Much of the Homesteads
significance lies in its rich and colorful history, a history that predates European
colonization by thousands of years. It is a history shaped by the land by its
abundance of wildlife, fertile soil, surface waters and opportunity. The Pilgrim George Soule must have recognized
what the land had to offer when he joined together with 25 other men to buy a large parcel
from the Wampanoag Indians in 1662. Although he never settled his piece, which lay
primarily in what is now E. Middleborough, his grandson James, built a home there. The
house was burned to the ground during King Philips War (1675-76) and a second house
was built at the end of Thorntons Lane (Winter Street Extension). That house also
burned in the 1720s. Nothing remains of those early dwellings.
So many of James descendants
stayed in the area during the next three centuries that it became known as the Soule
Neighborhood. Children were educated in the one-room Soule Schoolhouse on Winter Street
and their parents had their horses shod by one of three Soule farriers. They bought bricks
from Jonathon Soule, lumber from E. Everett Soule, duck eggs from Charles H. Soule, and
were likely married by Augustus Soule, a Justice of the Peace.
It was Augustus Soule who, in the mid
-1800s, built the house and barn that are now part of the Soule Homestead Education
Center. He most likely used lumber cut from his sawmill across the street to construct the
17 room house and 90-foot long barn. The upper floor of the two-story barn was first used
to house animals with the loft being used for hay storage. However, when several cows fell
through the old wooden floor in 1954, the basement was converted into a modern dairy
operation with a conveyor belt to remove the manure and the upper floor was used for hay
storage.
Augustus daughter, Irene, who was
born in the house in 1865, married Albert Deane on October 3, 1894. They lived at the farm
and when her parents died, its name was changed to the Deane Farm. The Holsteins grazed
contentedly in the lush green fields. The cheerful yellow house with its forest green
shutters and the east and west additions to the barn were all signs that the dairy
business was prospering in Middleborough, as indeed it was with the more than 100 dairies
in the town at the turn of the century.
Mr. Deane needed help to milk the cows
and hay the fields and he found a lifelong assistance and friend in his neighbor, Columbo
Guidoboni. Columbo was tired of working inside, and he quit his job at the George E. Keith
Shoe Shop to become a farm hand. The Deanes thought so highly of Columbo that they
bequeathed the farm to him when they died, Albert in 1949 and Irene nine years later.
Columbo's son, Donald, and his wife,
Mary, moved into the second floor apartment in 1954 for "$10.00 a month rent and all
the milk and eggs (they) could eat." Columbo and his wife, Doris, moved in downstairs
in 1958 and lived at the farm for the remainder of their lives.
They worked hard and built up a herd of
120 cows in the 1960s. Milking began at 6 a.m. and took two hours to finish. The
process was repeated at 3:30 p.m.
In 1983, Donald sold the cows to two
young men, who continued the dairy operation at the farm. Donald continued haying the
fields for income putting up 8,000 to 10,000 bales each year for another
five years. Meanwhile, he had three or four offers a week on the property from developers.
Knowing that the dairy industry was in trouble in the area, he decided to sell, but it was
the town of Middleborough, through a town meeting vote, not a developer, that acquired the
farm to maintain it as agricultural open space.
Four years later, the Soule Homestead
Education Center, Inc., a non-profit organization formed specifically to restore the farm
and develop it into an agro-ecology education center, signed a ten-year lease with the
town for 90 acres on the Middleborough portion. And so, the farm is once again playing an
active, vital role in the community, teaching children and adults alike about their
connections with the earth.