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Fall River, Massachusetts

Fall River is a city in Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States. Fall River's population was 94,000 at the 2020 United States Census,[6] making it the tenth-largest city in the state.

Fall River
Downtown Fall River in September 2007
Nicknames: 
"The Scholarship City," "The River", "Spindle City", "Where the River Falls"
"The City of the Dinner Pail"[1]
Motto(s): 
"We'll Try"[2]
"Make It Here"[3]
Location of Fall River in Bristol County, Massachusetts
Fall River
Location in Massachusetts
Fall River
Location in the United States
Coordinates: 41°42′05″N 71°09′20″W / 41.70139°N 71.15556°W / 41.70139; -71.15556Coordinates: 41°42′05″N 71°09′20″W / 41.70139°N 71.15556°W / 41.70139; -71.15556
Country United States
State Massachusetts
CountyBristol
Settled1670
Incorporated (town)1803
Incorporated (city)1854
Government
 • TypeMayor–council
 • MayorPaul Coogan
 • City council[4]Cliff Ponte
President

Pam Laliberte-Lebeau
Vice President

Shawn E. Cadime
Michelle Dionne
Bradford L. Kilby
Trott Lee
Christopher Peckham
Leo O. Pelletier
Linda Pereira
Area
 • Total40.24 sq mi (104.22 km2)
 • Land33.12 sq mi (85.79 km2)
 • Water7.12 sq mi (18.43 km2)
Elevation
72 ft (37 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total94,000
 • Density2,837.91/sq mi (1,095.73/km2)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (Eastern)
ZIP Codes
02720–02724
Area code508/774
FIPS code25-23000
GNIS feature ID0612595
Websitewww.fallriverma.org
Welcome sign in Fall River
Fall River municipal flag over City Hall

Located along the eastern shore of Mount Hope Bay at the mouth of the Taunton River, the city gained recognition during the 19th century as a leading textile manufacturing center in the United States. While the textile industry has long since moved on, its impact on the city's culture and landscape is still prominent. Fall River's official motto is "We'll Try", dating back to the aftermath of the Great Fire of 1843. Nicknamed The Scholarship City after Irving Fradkin founded Dollars for Scholars there in 1958, mayor Jasiel Correia introduced the "Make It Here" slogan as part of a citywide rebranding effort in 2017.[3]

Fall River is known for the Lizzie Borden case, the Fall River cult murders, Portuguese culture, its numerous 19th-century textile mills and Battleship Cove, home of the world's largest collection of World War II naval vessels (including the battleship USS Massachusetts). Fall River has its city hall located over an interstate highway.

History

Colonial period to 1800s

 
An 1877 pictorial map of Fall River with a list of the city's sights

At the time of the establishment of the Plymouth Colony in 1620, the area that would one day become Troy City was inhabited by the Pokanoket Wampanoag tribe, headquartered at Mount Hope in what is now Bristol, Rhode Island. The "falling" river that the city's name refers to is the Quequechan River (pronounced "quick-a-shan" by locals) which flows through the city before draining into the bay. Quequechan is a Wampanoag word believed to mean "falling river" or "leaping/falling waters." During the 1960s, Interstate 195 was constructed through the city along the length of the Quequechan River. The portion west of Plymouth Avenue was routed underground through a series of box culverts, while much of the eastern section "mill pond" was filled in for the highway embankment.

In 1653, Freetown was settled at Assonet Bay by members of the Massachusetts Bay Colony as part of Freeman's Purchase, which included the northern part of what is now Fall River. In 1683, Freetown was incorporated as a town within the colony. The southern part of what is now Fall River was incorporated as the town of Tiverton as part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1694, a few years after the merger with Plymouth Colony. In 1746, in the settlement of a colonial boundary dispute between Rhode Island and Massachusetts, Tiverton was annexed to Rhode Island, along with Little Compton and what is now Newport County, Rhode Island. The boundary was then placed approximately at what is now Columbia Street.

In 1703, Benjamin Church, a hero of King Philip's War established a saw mill, grist mill, and a fulling mill on the Quequechan River. In 1714, Church sold his land, along with the water rights to Richard Borden of Tiverton and his brother Joseph. This transaction would prove to be extremely valuable 100 years later, helping to establish the Borden family as the leaders in the development of Fall River's textile industry.

During the 18th century, the area consisted mostly of small farms and relatively few inhabitants. In 1778, the Battle of Freetown, was fought here during the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783) after British raids badly damaged Bristol and Warren. The militia of Fall River, at that time known as Freetown, put up a stronger defense against a British force.

In 1803, Fall River was separated from Freetown and officially incorporated as its own town. A year later, Fall River changed its name to "Troy." The name "Troy" was used for 30 years and was officially changed back to Fall River on February 12, 1834. During this period, Fall River was governed by a three-member Board of Selectmen, until it became a City in 1854.

In 1835, The Fall River Female Anti Slavery Society was formed (one of the many anti slavery societies in New England) to promote abolition and to allow a women's space to conduct social activism. There was an initial group, which was wary of allowing free black full membership, so a second group (this one) was formed in response by Elizabeth Buffum Chace and her sisters, who were committed to allowing free black women membership.[7] Sarah G. Buffman, a delegate from the group, was sent to the Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women in Philadelphia in 1838. Buffman signed all three of the statements that the convention's delegates agreed on.[8]

In July 1843, the first great fire in Fall River's history destroyed much of the town center, including the Atheneum, which housed the Skeleton in Armor which had been discovered in a sand bank in 1832 near what is now the corner of Hartwell and Fifth Street.

During this time, the southern part of what is now Fall River (south of Columbia Street) remained part of Tiverton, Rhode Island. In 1856, the town of Tiverton, Rhode Island voted to split off its industrial northern section as Fall River, Rhode Island. In 1861, after decades of dispute, the United States Supreme Court moved the state boundary to what is now State Avenue, unifying both Fall Rivers as a city in Massachusetts (among other changes; see History of Massachusetts § Rhode Island eastern border).

Industrial development and prosperity

 
Group of workers in the Sagamore Manufacturing Company in August 1911 photographed by Lewis Hine

19th century

The early establishment of the textile industry in Fall River grew out of the developments made in nearby Rhode Island, beginning with Samuel Slater at Pawtucket, Rhode Island in 1793. In 1811, Col. Joseph Durfee, the Revolutionary War veteran and hero of the Battle of Freetown in 1778, built the Globe Manufactory, a spinning mill at the outlet of Cook Pond on Dwelly St. near what is now Globe Four Corners in the city's South End. (It was part of Tiverton, Rhode Island at the time.) While Durfee's mill itself was not particularly successful, its establishment marked the beginning of Fall River's time as a mill city.

The real development of Fall River's industry, however, would occur along the falling river from which it was named, about a mile north of Durfee's first mill. The Quequechan River, with its eight falls, combined to make Fall River the best tidewater privilege in southern New England. It was perfect for industrialization—big enough for profit and expansion, yet small enough to be developed by local capital without interference from Boston.[9]

The Fall River Manufactory was established by David Anthony and others in 1813. That same year, the Troy Cotton & Woolen Manufactory was founded by a group of investors led by Oliver Chace of Swansea. Chase had worked as a carpenter for Samuel Slater in his early years. The Troy Mill opened in 1814 at the upper end of the falls.

In 1821, Colonel Richard Borden (along with Maj. Bradford Durfee) established the Fall River Iron Works at the lower part of the Quequechan River. Durfee was a shipwright, and Borden was the owner of a grist mill. After an uncertain start, in which some early investors pulled out, the Fall River Iron Works was incorporated in 1825. The Iron Works began producing nails, bar stock, and other items, such as bands for casks in the nearby New Bedford whaling industry. They soon gained a reputation for producing nails of high quality, and business flourished. In 1827, Col. Borden began regular steamship service to Providence, Rhode Island.[10]

The American Print Works was established in 1835 by Holder Borden, uncle of Col. Richard Borden. With the leadership of the Borden family, the American Print Works (later known as the American Printing Company) became the largest and most important textile company in the city, employing thousands at its peak in the early 20th century. Richard Borden also constructed the Metacomet Mill in 1847, which today is the oldest remaining textile mill in the city; it is located on Anawan Street.

By 1845, the Quequechan's power had been all but maximized. The Massasoit Steam Mill was established in 1846, above the dam near the end of Pleasant Street. However, it would be another decade or so when improvements in the steam engine by George Corliss would enable the construction of the first large steam-powered mill in the city, the Union Mills in 1859.

The advantage of being able to import bales of cotton and coal to fuel the steam engines to Fall River's deep water harbor (and ship them out from the same) made Fall River the city of choice for a series of cotton mill magnates. The first railroad line serving Fall River, The Fall River Branch Railroad, was incorporated in 1844 and opened in 1845. In 1847, the first regular steamboat service to New York City began. The Fall River Line, as it came to be known, operated until 1937, and for many years was the preferred way to travel between Boston and Manhattan. The Old Colony Railroad and Fall River Railroad merged in 1854, forming the Old Colony and Fall River Railroad.

In 1854, Fall River was officially incorporated as a city; it had a population of about 12,000.[11] Its first mayor was James Buffington.

Fall River profited well from the American Civil War and was in a fine position to take advantage of the prosperity that followed. By 1868, it had surpassed Lowell as the leading textile city in America with over 500,000 spindles.

Expansion and growth

 
Border City Mill

In 1871 and 1872, a "most dramatic expansion" of the city occurred: 15 new corporations were founded, building 22 new mills throughout the city, while some of the older mills expanded. The city's population increased by 20,000 people during these two years, while overall mill capacity doubled to more than 1,000,000 spindles.

By 1876, the city had one-sixth of all New England cotton capacity and one-half of all print cloth production. The Spindle City, as it became known, was second in the world to only Manchester, England in terms of output.

To house the thousands of new workers—mostly Irish and French Canadian immigrants during these years—over 12,000 units of company housing were built. Unlike the well-spaced boardinghouses and tidy cottages of Rhode Island, worker housing in Fall River consisted of thousands of wood-framed, multi-family tenements, usually three-floor "triple-deckers" with up to six apartments. Many more privately owned tenements supplemented the company housing.[12]

During the 19th century, Fall River became famous for the granite rock on which much of the city is built. Several granite quarries operated during this time, the largest of which was the Beattie Granite Quarry, near what is now the corner of North Quarry and Locust Streets.[13] Many of the mills in the city were built from this stone, and it was highly regarded as a building material for many public buildings and private homes alike. The Chateau-sur-Mer mansion in Newport, Rhode Island was constructed from Fall River granite, known for its greyish-pink color.

While most of the mills "above the hill" were constructed from native Fall River granite, nearly all of their counterparts along the Taunton River and Mount Hope Bay were made of red brick due to the high costs and impracticality associated with transporting the rock through the city and down the hill. (One notable exception is the Sagamore Mills on North Main Street, which were constructed from similar rock quarried in Freetown and brought to the site by rail).

20th century

 
Massachusetts Route 79 viaduct and Braga Bridge in Fall River. The Quequechan River flows beneath the parking lot. The viaduct was demolished in 2014 and replaced with a surface boulevard.

Fall River rode a wave of economic prosperity well into the early 20th century. During this time, the city boasted a bustling downtown with several upscale hotels and theaters. As the city continuously expanded during the late 19th century, additional infrastructure such as parks, schools, streetcar lines, a public water supply, and sewerage system were constructed to meet the needs of its growing population.

From 1896 to 1912, Fall River was the headquarters of the E. P. Charlton & Company, a chain of five and ten cent stores. Founded at Fall River in 1890 by Seymour H. Knox and Earle Perry Charlton as the Knox & Charlton Five and Ten Cent Store, E.P. Charlton operated fifty-eight stores in the United States and Canada by the time of its merger with several other retailers to form the F. W. Woolworth Company in 1912.

In 1920, the population of Fall River peaked at 120,485.[14]

The cotton mills of Fall River had built their business largely on one product: print cloth. Around 1910, the city's largest employer, the American Printing Company (APC), employed 6,000 people and was the largest company printer of cloth in the world. Dozens of other city mills solely produced cloth to be printed at the APC.

