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Glennie Woodlot

Historic Woodlot, Trails to Conservation Area

Despite its modest size of 9.25 acres, a few steps into the Glennie Woodlot feels like a journey back a century, to a time when North Andover was a rural farming community dotted with woodlots like this one.


Aspectos destacados

  • 9 acres
  • Conserved 2020

Aspectos destacados

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      Location, Directions & Parking

      There is a small parking lot with room for 3-4 cars.



      Passed down through the generations, the Glennie Woodlot is the last piece of the Glennie Dairy, much of which is now the permanently-protected Smolak Farm.

      The groundwaters in this area feed Lake Cochichewick, which drains into the Merrimack River to the north. The Pawtucket village of Cochichewicket (“At the fast-running stream”) was on the Cochichewick River at the outflow of the lake. Villagers would have hunted in the Glennie forest.

      An existing woods road provides a solid base for a trail to the shared boundary with Town Farm Conservation Area, offering improved public access to the northern portion of Town Farm.


      The conservation significance and public benefits of preserving this parcel are noteworthy.

      Perhaps most significant is that the Glennie Woodlot Property is a gateway to that portion of the Town Farm Conservation Area north of Dale Street. There was no adequate trail access from Dale Street to the northern portion of Town Farm due to flooding of the wetlands behind the Dale Street Soccer Fields.

      With the support of many generous donors and North Andover residents who voted to allocate CPA funds toward the $250,000 purchase price, Glennie Woodlot will be protected forever. The Town of North Andover now owns the land for conservation and passive recreational purposes.


      Glennie Woodlot is a gorgeous example of a classic Northeastern Massachusetts forest. Mature oaks, maples and white pine grace these open woods, leading to views of a 23-nest heron rookery perched in the neighboring wetlands.


      Land Acknowledgment

      The properties that Greenbelt conserves are on the ancestral lands of the Pennacook and the Pawtucket, bands of Abenaki-speaking people. Join us in honoring the elders who lived here before, the Indigenous descendants today and the generations to come. Learn more…

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