MSI 1/31/22
1658 John Fuller bought 750 acres of land in Newton from Joseph Cook in 1658, including this lot, along with most of what later became the part of Newton annexed to Waltham in 1849 known as the Southside (MLR 2/180). According to Francis Jackson's 1854 history of Newton, John Fuller came to Cambridge (and Newton, which was part of Cambridge at the time) from England in 1644. For about the next 150 years, this area was farmed by the descendents of John Fuller, and known as the "Fuller Farm".
The origin of the name "Newton" is rather interesting. Today's Newton was originally part of colonial Cambridge in the 1630s, but by 1654 it was being referred to as "Cambridge Village". In 1679, Cambridge Village became a separate town from Cambridge, and between 1679 and 1691, it was referred to as either "Cambridge Village" or "New Cambridge". In 1691, the colony's General Court officially renamed it "New Town". Then, in 1766 it was arbitrarily changed to "Newton" by the current town clerk, Judge Fuller (according to Jackson's 1854 history of Newton, p. 6).
c1800 In the late 1700s and early 1800s, Dr. Marshall Spring purchased much of the land in this part of what used to be Newton (see MLR 145/35, 152/133, 176/183 and 181/505). These were farm lands, pasture lands, and woodlots on the original Fuller Farm of 1658. Doctor Marshall Spring, who lived in Watertown, was a loyalist before the Revolutionary War, but rushed to Lexington during the Battle of Lexington and Concord to treat the wounded patriots. He was so much respected that his loyalist leanings were later forgiven (from Bond and Nelson). The Spring family goes back to the beginning of Newton as a colonial town, but the connection of Dr. Spring with this branch of the family is not clear.
1844 In 1844, William Minot and the other trustees of the assets of Nancy Wharton sold two large lots in the part of Newton that would become Waltham to Frances C. Lowell (MLR 459/65 and 68). This Francis C. Lowell was the son of the Francis Cabot Lowell, who had founded the Boston Manufacturing Company. One parcel, a woodlot of 115 acres, appears to have been near the Newton Chymical (Chemical) Company, but south of today's High Street. The other parcel, consisting of 60 acres of woodlot and pasture called the "Brush Pasture", stretched east from today's Newton Street about 2,000 feet (to about Flood Street) and south from the river about 1,600 feet (to about Clinton Street). Nancy Wharton was the daughter of Marshall B. Spring, who was the son of Dr. Marshall Spring. Before her wedding to William Wharton, Nancy W. Spring owned a large amount of land, which was described in their prenuptial agreement (MLR 444/7 and 13). Nancy Spring later became the mother-in-law of Edith Wharton, the author.
1846 In 1846, Lowell sold most of the north east corner of the "Brush Pasture" to Horatio Moore (MLR 495/98). Moore was the manager of the Newton Chymical Company, associated with the Boston Manufacturing Company, at the time. The lot, containing a bit over 10 acres, stretched from east to west from today's house lots on the east of Flood Street to those on the west of Moore Street, and from north to south from today's house lots on the south side of today's Calvary Street to those on the south of today's John Street.
1849 In 1849, Waltham annexed the Southside from Newton, including all of what formerly had been the "Brush Pasture".
1856 Horatio Moore sold the lot for today's No. 89 Oak Street (on the corner of Moore Street) to Patrick Muldoon in 1856 for $140 (MLR 748/79). Moore Street had been named Alder Street at the time. Muldoon had been noted as a laborer in the deed.
1858 In 1858, Patrick and Catherine Muldoon took out a mortgage with Josiah Rutter for $650 based on this lot (MLR 799/478). It appears likely that the house at No. 89 Oak Street was probably originally built for Patrick and Catherine Muldoon in 1858. Patrick was listed there in the 1865 census as working at the chemical works, and in the 1869 town directory as living on Oak near Alder. The house was also shown on the 1875 and 1886 maps as belonging to P. Muldoon.
1887 In 1887, Patrick Muldoon sold the house to John F. Muldoon, his son, for $2,000 (MLR 1825/496), and the 1900 map showed it as belonging to J. Muldoon. In 1903, John F. Muldoon married Elizabeth Clare Rogers. John was listed in the 1910 directory as working at the Waltham Bleachery and Dye Works, but the 1918 map showed the house now belonging to Elizabeth Jones. It is possible that John had died and Elizabeth had remarried, since the 1922 voting list had John J. and Elizabeth Jones at the address.
1926 In 1926, Elizabeth C. Jones, widow and formerly Muldoon, sold the house to Nicholas and Lucia Deluca (MLR 4996/538). Therefore, in 1926 the house passed out of the hands of the Muldoon family, as the neighborhood was gradually being transformed from almost entirely Irish to a mixture of Irish and Italian.