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Western Massachusetts

42°20′N 72°50′W / 42.333°N 72.833°W / 42.333; -72.833

Map showing the area typically considered to make up western Massachusetts (dark green). Worcester County is usually considered to be in central Massachusetts (light green), although western parts of Worcester County are sometimes considered western Massachusetts.

Western Massachusetts, known colloquially as "western Mass," is a region in Massachusetts, one of the six U.S. states that make up the New England region of the United States. Western Massachusetts has diverse topography; 22 colleges and universities including UMass in Amherst, MA, with approximately 100,000 students;[1] and such institutions as Tanglewood, the Springfield Armory, and Jacob's Pillow.

The western part of western Massachusetts includes the Berkshire Mountains, where there are several vacation resorts. The eastern part of the region includes the Connecticut River Valley, which has a number of university towns, the major city Springfield, and numerous agricultural hamlets.[2] In the eastern part of the area, the Quabbin region is a place of outdoor recreation.[3]

History edit

Native inhabitants edit

Archeological efforts in the Connecticut River Valley have revealed traces of human life dating back at least 9,000 years. Pocumtuck tradition describes the creation of Lake Hitchcock in Deerfield by a giant beaver, possibly representing the action of a glacier that retracted at least 12,000 years ago. Western Massachusetts was originally settled by Native American societies, including the Pocomtuc, Nonotuck Mohawk, Nipmuck, and Mahican. Various sites indicate millennia of fishing, horticulture, beaver-hunting, and burials. The passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act in 1990 ordered museums across western Massachusetts and the country to repatriate these remains to Native peoples, an ongoing process.

The region was inhabited by several Algonkian-speaking Native American communities, culturally connected but distinguished by the place names they assigned to their respective communities: Agawam (low land), Woronco (in a circular way), Nonotuck (in the midst of the river), Pocumtuck (narrow, swift river), and Sokoki (separated from their neighbors). The modern-day Springfield metropolitan area was inhabited by the Agawam people.[4] The Agawam, as well as other groups, belong to the larger cultural category of Alongkian Indians.

In 1634, a plague, probably smallpox, reduced the Native American population of the Connecticut River Valley to a tiny percentage of its previous size. Governor Bradford of Massachusetts writes that in Windsor, notably the site of a trading post, where European diseases often spread to Native populations, "of 1,000 of [the Native Americans] 150 of them died." With so many dead, English colonists were emboldened to attempt significant settlement of the region.[5]

Colonial and early Federal period edit

The first European explorers to reach western Massachusetts were English Puritans, who in 1635, at the request of William Pynchon, settled the land that they considered most advantageous for both agriculture and trading in modern-day Agawam, adjacent to modern Metro Center, Springfield. In 1636, a group of English colonists—lured by the promise of a "great river" and the northeast's most fertile farmland—ventured to Springfield, where they established a permanent colony. Originally, this settlement was called Agawam Plantation, and administered by the Connecticut Colony. (Springfield lies only 4 miles north of Connecticut; however, Agawam included lands as far south as Windsor Locks, as far north as Holyoke, and as far west as Westfield.[6]) In 1640, Springfield voted to separate from the Connecticut Colony following a series of contentious incidents and, after a brief period of independence, decided to align with the coastal Massachusetts Bay Colony, shaping the region's political boundaries. The Massachusetts Bay Colony settled at the Connecticut River Valley's most fertile land―stretching from Windsor, Connecticut, (once part of Springfield,) to Northampton, Massachusetts―from 1636 to 1654.[7]

For the next several decades, Native people experienced a complex relationship with European settlers. The fur trade stood at the heart of their economic interactions, a lucrative business that guided many other policy decisions. White settlers traded wampum, cloth and metal in exchange for furs, as well as horticultural produce. Because of the seasonal nature of goods provided by Native people compared with the constant availability of colonial goods, a credit system developed. Land, the natural resource whose availability did not fluctuate, served as collateral for mortgages in which Native people bought goods from the colonists in exchange for the future promise of beavers. However, trade with the colonists made pelts so lucrative that the beaver was rapidly overhunted. The volume of the trade fell, from a 1654 high of 3723 pelts to a mere 191 ten years later. With every mortgage, Native people lost more land, although their population recovered and expanded from the old plague.[8]

