A Brief History of the
Town of Sudbury, Massachusetts
By the Sudbury Senior Center
The Center of Sudbury in about 1888 looking north along Concord Road from just south of Hudson Road.
Etching shows the Town House as it sat next to the Unitarian Church on the west side of Concord Road, before it burned in 1929.
The horse barns that can still be seen next to the church were actually built for the Town House. The Methodist Episcopal Church stands at the right.
The exact locations of the three buildings are shown in this 1889 Map from the Town Archives.
The image is from an etching by J. S. Conant in Hudson's History opposite p. 364 (see H. Sources) .
LINKS to the SECTIONS of this PAGE:
A. The Original Town of Sudbury Was Founded in 1639
- The original Town of Sudbury was founded (incorporated) over 360 years ago in 1639.
- The first permanent Colonial settlements in Sudbury took place in 1638.
- The number of Colonial men, women, and children who were permanent residents of Sudbury in early 1639 was about 130.
- Very few Native Americans (Indians) were known to visit and/or use the land in the original Town of Sudbury in 1639.
- Repeated contact with European explorers, fur traders and fishermen in the 1500s and early 1600s caused multiple epidemics of smallpox and other European diseases in Native American tribes living in what we now call New England.
- Prior to 1500 these European diseases did not exist in the area we call New England.
- The immune systems of the Native Americans living in the area we call New England had no defense against these new diseases.
- Most Native Americans exposed to these European diseases died.
- By 1639 these deadly epidemics had greatly reduced the numbers of Native Americans who visited and/or used the land that became Sudbury.
- Extensive evidence has been found of earlier Native American activities in this area, some dating back thousands of years.
- One example is the Grinding Stone
pictured and described in the "Historic Sudbury Trail" on
the Town of Sudbury web site.
- Early Sudbury settlers had good relations with the few Native American families living there.
- The Sudbury land occupied by the Sudbury settlers was purchased from a local Native American man named Cato (also spelled Karte) individually or with his brothers.
- Cato was given the Colonial title of respect and rank of "Goodman" by the Sudbury settlers.
- Goodman Cato and his family lived on what is still called Goodman's Hill in the present Town of Sudbury.
- The original Town of Sudbury was the nineteenth Colonial, permanent "Town" within the 1639 boundaries of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
- Note that the Massachusetts Bay Colony did NOT include large areas of the present State of MA such as the Plymouth Colony (now the present MA Counties of Plymouth, Bristol, and Barnstable).
- The original Town of Sudbury was the THIRD, Colonial, permanent, INLAND Town within the 1639 borders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
- "INLAND" means above the flow of tide waters from the Atlantic Ocean.
- The FIRST (1635) was the original Town of Concord, then and now the immediate northern neighbor of Sudbury, and the SECOND (1636) was the original Town of Dedham.
- An inland location was a HIGH RISK location for the initial settlers of the original Town of Sudbury, since:
- There was no possibility of escape by ship if needed;
- Emergency resources were about ten hours away in the Boston area;
- There was mainly wilderness beyond the southern and western borders of the Town.
- The ORIGINAL Town of Sudbury was MUCH LARGER than the present Town of that name.
- The present Towns of Wayland, Maynard, and Sudbury SHARE the historical heritage described in the first three sections of this page.
- It is important to note that the very earliest occupied settlements and that central feature of a "Puritan Village", the earliest church/meeting house, were on lands in the eastern part of the original Town of Sudbury that are within the present Town of Wayland.
- The earliest church/meeting house was built in 1643 at the site of the present North Cemetery of the Town of Wayland.
- North Cemetery is located on the northeast side of Old Sudbury Road (Route 27) about halfway between the traffic light at Wayland Center and the bridge over the Sudbury River.
- This site is identified as the "First Town Center" by a roadside historical marker.
- A large map of the First Roads and House-Lots (including the "Meeting-House Lot") of the earliest settlements is on the Town of Sudbury web site.
- It is not surprising that the first settlements were in the eastern part of the original Town of Sudbury, since a substantial river (now called the Sudbury River) flowed from south to north through the original Town and gave some protection to those settlers living east of it.
- The river was harder to cross during much of the year in 1639 than is today's usually placid Sudbury River whose flow is controlled by upstream and downstream dams.
- The petition to "The Great and General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony" to establish the original Town of Sudbury was made by a group of Colonial residents of the original Town of Watertown.
- The area within the original Town of Watertown extended west to the eastern border of the original Town of Sudbury.
