observed from the envious
remarks of a former resident of Arctic. She noted. "When we
were kids we were not too happy about coming from a tired mill village
such as Arctic. But, we always could take some consolation in saying.
'Well, at least we’re not as bad off as Apponaug. Now, seeing
the street lights and the park and other improvements, we have to
admit that Apponaug has come a long way."
The work begun by Mrs. Mayor and encouraged by Mayors Flaherty,
Donovan, Chafee and Avedisian, tell a pleasant story in an age when
too often financial gain has been detrimental to beauty and the
environment. In 1980, Dot Mayor, in her introduction to I Remember
Apponaug, a collection of paintings depicting life at an earlier
age, commented that "...it has been reduced to an unattractive
crossroads on the way to Route 95." When asked about the subject
of so many of her paintings, Dot has often remarked. "Throughout
most of my life, I have had a hate-love relationship with my birthplace.
Sometimes I have been proud of it, sometimes ashamed to acknowledge
any relation to it... .None of the past generations could have foreseen,
although in their time they may have contributed to it, that their
village would onetime become a nondescript crossroads on the map."
Dot Mayor also noted that Apponaug was "the home of my parents,
my grandparents, and my great grandparents. Each generation must
have seen this place, my home, in a different way.…"
Dot spent a great deal of time and effort in trying to make Apponaug
a pleasant area once again. While it is obvious that it would be
impossible to recreate the pleasant 19th century village of Fuller's
recollection, Dot Mayor, and many concerned citizens, have made
dramatic improvements, not only in the obvious physical appearance
of the area, but in the spirit as we1l. Dot noted that Apponaug
is now the civic center of the second largest city in the state
and while it is no longer the geographic center of the City, it
is an historical center. She expressed her feelings by saying. "I
hope that it will continue to be used as such. ...I hope good planning
will make my village attractive to visitors and residents and that
once again it will become a place with a future.”
The success of Apponaug has been echoed again and again in the villages
of Conimicut, Pontiac, Hillsgrove and other sections of the city.
We hope by placing the history of the villages and historic places
on the Internet, we will be helping to increase the interest in
Warwick’s rich heritage and make a contribution to its future.

Photo – Dorothy Mayor at her lovely Apponaug home in 1983.
She is holding one of the many maps she drew of the area.
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