Concord, Massachusetts


Town in Massachusetts, United States







































Concord, Massachusetts
Town

View of Concord's Main Street in December
View of Concord's Main Street in December


Official seal of Concord, Massachusetts
Seal
Motto(s): Quam Firma Res Concordia (Latin)
"How Strong Is Harmony"


Location in Middlesex County in Massachusetts
Location in Middlesex County in Massachusetts



Concord, Massachusetts is located in the US

Concord, Massachusetts

Concord, Massachusetts



Location in Middlesex County in Massachusetts

Coordinates: 42°27′37″N 71°20′58″W / 42.46028°N 71.34944°W / 42.46028; -71.34944Coordinates: 42°27′37″N 71°20′58″W / 42.46028°N 71.34944°W / 42.46028; -71.34944
CountryUnited States
StateMassachusetts
CountyMiddlesex County
Settled1635
Incorporated1635
Government
 • TypeOpen town meeting
Area
 • Total25.9 sq mi (67.4 km2)
 • Land24.9 sq mi (64.5 km2)
 • Water1.0 sq mi (2.5 km2)
Elevation
141 ft (43 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total17,669
 • Density680/sq mi (260/km2)
Time zone
UTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)
UTC−4 (Eastern)
ZIP Code01742
Area code(s)
351 / 978
FIPS code25-15060

GNIS feature ID
0619398
Websitewww.concordma.gov

Concord (/ˈkɒŋkərd/) is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, in the United States. At the 2010 census, the town population was 17,668.[1] The United States Census Bureau considers Concord part of Greater Boston. The town center is located near where the confluence of the Sudbury and Assabet rivers forms the Concord River.


The area that became the town of Concord was originally known as Musketaquid, an Algonquian word for "grassy plain." Concord was established in 1635 by a handful of British settlers; by 1775, the population had grown to 1,400.[2] As dissension between colonists in North America and the British crown intensified, 700 troops were sent to confiscate militia ordnance stored at Concord on April 19, 1775.[3][4] The ensuing conflict, the Battle of Lexington and Concord, was the final inciting incident (the shot heard round the world) that triggered the American Revolutionary War.


A rich literary community developed in Concord during the mid-nineteenth century, centered around Ralph Waldo Emerson. Emerson's circle included Nathaniel Hawthorne, Louisa May Alcott and Henry David Thoreau. Major works written in Concord during this period include Alcott's novel Little Women, Emerson's essay Self-Reliance, and Thoreau's Walden and Civil Disobedience. In this era, the now-ubiquitous Concord grape was developed in Concord by Ephraim Wales Bull.


In the 20th century, Concord developed into an affluent Boston suburb and tourist destination, drawing visitors to the Old North Bridge, Orchard House and Walden Pond. The town retains its literary culture and is home to notable authors including Doris Kearns Goodwin, Alan Lightman and Gregory Maguire. Concord is also notable for its progressive and environmentalist politics, becoming in 2012 the first community in the United States to ban single-serving PET bottles.




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 Prehistory and founding


    • 1.2 Battle of Lexington and Concord


    • 1.3 Literary history


    • 1.4 Concord grape


    • 1.5 Plastic bottle ban



  • 2 Geography

    • 2.1 Adjacent towns



  • 3 Government

    • 3.1 State and federal government



  • 4 Demographics


  • 5 Pronunciation


  • 6 Economy

    • 6.1 Principal employers



  • 7 Transportation


  • 8 Sister cities


  • 9 Points of interest


  • 10 Education


  • 11 Transportation


  • 12 Notable people


  • 13 Popular culture


  • 14 See also


  • 15 References


  • 16 Further reading


  • 17 External links




History



Prehistory and founding




Photo of Egg Rock inscription, about 1900


The area which became the town of Concord was originally known as "Musketaquid", situated at the confluence of the Sudbury and Assabet rivers.[5] The name Musketaquid was an Algonquian word for "grassy plain", fitting the area's low-lying marshes and kettle holes.[6] Native Americans had cultivated corn crops there; the rivers were rich with fish and the land was lush and arable.[7] However, the area was largely depopulated by the smallpox plague that swept across the Americas after the arrival of Europeans.[8]