- The original Town of Watertown was much larger in area than the present Town of Watertown and also included the present Towns of Weston (the immediate eastern neighbor of Wayland) and Waltham.
- The original Town of Sudbury was named after the town of that name in the County of Suffolk in the East Anglia region of eastern England.
- Several of the first settlers of the original Town of Sudbury had lived in or near Sudbury, Suffolk, England.
- Sudbury, Suffolk, England is an ancient market town which existed prior to the year 800.
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B. King Philip's War and the "Sudbury Fight"
- King Philip's War was one of the MOST SIGNIFICANT wars ever fought in North America.
- This short war lasted in southern New England from June 1675 to August 1676.
- This bloody war had a significant impact on American history over the following 300 years.
- In this war an alliance of hostile Native American (Indian) tribes attempted to eliminate ALL of the English Colonies in New England by KILLING or DRIVING OUT ALL of the immigrant Colonial residents so that the Native Americans could:
- Regain control of their former lands;
- Practice their culture without outside interference;
- Put an end to their poor treatment by the English Colonial authorities, and in some cases, settlers.
- If the alliance of tribes had won the war, then it is unlikely that a country anything like the U. S. A. would exist today.
- However, the alliance of tribes LOST the war.
- This loss made the situation of the hostile Native Americans in New England very much worse than it had been.
- Their population was greatly reduced which opened up even more land for new Colonial settlements.
- It became even more difficult for them to practice their culture.
- Their attempt to kill or drive out all English Colonial residents created a predictable reaction that led to bad treatment of the surviving hostile Native Americans.
- An even most disastrous result of this war for ALL Native Americans was that it caused a major change in the collective view of Colonial immigrants toward most Native Americans in all of the American Colonies.
- This change started in New England and over time spread to other Colonies.
- This change was reinforced by the widespread killing of Colonial civilians and destruction of their property by Native American warriors during the four French and Indian wars in the period 1689 to 1763.
- This change led to the TERRIBLE TREATMENT of most Native Americans over the next three hundred years.
- The deeply religious English Colonial residents of New England discovered that they were capable of cruel behavior toward fellow humans during this war by carrying out acts such as:
- Burning hundreds of living, defenseless Native American women, children, and elderly men to death at a time;
- Selling large numbers of Native American men, women, and children into slavery in the West Indies;
- Imprisoning large numbers of nonhostile Native Americans in isolated camps where only about half survived.
- This war caused by far the LARGEST per capita loss of life of any war involving Americans (native or immigrant).
- The total (Native American + English Colonial) per capita death rate in this SHORT war was about TWENTY times HIGHER than that of the U. S. Civil War, the second worst American war by this measure.
- The hostile Native Americans killed many English Colonial residents of New England and destroyed large amounts of their property.
- Over half of the roughly one hundred Towns within New England were damaged or destroyed.
- The loss of life and property for English Colonial residents was the greatest in frontier Towns.
- By late in the war the Towns west of the original Town of Sudbury had been heavily damaged or destroyed, including the original Town of Marlborough, the immediate western neighbor of Sudbury.
- At this point the original Town of Sudbury became a frontier Town, and the part of the Town west of the Sudbury River (i. e., the present Towns of Sudbury and Maynard) was most exposed to harm.
- Shortly after the destruction of Marlborough the original Town of Sudbury was attacked on 21 April 1676 by a very large number of hostile Native American forces.
- The battles resulting from that attack are called the "Sudbury Fight".
- This attack caused a large number of deaths on the English Colonial side and an unknown but perhaps significant number on the hostile Native American side.
- Some Sudbury residents were killed in this attack, but the vast majority of English Colonials killed were among the several groups of soldiers who came from other Towns to try to save Sudbury from destruction.
- Almost all deaths of English Colonial soldiers and civilians happened WEST of the river.
- The largest loss of life was in a major battle on and around what is now called Green Hill northeast of the present Mill Village shopping center.
- In the area of the original Town of Sudbury west of the river (i. e., the present Towns of Sudbury and Maynard) most homes, barns, farm animals, tools, and other property were destroyed or stolen.
- However, most of the Sudbury residents living west of the river were able to escape to fortified houses stocked with food, water, weapons, ammunition, and gunpowder.
- These fortified houses were successfully defended against repeated attacks over many hours.
- There was much less property damage in the more heavily populated area east of the river (i. e., the present Town of Wayland).
- The Sudbury militia plus soldiers from other Towns were able to fight off the Native American attackers and drive them out of the area east of the river.