World War I had provided a general increase in demand for textiles, and many of the mills of New England benefited during this time. The post-war economy quickly slowed, however, and production quickly outpaced demand. The Northern mills faced serious competition from their Southern counterparts due to lower labor and transportation costs, as well as the South's large investment in new machinery and other equipment. In 1923, Fall River faced the first wave of mill closures. Several of the mills merged, allowing them to remain in business into the late 1920s.

The worst fire in Fall River's history occurred on the evening of February 2, 1928.[15] It began when workers were dismantling the recently vacated Pocasset Mill. During the night, the fire spread quickly and wiped out a large portion of downtown. City Hall was spared, but was badly damaged. Today, many of the structures near the corner of North Main and Bedford Street date from the early 1930s, as they were rebuilt soon after the fire.

By the 1930s and the Great Depression, many of the mills were out of business and the city was bankrupt. The once mighty American Printing Company finally closed for good in 1934. In 1937, their huge plant waterfront on Water Street was acquired by the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company and soon employed 2,600 people. A handful managed to survive through World War II and into the 1950s. In October 1941, just a few weeks before the attack on Pearl Harbor, another large fire broke out in the main building of the printworks. The fire was a major setback to the U.S. war effort; 30,000 pounds (13,607 kilograms) of raw rubber worth $15 million was lost in the inferno.[16]

With the demise of the textile industry, many of the city's mills were occupied by smaller companies, some in the garment industry, traditionally based in the New York City area but attracted to New England by the lure of cheap factory space and an eager workforce in need of jobs.[17] The garment industry survived in the city well into the 1990s, by which point it had fallen victim to globalization and foreign competition.[18]

Modern era

 
Fall River's old City Hall, which was demolished in 1962

In the 1960s, the city's landscape was drastically transformed with the construction of the Braga Bridge and Interstate 195, which cut directly through the heart of the city. In the wake of the highway building boom, the city lost many of its longtime landmarks. The Quequechan River was filled in and re-routed for much of its length. The historic falls were diverted into underground culverts. A series of elevated steel viaducts was constructed to allow access the new bridge. Many historic buildings were demolished, including the Old City Hall, the Troy Mills, the Second Granite Block (built after the 1928 fire), as well as other 19th-century brick-and-mortar buildings near Old City Hall.

Constructed directly over Interstate 195 in the place of it predecessor, the new city hall (known as Government Center) was opened in 1976 after years of construction delays and quality control problems. Built in the Brutalist style popular in the 1960s and 1970s, the new city hall drew complaints from city workers and residents almost immediately.[citation needed]

In 1970, Valle's Steak House opened one if its landmark restaurants on William S. Canning Boulevard in the city's South End. The steak house was popular with Fall River residents, but economic challenges caused the chain to close all of its restaurants in the 1980s.[19]

Also during the 1970s, several modern apartment high-rise towers were built throughout the city, many part of the Fall River Housing Authority. There were two built near Milliken Boulevard, two on Pleasant Street in Flint Village, another on South Main Street, and in the north end off Robeson Street. Today, these high-rises mostly house the elderly.

In 1978, the city opened the new B.M.C. Durfee High School in the North End, replacing the historic Rock Street building that had become overcrowded and outdated for use as a high school. The "new" Durfee is one of the largest high schools in Massachusetts.

Since approximately 1980, there has been a considerable amount of new development in the North End of the city. A significant number of new single- and multi-family housing developments have been constructed, particularly along North Main Street.

In 2021, Fall River was ranked the 96th most dangerous city in the United States. It was also the third most dangerous city in Massachusetts and fourth most dangerous city in New England.[20]

On January 20, 2019, a cannabis dispensary opened in Fall River, becoming only the sixth dispensary in Massachusetts and the first in Southeastern Massachusetts to open to anyone 21 years or older.[21]

Geography

 
Fall River on Mount Hope Bay in 1905

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 40.2 square miles (104.2 km2), of which 33.1 square miles (85.8 km2) is land and 7.1 square miles (18.4 km2), or 17.68%, is water.[22]

Water power from the Quequechan River and natural granite helped form and shape Fall River into the city it is today. The Quequechan River once flowed through downtown unrestricted, providing water power for the mills and, in the last 12 mile (0.8 km) of its length, down a series of eight steep waterfalls falling 128 feet (39 m) into the Taunton River at the head of the deep Mount Hope Bay. Fall River and surrounding areas are located in the northeastern coastal forests, which make up the temperate broadleaf and mixed forest biome.

Fall River was the only city on the East Coast of the United States to have had an exposed waterfall in part of its downtown area; it flowed less than 12 mile (0.8 km) into a sheltered harbor at the edge of downtown. Fall River has two large lakes (originally one lake) and a large portion of protected woodlands on the eastern part of the city, which is higher in elevation, with the Quequechan River draining out of the ponds and flowing 2.5 miles (4.0 km) through the heart of the city, emptying out an estimated 26 million US gallons (98×10^6 l) per day into the deep Mount Hope Bay/Taunton River estuary in the western part of the city.

The city lies on the eastern border of Mount Hope Bay, which begins at the mouth of the Taunton River starting south from the Charles M. Braga Jr. Memorial Bridge. The greater portion of the city is built on hillsides rising quite abruptly from the water's edge to a height of more than 200 feet (60 m). From the summits of these hills, the terrain extends back in a comparatively level table-land, on which a large section of the city now stands.

Two miles (3 km) eastward from the shore lies a chain of deep and narrow ponds, eight miles (13 km) long, with an average width of three-quarters of a mile, and covering an area of 3,500 acres (14 km2). These ponds are supplied by springs and brooks, draining a watershed of 20,000 acres (81 km2). The northern pond is the North Watuppa Pond, the city's main reservoir. The southern pond is the South Watuppa Pond. The narrow strip of land where the two ponds meet is known as The Narrows. East of the North Watuppa Pond is the Watuppa Reservation, which includes several thousand acres of forest-land for water supply protection that extends north into the Freetown-Fall River State Forest, and east to the Copicut Reservoir. Copicut Pond is located on the border of Dartmouth in North Dartmouth's Hixville section that borders Fall River. Copicut Hill, the highest point in Fall River, is located between North Watuppa Pond and the Copicut Reservoir. The hill has a summit elevation of greater than 404 feet (123 m) above sea level.[23]

The Quequechan River breaks out of its bed in the west part of the South Watuppa Pond, just west of The Narrows, and flows through the city (partially underground in conduits) where it falls to a channel leading to what is now Fall River Heritage State Park at Battleship Cove on the Taunton River. The Quequechan River originally flowed unconfined over an almost level course for more than a mile. In the last half-mile (800 m) of its progress it rushes down the hillside in a narrow, precipitous, rocky channel, creating the falls for which Fall River is named. In this distance the total fall is about 132 feet (40 m). and the volume of water 122 cubic feet (3.5 m3) per second.

 
Quequechan River Rail Trail
 
Fall River's Granite Mills in 1908
 
Statue of Marquis de Lafayette stands in Lafayette Park.

Originally an attractive feature of the landscape, the Quequechan has seldom been visible since it was covered over by cotton mills and the Bay Colony Railroad line in the 19th century. As the Quequechan became an underground feature of the industrial landscape, it also became a sewer. In the 20th century the mills were abandoned and some of them burned, exposing the falls once more. Because of highway construction in the 1960s, the waterfalls were buried under Interstate 195, which crosses the Taunton River at Battleship Cove. Plans exist to "daylight" the falls, restore or re-create them, and build a green belt with a bicycle path along the Quequechan River.

In the south end, Cook Pond, also formerly known as Laurel Lake, is located east of the Taunton River and west of the South Watuppa Pond. The area between the modern day Cook and South Watuppa Ponds, east of the Taunton River and north of Tiverton, Rhode Island, was once referred to as "Pocasset Swamp" during King Philip's War in 1675–1676.

Neighborhoods

The city is divided into two by I-195; downtown sits between them. The two sections of the city contain a number of distinct neighborhoods.

Northern Neighborhoods ("The North End"; North of I-195, extending to the city's northern border with Freetown, Massachusetts and western border with Dartmouth, Massachusetts)

  • Waterfront/Battleship Cove (east of Route 79 to the edge of the Taunton River/Mount Hope Bay)
  • The Highlands
    • Lower Highlands (Bedford St, up High St to Prospect St)
    • Upper Highlands (Prospect St along President Ave, up to Wilson Rd)
  • Fall River Industrial Park ("Airport Road," area north of Wilson Rd bounded to the west by Route 24 and to the east by Riggenbach Rd)
  • Fall River/Freetown State Forest

Southern Neighborhoods ("The South End"; South of I-195, extending to the city's southern border with Tiverton, RI)

  • Flint Village ("The Flint")South and east of Bedford and Quarry Sts, respectively)
  • Globe Village (Cook Pond, Broadway)
  • Townsend Hill (South Main and Bay St Neighborhoods bordering Tiverton, R.I.)
  • Maplewood

Parks

Fall River has 23 municipal parks and playgrounds, including three designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.[24][25] Fall River's more notable parks include:

  • Kennedy Park (Olmsted, 1868): South Main Street, 54 acres, four tennis courts, three baseball fields, two basketball courts, softball field, skating pond, playground[24]
  • North Park (Olmsted, 1901): President Avenue, 25 acres, two baseball fields, two basketball courts, playground, skating pond, skate park[24]
  • Ruggles Park (Olmsted, 1903): Locust Street, 9 acres, basketball court, playground, softball field[24]
  • Bicentennial Park: Davol Street, 2 acres, boat ramp[24]
  • Lafayette Park: Eastern Avenue, 11 acres, baseball field, basketball court, playground, swimming pool, tennis court, skate park[24]
  • Quequechan River Rail Trail: 2.5 mile Bike path from Britland Park and Rodman Street to Westport Line on Route 6[26]

The city is also home to several Massachusetts state parks, including Fall River Heritage State Park and Freetown-Fall River State Forest.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
18101,296—    
18201,594+23.0%
18304,158+160.9%
18406,738+62.0%
185011,524+71.0%
186014,026+21.7%
187026,766+90.8%
188048,961+82.9%
189074,398+52.0%
1900104,863+40.9%
1910119,295+13.8%
1920120,485+1.0%
1930115,274−4.3%
1940115,428+0.1%
1950111,963−3.0%
196099,942−10.7%
197096,898−3.0%
198092,574−4.5%
199092,703+0.1%
200091,938−0.8%
201088,857−3.4%
202094,000+5.8%
* = population estimate.
Source: United States census records and Population Estimates Program data.[27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37]
Source:
U.S. Decennial Census[38]
 
Plymouth Avenue in Fall River

According to the U.S. Census of 2020, the population of Fall River is 94,000. The largest racial groups within the city were 87.2% (83.4% Non-Hispanic) White, 3.5% African American, 2.5% Asian and 0.2% Native American and 7.4% Hispanic or Latino. 49% of residents are Luso American or have origins somewhere in the former Portuguese Empire. 37% of the population described themselves as being of Portuguese ancestry. The next largest groups by ancestry are French (12.4%) the original immigrants to largely populate Fall River until the Portuguese started immigrating to the area, Irish (8.9%), Cape Verdean (8.1%), English (6.0%), French Canadian (5.9%), Puerto Rican (4.5%), and Italian (3.6%).[39]

Fall River and its surrounding communities form much of the Massachusetts portion of the Providence metropolitan area, which has an estimated population of 1,622,520.

In percentage terms, Fall River has the largest Portuguese American population in the United States. The exact percentage of the population they make up is disputed; a 2005 study by the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth estimated that 49.6% of city residents are Portuguese American,[40] while other sources estimate that 43.9% are.[41]

The city has 38,759 households and 23,558 families. The population density was 2,963.7 inhabitants per square mile (1,144.3/km2). There were 41,857 housing units at an average density of 1,349.3 per square mile (521.0/km2). Of the 38,759 households, 29.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 40.3% were married couples living together, 16.5% had a female householder with no husband present, and 39.2% were non-families. 34.2% of all households were made up of individuals, and 14.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.32 and the average family size was 3.00.

In terms of age, the population was spread out, with 24.1% under the age of 18, 9.2% from 18 to 24, 29.8% from 25 to 44, 20.0% from 45 to 64, and 16.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 36 years. For every 100 females, there were 87.7 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 82.9 males.