In 1635, a group of settlers from Britain led by Rev. Peter Bulkeley and Major Simon Willard negotiated a land purchase with the remnants of the local tribe. Bulkeley was an influential religious leader who "carried a good number of planters with him into the woods";[9] Willard was a canny trader who spoke the Algonquian language and had gained the trust of Native Americans.[10] They exchanged wampum, hatchets, knives, cloth, and other useful items for the six-square-mile purchase from Old Jethro, which formed the basis of the new town, called "Concord" in appreciation of the peaceful acquisition.[5][11]



Battle of Lexington and Concord



The Battle of Lexington and Concord was the first conflict in the American Revolutionary War.[12] On April 19, 1775, a force of British Army regulars marched from Boston to Concord to capture a cache of arms that was reportedly stored in the town. Forewarned by Samuel Prescott (who had received the news from Paul Revere), the colonists mustered in opposition. Following an early-morning skirmish at Lexington, where the first shots of the battle were fired, the British expedition under the command of Lt. Col. Francis Smith advanced to Concord. There, colonists from Concord and surrounding towns (notably a highly drilled company from Acton led by Isaac Davis) repulsed a British detachment at the Old North Bridge and forced the British troops to retreat.[13] Subsequently, militia arriving from across the region harried the British troops on their return to Boston, culminating in the Siege of Boston and outbreak of the war.


The battle was initially publicized by the colonists as an example of British brutality and aggression: one colonial broadside decried the "Bloody Butchery of the British Troops."[14] A century later, however, the conflict was remembered proudly by Americans, taking on a patriotic, almost mythic status ("the shot heard 'round the world") in works like the "Concord Hymn" and "Paul Revere's Ride."[15] In 1894, the Lexington Historical Society petitioned the Massachusetts State Legislature to proclaim April 19 as "Lexington Day." Concord countered with "Concord Day." Governor Greenhalge opted for a compromise: Patriots' Day. In April 1975, Concord hosted a bicentennial celebration of the battle, featuring an address at the Old North Bridge by President Gerald Ford.[16]



Literary history





The Old Manse, home to Ralph Waldo Emerson and later Nathaniel Hawthorne


Concord has a remarkably rich literary history centered in the mid-nineteenth century around Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882), who moved to the town in 1835 and quickly became its most prominent citizen.[17] Emerson, a successful lecturer and philosopher, had deep roots in the town: his father Rev. William Emerson (1769–1811) grew up in Concord before becoming an eminent Boston minister, and his grandfather, William Emerson Sr., witnessed the battle at the North Bridge from his house, and later became a chaplain in the Continental Army.[18] Emerson was at the center of a group of like-minded Transcendentalists living in Concord.[19] Among them were the author Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804–1864) and the philosopher Amos Bronson Alcott (1799–1888), the father of Louisa May Alcott (1832–1888). A native Concordian, Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862), was another notable member of Emerson's circle. This substantial collection of literary talent in one small town led Henry James to dub Concord "the biggest little place in America."[20]



Among the products of this intellectually stimulating environment were Emerson's many essays, including Self-Reliance (1841), Louisa May Alcott's novel Little Women (1868), and Hawthorne's story collection Mosses from an Old Manse (1846).[21] Thoreau famously lived in a small cabin near Walden Pond, where he wrote Walden (1854).[22] After being imprisoned in the Concord jail for refusing to pay taxes in political protest against slavery and the Mexican–American War, Thoreau penned the influential essay "Resistance to Civil Government", popularly known as Civil Disobedience (1849).[23] Evidencing their strong political beliefs through actions, Thoreau and many of his neighbors served as station masters and agents on the Underground Railroad.[24]