- Late in the day the hostile Native American forces abruptly stopped their attacks for unknown reasons and withdrew to their base camp northwest of Marlborough.
- At this point in time the hostile Native American forces completely controlled the battlefield west of the river, and they probably could have killed many more Colonial soldiers and civilians if they had continued their attacks after dark.
- In tactical terms the hostile Native American forces won the "Sudbury Fight" just as they had won almost all military encounters during the war up to that date.
- However, some historians have speculated that the primary mission of the hostile Native American forces in their attack on the original Town of Sudbury was to acquire much needed supplies of food, weapons, ammunition, and gunpowder and to totally destroy the Town so that they could more easily attack coastal Towns where even larger stores of these items could be acquired.
- The Native American forces failed to acquire meaningful amounts of needed supplies in Sudbury, and they failed to totally destroy the Town.
- The stiff resistance by Sudbury residents, the Sudbury militia, and the groups of English Colonial soldiers from other Towns may have prevented the hostile Native American forces from using Sudbury as a base to attack the adjoining Town of Watertown and other coastal Towns.
- Thus, the "Sudbury Fight" may have been a strategic failure for the hostile Native American forces.
- Following the "Sudbury Fight" the capability and/or resolve of the Native American forces to continue fighting the war took a dramatic drop for unknown reasons, and the English Colonial side started winning almost all of the military encounters.
- If the "Sudbury Fight" played a major role in causing this turning point in the war, then the "Sudbury Fight" was very important.
- It took over twenty years for Sudbury residents to recover from the physical damage caused by the war.
- A more detailed description is given on the "King Philip's War" page.
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C. Sudbury Residents Played a Key Role in the U. S. Revolutionary War
- In 1776 the Town of Sudbury became part of the new State of Massachusetts (MA) in the newly constituted United States of America (U. S. A.).
- Residents of Sudbury (which at that time included the present Town of Wayland and part of the present Town of Maynard) played a key role in making this significant event possible.
- Minutemen and Militia from Sudbury fought in the Revolutionary War from its beginning in the early hours of 19 April 1775 at the nearby Towns of Lexington and Concord.
- They were very active in the battles that took place on 19 April 1775, and two of them were killed in action on that day.
- Modern "Sudbury Companies of Militia & Minute" using weapons and wearing clothing appropriate to 1775 re-enact the battles of Lexington and Concord each year on April 19th.
- There is also a modern version of the Sudbury Fife and Drum Company that accompanied the soldiers.
- Sizable groups of soldiers from Sudbury served with distinction in other major battles including those of Bunker Hill, Ticonderoga, Saratoga, and White Plains.
- The large size of Sudbury's contribution to the war effort was due to:
- The population within the Town boundaries of 1775 was 2160, which was higher than many other Towns outside of Boston in what would become the State of Massachusetts;
- Almost all of the adult male population of about 500 living within the Town boundaries of 1775 fought in the Revolutionary War;
- Even elderly men served; the first Sudbury war death was an eighty-year-old man on 19 April 1775.
- More than 350 of Sudbury men were experienced soldiers, having served in one or more of the four French and Indian Wars.
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D. The Original Town of Sudbury Had a Larger Area
- The 24.7 square mile area of the present Town of Sudbury is MUCH LESS than the area of the original Town of Sudbury in 1650.
- The area of original Town of Sudbury included most of the area within the present Towns of Wayland and Maynard and all of the area within the present Town of Sudbury.
- The evolution of the land within Sudbury is summarized in points 4. through 7. just below in this section, and this evolution includes:
- A major subtraction of land in 1780 when what is now the Town of Wayland split off;
- A small addition of land in 1721;
- Two small subtractions of land in 1730 and 1871.
- Five land grants made up the original Town of Sudbury with a total area by 1650 of over 40 square miles.
- Three large grants were made to the Town in 1638, 1640, and 1649.
- Two small grants were made in 1639 and 1649 to individuals as noted below.
- Land grants in this early era had very imprecise boundaries and areas, since the grants were often made by groups of people unfamiliar with the area using very inaccurate maps.
- In addition, it usually took many years to properly survey and adjust boundaries of land grants due to difficult topography, hostile Native Americans, lack of proper equipment, disputes between Towns, etc.
- In 1721 a gore of 3.3 square miles of unincorporated land north of the Town of Natick was added to the southeast part of the original Town of Sudbury.
- This general area is now called the Cochituate Village part of the present Town of Wayland.
- In 1730 roughly 0.4 square miles of land in the extreme northwest corner of the original Town of Sudbury were annexed to the Town of Stow.