The median household income was $29,014, and the median family income was $37,671. Males had a median income of $31,330 versus $22,883 for females. The per capita income for the city was $16,118. About 14.0% of families and 17.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 25.4% of those under age 18 and 17.4% of those age 65 or over.[39]

Income

Fall River is ranked 344th out of Massachusetts' 350 municipalities in terms of per capita income.[42][43][44]

Rank ZIP Code (ZCTA) Per capita
income
Median
household
income
Median
family
income
Population Number of
households
Massachusetts $35,763 $66,866 $84,900 6,605,058 2,530,147
Bristol County $28,837 $55,298 $72,018 549,870 210,037
United States $28,155 $53,046 $64,719 311,536,594 115,610,216
1 02720 $25,090 $41,910 $56,091 30,811 13,079
Fall River $21,257 $33,211 $42,962 88,811 38,258
2 02721 $19,321 $30,180 $38,133 26,141 10,943
3 02723 $18,980 $28,120 $34,835 14,298 6,442
4 02724 $18,827 $27,390 $39,246 16,769 7,561

Culture

 
The 19 Banners of Allegiance at Gromada Plaza represent the diverse nationalities of Fall River's residents[45]
 
Kennedy Park

Fall River retains a vibrant mix of cultures that date back to its time as an immigration hub. While the distinct ethnic neighborhoods formed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries have changed over the years, the legacy of immigrants who came to work in the mills can be found in the various parishes and restaurants throughout the city. This heritage is commemorated by the 19 flags which make up the "Banners of Allegiance" at Gromada Plaza.[45] Erected in 1979 across from City Hall (and restored in 2019), this landmark commemorates the diverse nationalities of Fall River's residents.[45]

The city is host to many ethnic festivals throughout the year. The largest, the Great Holy Ghost Festival, occurs each August at Kennedy Park and attracts over 200,000 visitors. The feast is held over a total of four days.[46]

Each summer, the city uses its waterfront at Heritage State Park and Battleship Cove for a Fourth of July fireworks display. For many years, the waterfront also hosted the annual Fall River Celebrates America Festival, sponsored by the Fall River Chamber of Commerce. The event was suspended in 2010 due to lack of financial support stemming from the Great Recession. While the Chamber of Commerce hoped to hold the event again in 2011, it has not been held since.[47]

Performing arts

A number of community organizations have made concerted efforts to promote the arts in the city, using vacant mill space for studios and performance centers. The Narrows Center for the Arts, located on Anawan Street, has been played by a number of national and international acts since its opening in 2001, including Rosanne Cash, Los Lobos, Blue Öyster Cult, Dr. John, The Avett Brothers, Richie Havens, Lake Street Dive and Susan Tedeschi.[48] A proposal is in place to revitalize the downtown area by the creation of an Arts District. Along with the art centers being established throughout the city, Fall River has numerous Portuguese/Community Bands throughout the city that perform throughout the year.

Visual arts

In 2020, artists and Fall River natives Harry Gould Harvey IV and Brittni Ann Harvey opened the Fall River Museum of Contemporary Art (Fall River MoCA) in the first floor of a former mill on Bedford Street.[49] The museum aims to "create culturally relevant programming that is in dialog with the global contemporary art world."[50]

Religion

 
St. Mary's Cathedral
 
St. Anne's Church
 
Temple Beth-El

Fall River remains a predominantly Roman Catholic city due to the French Canadians who first populated the city, and is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River. St. Mary's Cathedral was formed in the 1850s by Irish immigrants; Edgar DaCunha has served as bishop since 2014. Santo Christo Parish on Columbia Street is known as the Mother Church of the Portuguese parishes in the diocese. The Church was established in 1892 to serve the local Portuguese community, Many of whom came from the Azorean island of São Miguel. Other notable Catholic churches include St. Anne's Church, Good Shepherd Church (formerly Saint Patrick's), and the former Notre Dame de Lourdes in the Flint neighborhood, which was destroyed in a large fire on May 10, 1982. At the time of the city's peak population in 1920, there were over two dozen Catholic parishes existing throughout the city, with each ethnic enclave having its own parish. In recent years, the diocese has merged several parishes in the city, closing some and renaming the united congregations, bringing the total number of parishes in the diocese to ten as of 2021.[51] St. Louis the King Church closed in 2000.[52]

Historically, the Highlands neighborhood was predominantly Protestant, with several churches in the area of North Main and Rock Streets, notably including the Central Congregational Church and the First Congregational Church, known for hosting many New England luminaries before its demise in a fire in the 1980s.

German Jewish settlers arrived in Fall River beginning in the 1860s and continuing into the 1870s.[53] The 1880s and 1890s saw the arrival of Russian Jewish immigrants.[53] At the start of the 20th century, Fall River was home to three synagogues.[53] The Jewish community historically worked in peddling, retail, and clothing stores.[53] Temple Beth-El was founded in 1924 on High Street.[53] In 1970 there were three congregations serving 4,000 Jews in Fall River; by 2008 that number had declined to less than 1,000.[53]

Various other ethno-religious groups also live in the city. Recent arrivals from Cambodia and India maintain temples in the city, such as Wat Udomsaharatanaram and BAPS Shri Swaminarayanwasi.

Government

City government and services

 
Fall River Government Center
 
Fall River Superior Court in 1905

The city is led by the mayor-council form of government. There is a mayor and nine at-large city councillors, elected in odd-years to two year terms. The mayor, along with their appointed city administrator, lead and manage the city's day-to-day operations. The majority of the city's municipal offices are located at Government Center.

The city's police department is consolidated into a large central police station. There are six fire stations located around the city. The Fire Headquarters is located on Commerce Drive, across from the former Fall River Municipal Airport.

There are four post offices in the city. The central, located adjacent to Government Center, is modeled after the James Farley Post Office in New York City. The central branch was named after the late Sgt. Robert Barrett in May 2011, a Fall River native who died in Afghanistan in 2010. Additional branches are located in the Flint, the South End, and the Highlands.

The city is home to several state and county-level courthouses. The murder trial of former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez in 2015 was held at the district courthouse on South Main Street.[54]

State and federal representation

Fall River is represented by three separate Massachusetts House of Representatives districts; only one, the 7th Bristol, is wholly within city limits. As of 2021, the city is represented by Democrats Carole Fiola (6th Bristol), Alan Silvia (7th Bristol), and Paul A. Schmid III (8th Bristol). The city is entirely within the First Bristol and Plymouth district, represented by State Senator Michael Rodrigues (D-Fall River). The First Bristol and Plymouth also includes the towns of Freetown, Lakeville, Rochester, Somerset and Swansea.[55][56]

Fall River's state highways are patrolled by the Third Barracks of Troop D of the Massachusetts State Police, based out of Dartmouth.

On the national level, the city is divided between two congressional districts. Massachusetts' 4th congressional district, represented by Democrat Jake Auchincloss, contains most of the city, while Massachusetts' 9th congressional district, represented by Democrat Bill Keating, contains a part of the northeastern portion of the city.

Voter registration and party enrollment as of February 1, 2019[57]
Party Number of voters Percentage
Democratic 20,658 44.10%
Republican 3,880 8.28%
Unaffiliated 21,353 45.59%
Libertarian 951 2.03%
Total 46,842 100%
Presidential election results
Presidential election results[58]
Year Republican Democratic Third parties
2020 43.0% 13,571 55.3% 17,459 1.7% 535
2016 36.2% 10,850 58.2% 17,467 4.8% 1,444
2012 24.8% 7,390 73.5% 21,878 1.4% 427
2008 25.4% 7,933 72.4% 22,591 2.2% 678
2004 23.3% 7,369 75.6% 23,859 1.1% 332
2000 19.4% 5,621 76.0% 22,051 4.6% 1,343
1996 14.3% 4,290 76.2% 22,805 9.5% 2,831
1992 17.5% 5,456 59.8% 18,652 22.8% 7,102
1988 29.2% 8,394 70.1% 20,184 0.8% 216
1984 35.5% 11,463 64.2% 20,722 0.3% 109
1980 29.6% 9,958 58.5% 19,644 11.9% 4,001
1976 27.1% 10,065 70.5% 26,126 2.4% 886
1972 36.4% 14,088 63.0% 24,379 0.6% 216

Education

Public schools

Fall River Public Schools operates all public schools in the city. Fall River has one public high school, B.M.C. Durfee High School. Durfee alum include Chris Herren, former NBA player for the Denver Nuggets and the Boston Celtics, former Supreme Court Justice James M. McGuire, and Humberto Sousa Medeiros, a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and former Archbishop of Boston.

The city is also home to Diman Regional Vocational Technical High School, which serves Fall River and the towns of Somerset, Swansea, and Westport. Chef Emeril Lagasse is a Diman Graduate. The school dates back to the Durfee Textile School, which branched out to include Diman. (The college, founded to promote the city's textile sciences, is now a part of University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.)

Private schools

In addition to public schools, there are several private and parochial schools in the city, including six Catholic schools, two private schools, a Christian academy (East Gate Christian Academy). Atlantis Charter School, a Pre-K through 8 charter school with a marine science-themed curriculum, was founded in 1995.[59] The city is also home to Bishop Connolly High School, a Catholic high school named for Bishop James Louis Connolly, fourth Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River. Bishop Feehan was located in Fall River from 1961 to 1972.[60]

Espirito Santo School opened on September 19, 1910, and was the first Portuguese grammar school to open in the United States. As of 2011, the majority of its students were ethnic Portuguese, and 70% of the students were bilingual.[61]

Higher education

University of Massachusetts Dartmouth has two branches in the city: the Professional and Continuing Education Center, located at 139 South Main Street, and the Advanced Technical & Manufacturing Center at the Narrows, on the former site of the Kerr Mills. Bristol Community College, founded in 1965, is a two-year college offering associate degrees as well transfer programs to four-year institutions. Eastern Nazarene College offers Adult Studies/LEAD classes in Fall River as well. It has GED programs and a recording studio.[62]

Sister cities

Fall River is twinned with:

Library

 
Fall River Public Library's main building in 2013

Fall River established its public library in 1860.[63][64] As of fiscal year 2022, the city of Fall River spends 0.53% ($1,861,112) of its budget on its public library—roughly $20 per person.[65]

The main location of the Fall River Public Library is located at 104 North Main Street, within the Downtown Fall River Historic District. It opened in 1899, and was designed by architect Ralph Adams Cram in the Renaissance Revival style. It is constructed from native Fall River granite. The building underwent an extensive renovation during the late 1990s and early 2000s.

The public library system also includes two branches; the South End Branch, located at 58 Arch Street, and the East End Branch, located at 1386 Pleasant Street.[66]

The Fall River Historical Society also maintains the Charlton Library of Fall River History.[67]

Transportation

 
The Braga Bridge and I-195

Fall River has historically been a transportation hub for the South Coast and Mount Hope Bay areas due to its location along the Taunton River. In addition to the Fall River Line, Slade's Ferry ran from Fall River to Somerset beginning in the 17th century. In 1875, Slade's Ferry Bridge was opened, connecting the two cities by trolley (and late by car). A two-tiered steel swing-span bridge, Slade's Ferry Bridge extended over 1,100 feet (340 m) from Remington Avenue in Fall River to the intersection of Wilbur Avenue, Riverside Avenue and Brayton Avenue in Somerset. The bridge was in use until 1970, when it was closed and subsequently demolished. The path of the bridge is now roughly marked by twin sets of power lines crossing the river.

In 1903, the state authorized construction of a second bridge, the Brightman Street Bridge, a four lane, 922-foot (281 m) long drawbridge ending at its namesake street; the bridge opened in 1908. Closed in 2011 and inaccessible to pedestrians and vehicles, the old span is still partially standing. By the 1980s, structural issues with the Brightman Street Bridge resulted in frequent closures for repair, straining local traffic and forcing motorists to take long detours. By 1983, plans were being made to build a new bridge 1,500 feet (460 m) north of the original, which would directly link with Route 138 in Somerset. Plans were put on hold in 1989 due to Coast Guard concerns. Construction of the new span began in the late 1990s and continued until late 2011. The new bridge, the Veterans Memorial Bridge, was formally dedicated on September 11, 2011.

