Thomas Barrows (August 6, 1795 – May 7, 1880) was a business and civic leader from Dedham, Massachusetts.
Barrows was born August 6, 1795 in Middleboro, Massachusetts. He rose from a humble childhood to become the wealthiest mill owner in Dedham.
With his wife, Elizabeth, he had two sons and two daughters, including Thomas, Sarah, and Elizabeth. Barrows had a grand estate on High Street that was torn down in 1959 to make room for St. Mary's parking lot.
He died May 7, 1880, and is buried at the Old Village Cemetery.
In 1812, he left the family farm to work at a Middleboro cotton mill. Two years later he worked at a different mill in Wrentham, Massachusetts. He later returned to Middleboro to become the superintendent of a mill and remained there for five years.
He then took a position in Halifax, Massachusetts until 1825, at which point he was hired by Benjamin Bussey and George H. Kuhn to work at their mill on Mother Brook making broadcloths.
Barrows retired in 1864 when the mill was sold. He soon after purchased another mill on Mother Brook. He made large additions to the mill, including a three-story ell. He also improved the machinery, including replacing the water wheels with turbines and adding a steam engine. With the additions, he transformed it into a woolen mill.
He sold the mill in 1872, during a downturn in the woolen industry.
See main article: Brookdale Cemetery.
Seeing a need for greater cemetery space, Dedham's Annual Town Meeting of 1876 established a committee to look into establishing a new cemetery. The committee, composed of the selectmen and Eratus Worthington, Eliphalet Stone, Royal O. Storrs, Winslow Warren, Edwin Whiting, and Alfred Hewins, was charged with determining how large the cemetery should be, locating land for it, and all other matters.
Town Meeting accepted the committee's recommendation on October 20, 1877, and appropriated $8,150 to purchase 39 acres from Barrows and Thomas Motley with additional land from Walter E. White for a total of 40 acres. Several of those involved in the creation of Brookdale Cemetery were the agents and superintendents of the mills along Mother Brook.
During the bicentennial celebrations in Dedham in 1836, Barrows served as a vice president of the dinner held for 600 people.