- This triangle of land was immediately northwest of what is now called the Assabet River in what is now the Town of Maynard.
- This area included 200 acres granted to William Browne in 1649.
- In 1780 the 15.3 square mile NEW Town of East Sudbury was formed from lands in the eastern portion of the post-1730 Town of Sudbury.
- The NEW Town of East Sudbury included the 3.3 square mile addition made in 1721.
- The NEW Town of East Sudbury also included 12 square miles of lands from the original Town of Sudbury.
- Most of this 12 square mile area was east of the Sudbury River.
- A small part of the 12 square mile area was land now called Pelham Island just west of the Sudbury River.
- Pelham Island is the site of a 400 acre land grant made to Herbert Pelham and his father-in-law Mr. Walgrave in 1639.
- In 1835 the Town of East Sudbury changed its name to the Town of Wayland.
- See the following section E. The Splitting Off of East Sudbury for some interesting historical insights.
- In 1871 over half (about 3.2 square miles) of the new Town of Maynard was formed from lands immediately southeast of the Assabet River in the northwest part of the post-1780 Town of Sudbury.
- The rest of the new Town of Maynard was formed from about 2.1 square miles of land immediately northwest of the Assabet River annexed from the Town of Stow.
- This 2.1 square mile area included the roughly 0.4 square mile area triangle of land transferred from Sudbury to Stow in 1730.
- Thus, in total about 3.6 square miles of land in the original Town of Sudbury ended up in the present Town of Maynard comprising two-thirds of its area of 5.3 square miles.
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E. The Splitting Off of East Sudbury (later Wayland) in 1780
- As noted in the section just above, the NEW Town of East Sudbury was formed in 1780 from lands in the eastern portion of the post-1730 Town of Sudbury.
- Later, in 1835, the Town of East Sudbury changed its name to the Town of Wayland.
- The fact that a NEW Town was formed within Sudbury was not unusual.
- Many early Towns in the Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth Colonies originally had an area MUCH LARGER than the area of present Town of the same name.
- The reduction in size came about via formation of one or more new Towns within the original Town.
- However, the way in which the NEW Town of East Sudbury was formed was VERY unusual.
- The usual sequence of events for the formation of a NEW Town was that as the population of the original Town grew and spread into a later-settled area of the original Town, the residents in the LATER-SETTLED area would petition the General Court of the Colony/Province/State of Massachusetts and often receive permission to found a NEW Town having a NEW name.
- The General Court normally granted permission for the formation of the NEW Town if:
- The residents of the area making the petition agreed to meet certain requirements laid out by the General Court;
- There were no serious objections from the residents of the pre-existing Town NOT living within the area of the proposed NEW Town.
- The usual sequence of events was NOT followed in the 1780 division of the post-1730 Town of Sudbury in that it was the residents of the EARLIER-SETTLED eastern area who petitioned the General Court (the legislature) for and received permission to found a NEW Town having a NEW name (East Sudbury).
- An extensive and detailed discussion of the history of the division of the post-1730 Town of Sudbury into two Towns is given in Chapter 4 of Helen Fitch Emery's excellent and carefully researched 1981 book (see H. Sources below). On page 75 she concludes this discussion with the words:
"It is clear that the east siders were extremely eager to disassociate themselves from the west side. This is shown by the fact that they were willing to accept a secondary name, a smaller land area, and even a ridiculously uneven western land boundary to accomplish this breakoff as soon as they could get it through the legislature."
- Helen Fitch Emery found evidence that the eagerness of the east siders to split off from the Town of Sudbury in 1780 was primarily motivated by what they felt were unfairly high Town taxes on east siders.
- The higher average wealth level of the east siders caused the east side of Town to have a higher total assessment than the west side.
- As a result the east siders paid more than half of Town taxes even though more than half of the Town population (and the associated costs for Town services) was on the west side.
The eagerness of the east siders to split off at that time was also motivated by the very high Town tax burden in the late 1770s caused by extra costs associated with the Revolutionary War.
- Successful petitioners for the formation of a NEW Town were forced by the rules of the General Court to adopt a NEW name for their NEW Town, since the petitioners were the ones who had disturbed the status quo.
- Also, the rules of the General Court placed the pre-split Town records with the OLD Town, using the same logic.
- The loss of the name "Sudbury" was a psychological shock to the east siders in 1780, and it remains an emotional issue today for some Wayland residents even though more than 220 years have passed since this loss.
