South Norwood was a multi-ethnic neighborhood. Immigrants from Syria, Poland, Lithuania, and Italy first settled here; followed later by people from Portugal, Brazil, Egypt, and Ecuador. Like the residents of Norwood’s other ethnic neighborhoods, Germantown, Swedeville, and the Irish of Dublin & Cork City, many came to Norwood because they already had friends or family living here – chain migration. It would seem natural that these newcomers would settle in a neighborhood where they already knew people and where people spoke their native language.

This is also the same scenario for the people who lived in South Norwood. However, the residents of South Norwood were not viewed equally as other residents – including some other Norwood immigrants.  It appears that the immigrants who came to Norwood from Scandinavia, Ireland, and the Germanic countries, had been accepted into Norwood Yankee society by the second generation.

In a 1916 article in the Norwood Messenger stated that “a great number of people have never visited this part of town.” Win Everett, in writing about infrastructure improvements that were slow to be brought to the area, after the Influenza epidemic in 1918, said that the area could no longer be ignored, and viewed as “a dumping ground of the peasantry of Europe.” In 1918, the Civic Herald, the newspaper of the Norwood Civic Association, published a full-page advertisement that pictured twelve babies, each labeled by nationality that encircled an inspirational poem that notes how all Norwood children are born without prejudice – thus, encouraging parents to raise good citizens and to build a better Norwood.

Although the Civic Herald took an interesting stand, racism, and ostracization continued for several more decades as the “uptown” Norwoodians viewed the residents of South Norwood with a jaundiced eye. However, those who lived in the South Norwood neighborhood had pride for their tight-knit community. Though they may have spent Sunday worshiping in the Temple or in one of the three ethnic Catholic churches in the neighborhood, they socialized, played, and celebrated with each other the rest of the week.

Bulletin board in the Balch School in the Spring of 2022, showing all the ethnicities of the children who go to school there.

Today, South Norwood remains a culturally diverse community with the largest groups being from Brazil, Central America and from the Middle East. Recently when the Balch School was celebrating Norwood’s 150th anniversary, they displayed a bulletin board that celebrated Norwood cultural heritage. This bulletin board noted the children in the school had roots in 40 other nations….but, as the bulletin board points out they all “learn together in one school. The Balch.”

Lebanese-Syrian

Lithuanian

Polish

Norwood’s Jewish Community

Italian

Portuguese

Back to the Norwood Neighborhoods Exhibit main page –>

Turnpike Lumber Yard Property Sold to Neighboring Supply Firm-This Day In Norwood History-June 24, 1983

Turnpike Lumber Yard Property Sold to Neighboring Supply Firm-This Day In Norwood History-June 24, 1983

georgenhs Jun 24, 1983 2 min read

The commercial expansion follows two destructive, suspected arson fires that completely leveled the historic lumber yard buildings last year.

Vintage Norwood Ballplayers Reunite to Recall The “Good Old Days”-This Day in Norwood History-June 20, 1957

Vintage Norwood Ballplayers Reunite to Recall The “Good Old Days”-This Day in Norwood History-June 20, 1957

georgenhs Jun 20, 1957 8 min read

A 55-year-old scorebook brings together Norwood’s original turn-of-the-century baseball masters to recall the legendary Trolley League era.

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Protected: HE CHASED SLAVERS AND RECEIVED HEAD MONEY

georgenhs Jun 20, 2020 1 min read

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Selectmen Deny Multiple Liquor Expansion Requests and Face Teen Hangout Issues-This Day In Norwood History-June 26, 1974

Selectmen Deny Multiple Liquor Expansion Requests and Face Teen Hangout Issues-This Day In Norwood History-June 26, 1974

georgenhs Jun 26, 1974 5 min read

South Norwood church leaders successfully block a ‘liquor row’ expansion as police chiefs reveal severe staffing shortages facing local businesses.

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Norwood FinCom’s Elias Refuses To Resign Amid Recall Threats-This Day In Norwood History-June 22, 1974

georgenhs Jun 22, 1974 2 min read

| A political standoff gridlocks the Finance Commission as a newly elected official breaks rank and drops out of municipal sessions


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