The unwelcome “eavesdroppers” at the Tanneyhill house on Bay Street are getting all hot and bothered about attempts to smoke them out of the improvised hive in a hole under the roof. Mr. C. M. Anderson, 15 Horn Street, an instructor at the Norfolk Agricultural School, was rudely stung on the arms five times last Wednesday morning.

Mr. Anderson claims that the smoker he uses counteracts the poison of the bee stings, but they looked pretty sore just the same. All this excitement over the bees started last Saturday when Mr. Bacon at the Norfolk Aggie informed Mr. Anderson that the bees were there on Day Street and that he could have them “if he could get ’em ”

Now Mr. Anderson had lost all his own bees last winter, so he donned his armor (helmet and mask) and set out to do his stuff. Everything went wrong from, the very beginning when the queen bee refused to leave her hive and reign in the bright, white new one that Mr. Anderson offered.

The workers won’t leave here until they have at least a satisfactory substitute, (aren’t they fickle?), so probably Mr. Anderson will have to purchase a new queen or provide some eggs so the workers can hatch one. “This will take some time,” he assures us, so if you happen to walk by the house, don’t think it’s burglars.

Mr. Anderson graduated from the Norfolk Agricultural School himself in 1930. Bees are his special hobby, and he purchased his first hive from Charles Ellis, the “bee man’ ’in Westwood.

This summer Mr. Anderson spent a little spare time at a Revere Beach concession watching the bees. He admits he got “stung” to the tune of $1.10 for a phoney good luck charm from a wily fortune teller. He said he could make four or five wishes a day and they would all come true. He wished this week that those bees would bee-have and go home with him.

(All articles were originally published in the Norwood Messenger unless otherwise noted)

In Memory of Timothy J. McDonough (February 21, 1965 – March 12, 2026)

In Memory of Timothy J. McDonough (February 21, 1965 – March 12, 2026)

A Life of Service, Community, and Unwavering Norwood Pride On March 12, 2026, the Town of Norwood lost one of its most dedicated public servants and most beloved neighbors with … Continue reading In Memory of Timothy J. McDonough (February…

Day Street

Day Street

Day Street is one of Norwood’s richest historic corridors, home to some of the town’s most architecturally significant and culturally meaningful properties. Each house tells a different chapter of Norwood’s … Continue reading Day Street

Six white roses and photographs of victims are displayed at The Skating Club of Boston, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025, in Norwood, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Norwood Mourns Skating Club Members-This Day in Norwood History–January 29, 2025

Norwood Mourns Skating Club Members Lost in Washington, D.C. Mid‑Air Collision January 29 now carries a solemn weight in Norwood’s civic memory. On this day in 2025, a mid‑air collision … Continue reading Norwood Mourns Skating Club Members-This Day in…

2025 This Day In Norwood History: Industry & Workplaces Wrapped

2025 This Day In Norwood History: Industry & Workplaces Wrapped

A year of factories, shop floors, printing presses, ice cream plants, car lots, tanneries, department stores, and every workplace that helped build Norwood’s identity. Norwood’s history has always been written … Continue reading 2025 This Day In Norwood History: Industry…

2025 This Day In Norwood History: Crime & Mystery Wrapped

2025 This Day In Norwood History: Crime & Mystery Wrapped

Some stories rise to the top because they’re gripping. Others because they’re tragic. And some because they leave behind questions that echo for decades. In 2025, Norwood readers returned again … Continue reading 2025 This Day In Norwood History: Crime…