Cranberry Pond, Hingham

Cranberry Pond, Hingham

Hingham, Massachusetts 02043

Official Website
More Brewer Park Complex information page and map

About this Location

Formerly a cranberry bog, this small pond on French Street offers scenic water views and 0.4 miles of woodland trails, plus ice skating in the winter. It is also known as Bouve Pond.

The property’s history as a cranberry bog is evident in some spots, as some pipes, dams, and culverts remain. The Hingham Transfer Facility is next door.

The forest that surrounds the pond is composed of pine, oak, maple, birch, and beech.

Cranberry Pond is a manmade pond that used to be part of a cranberry bog. Its waters, as well as those of the wetlands that surround it, flow into the Fresh River. The Fresh River joins with the Mill River/Herring Run Brook in Weymouth and flows into the Weymouth Back River.

About More Brewer Park Complex

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Francis Brewer, son of John R. Brewer, spent happy boyhood days on his father’s World End Farm; and possibly inspired by that experience began in 1884 to purchase sheep grazing land at Great Hill. He originally planned to create a park and give it to the town. Instead, he married, built a house and farm buildings, and raised a family there. In the spring of 1921, Brookes More, a poet purchased the Great Hill estate. His daughter, Katherine More, eventually married Francis Brewer’s son, Wilmon Brewer, also a poet.

Nearly a century after Francis Brewer began buying the land, his original intent was fulfilled by an act of uncommon generosity when, in 1980, Dr. and Mrs. Wilmon Brewer gave the Higham Conservation Commission 107 acres of the Great Hill estate. Combined with the previously acquired 31.4 acres to the north and the 48.1 acres of Brewer Reservation earlier given by the Brewer family, the park totals 186.5 acres of varied land, much of it interlaced with winding carriage paths.

An outstanding feature is a spacious meadow, surrounded by pine. Larch and dogwood. Brewer Pond, gorgeous when water lilies are in bloom, and the more secluded Ice House Pond, provides habitats for many creatures. Other features include a trail through Bear Swamp and the foundation of the tiny cottage of Bootleg Charlie, immortalized in Brookes More’s poetry.

In 2006, the protection of Bear Swamp was enhanced by a 5-acre gift from the Estate of Gertrude Higgins. The 112-acre park provides access to Hobart Street and New Bridge Street. Parking is located along Hobart Street.

Cranberry Pond located south of More Brewer Park and west of Brewer Reservation was once a cranberry bog known as Bouve Pond. The Cranberry Pond area is a 13.8-acre preserver that attracts ice skaters and waterfowl. Parking is located along French Street.

Notable Trails

Follow the blue blazes along the south side of the pond for a 0.4-mile out-and-back walk along the water’s edge and through the woods. Along the way, you’ll see wetlands and a vernal pool.

Features

  • Restrooms on site

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

  • Entrance fee

Content from Official Website and More Brewer Park Complex information page and map

Last updated February 21, 2024