Construction on the Charles M. Braga Jr. Memorial Bridge began in 1959, and the bridge opened to traffic in the spring of 1966. The six-lane cantilever truss highway bridge spans 1.2 miles (1.9 km) and was constructed in tandem with Interstate 195. The bridge is named for Charles M. Braga Jr., who died during the attack on Pearl Harbor while aboard the U.S.S. Pennsylvania.[68]

Major highways

 
Massachusetts Route 177's short Fall River section in Massachusetts

Interstate 195 is the main east-west artery through the city for motorists. The highway enters Fall River from the west via the Charles M. Braga Jr. Memorial Bridge, continuing through the center of the city to The Narrows and New Bedford and Cape Cod to the east. The highway roughly parallels both the Bay Colony/New Bedford Cape Cod Railroad as well the original path of the Quequechan River. In 1999, a cement ceiling tile fell from the roof of the tunnel beneath Government Center, landing on several cars and causing minor injuries. The incident caused major traffic problems in the area, and is reminiscent of the I-90 tunnel collapse (a part of the Big Dig) in Boston in 2006.

In addition to Interstate 195, Fall River is served by four other major routes. U.S. Route 6 passes over the Brightman Street Bridge headed east, before joining the city street grid and continuing into Westport as State Road. Route 24, a two lane, north-south expressway, enters the city (and the state) at its southern border and extends towards the city center, where it is briefly concurrent with Interstate 195 before branching north along the city's eastern border towards Taunton, Brockton and the Southeast Expressway into Boston. Route 79, another north-south divided highway, begins at the Braga Bridge and continues northbound along the city's waterfront to Airport Road, where it becomes concurrent with Route 24. Route 138 enters the city via the Veterans Memorial Bridge before joining the city grid and headed south towards Tiverton and Aquidneck Island. Route 81 begins in the heart of the city and heads south along city streets into Tiverton. Additionally, Route 177 clips the extreme southern part of the city for less than 0.25-mile (0.40 km) between Westport and Tiverton. Route 138, Route 24, I-195, and US 6 are based upon pre-Colonial and Colonial-era Native American trails.

Rail

Fall River last saw passenger rail service in 1958. An under-construction project named South Coast Rail will bring MBTA Commuter Rail service to a currently under-construction station serving the city via a slight rerouting/extension of the existing Middleborough/Lakeville Line as an interim service by 2023. The line is eventually planned to be rerouted via the Stoughton Branch and the former Dighton and Somerset Railroad by 2030. As of 2022, the nearest passenger rail station is Providence, which is served by the MBTA Providence/Stoughton line and Amtrak's Acela Express and Northeast Regional trains.

Bus

Along with New Bedford, Fall River shares ownership of the Southeastern Regional Transit Authority (SRTA), a bus network that services both cities, as well as Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, Freetown, Mattapoisett, Somerset, Swansea, and Westport.[69] The twelve fixed-route bus lines that service Fall River depart from the Louis D. Pettine Transportation Center, which opened in 2013.[70] Service to Providence, Tiverton, and Newport, Rhode Island is offered by the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority (RIPTA).[71]

Intercity bus service to Boston and Hyannis is provided by Peter Pan, with connections available to the company's larger network via transfers.[72]

Air

Fall River Municipal Airport, opened in 1951, served as a general aviation airport for small planes and commuter flights to the Cape and Islands for several decades. By the 1960s, the airport had fallen into a state of relative disrepair. it was closed on February 18, 1996, after the Federal Aviation Administration deemed it unsafe due to its proximity to the city's large landfill. Limited commercial service to the Cape and Islands, as well as general aviation, is available from New Bedford Regional Airport in nearby New Bedford, Massachusetts. Domestic and international commercial air service is available from T.F. Green Airport, located 13 miles west in Warwick, Rhode Island, and at Logan International Airport, located 45 miles north in Boston, Massachusetts.

Water

The Fall River Line Pier, located directly beneath the Braga Bridge, is a major port for commercial fishing[73] and cargo shipping, handling imports from and to Cape Verde, the Azores, Brazil, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic.[74] It has served as port-of-call for cruise ships,[75] and serves as the terminus for a passenger ferry line connecting to Newport, Rhode Island.[76] (Service to Block Island has been suspended since 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic).[77] The pier also offers connections to freight rail via the Massachusetts Coastal Railroad.

Soccer

Fall River has a rich soccer history. The game was first introduced to the city in the 1880s by immigrants from Lancashire and Glasgow who worked in the local textile industry. In later decades, the arrival of immigrants from Portugal helped to sustain the game's popularity. Between 1888 and 1892, teams from Fall River won the American Cup for five straight years. One of these teams, the Fall River Rovers, also won the 1917 National Challenge Cup. The star and captain of the team was local-born Thomas Swords, who in 1916 captained the United States in their first official international.

During the 1920s and early 1930s, the Fall River Marksmen were one of the most successful soccer clubs in the United States and were American soccer champions on seven occasions. Another local club, Fall River F.C., were champions in 1932.

The Marksmen won the National Challenge Cup four times. Among their most notable players were Billy Gonsalves and Bert Patenaude, who were both raised in Fall River. Both played for the United States at the first ever soccer World Cup in 1930. Patenaude is also credited with scoring the first ever hat-trick in World Cup history. He scored all three goals in the United States' 3–0 victory over Paraguay.

During the 1940s, Ponta Delgada S.C. became one of the most successful amateur teams in the United States. In 1947 the team was selected to represent the United States at the North American soccer championship. In 1950, two of their local born players, Ed Souza and John Souza, played at the World Cup, helping the United States defeat England 1–0.[78]

On January 18, 2011, Andrew Sousa was drafted by New England Revolution, becoming the first ever Fall River native to play in Major League Soccer.

In 2019, Fall River Football Club and Fall River Marksmen FC returned to the field after a long hiatus. Both clubs participated in the 1st annual Taça de Fall River, a Home & Away match series, with Fall River Football Club becoming the eventual winners.

Points of interest

 
Battleship Cove, the world's largest historic naval ship exhibit

Notable people

 
The Borden family home, now a bed and breakfast

See also

References

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    • Coburn, Frederick William (1920). History of Lowell and Its People. Vol. I. Lewis Publishing Company. p. 345. For Fall River's rapid rise...the labor union movement has been much more vigorous in 'the City of the Dinner Pail' and at New Bedford than it ever has been in Lowell
    • "The Dinner Pail". American Heritage. Vol. XLVII, no. 2. April 1996. Fall River has been called the City of the Dinner Pail. Although I haven't seen a dinner nail [sic] in many years, I remember it well. It was made of galvanized tin, had three nesting compartments, and a bail handle.
  2. ^ Chapter 2-1, Current City Charter September 14, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, rev. 1995 under ordinance 1995-42.
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External links

  • Fall River official website
  • Beers, D.G. 1872 Atlas of Essex County . Click on the map for a very large image. Also see detailed map of .
  • Fall River History, Old Newspaper Articles, Genealogy

