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1921 postcard of the c. 1764 Silas Brooks place, home of Revolutionary War minuteman Luke Brooks.It still stands as of November 2017 [4] at 88–90 Summer Street.. Maynard, located on the Assabet River, was first settled as a farming community by Puritan colonists in the 1600s who acquired the land comprising modern-day Maynard from local Native American tribe members who referred to the area ...
Maynard became known as the "Minicomputer Capital of the World". Digital remained headquartered in Maynard until 1998, but it had shuttered operations in the mill buildings in 1993. [ 6 ] Wellesley Management purchased the property in 1998 and rented space to various business under the operating name Clock Tower Place. [ 5 ]
Roosevelt Street in Presidential Village. Presidential Village (also once known as New Village, Reardonville, and Mahoneyville) is a residential neighborhood of approximately 250 houses in Maynard, Massachusetts, where almost all of the streets are named after the post-American Civil War U.S. Presidents: Ulysses Grant, Rutherford Hayes, James Garfield, Chester Arthur, Grover Cleveland ...
Get the Maynard, MA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
American Powder Mills (1883–1929) was a Massachusetts gunpowder manufacturing complex on the Assabet River.It expanded to include forty buildings along both sides of the river in the towns of Acton, Concord, Maynard, and Sudbury.
The Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge (ARNWR; formerly referred to as the U.S. Army's Fort Devens-Sudbury Training Annex) is a 2,230-acre (9.0 km 2) protected National Wildlife Refuge located approximately 25 miles (40 km) west of Boston and 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the Eastern Massachusetts National Wildlife Refuge Complex Headquarters, along the Assabet River.
White Pond is a 58.5 acre [1] lake and reservoir within the towns of Stow and Hudson, in Middlesex County, Massachusetts.The lake has historically provided a source of drinking water to the town of Maynard, and Maynard maintains water rights to the pond and owns some of the land surrounding it.
Stow ceded land to Harvard (1732), Shirley (1765), Boxborough (1783), Hudson (1866) and Maynard (1871). Stow lost 1300 acres (5.3 km 2) and close to half its population to the creation of Maynard. Prior to that, what became Maynard was known as "Assabet Village" but was legally still part of the towns of Stow and Sudbury. There were some ...