- It turns out that the east siders living in what is now the Town of Wayland COULD HAVE AVOIDED the loss of the name "Sudbury" IF they had adopted a different posture on a major Town issue in the years just prior to 1714 (see the following point).
- Helen Fitch Emery points out in Chapter 1 of her book that the usual sequence of events WOULD have been followed in the creation of a NEW Town within the original Town of Sudbury IF the residents of the EARLIER-SETTLED east side had NOT raised serious objections to and thereby blocked the approval of a 1714 petition to the General Court by residents of the LATER-SETTLED west side to found a NEW Town.
- If the 1714 petition by the residents of the west side of the original Town of Sudbury had been approved by the General Court, then the residents of the east side (now the Town of Wayland) would have:
- Continued to live in a Town named "Sudbury";
- Continued to possess the important pre-split Town records which go back to 1639.
- Helen Fitch Emery also points out in Chapter 1 of her book that the major Town issue that caused the west siders to petition the General Court for a NEW Town in 1714 was resolved by the General Court a few years later:
- In favor of the position advocated by the WEST siders during several years leading up to 1714;
- In a manner that caused a much HIGHER Town tax burden for the EAST siders for several DECADES than would have been the case if they had NOT blocked the west siders from founding a NEW Town in 1714.
- Thus, the 1714 actions of the EAST siders (residing in what is now the Town of Wayland) turned out to be EXTREMELY COSTLY to the EAST siders and their descendents in both:
- The short run (higher taxes) and
- The long run (loss of the historic Town name of "Sudbury").
- In recent decades Helen Fitch Emery was regarded as the leading expert on many aspects of the history of the Town of Wayland (including the years when it was part of Sudbury and then when it was called East Sudbury).
- She died at age 91 in 2003.
- Her 1981 book is the only published history of the Town of Wayland, and it is based on over a decade of intensive research.
- She worked from an unusually wide array of primary sources, and her historical research has been described as "flawless in accuracy", "painstaking", and "exhaustive".
- She lived in Wayland for 44 years from 1946 to 1990, and she was the first chairwoman of the Wayland Historical Commission.
- She graduated from Vassar College in 1934, she did her graduate work in economics at Radcliffe (now merged into Harvard), and she taught economics at Smith College prior to retiring to rear a family (as most married women with children in the academic world of that era were forced to do).
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F. Sudbury Had a TenFold Growth in Population over the Past Sixty Years
- This section describes only the present Town of Sudbury.
- The 2003 population of the Town of Sudbury is estimated to be 17,423 residents.
- The current population of Sudbury is TEN times larger than it was in 1940 when the federal census found 1,754 residents.
- Sudbury's population roughly TRIPLED in the 1950s and then roughly DOUBLED in the 1960s.
- The explosive growth in population has turned most farmlands into sites for private homes.
- By contrast, in the sixty years prior to 1940 the population of Sudbury remained about the same.
- Sudbury was a mostly rural community with many small farms until about 1940.
- Very few of these farms still exist.
- A few pictures of Sudbury in the period 1850 to 1919 are available on the Town web site. To see them:
- Click Pictures to go to the Town page;
- Click the "Historical" category at the top of the page;
- Click a Historical "Event Name" to open a page of small pictures with descriptive text;
- Click the small pictures to enlarge them.
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G. Sudbury Today
- This section describes only the present Town of Sudbury.
- The Town of Sudbury is primarily a residential community.
- The Town of Sudbury still uses the Open Town Meeting form of direct citizen participation in local government.
- The Town of Sudbury is known for its:
- Excellent public schools;
- High real-estate taxes, most of which are devoted to supporting the public schools;
- Rural character (heavily wooded, narrow winding roads bordered by old stone walls);
- Many well-maintained houses over 200 years old such as the Hosmer House - circa 1780 ;
- Talented, well-educated, and public-spirited citizens;
- Efficient local government;
- High land and housing prices.
- It is also known for the historic Longfellow's Wayside Inn and its associated structures:
- The Town of Sudbury has a growing number of Conservation Lands .
- Several of these conservation lands are associated with historic sites.
- The "Historic Center" of the Town of Sudbury is about a 25 mile (40 kilometer) drive west of the heart of the City of Boston, MA.
- It can be reached by setting the destination coordinates in your GPS navigation device to 42.38256° north latitude and 71.41245° west longitude.
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H. Sources of Information about the History of Sudbury
- Some information is available on the Internet.
- The Town of Sudbury web site includes an Archive of historic records of Sudbury.