Central part of Concord, Mass.jpg


The Wayside, a house located on Lexington Road, has been home to a number of authors.[25] It was occupied by scientist John Winthrop (1714–1779) when Harvard College was temporarily moved to Concord during the Revolutionary War.[26] The Wayside was later the home of the Alcott family (who referred to it as "Hillside"); the Alcotts sold it to Hawthorne in 1852, and the family moved into the adjacent Orchard House in 1858. Hawthorne dubbed the house "The Wayside" and lived there until his death. The house was purchased in 1883 by Boston publisher Daniel Lothrop and his wife, Harriett, who wrote the Five Little Peppers series and other children's books under the pen name Margaret Sidney.[27] Today, The Wayside and the Orchard House are both museums. Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, and the Alcotts are buried on Authors' Ridge in Concord's Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.[28]


The twentieth-century composer Charles Ives wrote his Concord Sonata (c. 1904-15) as a series of impressionistic portraits of literary figures associated with the town. Concord maintains a lively literary culture to this day; notable authors who have called the town home in recent years include Doris Kearns Goodwin, Alan Lightman, Robert B. Parker, and Gregory Maguire.



Concord grape


In 1849, Ephraim Bull developed the now-ubiquitous Concord grape at his home on Lexington Road, where the original vine still grows.[29]Welch's, the first company to sell grape juice, maintains a headquarters in Concord.[30] Boston-born Ephraim Wales Bull developed the Concord grape by experimenting with seeds from some of the native species. On his farm outside Concord, down the road from the Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne and Alcott homesteads, he planted some 22,000 seedlings in all, before he had produced the ideal grape. Early ripening, to escape the killing northern frosts, but with a rich, full-bodied flavor, the hardy Concord grape thrives where European cuttings had failed to survive. In 1853, Mr. Bull felt ready to put the first bunches of his Concord grapes before the public—and won a prize at the Boston Horticultural Society Exhibition. From these early arbors, fame of Mr. Bull's ("the father of the Concord grape") Concord grape spread worldwide, bringing him up to $1,000 a cutting, but he died a relatively poor man. The inscription on his tombstone states, "He sowed--others reaped."[31]



Plastic bottle ban


On September 5, 2012, Concord became the first community in the United States to approve a ban of the sale of water in single-serving plastic bottles. The law banned the sale of PET bottles of one liter or less starting on January 1, 2013.[32] The ban provoked significant national controversy. An editorial in the Los Angeles Times characterized the ban as "born of convoluted reasoning" and "wrongheaded."[33] Some residents stated that this ban would not do much to affect the sales of bottled water, which was still highly accessible in the surrounding areas,[34] and the belief that it restricted consumers' freedom of choice.[35] Opponents also considered the ban to represent unfair targeting of one product in particular, when other, less healthy alternatives such as soda and fruit juice were still readily available in bottled form.[36][37] Nonetheless, subsequent efforts to repeal Concord's plastic bottled water ban have failed in open town meetings.[38] An effort to repeal Concord's ban on the sale of plastic water bottles was resoundingly defeated at a Town Meeting. Resident Jean Hill, who led the initial fight for the ban, said, "I really feel at the age of 86 that I've really accomplished something." Town Moderator Eric Van Loon didn't even bother taking an official tally because opposition to repeal was so overwhelming. It appeared that upwards of 80 to 90 percent of the 1,127 voters at town meeting raised their ballots against the repeal measure. The issue has been bubbling in Concord for several years. In 2010, a town meeting-approved ban, which wasn't written as a bylaw, was rejected by the state attorney general's office. In 2011, a new version of the ban narrowly failed at town meeting, by a vote of 265 to 272. The ban on selling water in polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles of one liter or less passed in 2012 by a vote of 403 to 364, and a repeal effort in April failed by a vote of 621 to 687.



Geography




Sleepy Hollow Cemetery




A tombstone in Concord


According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 25.9 square miles (67 km2), of which 24.9 square miles (64 km2) is land and 1.0 square mile (2.6 km2), or 3.75%, is water. The city of Lowell is 13 miles (21 km) to the north, Boston is 19 miles (31 km) to the east, and Nashua, New Hampshire, is 23 miles (37 km) to the north.


