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Willowdale Mill Reservation

Historic Mill, Fish Ladder & Trail Connections

Trails follow the Ipswich River and traverse unique terrain, riparian habitat and historic features before connecting to Bradley Palmer State Park, which in turn connects to Greenbelt’s popular Vineyard Hill Reservation.


Aspectos destacados

  • 22 acres
  • Conserved 1969

Aspectos destacados

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      Location, Directions & Parking

      Park in the dirt pullout at the corner of the field, just before the bridge. Do not block the gate, which provides emergency and fire access to Bradley Palmer State Park. Parking is limited to 4 cars.



      Trails follow the Ipswich River and traverse unique terrain, riparian habitat and historic features before connecting to Bradley Palmer State Park, which in turn connects to Greenbelt’s popular Vineyard Hill Reservation.

      Protecting 1,500 feet along the Ipswich River, the surrounding woods are dotted with white pine, and fine broad paths and single-track trails carpeted in layers of pine needles for walking or horseback riding. Upon entering, you’ll notice remains of an old mill site, including foundations and a sluiceway, or man-made channel, that controlled water flow for the mill.

      Look for the fish ladder that allows passage of migrating fish around the Willowdale Dam, which once powered the former woolen mill. The southern trail passes through mature hardwood forests and the riverside trail follows the banks of the river.

      At the time of English settlement, Indigenous people known as the Pawtucket or Agawam were fishing here before there was a dam. They fished for alewives (river herring), shad, and other anadromous species on their spring runs, as well as for catadromous Atlantic eels.

      Eels were a culinary delicacy and had other important uses. Crushed eel skeletons were added to baby food as a kind of protein powder, and the cured skins were used as soft strong cradleboard ties, moccasin laces, and tumplines.

      Dr. Thomas Manning established a wooden textile mill here in the 1700s. By 1834, a stone factory complex, including a mill, boarding house and factory building, was turning out woolen blankets and hosiery.


      Cedars, hemlocks, pines and hardwoods dominate the property, which has extensive frontage on the Ipswich River. Hike the river edge to the dam through red maples or head up the hillside into denser forested stands dominated by hemlock.

      The river is a great place to see red-breasted merganser and snapping turtles, or try your luck fishing for trout. Beaver, deer and other woodland mammals are common, as are owls in the dark woodlands.


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      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…