- Town records date from the founding of the original Town of Sudbury in 1639 and are described as being the most detailed and complete of any early Town in all of the American Colonies.
- The Town Archives have a section devoted to Sudbury's History with images, maps, and biographies of early settlers.
- The Town Archives have a page of Important Dates in Sudbury's History to 1850 .
- Click Historic Sudbury Trail to see a series of pictures of some historic places in the present Town of Sudbury accompanied by brief descriptions by the Town Historian (the Trail is located on the Town of Sudbury web site).
- An extensive description of Sudbury history was created by the local Chamber of Commerce.
- The historical information on this page is mainly based on information from the following books, listed in order of initial date of publication:
- The History of Sudbury, Massachusetts 1638-1889, Alfred Sereno Hudson, 660 pages, The Town of Sudbury, 1889 (republished by the Sudbury Press in 1968), has no index;
- The Annals of Sudbury, Wayland and Maynard, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Alfred Sereno Hudson, 210 pages, privately published, 1891 (reprinted by Higginson in paperback in 1994), has incomplete index;
- Indexes: A. S. Hudson's History of Sudbury, Massachusetts 1638-1889 & The Annals of Sudbury, Wayland and Maynard, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, 119 pages, edited by George D. Max, Chief Indexer: Forrest D. Bradshaw, Sudbury Historical Society, 1983;
- A Brief History of the Towne of Sudbury in Massachusetts: 1639-1939, Andrew D. Fuller, Jr. et al., 69 pages, Federal Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration in Massachusetts, 1939 (revised and reprinted by the Sudbury Historical Society in 1968);
- Puritan Village: The Formation of a New England Town, Sumner Chilton Powell, 215 pages, Wesleyan University Press, 1963 (reprinted in paperback in 1965 and 1982);
- (Untitled) Scrapbook of Descriptions and Pictures of Historic Monuments and Houses in Sudbury, MA, Janet H. Smith, 99 pages, unpublished (available from the Reference Librarian at the Sudbury Public Library), 1975;
- The Puritan Village Evolves: a history of the Town of Wayland, Massachusetts, Helen Fitch Emery, 361 pages, Wayland Historical Commission (Phoenix Publishing), 1981;
- Sudbury: A Pictorial History, Laura Scott, 208 pages, The Donning Co., 1989;
- The Name of War: King Philip's War and the Origins of American Identity, Jill Lepore, 384 pages, Vintage Books, 1998 (reprinted in paperback in 1999);
- Sudbury 1890-1989: 100 Years in the Life of a Town, Curtis F. Garfield, 242 pages, Porcupine Enterprises, 1999 (paperback);
- King Philip's War: The History and Legacy of America's Forgotten Conflict, Eric B. Schultz and Michael J. Tougias, 432 pages, Countryman Press, 1999 (reprinted in paperback in 2000).
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I. The Special Meaning of the Word "Town" in the State of Massachusetts
- In the Massachusetts Bay Colony the word "Town" defined:
- First, an area within certain boundaries;
- Second, the locus of the smallest unit of local government.
The above definition of "Town" persisted in the State of Massachusetts (MA) with one additional element:
- Third, a particular form of local government used within that area.
- In MA the word "Town" does NOT denote a populated settlement.
- In fact some MA "Towns" contain only rural areas.
- Thus, in MA the word "Town" has a different meaning than in some other States.
- ALL of the area comprising the State of MA is divided up into 351 entities that are officially either "Towns" (301 entities) or "Cities" (50 entities).
- "Cities" are entities that used to be "Towns" but have received permission from the State to use a different form of government (which is more appropriate to entities with higher populations).
- The change in status from "Town" to "City" does not involve any change in borders.
- (For historical reasons eleven MA entities that are officially "Cities" still call themselves "Towns".)
- The 351 Cities and Towns in MA are shown on this Large Map in Adobe Acrobat format.
- Repeatedly click the "+ (Plus)" sign in the Adobe viewer menu to zoom in on a particular area.
- Sudbury and the Towns and City surrounding it (Wayland, Lincoln, Concord, Acton, Maynard, Stow, Hudson, City of Marlborough, Framingham) show up well at a 200% zoom.
- A "Town" shares a common border with each neighboring "Town" (or "City") in MA.
- The borders of a MA "Town" are similar to the borders of a "Township" in certain other States.
- A "Town" is the geographically smallest unit of general municipal government (outside of cities) in MA.
- Populated settlements with place names (e. g., villages) within MA "Towns" are NOT governmental units.
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