Massachusetts state routes 2, 2A, 62, 126, 119, 111, and 117 pass through Concord. The town center is located near the confluence of the Sudbury and Assabet rivers, forming the Concord River, which flows north to the Merrimack River in Lowell. Gunpowder was manufactured from 1835 to 1940 in the American Powder Mills complex extending upstream along the Assabet River.[39]



Adjacent towns


Concord is located in eastern Massachusetts, bordered by several towns:




Government



State and federal government


On the federal level, Concord is part of Massachusetts's 3rd congressional district, represented by Niki Tsongas. The state's senior (Class I) member of the United States Senate is Elizabeth Warren. The junior (Class II) senator is Ed Markey.



Demographics

























































Historical population
YearPop.±%
18502,249—    
18602,246−0.1%
18702,412+7.4%
18803,922+62.6%
18904,427+12.9%
19005,652+27.7%
19106,421+13.6%
19206,461+0.6%
19307,477+15.7%
19407,972+6.6%
19508,623+8.2%
196012,517+45.2%
197016,148+29.0%
198016,293+0.9%
199017,076+4.8%
200016,993−0.5%
201017,668+4.0%
* = population estimate.
Source: United States Census records and Population Estimates Program data.[40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49]



The Wayside, home in turn to Louisa May Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Margaret Sidney





Main Street from Monument Square


At the 2000 census,[50] there were 16,993 people, 5,948 households and 4,437 families residing in the town. The population density was 682.0 per square mile (263.3/km2). There were 6,153 housing units at an average density of 246.9 per square mile (95.3/km2). The racial makeup of the town was 91.64% White, 2.24% African American, 0.09% Native American, 2.90% Asian, 0.02% Pacific Islander, 2.12% from other races, and 0.99% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 2.80% of the population.


There were 13,090 households of which 37.2% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 65.5% were married couples living together, 7.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 25.4% were non-families. 22.0% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.62 and the average family size was 3.08.


25.1% of the population were under the age of 18, 4.2% from 18 to 24, 25.8% from 25 to 44, 28.4% from 45 to 64, and 16.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 42 years. For every 100 females, there were 100.3 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 101.8 males.


In 2013, the median household income was $129,960.[51] About 2.1% of families and 3.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 3.7% of those under age 18 and 3.3% of those age 65 or over.



Pronunciation


The town's name is pronounced by its residents as /ˈkɒŋkərd/ KONG-kərd in a manner indistinguishable from the American pronunciation of the word "conquered".[52]



Economy



Principal employers


According to Concord's 2016 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report,[53] the principal employers in the city are:





























#
Employer
# of Employees
1

Emerson Hospital
1,731
2
Concord Meadows Corporate Center (building complex with mulltiple tenants)
1,050
3
Newbury Court (senior living facility)
290
4

Care One at Concord (nursing and assisted living facility)
166
5

Middlesex School (coeducational private high school)
197
6

Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates
162
7

Concord Academy (coeducational private high school)
165
8
Hamilton, Brook, Smith, & Reynolds, P.C. (intellectual property law)
75


Transportation


Concord station is served by the MBTA's Fitchburg Line. Yankee Line provides commuter bus service between Concord and Boston.[54]



Sister cities



  • Japan Nanae, Japan


  • Portugal Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal


  • France Saint-Mandé, France


  • Nicaragua San Marcos, Nicaragua


  • Mexico Torreón, Coahuila, Mexico


  • Ecuador Quito, Ecuador


Points of interest






Walden Pond in November





Street names in Concord





Cyrus Pierce House (23 Lexington Rd.)




