Four fires Around two o'clock in the morning on October 30, 1832, a fire broke out in the stable and quickly traveled to the hotel, leveling both in 90 minutes. The fire killed 66 horses and one man, who was sleeping in the barn. It was assumed that the man, a veteran of the Revolution walking to Washington, D.C. to beg for a pension, was the cause of the fire. The veteran was buried at the local cemetery, and it took several days to cart all of the dead horses down to the marshes where their carcasses could be sunk into the mud. Bride rebuilt the inn, naming it the Phoenix Hotel in honor of it
rising from the ashes. It had four large parlors on the first floor in addition to a dining hall that measured 58' by 28' and a bar that was 38' by 18'. The hall had a fenced off area for musicians. The second floor had six parlors and ten chambers, with a total of sixty guest rooms. It was a "stately edifice." The
Norfolk Advertiser called it "a splendid new house, not surpassed in size, fixtures, or elegance of finish, by any in all the villages of Massachusetts." It rivaled many of the finer hotels in Boston. The stable was built adjacent to the hotel again, but this time a brick wall served as a firestop between the two. Another fire broke out in the stables around 2:00 a.m. on January 7, 1834, just 15 months later. This time, the stagecoach company had 53 horses in the stables, only one of which made it out alive. There were an additional 11 horses, owned by E. Newell, also in the barn. Ten of them made it out safely, but one broke its neck jumping out a window and died. After the second fire, the stables were rebuilt further down Washington Street and away from the hotel. A third fire broke out on January 7, 1850, killing eight horses, two cows, and several pigs, in addition to carriages, harnesses, and other equipment. The hotel and other buildings in the area were emptied as a precaution, but the engine companies were able to keep the flames confined to the stable. It finally burned to the ground on the morning of December 25, 1880.
Arrests of the arsonists Around the time of the second fire, 70 or 80 horses owned by another stagecoach company were poisoned in a neighboring community, growing suspicions that the repeated fires were not accidental and might perhaps be related to the stagecoach companies. The Dedham Selectmen offered a $500 reward for the capture of the arsonist, and the Citizen's Stagecoach Company offered an additional $500. John Wade, a resident at the competing
Norfolk House, got drunk one evening and mentioned that he knew something about the fire. He was arrested within an hour but, after sobering up, refused to speak any more about it. A number of prominent residents visited him in jail, including
Jeremy Stimson, and he eventually confessed that he had been hired by the owner of the Norfolk House to light the first fire. Wade was tried for both arson and murder. He was represented by
Theron Metcalf, who defended him by highlighting Wade's lack of intelligence and the fact that he was intoxicated when he confessed. Wade was found guilty and sentenced to death, but Rev.
Ebenezer Burgess intervened on his behalf and helped get it commuted to life imprisonment. The accused owner of the Norfolk House, which was a stop on the competing Tremont Stagecoach Line, committed suicide shortly after Wade named him. The proprietors of the two establishments generally stayed away from each other but "every once in a while they slipped and then there would be a short burst of newspaper venom." Wade also knew
George Walton, who was in prison for robbing Deacon Jabez Boyden of the Second Parish and who was later identified as the culprit in the second fire. Walton was indicted, but he died of consumption before he could be tried. ==Rules of baseball==