fall, river, massachusetts, fall, river, redirects, here, other, uses, fall, river, disambiguation, fall, river, city, bristol, county, massachusetts, united, states, fall, river, population, 2020, united, states, census, making, tenth, largest, city, state, f. Fall River redirects here For other uses see Fall River disambiguation Fall River is a city in Bristol County Massachusetts United States Fall River s population was 94 000 at the 2020 United States Census 6 making it the tenth largest city in the state Fall RiverCityDowntown Fall River in September 2007FlagSealLogoNicknames The Scholarship City The River Spindle City Where the River Falls The City of the Dinner Pail 1 Motto s We ll Try 2 Make It Here 3 Location of Fall River in Bristol County MassachusettsFall RiverLocation in MassachusettsShow map of MassachusettsFall RiverLocation in the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 41 42 05 N 71 09 20 W 41 70139 N 71 15556 W 41 70139 71 15556 Coordinates 41 42 05 N 71 09 20 W 41 70139 N 71 15556 W 41 70139 71 15556Country United StatesState MassachusettsCountyBristolSettled1670Incorporated town 1803Incorporated city 1854Government TypeMayor council MayorPaul Coogan City council 4 Cliff Ponte PresidentPam Laliberte LebeauVice PresidentShawn E CadimeMichelle DionneBradford L KilbyTrott LeeChristopher PeckhamLeo O PelletierLinda PereiraArea 5 Total40 24 sq mi 104 22 km2 Land33 12 sq mi 85 79 km2 Water7 12 sq mi 18 43 km2 Elevation72 ft 37 m Population 2020 Total94 000 Density2 837 91 sq mi 1 095 73 km2 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern Summer DST UTC 4 Eastern ZIP Codes02720 02724Area code508 774FIPS code25 23000GNIS feature ID0612595Websitewww wbr fallriverma wbr orgWelcome sign in Fall River Fall River municipal flag over City Hall Located along the eastern shore of Mount Hope Bay at the mouth of the Taunton River the city gained recognition during the 19th century as a leading textile manufacturing center in the United States While the textile industry has long since moved on its impact on the city s culture and landscape is still prominent Fall River s official motto is We ll Try dating back to the aftermath of the Great Fire of 1843 Nicknamed The Scholarship City after Irving Fradkin founded Dollars for Scholars there in 1958 mayor Jasiel Correia introduced the Make It Here slogan as part of a citywide rebranding effort in 2017 3 Fall River is known for the Lizzie Borden case the Fall River cult murders Portuguese culture its numerous 19th century textile mills and Battleship Cove home of the world s largest collection of World War II naval vessels including the battleship USS Massachusetts Fall River has its city hall located over an interstate highway Contents 1 History 1 1 Colonial period to 1800s 1 2 Industrial development and prosperity 1 2 1 19th century 1 2 2 Expansion and growth 1 2 3 20th century 1 2 4 Modern era 2 Geography 2 1 Neighborhoods 2 2 Parks 3 Demographics 3 1 Income 4 Culture 4 1 Performing arts 4 2 Visual arts 4 3 Religion 5 Government 5 1 City government and services 5 2 State and federal representation 6 Education 6 1 Public schools 6 2 Private schools 6 3 Higher education 7 Sister cities 8 Library 9 Transportation 9 1 Major highways 9 2 Rail 9 3 Bus 9 4 Air 9 5 Water 10 Soccer 11 Points of interest 12 Notable people 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Fall River Massachusetts Colonial period to 1800s Edit An 1877 pictorial map of Fall River with a list of the city s sights At the time of the establishment of the Plymouth Colony in 1620 the area that would one day become Troy City was inhabited by the Pokanoket Wampanoag tribe headquartered at Mount Hope in what is now Bristol Rhode Island The falling river that the city s name refers to is the Quequechan River pronounced quick a shan by locals which flows through the city before draining into the bay Quequechan is a Wampanoag word believed to mean falling river or leaping falling waters During the 1960s Interstate 195 was constructed through the city along the length of the Quequechan River The portion west of Plymouth Avenue was routed underground through a series of box culverts while much of the eastern section mill pond was filled in for the highway embankment In 1653 Freetown was settled at Assonet Bay by members of the Massachusetts Bay Colony as part of Freeman s Purchase which included the northern part of what is now Fall River In 1683 Freetown was incorporated as a town within the colony The southern part of what is now Fall River was incorporated as the town of Tiverton as part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1694 a few years after the merger with Plymouth Colony In 1746 in the settlement of a colonial boundary dispute between Rhode Island and Massachusetts Tiverton was annexed to Rhode Island along with Little Compton and what is now Newport County Rhode Island The boundary was then placed approximately at what is now Columbia Street In 1703 Benjamin Church a hero of King Philip s War established a saw mill grist mill and a fulling mill on the Quequechan River In 1714 Church sold his land along with the water rights to Richard Borden of Tiverton and his brother Joseph This transaction would prove to be extremely valuable 100 years later helping to establish the Borden family as the leaders in the development of Fall River s textile industry During the 18th century the area consisted mostly of small farms and relatively few inhabitants In 1778 the Battle of Freetown was fought here during the American Revolutionary War 1775 1783 after British raids badly damaged Bristol and Warren The militia of Fall River at that time known as Freetown put up a stronger defense against a British force In 1803 Fall River was separated from Freetown and officially incorporated as its own town A year later Fall River changed its name to Troy The name Troy was used for 30 years and was officially changed back to Fall River on February 12 1834 During this period Fall River was governed by a three member Board of Selectmen until it became a City in 1854 In 1835 The Fall River Female Anti Slavery Society was formed one of the many anti slavery societies in New England to promote abolition and to allow a women s space to conduct social activism There was an initial group which was wary of allowing free black full membership so a second group this one was formed in response by Elizabeth Buffum Chace and her sisters who were committed to allowing free black women membership 7 Sarah G Buffman a delegate from the group was sent to the Anti Slavery Convention of American Women in Philadelphia in 1838 Buffman signed all three of the statements that the convention s delegates agreed on 8 In July 1843 the first great fire in Fall River s history destroyed much of the town center including the Atheneum which housed the Skeleton in Armor which had been discovered in a sand bank in 1832 near what is now the corner of Hartwell and Fifth Street During this time the southern part of what is now Fall River south of Columbia Street remained part of Tiverton Rhode Island In 1856 the town of Tiverton Rhode Island voted to split off its industrial northern section as Fall River Rhode Island In 1861 after decades of dispute the United States Supreme Court moved the state boundary to what is now State Avenue unifying both Fall Rivers as a city in Massachusetts among other changes see History of Massachusetts Rhode Island eastern border Industrial development and prosperity Edit See also List of mills in Fall River Massachusetts Group of workers in the Sagamore Manufacturing Company in August 1911 photographed by Lewis Hine 19th century Edit The early establishment of the textile industry in Fall River grew out of the developments made in nearby Rhode Island beginning with Samuel Slater at Pawtucket Rhode Island in 1793 In 1811 Col Joseph Durfee the Revolutionary War veteran and hero of the Battle of Freetown in 1778 built the Globe Manufactory a spinning mill at the outlet of Cook Pond on Dwelly St near what is now Globe Four Corners in the city s South End It was part of Tiverton Rhode Island at the time While Durfee s mill itself was not particularly successful its establishment marked the beginning of Fall River s time as a mill city The real development of Fall River s industry however would occur along the falling river from which it was named about a mile north of Durfee s first mill The Quequechan River with its eight falls combined to make Fall River the best tidewater privilege in southern New England It was perfect for industrialization big enough for profit and expansion yet small enough to be developed by local capital without interference from Boston 9 The Fall River Manufactory was established by David Anthony and others in 1813 That same year the Troy Cotton amp Woolen Manufactory was founded by a group of investors led by Oliver Chace of Swansea Chase had worked as a carpenter for Samuel Slater in his early years The Troy Mill opened in 1814 at the upper end of the falls In 1821 Colonel Richard Borden along with Maj Bradford Durfee established the Fall River Iron Works at the lower part of the Quequechan River Durfee was a shipwright and Borden was the owner of a grist mill After an uncertain start in which some early investors pulled out the Fall River Iron Works was incorporated in 1825 The Iron Works began producing nails bar stock and other items such as bands for casks in the nearby New Bedford whaling industry They soon gained a reputation for producing nails of high quality and business flourished In 1827 Col Borden began regular steamship service to Providence Rhode Island 10 The American Print Works was established in 1835 by Holder Borden uncle of Col Richard Borden With the leadership of the Borden family the American Print Works later known as the American Printing Company became the largest and most important textile company in the city employing thousands at its peak in the early 20th century Richard Borden also constructed the Metacomet Mill in 1847 which today is the oldest remaining textile mill in the city it is located on Anawan Street By 1845 the Quequechan s power had been all but maximized The Massasoit Steam Mill was established in 1846 above the dam near the end of Pleasant Street However it would be another decade or so when improvements in the steam engine by George Corliss would enable the construction of the first large steam powered mill in the city the Union Mills in 1859 The advantage of being able to import bales of cotton and coal to fuel the steam engines to Fall River s deep water harbor and ship them out from the same made Fall River the city of choice for a series of cotton mill magnates The first railroad line serving Fall River The Fall River Branch Railroad was incorporated in 1844 and opened in 1845 In 1847 the first regular steamboat service to New York City began The Fall River Line as it came to be known operated until 1937 and for many years was the preferred way to travel between Boston and Manhattan The Old Colony Railroad and Fall River Railroad merged in 1854 forming the Old Colony and Fall River Railroad In 1854 Fall River was officially incorporated as a city it had a population of about 12 000 11 Its first mayor was James Buffington Fall River profited well from the American Civil War and was in a fine position to take advantage of the prosperity that followed By 1868 it had surpassed Lowell as the leading textile city in America with over 500 000 spindles Expansion and growth Edit Border City Mill In 1871 and 1872 a most dramatic expansion of the city occurred 15 new corporations were founded building 22 new mills throughout the city while some of the older mills expanded The city s population increased by 20 000 people during these two years while overall mill capacity doubled to more than 1 000 000 spindles By 1876 the city had one sixth of all New England cotton capacity and one half of all print cloth production The Spindle City as it became known was second in the world to only Manchester England in terms of output To house the thousands of new workers mostly Irish and French Canadian immigrants during these years over 12 000 units of company housing were built Unlike the well spaced boardinghouses and tidy cottages of Rhode Island worker housing in Fall River consisted of thousands of wood framed multi family tenements usually three floor triple deckers with up to six apartments Many more privately owned tenements supplemented the company housing 12 During the 19th century Fall River became famous for the granite rock on which much of the city is built Several granite quarries operated during this time the largest of which was the Beattie Granite Quarry near what is now the corner of North Quarry and Locust Streets 13 Many of the mills in the city were built from this stone and it was highly regarded as a building material for many public buildings and private homes alike The Chateau sur Mer mansion in Newport Rhode Island was constructed from Fall River granite known for its greyish pink color While most of the mills above the hill were constructed from native Fall River granite nearly all of their counterparts along the Taunton River and Mount Hope Bay were made of red brick due to the high costs and impracticality associated with transporting the rock through the city and down the hill One notable exception is the Sagamore Mills on North Main Street which were constructed from similar rock quarried in Freetown and brought to the site by rail 20th century Edit Davol Mills Massachusetts Route 79 viaduct and Braga Bridge in Fall River The Quequechan River flows beneath the parking lot The viaduct was demolished in 2014 and replaced with a surface boulevard Fall River rode a wave of economic prosperity well into the early 20th century During this time the city boasted a bustling downtown with several upscale hotels and theaters As the city continuously expanded during the late 19th century additional infrastructure such as parks schools streetcar lines a public water supply and sewerage system were constructed to meet the needs of its growing population From 1896 to 1912 Fall River was the headquarters of the E P Charlton amp Company a chain of five and ten cent stores Founded at Fall River in 1890 by Seymour H Knox and Earle Perry Charlton as the Knox amp Charlton Five and Ten Cent Store E P Charlton operated fifty eight stores in the United States and Canada by the time of its merger with several other retailers to form the F W Woolworth Company in 1912 In 1920 the population of Fall River peaked at 120 485 14 North Main Street c 1910 First Cotton Mill built in 1811 Printing Works c 1920 The Charlton Block 1908The cotton mills of Fall River had built their business largely on one product print cloth Around 1910 the city s largest employer the American Printing Company APC employed 6 000 people and was the largest company printer of cloth in the world Dozens of other city mills solely produced cloth to be printed at the APC World War I had provided a general increase in demand for textiles and many of the mills of New England benefited during this time The post war economy quickly slowed however and production quickly outpaced demand The Northern mills faced serious competition from their Southern counterparts due to lower labor and transportation costs as well as the South s large investment in new machinery and other equipment In 1923 Fall River faced the first wave of mill closures Several of the mills merged allowing them to remain in business into the late 1920s The worst fire in Fall River s history occurred on the evening of February 2 1928 15 It began when workers were dismantling the recently vacated Pocasset Mill During the night the fire spread quickly and wiped out a large portion of downtown City Hall was spared but was badly damaged Today many of the structures