Holy Family Church, and the Old Hill Burying Ground, on Monument Square in Concord


  • Barrett's Farm


  • Reuben Brown House, home of notable revolutionist

  • Concord Art Association

  • Concord Free Public Library

  • Concord Museum

  • Corinthian Lodge[55]Egg Rock, where the Concord River forms at the confluence of the Sudbury River and Assabet River, accessible by water or land

  • Emerson Hospital

  • Ralph Waldo Emerson House

  • Estabrook Woods

  • Fairyland Pond

  • First Parish Church[56]

  • Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge

  • Massachusetts Correctional Institution – Concord

  • Minute Man National Historical Park

  • Northeastern Correctional Center


  • The Old Manse, home of Emerson and Hawthorne

  • Old North Bridge

  • Orchard House

  • Punkatasset Hill

  • Sleepy Hollow Cemetery

  • Walden Pond


  • The Wayside, home of Louisa May Alcott, Hawthorne, and Margaret Sidney


  • Wheeler-Minot Farmhouse, also known as Thoreau Farm, birthplace of Henry David Thoreau

  • Wright's Tavern


Education



  • Concord Carlisle Regional High School, the local public high school


  • Concord Middle School (consisting of two buildings about a mile apart: Sanborn and Peabody)

  • Alcott School, Willard School, and Thoreau School, the local public elementary schools


  • Concord Academy and Middlesex School, private preparatory schools


  • The Fenn School and The Nashoba Brooks School, private primary schools


Transportation



  • Commuter rail service to Boston's North Station is provided by the MBTA with two stops in Concord on its Fitchburg Line.

  • Yankee Lines provides a commuter bus service to Copley Square in Boston from Concord Center.


Notable people



  • Chris Abele, county executive of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin


  • Seth Abramson, poet[57]


  • Amos Bronson Alcott, teacher and writer


  • Louisa May Alcott, novelist


  • Casper Asbjornson, Major League Baseball player


  • Jane G. Austin, writer of historical fiction


  • Oscar C. Badger, U.S. Navy officer[58]


  • Laurie Baker, USA ice hockey gold medalist[59]


  • Samuel Bartlett, silversmith


  • Tim Berners-Lee, British computer scientist, best known as the inventor of the World Wide Web


  • Frank Hagar Bigelow, U.S. astronomer and meteorologist


  • Daniel Bliss, jurist, proscribed by the Massachusetts Banishment Act


  • Paget Brewster, actress


  • Peter Bulkley, Puritan preacher and a co-founder of Concord[60]


  • Ephraim Bull, inventor of the Concord grape


  • John Buttrick, Concord militia leader


  • Steve Carell, comedian (lived in Acton but attended The Fenn School and also attended The Middlesex School)


  • William Ellery Channing, poet


  • Darby Conley, cartoonist


  • Patricia Cornwell, contemporary American crime writer and author[61]


  • George William Curtis, writer and speaker


  • Bob Diamond, former chief executive of Barclays


  • Harrison Gray Dyar, chemist and inventor


  • Edward Waldo Emerson, physician, writer and lecturer


  • Ralph Waldo Emerson, essayist, poet and philosopher


  • William Emerson, minister, father of Ralph Waldo Emerson


  • Will Eno, author and playwright


  • Richard Fadden, CSIS Director


  • Allen French, author and historian (including of the history of the town)


  • Daniel Chester French, sculptor


  • Michael Fucito, Major League Soccer player


  • Kevin Garnett, NBA player


  • Hal Gill, National Hockey League player[62]


  • Tom Glavine, Major League Baseball player


  • Doris Kearns Goodwin, historian and writer[63]


  • Har Gobind Khorana, Notable Indian American biochemist who shared the 1968 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine


  • Richard N. Goodwin, advisor and speechwriter to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson


  • William Watson Goodwin, classical scholar


  • Nathaniel Hawthorne, novelist and short story writer


  • Ebenezer R. Hoar, U.S. Attorney General


  • George Frisbie Hoar, U.S. Congressman and Senator


  • John Hoar, redeemer of famed captive Mary Rowlandson during King Philip's War


  • Jonathan Hoar, colonial soldier


  • Samuel Hoar, U.S. Congressman


  • Frederic Hudson, journalist


  • Dick Hustvedt, software engineer


  • Edward Jarvis, physician and statistician


  • Dick Kazmaier, Princeton American football player who was the last Ivy League Heisman Trophy winner[64]


