Boston
Essex
Suffolk
Middlesex
County
Plymouth
Norfolk
Massachusetts was named after local Indian tribe whose name means "a large hill
place" The 6th Colony of the United States (February 6, 1788),
Massachusetts has lead the way in many areas of the common culture.
The Pilgrims, fleeing religious persecution, set sail for North America in
1620 and established their colony in Plymouth, where they set up a
democratic government (the
Mayflower
Compact under the government of the
Massachusetts
Bay Colony) The Constitution of Massachusetts (1780) is the oldest
written Constitution in the world still in effect.
Firm in their respect for education, Massachusetts established the
prestigious
Harvard
University in 1636. Massachusetts passed the 1st compulsory attendance
laws for school in 1852. (Harvard School of Dental Medicine was established
in 1867 as the first university-based dental school in the United States.)
Ironically, the compulsory attendance law was to strengthen the common
culture by ensuring that religion was a base of education, this has been
negated by recent Supreme Court decisions which use this legal base to
compel imposition of secular humanism. Today, the Commonwealth has more than
eighty colleges and universities.
The first anti-slavery publication, The Liberator(1831), gave rise to the
New England Anti-Slavery Society in Boston. Responsible for the historic
"Underground
Railway". Massachusetts generously gave men and money to the Civil
War, also contributing the first African-American regiments to be mustered.
The
Colony of Massachusetts was the first English speaking government to adopt
permanent military regiments in December, 1636. Massachusetts' Motto is:
Ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem (By the sword we seek peace, but
peace only under liberty) From 1660, when regulations began increasing from
abroad (the Stuarts revoked the Massachusetts charter in 1684) to the "Boston
Massacre" in 1770 when British soldiers fired upon Boston's
taunting citizens, Massachusetts has met any attempt at outside regulation
firmly. (The first rioting and boycotts in America were in Massachusetts.
The first blood shed in the American Revolutionary War was in
Massachusetts.) Since the siege of Boston, and Battle of Bunker Hill,
(1776), Massachusetts has had no enemy troops within its borders.
Archaeological excavations show that Paleo-Indian habitation of the
Massachusetts area began more than 10,000 years ago. Sophisticated
technology has been found, including ceramics, textiles, leather, basketry,
and maneuverable canoes. Around 1500 A.D., European settlers found the
Massachusetts, Wampanoag, Pennacook, Mahican (Stockbridge), Pocumtuck, and
Nipmuck - all speaking variations of the Algonquian language family. (John
Cabot explored the area in 1497 and 1498. Bartholemew Gosnold explored the
bay in 1602 and named Cape Cod for the fish.) The Indians had no natural
immunities to European disease and epidemics began in coastal Massachusetts
in 1616 and 1617, devastating native populations by as much as 90%.
Pilgrims, arriving in 1620, they found many areas abandoned. Plimoth
plantation was established on the site a depopulated Native American
settlement. Native Americans are a deeply rooted, vigorous part of the
diverse population (2000 census) of 6,349,097 Massachusetts residents.
Known as the "Bay State", Massachusetts stretches from Cape Cod
(easternmost areas border the Atlantic Ocean), to the western mountains in
the northeast United States. Its capitol is Boston. It has 12 County
governments, 44 Municipal governments and 307 Townships.
The Embargo during the War of 1812, hit Maritime Massachusetts hard, but,
resilient, as always, and using the plentiful waterpower available to them,
Massachusetts began the manufacture of essential goods, soon becoming a
leader. Francis Cabot Lowell's power loom (1814) jump-started the textile
industry, turning Waltham, Lawrence, Lowell, Fall River, New Bedford, and
other cities into great manufacturing centers.
Massachusetts'
present day economy is characterized by entrepreneurship, innovation,
venture capital, one of the highest employment rates in the nation, an
educated employment pool, and a strong research and development network. The
state leads the nation in attracting federal investments in research and
development, and the universities and laboratories work hand-in-hand with
business interests for the future of the state and the nation. High-tech
innovation, global trading. exports of information technology, financial
services, health industry, manufacturing, travel and tourism combine to
assure Massachusetts of a bright financial future.
State Bird
State Tree
State Flower |
Chickadee
American Elm Ulmus americana
Mayflower Epigaea regens |
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