near the corner of North Main and Bedford Street date from the early 1930s as they were rebuilt soon after the fire By the 1930s and the Great Depression many of the mills were out of business and the city was bankrupt The once mighty American Printing Company finally closed for good in 1934 In 1937 their huge plant waterfront on Water Street was acquired by the Firestone Tire amp Rubber Company and soon employed 2 600 people A handful managed to survive through World War II and into the 1950s In October 1941 just a few weeks before the attack on Pearl Harbor another large fire broke out in the main building of the printworks The fire was a major setback to the U S war effort 30 000 pounds 13 607 kilograms of raw rubber worth 15 million was lost in the inferno 16 With the demise of the textile industry many of the city s mills were occupied by smaller companies some in the garment industry traditionally based in the New York City area but attracted to New England by the lure of cheap factory space and an eager workforce in need of jobs 17 The garment industry survived in the city well into the 1990s by which point it had fallen victim to globalization and foreign competition 18 Modern era Edit Fall River s old City Hall which was demolished in 1962 In the 1960s the city s landscape was drastically transformed with the construction of the Braga Bridge and Interstate 195 which cut directly through the heart of the city In the wake of the highway building boom the city lost many of its longtime landmarks The Quequechan River was filled in and re routed for much of its length The historic falls were diverted into underground culverts A series of elevated steel viaducts was constructed to allow access the new bridge Many historic buildings were demolished including the Old City Hall the Troy Mills the Second Granite Block built after the 1928 fire as well as other 19th century brick and mortar buildings near Old City Hall Constructed directly over Interstate 195 in the place of it predecessor the new city hall known as Government Center was opened in 1976 after years of construction delays and quality control problems Built in the Brutalist style popular in the 1960s and 1970s the new city hall drew complaints from city workers and residents almost immediately citation needed In 1970 Valle s Steak House opened one if its landmark restaurants on William S Canning Boulevard in the city s South End The steak house was popular with Fall River residents but economic challenges caused the chain to close all of its restaurants in the 1980s 19 Also during the 1970s several modern apartment high rise towers were built throughout the city many part of the Fall River Housing Authority There were two built near Milliken Boulevard two on Pleasant Street in Flint Village another on South Main Street and in the north end off Robeson Street Today these high rises mostly house the elderly In 1978 the city opened the new B M C Durfee High School in the North End replacing the historic Rock Street building that had become overcrowded and outdated for use as a high school The new Durfee is one of the largest high schools in Massachusetts Since approximately 1980 there has been a considerable amount of new development in the North End of the city A significant number of new single and multi family housing developments have been constructed particularly along North Main Street In 2021 Fall River was ranked the 96th most dangerous city in the United States It was also the third most dangerous city in Massachusetts and fourth most dangerous city in New England 20 On January 20 2019 a cannabis dispensary opened in Fall River becoming only the sixth dispensary in Massachusetts and the first in Southeastern Massachusetts to open to anyone 21 years or older 21 Geography Edit Fall River on Mount Hope Bay in 1905 According to the U S Census Bureau the city has a total area of 40 2 square miles 104 2 km2 of which 33 1 square miles 85 8 km2 is land and 7 1 square miles 18 4 km2 or 17 68 is water 22 Water power from the Quequechan River and natural granite helped form and shape Fall River into the city it is today The Quequechan River once flowed through downtown unrestricted providing water power for the mills and in the last 1 2 mile 0 8 km of its length down a series of eight steep waterfalls falling 128 feet 39 m into the Taunton River at the head of the deep Mount Hope Bay Fall River and surrounding areas are located in the northeastern coastal forests which make up the temperate broadleaf and mixed forest biome Fall River was the only city on the East Coast of the United States to have had an exposed waterfall in part of its downtown area it flowed less than 1 2 mile 0 8 km into a sheltered harbor at the edge of downtown Fall River has two large lakes originally one lake and a large portion of protected woodlands on the eastern part of the city which is higher in elevation with the Quequechan River draining out of the ponds and flowing 2 5 miles 4 0 km through the heart of the city emptying out an estimated 26 million US gallons 98 10 6 l per day into the deep Mount Hope Bay Taunton River estuary in the western part of the city The city lies on the eastern border of Mount Hope Bay which begins at the mouth of the Taunton River starting south from the Charles M Braga Jr Memorial Bridge The greater portion of the city is built on hillsides rising quite abruptly from the water s edge to a height of more than 200 feet 60 m From the summits of these hills the terrain extends back in a comparatively level table land on which a large section of the city now stands Two miles 3 km eastward from the shore lies a chain of deep and narrow ponds eight miles 13 km long with an average width of three quarters of a mile and covering an area of 3 500 acres 14 km2 These ponds are supplied by springs and brooks draining a watershed of 20 000 acres 81 km2 The northern pond is the North Watuppa Pond the city s main reservoir The southern pond is the South Watuppa Pond The narrow strip of land where the two ponds meet is known as The Narrows East of the North Watuppa Pond is the Watuppa Reservation which includes several thousand acres of forest land for water supply protection that extends north into the Freetown Fall River State Forest and east to the Copicut Reservoir Copicut Pond is located on the border of Dartmouth in North Dartmouth s Hixville section that borders Fall River Copicut Hill the highest point in Fall River is located between North Watuppa Pond and the Copicut Reservoir The hill has a summit elevation of greater than 404 feet 123 m above sea level 23 The Quequechan River breaks out of its bed in the west part of the South Watuppa Pond just west of The Narrows and flows through the city partially underground in conduits where it falls to a channel leading to what is now Fall River Heritage State Park at Battleship Cove on the Taunton River The Quequechan River originally flowed unconfined over an almost level course for more than a mile In the last half mile 800 m of its progress it rushes down the hillside in a narrow precipitous rocky channel creating the falls for which Fall River is named In this distance the total fall is about 132 feet 40 m and the volume of water 122 cubic feet 3 5 m3 per second Quequechan River Rail Trail Fall River s Granite Mills in 1908 Statue of Marquis de Lafayette stands in Lafayette Park Originally an attractive feature of the landscape the Quequechan has seldom been visible since it was covered over by cotton mills and the Bay Colony Railroad line in the 19th century As the Quequechan became an underground feature of the industrial landscape it also became a sewer In the 20th century the mills were abandoned and some of them burned exposing the falls once more Because of highway construction in the 1960s the waterfalls were buried under Interstate 195 which crosses the Taunton River at Battleship Cove Plans exist to daylight the falls restore or re create them and build a green belt with a bicycle path along the Quequechan River In the south end Cook Pond also formerly known as Laurel Lake is located east of the Taunton River and west of the South Watuppa Pond The area between the modern day Cook and South Watuppa Ponds east of the Taunton River and north of Tiverton Rhode Island was once referred to as Pocasset Swamp during King Philip s War in 1675 1676 Neighborhoods Edit The city is divided into two by I 195 downtown sits between them The two sections of the city contain a number of distinct neighborhoods Northern Neighborhoods The North End North of I 195 extending to the city s northern border with Freetown Massachusetts and western border with Dartmouth Massachusetts Waterfront Battleship Cove east of Route 79 to the edge of the Taunton River Mount Hope Bay The Highlands Lower Highlands Bedford St up High St to Prospect St Upper Highlands Prospect St along President Ave up to Wilson Rd Fall River Industrial Park Airport Road area north of Wilson Rd bounded to the west by Route 24 and to the east by Riggenbach Rd Fall River Freetown State ForestSouthern Neighborhoods The South End South of I 195 extending to the city s southern border with Tiverton RI Flint Village The Flint South and east of Bedford and Quarry Sts respectively Globe Village Cook Pond Broadway Townsend Hill South Main and Bay St Neighborhoods bordering Tiverton R I MaplewoodParks Edit Fall River has 23 municipal parks and playgrounds including three designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted 24 25 Fall River s more notable parks include Kennedy Park Olmsted 1868 South Main Street 54 acres four tennis courts three baseball fields two basketball courts softball field skating pond playground 24 North Park Olmsted 1901 President Avenue 25 acres two baseball fields two basketball courts playground skating pond skate park 24 Ruggles Park Olmsted 1903 Locust Street 9 acres basketball court playground softball field 24 Bicentennial Park Davol Street 2 acres boat ramp 24 Lafayette Park Eastern Avenue 11 acres baseball field basketball court playground swimming pool tennis court skate park 24 Quequechan River Rail Trail 2 5 mile Bike path from Britland Park and Rodman Street to Westport Line on Route 6 26 The city is also home to several Massachusetts state parks including Fall River Heritage State Park and Freetown Fall River State Forest Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 18101 296 18201 594 23 0 18304 158 160 9 18406 738 62 0 185011 524 71 0 186014 026 21 7 187026 766 90 8 188048 961 82 9 189074 398 52 0 1900104 863 40 9 1910119 295 13 8 1920120 485 1 0 1930115 274 4 3 1940115 428 0 1 1950111 963 3 0 196099 942 10 7 197096 898 3 0 198092 574 4 5 199092 703 0 1 200091 938 0 8 201088 857 3 4 202094 000 5 8 population estimate Source United States census records and Population Estimates Program data 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Source U S Decennial Census 38 Plymouth Avenue in Fall River According to the U S Census of 2020 the population of Fall River is 94 000 The largest racial groups within the city were 87 2 83 4 Non Hispanic White 3 5 African American 2 5 Asian and 0 2 Native American and 7 4 Hispanic or Latino 49 of residents are Luso American or have origins somewhere in the former Portuguese Empire 37 of the population described themselves as being of Portuguese ancestry The next largest groups by ancestry are French 12 4 the original immigrants to largely populate Fall River until the Portuguese started immigrating to the area Irish 8 9 Cape Verdean 8 1 English 6 0 French Canadian 5 9 Puerto Rican 4 5 and Italian 3 6 39 Fall River and its surrounding communities form much of the Massachusetts portion of the Providence metropolitan area which has an estimated population of 1 622 520 In percentage terms Fall River has the largest Portuguese American population in the United States The exact percentage of the population they make up is disputed a 2005 study by the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth estimated that 49 6 of city residents are Portuguese American 40 while other sources estimate that 43 9 are 41 The city has 38 759 households and 23 558 families The population density was 2 963 7 inhabitants per square mile 1 144 3 km2 There were 41 857 housing units at an average density of 1 349 3 per square mile 521 0 km2 Of the 38 759 households 29 9 had children under the age of 18 living with them 40 3 were married couples living together 16 5 had a female householder with no husband present and 39 2 were non families 34 2 of all households were made up of individuals and 14 2 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 32 and the average family size was 3 00 In terms of age the population was spread out with 24 1 under the age of 18 9 2 from 18 to 24 29 8 from 25 to 44 20 0 from 45 to 64 and 16 9 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 36 years For every 100 females there were 87 7 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 82 9 males The median household income was 29 014 and the median family income was 37 671 Males had a median income of 31 330 versus 22 883 for females The per capita income for the city was 16 118 About 14 0 of families and 17 1 of the population were below the poverty line including 25 4 of those under age 18 and 17 4 of those age 65 or over 39 Income Edit See also List of Massachusetts locations by per capita income Fall River is ranked 344th out of Massachusetts 350 municipalities in terms of per capita income 42 43 44 Rank ZIP Code ZCTA Per capitaincome Medianhouseholdincome Medianfamilyincome Population Number ofhouseholdsMassachusetts 35 763 66 866 84 900 6 605 058 2 530 147Bristol County 28 837 55 298 72 018 549 870 210 037United States 28 155 53 046 64 719 311 536 594 115 610 2161 02720 25 090 41 910 56 091 30 811 13 079Fall River 21 257 33 211 42 962 88 811 38 2582 02721 19 321 30 180 38 133 26 141 10 9433 02723 18 980 28 120 34 835 14 298 6 4424 02724 18 827 27 390 39 246 16 769 7 561Culture Edit The 19 Banners of Allegiance at Gromada Plaza represent the diverse nationalities of Fall River s residents 45 Kennedy Park Fall River retains a vibrant mix of cultures that date back to its time as an immigration hub While the distinct ethnic neighborhoods formed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries have changed over the years the legacy of immigrants who came to work in the mills can be found in the various parishes and restaurants throughout the city This heritage is commemorated by the 19 flags which make up the Banners of Allegiance at Gromada Plaza 45 Erected in 1979 across from City Hall and restored in 2019 this landmark commemorates the diverse nationalities of Fall River s residents 45 The city is host to many ethnic festivals throughout the year The largest the Great Holy Ghost Festival occurs each August at Kennedy Park and attracts over 200 000 visitors The feast is held over a total of four days 46 Each summer the city uses its waterfront at Heritage State Park and Battleship Cove for a Fourth of July fireworks display For many years the waterfront also hosted the annual Fall River Celebrates America Festival sponsored by the Fall River Chamber of Commerce The event was suspended in 2010 due to lack of financial support stemming from the Great Recession While the Chamber of Commerce hoped to hold the event again in 2011 it has not been held since 47 Performing arts Edit A number of community organizations have made concerted efforts to promote the arts in the city using vacant mill space for studios and performance centers The Narrows Center for the Arts located on Anawan Street has been played by a number of national and international acts since its opening in 2001 including Rosanne Cash Los Lobos Blue Oyster Cult Dr John The Avett Brothers Richie Havens Lake Street Dive and Susan Tedeschi 48 A proposal is in place to revitalize