  • George Parsons Lathrop, poet and novelist


  • Joel Kurtzman, economist and journalist


  • Alan Lightman, physicist, novelist and essayist[65]


  • Lynn Harold Loomis, mathematician and co-discoverer of the Loomis–Whitney inequality[66]


  • Gregory Maguire, author[67]


  • Andrew McMahon, musician and lead singer of Something Corporate and Jack's Mannequin


  • Jane Mendillo, CEO of Harvard Management Company


  • Russell Miller, author and historian


  • William Munroe, first manufacturer of lead pencils in America


  • Abigail May Alcott Nieriker, artist


  • Robert B. Parker, author[68]


  • Samuel Parris, clergyman and witchcraft prosecutor


  • Uta Pippig, marathon runner[69]


  • Samuel Prescott, American Revolutionary War "The Ride" with Paul Revere and William Dawes


  • Sam Presti, NBA executive[70]


  • Amelia Atwater-Rhodes, novelist


  • Ezra Ripley, clergyman


  • William Stevens Robinson, journalist


  • Dean Rosenthal, composer and musician


  • Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, journalist, author and reformer


  • David Allen Sibley, ornithologist and author


  • Margaret Sidney (pseudonym of Harriett Mulford Stone Lothrop), author


  • Robert Solow, Nobel laureate in economics[66]


  • John Augustus Stone, actor, dramatist and playwright


  • Henry David Thoreau, author, naturalist and philosopher


  • John Tortorella, Columbus Blue Jackets head coach


  • Jonas Wheeler, Maine Senate President


  • Thomas Wheeler, soldier in King Philip's War

  • William W. Wheildon, writer[71]


  • William Whiting, lawyer, writer and politician


  • Samuel Willard, 17th century colonial minister


  • Simon Willard, 17th century intellectual and former British major who co-founded Concord.


  • Stephen Wolfram, British-born scientist and developer of Mathematica software


  • Gordon S. Wood, historian and author[72]


  • Chris Wysopal, entrepreneur and cybersecurity pioneer


Popular culture


Concord is featured in the 2012 video game Assassin's Creed 3 and the 2015 video game Fallout 4.[citation needed]



See also


  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Concord, Massachusetts


References




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  3. ^ Fischer, p. 85


  4. ^ Chidsey, p. 6. This is the total size of Smith's force.


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  18. ^ "Emerson's Concord Heritage". Concord Public Library – Special Collections. Archived from the original on February 5, 2007. Retrieved April 9, 2007.


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  30. ^ "All About Welch's: General Company Information". Welchs.com. Archived from the original on April 5, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2017.


  31. ^ "The History". Concord Grape Association. 2014. Retrieved 21 June 2018.


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Further reading



  • 1871 Atlas of Massachusetts. by Wall & Gray. Map of Massachusetts. Map of Middlesex County.


  • History of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Volume 1 (A-H), Volume 2 (L-W) compiled by Samuel Adams Drake, published 1879-1880. 572 and 505 pages. Concord article by Rev. Grindall Reynolds in volume 1 pages 380-405.


  • Lemuel Shattuck (1835). A history of the town of Concord, Middlesex County, Massachusetts. Concord: John Stacy.


External links






  • Town of Concord official website


  • Concord Public School System (includes Concord-Carlisle district)

  • Chamber of Commerce


  • The Concord Life, An Opportunity to Live Simply and Beautifully in Concord - Damon Street July/August 2017


  • MCI-Concord, overview of Massachusetts Correctional Institution – Concord

  • Concord's African American & Abolitionist History Map from the Drinking Gourd Project


  • Concord (Massachusetts) travel guide from Wikivoyage


  • Concord, Massachusetts at Curlie













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