Mendon Town Forest

It was a crystal clear November morning. We gathered to explore
Mendon's Town Forest. A motley crew, but full of spirit.

Our fearless leader, Paul, is on the right.

The Motley CrewThe Motley Crew

The first stop was what Paul called "Anchor Rock". A large submerged boulder at the base of the remains of a house foundation.

Surrounding Anchor RockSurrounding Anchor Rock

Jane was an umpire in a former life.

Umpire JaneUmpire Jane

Anchor Stone InspectionAnchor Stone Inspection

Evidence of carving in the large rock. There was obviously carvings on the rock, but they are difficult to make them out.

Faint CarvingsFaint Carvings

Until someone had the bright idea to highlight the carving with chalk.

With ChalkWith Chalk

The symbol below the date represents the Independent Order of Odd Fellows (also known as "The Three Link Fraternity", the links
represent Friendship, Love and Truth). "F", "L", "T" are carved in each of the three links. This carving is over 130 years old.

This area has been in use much longer than that. Records show that the town approved a road be laid in 1726. For the arithmetically impaired, that's nearly 300 years ago.

We suspect this similar carving was done later.

Later Carving?Later Carving?

We suspect that this was carved later than the first.

A. I. AlexanderA. I. Alexander

Anyone know who A.I. Alexander was? None of us have a clue what
meaning the anchor has.

More AnchorMore Anchor

Entire AnchorEntire Anchor

So that's why Paul called this the Anchor Rock.

Another ViewAnother View

One Last ViewOne Last View

The Anchor Rock sits in front of the remains of a house (the stone foundations survives). The remnants of the house's well can still be seen.

First WellFirst Well

Down the road a piece was a second house.

Another FoundationAnother Foundation

Apparently, the house was held together with nails. Square ones, made by blacksmiths.

NailedNailed

The remains of a mill stone.

Remains of a mill stoneRemains of a mill stone

Closeup of the mill stoneCloseup of the mill stone

One of the more interesting things we discovered was this house's
well. It was completely intact, including water!

Well buried under debrisWell buried under debris

Nice knees!Nice knees!

Inside...

First peek insideFirst peek inside

Water!Water!

Note the spiderweb.Note the spiderweb.

We continued our walk to "Stone Bridge"

Stone BridgeStone Bridge

Another view of the stone bridgeAnother view of the stone bridge

The stream lead us to the most interesting find of the day. Paul
explained that it's most likely a dam and the foundation for a
waterwheel.

UPDATE: I've been told that this is a "Mill Race"

Water wheel foundationWater wheel foundation

The stream is actually behind this stone wall and seeps through the wall.

Wet wallWet wall

Looking downstream from the dam, the waterwheel would have sat between these two walls.

Water wheel locationWater wheel location

Finally, we head up to Wigwam Hill, one of the highest points in
Worcester County. Today it's used as a fire spotting tower.

Paul educates us.Paul educates us.

Fire TowerFire Tower

It appears one of us has some sort of A.D.D.

From here it was back to Paul and Patrice's place for home-made soup.