the downtown area by the creation of an Arts District Along with the art centers being established throughout the city Fall River has numerous Portuguese Community Bands throughout the city that perform throughout the year Visual arts Edit In 2020 artists and Fall River natives Harry Gould Harvey IV and Brittni Ann Harvey opened the Fall River Museum of Contemporary Art Fall River MoCA in the first floor of a former mill on Bedford Street 49 The museum aims to create culturally relevant programming that is in dialog with the global contemporary art world 50 Religion Edit St Mary s Cathedral St Anne s Church Temple Beth El Fall River remains a predominantly Roman Catholic city due to the French Canadians who first populated the city and is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River St Mary s Cathedral was formed in the 1850s by Irish immigrants Edgar DaCunha has served as bishop since 2014 Santo Christo Parish on Columbia Street is known as the Mother Church of the Portuguese parishes in the diocese The Church was established in 1892 to serve the local Portuguese community Many of whom came from the Azorean island of Sao Miguel Other notable Catholic churches include St Anne s Church Good Shepherd Church formerly Saint Patrick s and the former Notre Dame de Lourdes in the Flint neighborhood which was destroyed in a large fire on May 10 1982 At the time of the city s peak population in 1920 there were over two dozen Catholic parishes existing throughout the city with each ethnic enclave having its own parish In recent years the diocese has merged several parishes in the city closing some and renaming the united congregations bringing the total number of parishes in the diocese to ten as of 2021 51 St Louis the King Church closed in 2000 52 Historically the Highlands neighborhood was predominantly Protestant with several churches in the area of North Main and Rock Streets notably including the Central Congregational Church and the First Congregational Church known for hosting many New England luminaries before its demise in a fire in the 1980s German Jewish settlers arrived in Fall River beginning in the 1860s and continuing into the 1870s 53 The 1880s and 1890s saw the arrival of Russian Jewish immigrants 53 At the start of the 20th century Fall River was home to three synagogues 53 The Jewish community historically worked in peddling retail and clothing stores 53 Temple Beth El was founded in 1924 on High Street 53 In 1970 there were three congregations serving 4 000 Jews in Fall River by 2008 that number had declined to less than 1 000 53 Various other ethno religious groups also live in the city Recent arrivals from Cambodia and India maintain temples in the city such as Wat Udomsaharatanaram and BAPS Shri Swaminarayanwasi Government EditCity government and services Edit Fall River Government Center Fall River Superior Court in 1905 The city is led by the mayor council form of government There is a mayor and nine at large city councillors elected in odd years to two year terms The mayor along with their appointed city administrator lead and manage the city s day to day operations The majority of the city s municipal offices are located at Government Center Further information List of mayors of Fall River Massachusetts The city s police department is consolidated into a large central police station There are six fire stations located around the city The Fire Headquarters is located on Commerce Drive across from the former Fall River Municipal Airport There are four post offices in the city The central located adjacent to Government Center is modeled after the James Farley Post Office in New York City The central branch was named after the late Sgt Robert Barrett in May 2011 a Fall River native who died in Afghanistan in 2010 Additional branches are located in the Flint the South End and the Highlands The city is home to several state and county level courthouses The murder trial of former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez in 2015 was held at the district courthouse on South Main Street 54 State and federal representation Edit Fall River is represented by three separate Massachusetts House of Representatives districts only one the 7th Bristol is wholly within city limits As of 2021 the city is represented by Democrats Carole Fiola 6th Bristol Alan Silvia 7th Bristol and Paul A Schmid III 8th Bristol The city is entirely within the First Bristol and Plymouth district represented by State Senator Michael Rodrigues D Fall River The First Bristol and Plymouth also includes the towns of Freetown Lakeville Rochester Somerset and Swansea 55 56 Fall River s state highways are patrolled by the Third Barracks of Troop D of the Massachusetts State Police based out of Dartmouth On the national level the city is divided between two congressional districts Massachusetts 4th congressional district represented by Democrat Jake Auchincloss contains most of the city while Massachusetts 9th congressional district represented by Democrat Bill Keating contains a part of the northeastern portion of the city Voter registration and party enrollment as of February 1 2019 57 Party Number of voters PercentageDemocratic 20 658 44 10 Republican 3 880 8 28 Unaffiliated 21 353 45 59 Libertarian 951 2 03 Total 46 842 100 Presidential election resultsPresidential election results 58 Year Republican Democratic Third parties2020 43 0 13 571 55 3 17 459 1 7 5352016 36 2 10 850 58 2 17 467 4 8 1 4442012 24 8 7 390 73 5 21 878 1 4 4272008 25 4 7 933 72 4 22 591 2 2 6782004 23 3 7 369 75 6 23 859 1 1 3322000 19 4 5 621 76 0 22 051 4 6 1 3431996 14 3 4 290 76 2 22 805 9 5 2 8311992 17 5 5 456 59 8 18 652 22 8 7 1021988 29 2 8 394 70 1 20 184 0 8 2161984 35 5 11 463 64 2 20 722 0 3 1091980 29 6 9 958 58 5 19 644 11 9 4 0011976 27 1 10 065 70 5 26 126 2 4 8861972 36 4 14 088 63 0 24 379 0 6 216Education Edit BMC Durfee High School Bristol Community College Bishop Connolly High School Public schools Edit Main article Fall River Public Schools Fall River Public Schools operates all public schools in the city Fall River has one public high school B M C Durfee High School Durfee alum include Chris Herren former NBA player for the Denver Nuggets and the Boston Celtics former Supreme Court Justice James M McGuire and Humberto Sousa Medeiros a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and former Archbishop of Boston The city is also home to Diman Regional Vocational Technical High School which serves Fall River and the towns of Somerset Swansea and Westport Chef Emeril Lagasse is a Diman Graduate The school dates back to the Durfee Textile School which branched out to include Diman The college founded to promote the city s textile sciences is now a part of University of Massachusetts Dartmouth Private schools Edit In addition to public schools there are several private and parochial schools in the city including six Catholic schools two private schools a Christian academy East Gate Christian Academy Atlantis Charter School a Pre K through 8 charter school with a marine science themed curriculum was founded in 1995 59 The city is also home to Bishop Connolly High School a Catholic high school named for Bishop James Louis Connolly fourth Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River Bishop Feehan was located in Fall River from 1961 to 1972 60 Espirito Santo School opened on September 19 1910 and was the first Portuguese grammar school to open in the United States As of 2011 the majority of its students were ethnic Portuguese and 70 of the students were bilingual 61 Higher education Edit University of Massachusetts Dartmouth has two branches in the city the Professional and Continuing Education Center located at 139 South Main Street and the Advanced Technical amp Manufacturing Center at the Narrows on the former site of the Kerr Mills Bristol Community College founded in 1965 is a two year college offering associate degrees as well transfer programs to four year institutions Eastern Nazarene College offers Adult Studies LEAD classes in Fall River as well It has GED programs and a recording studio 62 Sister cities EditFall River is twinned with Ponta Delgada The Azores PortugalLibrary Edit Fall River Public Library s main building in 2013 Fall River established its public library in 1860 63 64 As of fiscal year 2022 the city of Fall River spends 0 53 1 861 112 of its budget on its public library roughly 20 per person 65 The main location of the Fall River Public Library is located at 104 North Main Street within the Downtown Fall River Historic District It opened in 1899 and was designed by architect Ralph Adams Cram in the Renaissance Revival style It is constructed from native Fall River granite The building underwent an extensive renovation during the late 1990s and early 2000s The public library system also includes two branches the South End Branch located at 58 Arch Street and the East End Branch located at 1386 Pleasant Street 66 The Fall River Historical Society also maintains the Charlton Library of Fall River History 67 Transportation Edit The Braga Bridge and I 195 Fall River has historically been a transportation hub for the South Coast and Mount Hope Bay areas due to its location along the Taunton River In addition to the Fall River Line Slade s Ferry ran from Fall River to Somerset beginning in the 17th century In 1875 Slade s Ferry Bridge was opened connecting the two cities by trolley and late by car A two tiered steel swing span bridge Slade s Ferry Bridge extended over 1 100 feet 340 m from Remington Avenue in Fall River to the intersection of Wilbur Avenue Riverside Avenue and Brayton Avenue in Somerset The bridge was in use until 1970 when it was closed and subsequently demolished The path of the bridge is now roughly marked by twin sets of power lines crossing the river In 1903 the state authorized construction of a second bridge the Brightman Street Bridge a four lane 922 foot 281 m long drawbridge ending at its namesake street the bridge opened in 1908 Closed in 2011 and inaccessible to pedestrians and vehicles the old span is still partially standing By the 1980s structural issues with the Brightman Street Bridge resulted in frequent closures for repair straining local traffic and forcing motorists to take long detours By 1983 plans were being made to build a new bridge 1 500 feet 460 m north of the original which would directly link with Route 138 in Somerset Plans were put on hold in 1989 due to Coast Guard concerns Construction of the new span began in the late 1990s and continued until late 2011 The new bridge the Veterans Memorial Bridge was formally dedicated on September 11 2011 Construction on the Charles M Braga Jr Memorial Bridge began in 1959 and the bridge opened to traffic in the spring of 1966 The six lane cantilever truss highway bridge spans 1 2 miles 1 9 km and was constructed in tandem with Interstate 195 The bridge is named for Charles M Braga Jr who died during the attack on Pearl Harbor while aboard the U S S Pennsylvania 68 Major highways Edit Massachusetts Route 177 s short Fall River section in Massachusetts Interstate 195 is the main east west artery through the city for motorists The highway enters Fall River from the west via the Charles M Braga Jr Memorial Bridge continuing through the center of the city to The Narrows and New Bedford and Cape Cod to the east The highway roughly parallels both the Bay Colony New Bedford Cape Cod Railroad as well the original path of the Quequechan River In 1999 a cement ceiling tile fell from the roof of the tunnel beneath Government Center landing on several cars and causing minor injuries The incident caused major traffic problems in the area and is reminiscent of the I 90 tunnel collapse a part of the Big Dig in Boston in 2006 In addition to Interstate 195 Fall River is served by four other major routes U S Route 6 passes over the Brightman Street Bridge headed east before joining the city street grid and continuing into Westport as State Road Route 24 a two lane north south expressway enters the city and the state at its southern border and extends towards the city center where it is briefly concurrent with Interstate 195 before branching north along the city s eastern border towards Taunton Brockton and the Southeast Expressway into Boston Route 79 another north south divided highway begins at the Braga Bridge and continues northbound along the city s waterfront to Airport Road where it becomes concurrent with Route 24 Route 138 enters the city via the Veterans Memorial Bridge before joining the city grid and headed south towards Tiverton and Aquidneck Island Route 81 begins in the heart of the city and heads south along city streets into Tiverton Additionally Route 177 clips the extreme southern part of the city for less than 0 25 mile 0 40 km between Westport and Tiverton Route 138 Route 24 I 195 and US 6 are based upon pre Colonial and Colonial era Native American trails Rail Edit Fall River last saw passenger rail service in 1958 An under construction project named South Coast Rail will bring MBTA Commuter Rail service to a currently under construction station serving the city via a slight rerouting extension of the existing Middleborough Lakeville Line as an interim service by 2023 The line is eventually planned to be rerouted via the Stoughton Branch and the former Dighton and Somerset Railroad by 2030 As of 2022 the nearest passenger rail station is Providence which is served by the MBTA Providence Stoughton line and Amtrak s Acela Express and Northeast Regional trains Bus Edit Along with New Bedford Fall River shares ownership of the Southeastern Regional Transit Authority SRTA a bus network that services both cities as well as Acushnet Dartmouth Fairhaven Freetown Mattapoisett Somerset Swansea and Westport 69 The twelve fixed route bus lines that service Fall River depart from the Louis D Pettine Transportation Center which opened in 2013 70 Service to Providence Tiverton and Newport Rhode Island is offered by the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority RIPTA 71 Intercity bus service to Boston and Hyannis is provided by Peter Pan with connections available to the company s larger network via transfers 72 Air Edit Fall River Municipal Airport opened in 1951 served as a general aviation airport for small planes and commuter flights to the Cape and Islands for several decades By the 1960s the airport had fallen into a state of relative disrepair it was closed on February 18 1996 after the Federal Aviation Administration deemed it unsafe due to its proximity to the city s large landfill Limited commercial service to the Cape and Islands as well as general aviation is available from New Bedford Regional Airport in nearby New Bedford Massachusetts Domestic and international commercial air service is available from T F Green Airport located 13 miles west in Warwick Rhode Island and at Logan International Airport located 45 miles north in Boston Massachusetts Water Edit The Fall River Line Pier located directly beneath the Braga Bridge is a major port for commercial fishing 73 and cargo shipping handling imports from and to Cape Verde the Azores Brazil Haiti and the Dominican Republic 74 It has served as port of call for cruise ships 75 and serves as the terminus for a passenger ferry line connecting to Newport Rhode Island 76 Service to Block Island has been suspended since 2020 as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic 77 The pier also offers connections to freight rail via the Massachusetts Coastal Railroad Soccer EditFall River has a rich soccer history The game was first introduced to the city in the 1880s by immigrants from Lancashire and Glasgow who worked in the local textile industry In later decades the arrival of immigrants from Portugal helped to sustain the game s popularity Between 1888 and 1892 teams from Fall River won