

Although most of the villages have a post office, they have no legal definition and no firmly defined borders. Oak Hill Park is a place within the village of Oak Hill that itself is shown as a separate and distinct village on some city maps (including a map dated 2010 on the official City of Newton website), and Four Corners is also shown as a village on some city maps. The 13 villages are: Auburndale, Chestnut Hill, Newton Centre, Newton Corner, Newton Highlands, Newton Lower Falls, Newton Upper Falls (both on the Charles River, and both once small industrial sites), Newtonville, Nonantum (also called "The Lake"), Oak Hill, Thompsonville, Waban and West Newton. Rather than having a single city center, Newton is a patchwork of thirteen villages, many boasting small downtown areas of their own. The portion of Needham which lies east of 128 and west of the Charles, known as the Needham Industrial Park has become part of a Newton commercial zone and contributes to its heavy traffic, though the tax revenue goes to Needham.Īccording to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 18.2 square miles (47.1 km 2), of which 18.0 square miles (46.6 km 2) is land and 0.2 square miles (0.5 km 2) (0.82%) is water. The Yankee Division Highway, designated Interstate 95 but known to the locals as Route 128, follows the Charles from Waltham to Dedham, creating a de facto land barrier. The city is bordered by Waltham and Watertown on the north, Needham and the West Roxbury neighborhood of Boston on the south, Wellesley and Weston on the west, and Brookline and the Brighton neighborhood of Boston on the east.įrom Watertown to Waltham to Needham and Dedham, Newton is bounded by the Charles River. Residents and visitors line the race route along Washington Street and Commonwealth Avenue to cheer the runners. There are two more hills before reaching Centre Street, and then the fourth and most infamous of all, Heartbreak Hill, rises shortly after Centre Street. It then turns right onto Route 30 (Commonwealth Avenue) for the long haul into Boston.

The city has two symphony orchestras, the New Philharmonia Orchestra of Massachusetts and the Newton Symphony Orchestra.Įach April on Patriots Day, the Boston Marathon is run through the city, entering from Wellesley on Route 16 (Washington Street) where runners encounter the first of the four infamous Newton Hills. Most Newtonites work in Newton and other surrounding cities and towns. Newton is not a typical "commuter suburb" since many people who live in Newton do not work in downtown Boston. Even then, however, Oak Hill continued to be farmed, mostly market gardening, until the prosperity of the 1950s made all of Newton more densely settled.

The next wave came in the 1920s when automobiles became affordable to a growing upper middle class. One wave began with the streetcar lines that made many parts of Newton accessible for commuters in the late nineteenth century. Muir points out that these early commuters needed sufficient wealth to employ a groom and keep horses, to drive them from their hilltop homes to the station.įurther suburbanization came in waves. Wealthy Bostonian businessmen took advantage of the new commuting opportunity offered by the railroad, building gracious homes on erstwhile farmland of West Newton hill and on Commonwealth street. The Boston and Worcester, one of America's earliest railroads, reached West Newton in 1834.

Newton, according to Muir, became one of America's earliest commuter suburbs. Snuff, chocolate, glue, paper and other products were produced in these small mills but, according to Muir, the water power available in Newton was not sufficient to turn Newton into a manufacturing city, although it was, beginning in 1902, the home of the Stanley Motor Carriage Company, the maker of the Stanley Steamer.
NEWTON SOUTH HIGH SCHOOL SERIES
In Reflections in Bullough's Pond, Newton historian Diana Muir describes the early industries that developed in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in a series of mills built to take advantage of the water power available at Newton Upper Falls and Newton Lower Falls. Newton was incorporated as a separate town, known as Cambridge Village, in 1688, then renamed Newtown in 1691, and finally Newton in 1766. Roxbury minister John Eliot convinced the Native American people of Nonantum, a sub-tribe of the Massachusett led by a sachem named Waban, to relocate to Natick in 1651, fearing that they would be exploited by colonists. Newton was settled in 1630 as part of "the newe towne", which was renamed Cambridge in 1638.