the American Cup for five straight years One of these teams the Fall River Rovers also won the 1917 National Challenge Cup The star and captain of the team was local born Thomas Swords who in 1916 captained the United States in their first official international During the 1920s and early 1930s the Fall River Marksmen were one of the most successful soccer clubs in the United States and were American soccer champions on seven occasions Another local club Fall River F C were champions in 1932 The Marksmen won the National Challenge Cup four times Among their most notable players were Billy Gonsalves and Bert Patenaude who were both raised in Fall River Both played for the United States at the first ever soccer World Cup in 1930 Patenaude is also credited with scoring the first ever hat trick in World Cup history He scored all three goals in the United States 3 0 victory over Paraguay During the 1940s Ponta Delgada S C became one of the most successful amateur teams in the United States In 1947 the team was selected to represent the United States at the North American soccer championship In 1950 two of their local born players Ed Souza and John Souza played at the World Cup helping the United States defeat England 1 0 78 On January 18 2011 Andrew Sousa was drafted by New England Revolution becoming the first ever Fall River native to play in Major League Soccer In 2019 Fall River Football Club and Fall River Marksmen FC returned to the field after a long hiatus Both clubs participated in the 1st annual Taca de Fall River a Home amp Away match series with Fall River Football Club becoming the eventual winners Points of interest Edit Battleship Cove the world s largest historic naval ship exhibit See also National Register of Historic Places listings in Fall River Massachusetts Battleship Cove the world s largest historic naval ship exhibit featuring the USS Massachusetts Lincoln Park Carousel 79 restored 1920 carousel located at Battleship Cove Fall River Heritage State Park the focal point of Fall River s waterfront The Marine Museum at Fall River Freetown Fall River State Forest Kennedy Park North Park and Ruggles Park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast Museum Maplecroft home of Lizzie Borden from 1894 to her death in 1927 80 Oak Grove Cemetery Barnard s Folly a group of historic triple decker tenement houses located on North Main Street 81 Granite Mills two historic cotton textile mills located on Bedford Street 81 Notable people EditSee also Category People from Fall River Massachusetts The Borden family home now a bed and breakfast Lizzie Borden 1860 1927 tried and acquitted of the 1892 murder of father and step mother and public speaking teacher in Fall River is buried with them and the rest of their immediate family in Oak Grove Cemetery Nathaniel B Borden 1801 1865 businessman and politician Colonel Richard Borden 1795 1874 mill owner and industrialist Dave Brinnel musician television producer radio personality David Glendenning Cogan 1908 1993 ophthalmologist Jasiel Correia born 1991 Democrat politician arrested twice on charges related to fraud and extortion while in office Morton Dean television and radio anchor news correspondent and author Diesel born Mark Denis Lizotte American born Australian singer songwriter and musician 82 E J Dionne journalist political commentator Robert Dollard first Attorney General of South Dakota 83 Kristen Gilbert serial killer nurse who murdered four patients Brandon Gomes former Major League Baseball player and current Los Angeles Dodgers general manager Leslie Gourse jazz writer born here in 1939 84 Hank the Angry Drunken Dwarf Henry Joseph Nasiff Jr entertainer Chris Herren professional basketball player Denver Nuggets amp Boston Celtics Louie Howe political advisor to President Franklin D Roosevelt Thomas J Hudner Jr Naval aviator and Medal of Honor recipient Sam Hyde comedian writer and actor Napoleon A L Herault lawyer and Minnesota state senators Emeril Lagasse celebrity chef Tom Lawlor professional mixed martial artist Marc Megna American and Canadian football player Ernest Moniz 13th U S Secretary of Energy John Moriarty pianist vocal coach diction and repertoire professor New England Conservatory of Music Bert Patenaude professional soccer player scored the first hat trick in a World Cup match Irving Picard attorney in the Madoff scandal Joe Raposo songwriter for Sesame Street Kimberly Clark Saenz convicted serial killer and former nurse Chris Santos celebrity chef Ronald A Sarasin politician Winston Sharples composer known for his work at RKO Radio Pictures and Paramount cartoons Andrew Sousa professional soccer player George Stephanopoulos Good Morning America co host born in Fall River 85 Tecia Torres professional mixed martial artist Susan H Wixon 1839 1912 freethought writer editor feminist educatorSee also EditList of mill towns in Massachusetts USS Fall River 2 shipsReferences Edit Appears to have first been coined in Thayer Lincoln Jonathan 1909 The City of the Dinner Pail Cambridge Mass The Riverside Press Houghton Mifflin Company Coburn Frederick William 1920 History of Lowell and Its People Vol I Lewis Publishing Company p 345 For Fall River s rapid rise the labor union movement has been much more vigorous in the City of the Dinner Pail and at New Bedford than it ever has been in Lowell The Dinner Pail American Heritage Vol XLVII no 2 April 1996 Fall River has been called the City of the Dinner Pail Although I haven t seen a dinner nail sic in many years I remember it well It was made of galvanized tin had three nesting compartments and a bail handle Chapter 2 1 Current City Charter Archived September 14 2015 at the Wayback Machine rev 1995 under ordinance 1995 42 The Municipal Register for 1857 Containing the City Charter with Rules and Orders of the City Council and the Ordinances of the City of Fall River Fall River Mass J S Potter February 8 2018 via Google Books a b A Rallying Cry for the Dream Chasers A Mantra for the Hard Workers Fall River Case Study Figmints Digital Creative Marketing February 17 2017 Retrieved October 23 2017 Video Paul Coogan takes over as mayor of Fall River The Herald News 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 21 2022 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts United States U S Census Bureau Retrieved September 16 2021 Stevens Elizabeth C Elizabeth Buffum Chace and Lillie Chace Wyman A Century of Abolitionist Suffragist and Workers Rights Activism United States McFarland Publishing 2003 Ira V Brown Am I Not a Woman and a Sister The Anti Slavery Convention of American Women 1837 1839 Pennsylvania State University The Run of the Mill Dunwell Steve 1978 The Fall River Iron Works Prospered After Shaky Start Fall River Herald News October 17 1989 Archived December 27 2005 at the Wayback Machine Illustrated History of Fall River 1903 PDF The Run of the Mill Dunwell Steve 1978 p 105 110 2003 Local Rock Vital in City s Construction Herald News February 26 2003 U S Census 1940 Population Reports p 32 Sailsinc org Picture of the Worst Fire in Fall River s History Keeley Library B M C Durfee High School Full text Online Books amp Articles sailsinc org MHC Survey 1982 PDF History of Fall River s Garment Industry Archived June 27 2008 at the Wayback Machine Valle s Steak House opened in 1970 and demolished in 1984 August 6 2012 The Herald News Fall River Mass 1 Schiller Andrew January 2 2021 NeighborhoodScout s Most Dangerous Cities 2021 Neighborhoodscout com Neighborhoodscout com Retrieved January 2 2021 The Northeast Alternatives Story Northeast Alternatives Retrieved May 31 2019 Geographic Identifiers 2010 Demographic Profile Data G001 Fall River city Massachusetts U S Census Bureau American Factfinder Retrieved February 5 2013 U S Geological Survey Fall River MA 7 5 by 15 minute quadrangle 1985 a b c d e f Fall River has 23 parks and playgrounds for recreational fun Fall River Herald News May 15 2011 Retrieved February 15 2020 Dion Marc Munroe May 15 2011 OLMSTED FACTS Frederick Law Olmsted famed for parks nationwide Fall River Herald News Retrieved February 15 2020 Fall River South Coast Bikeway Retrieved August 1 2021 Total Population P1 2010 Census Summary File 1 American FactFinder All County Subdivisions within Massachusetts United States Census Bureau 2010 Massachusetts by Place and County Subdivision GCT T1 Population Estimates United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 12 2011 1990 Census of Population General Population Characteristics Massachusetts PDF US Census Bureau December 1990 Table 76 General Characteristics of Persons Households and Families 1990 1990 CP 1 23 Retrieved July 12 2011 1980 Census of the Population Number of Inhabitants Massachusetts PDF US Census Bureau December 1981 Table 4 Populations of County Subdivisions 1960 to 1980 PC80 1 A23 Retrieved July 12 2011 1950 Census of Population PDF Bureau of the Census 1952 Section 6 Pages 21 10 and 21 11 Massachusetts Table 6 Population of Counties by Minor Civil Divisions 1930 to 1950 Retrieved July 12 2011 1920 Census of Population PDF Bureau of the Census Number of Inhabitants by Counties and Minor Civil Divisions Pages 21 5 through 21 7 Massachusetts Table 2 Population of Counties by Minor Civil Divisions 1920 1910 and 1920 Retrieved July 12 2011 1890 Census of the Population PDF Department of the Interior Census Office Pages 179 through 182 Massachusetts Table 5 Population of States and Territories by Minor Civil Divisions 1880 and 1890 Retrieved July 12 2011 1870 Census of the Population PDF Department of the Interior Census Office 1872 Pages 217 through 220 Table IX Population of Minor Civil Divisions amp c Massachusetts Retrieved July 12 2011 1860 Census PDF Department of the Interior Census Office 1864 Pages 220 through 226 State of Massachusetts Table No 3 Populations of Cities Towns amp c Retrieved July 12 2011 1850 Census PDF Department of the Interior Census Office 1854 Pages 338 through 393 Populations of Cities Towns amp c Retrieved July 12 2011 1950 Census of Population PDF 1 Number of Inhabitants Bureau of the Census 1952 Section 6 pp 21 7 21 09 Massachusetts Table 4 Population of Urban Places of 10 000 or more from Earliest Census to 1920 Retrieved July 12 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2015 a b General Demographic Characteristics for Fall River Archived April 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine University of Massachusetts Dartmouth p 8 Archived April 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine Ancestry Search Genealogy by City epodunk com Archived from the original on July 16 2014 Retrieved February 25 2008 Selected Economic Characteristics 2009 2013 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved January 12 2015 ACS Demographic and Housing Estimates 2009 2013 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved January 12 2015 Households and Families 2009 2013 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved January 12 2015 a b c Jasinski Peter September 27 2019 Flags vanish from downtown Fall River but for a good reason Fall River Herald News Retrieved September 14 2020 Intended as a way to represent the city s diverse population and the nations they hailed from the flags honored a variety of countries including Lebanon Greece and Brazil O Jornal The Herald News Fall River MA Fall River Celebrates America canceled narrowsadmin October 5 2011 Live Music Fall River MA Waterfront www narrowscenter org Retrieved August 10 2021 Murphy Linda Fall River s new contemporary art museum FR MoCA opens Friday The Herald News Retrieved August 10 2021 About Us FR MoCA frmoca org Retrieved August 10 2021 List of Parishes Fall River Diocese Retrieved August 10 2021 Stewardson Jack May 23 2000 Another Fall River church will close South Coast Today Retrieved June 26 2020 a b c d e f Encyclopedia Judaica Fall River Massachusetts Jewish Virtual Library American Israeli Cooperative Enterprise Retrieved July 18 2018 Linton David News organizations flock to Aaron Hernandez murder trial The Sun Chronicle Retrieved August 10 2021 Massachusetts Senatorial Districts Sec state ma us Retrieved April 9 2020 Commonwealth of Massachusetts Elections Division State Senate elections 1st Bristol and Plymouth district Sec state ma us Retrieved April 9 2020 Feb 2019 MA Party Enrollment PDF Retrieved September 23 2019 Galvin William Public Document 43 electionstats state ma us School Atlantis Charter About Us Atlantis Charter School Retrieved August 10 2021 Bishop Feehan High School History www bishopfeehan com Retrieved August 10 2021 History of Espirito Santo School Archived 2011 12 22 at the Wayback Machine Espirito Santo School Retrieved on August 21 2012 ENC s Adult and Graduate Studies Program expands into satellite locations around the state Nazarene Communications Network December 18 2008 Archived from the original on December 23 2008 Retrieved January 14 2009 C B Tillinghast The free public libraries of Massachusetts 1st Report of the Free Public Library Commission of Massachusetts Boston Wright amp Potter 1891 Fall River Public Library Archived September 26 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 11 2010 City of Fall River 2021 FY 2022 Budget Retrieved from https www fallriverma org wp content uploads 2021 05 FY 22 Budget 5 7 21 pdf Fall River Public Library Branches fallriverlibrary org Fall River Historical Society North American Reciprocal Museum NARM Association Retrieved 7 July 2022 Dion Marc Munroe The name on the Braga Bridge is about more than steel and asphalt The Herald News Fall River MA Retrieved August 10 2021 SRTA Southeastern Regional Transit Authority www srtabus com Retrieved August 10 2021 Holtzman Michael Officials on hand for dedication of SRTA s new transportation center The Herald News Fall River MA Retrieved August 10 2021 24L Newport Fall River Providence RIPTA May 22 2020 Retrieved August 10 2021 Peter Pan Bus Lines Better Quicker Safer Peter Pan Bus Lines Retrieved August 10 2021 Commercial Fishing Fall River Line Pier Retrieved January 6 2020 Shipping Fall River Line Pier Retrieved January 6 2020 Cruise Fall River Line Pier Retrieved January 6 2020 Fall River Hi Speed Schedule Block Island Ferry Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 Winokoor Charles Why the Fall River to Block Island ferry run is canceled for the second season in a row The Herald News Retrieved August 10 2021 Soccer in a Football World The Story of America s Forgotten Game 2006 David Wangerin amazon com Battleshipcove org Archived May 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine Allard Deborah Lizzie Borden s Maplecroft estate is up for sale again a b Giza Patricia 1984 A Guide Book to Fall River s National Register Properties Fall River Massachusetts The City Mark Lizotte aka Johnny Diesel Australian Music Database Executive Committee April 14 1900 Souvenir Program Association of Mass Minute Men of 61 Celebration of the Thirty Ninth Anniversary Boston MA Geo W Nason p 70 Leslie Gourse 65 Biographer of Jazz Artists The New York Times January 5 2005 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Lawmaker reacts to Trump s State of the Union address YouTube External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fall River Massachusetts Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Fall River Massachusetts Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Fall River Fall River official website Preservation Society of Fall River Beers D G 1872 Atlas of Essex County Map of Massachusetts Plate 5 Click on the map for a very large image Also see detailed map of 1872 Essex County Plate 7 Fall River History Old Newspaper Articles Genealogy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fall River Massachusetts amp oldid 1143297297, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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