In a process that historian Lisa Brooks calls "the deed game", colonists acquired an increasing amount of land from Indian tribes through debt, fraudulent purchases and a variety of other methods.[9] Native people began to construct and gather in palisaded “forts”―structures that were not necessary beforehand. These sites were excavated in the 19th and 20th centuries by anthropologists who took cultural objects and human remains and displayed them for years in area museums. With the passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) in 1990, a long process of repatriation began.[citation needed]

Tensions between the colonists and surrounding Indian tribes, which had already been poor for some time, continued to deteriorate in the years preceding the outbreak of King Philip's War. Colonial encroachment on Indian lands combined with the decimation of the native population with European diseases led to increasing Native resentment and hostility towards the colonists. Though some Indians became integrated into colonial society, with many being employed in white households, numerous pieces of legislation were passed which prevented Indians from marrying settlers and staying in colonial settlements after dark, while colonists were prevented from living among the Indians.[10]

In 1662, the leader of the eastern Massachusetts Wampanoag Indian tribe, Wamsutta, died shortly after being questioned at gunpoint by Plymouth colonists. Wamsutta's brother, Chief Metacomet (known to inhabitants of Springfield as "Philip,") began a war against colonial expansion in New England which spread across the region. As the conflict grew in its initial months, colonists throughout western Massachusetts became deeply concerned with maintaining the loyalty of "their Indians."[11] The Agawams cooperated, even providing valuable intelligence to the colonists.[citation needed]

In August 1675, a group of colonists in Hadley demanded the disarming of a “fort” of Nonotuck Indians. Unwilling to relinquish their weapons, they left on the night of August 25. A hundred colonists pursued them, catching up to them at the foot of Sugarloaf Hill, which was a sacred space for the Nonotucks called the Great Beaver. The colonists attacked, but the Nonotucks forced them to withdraw and were able to keep moving.[12] The shedding of Native blood on sacred land was an attack on their entire kinship network, and caused Native peoples in western Massachusetts to join the ongoing conflict.[citation needed]

Following the war, the greater part of the Native American population left western Massachusetts behind.[13] Many refugees of the war joined the Wabanaki in the north, where their descendants remain today. Native American influence remains evident in the land and culture of western Massachusetts, from the practice of tobacco farming to the names of cities and rivers[14]

In 1777, George Washington and Henry Knox selected Springfield for the site of the fledgling United States' National Armory. Built atop a high bluff overlooking the Connecticut River, Washington and Knox agreed that Springfield provided an ideal location—beside a great river and at the confluence of major rivers and highways. For the following 200 years, the Springfield Armory would bring concentrated prosperity and innovation to Springfield and its surrounding towns.

After the American Revolution, a rebellion led by Daniel Shays culminated in a battle at the National Armory in Springfield.[15]

Geography edit

Berkshire Mountains edit

The Berkshires have long been patronized by artists (e.g. Herman Melville, who wrote Moby-Dick while living in Pittsfield; Edith Wharton, who wrote The House of Mirth and Ethan Frome while living in Lenox; and Norman Rockwell, many of whose painting were based on scenes that he observed in the town of Stockbridge). Cultural institutions include Lenox's Tanglewood, Becket's Jacob's Pillow, and Stockbridge's Norman Rockwell Museum, as well the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown. The city of Pittsfield is the largest community located in the Berkshires.

Connecticut River Valley edit

New England's largest river, the Connecticut, flows through the center of its agricultural valley. Nearly bisected by the Holyoke Range and the Mount Tom Range, this relatively small area contains a number of college towns, urban environments, and rural hamlets. The portion of this valley in Massachusetts is also commonly referred to as the Pioneer Valley.

At its southern tip, the Springfield-Hartford region is home to 29 colleges and universities and over 160,000 university students—the United States' second highest concentration of higher learning institutions after the Boston metropolitan area.[16][better source needed]

Innovations originating in the valley include the sports of basketball (James Naismith, 1895) and volleyball (William Morgan, 1895); the first American automobile (Duryea, 1893); the first motorcycle company (Indian, 1901); the first use of interchangeable parts in manufacturing (Thomas Blanchard, 1825); and the first commercial radio station, (WBZ, 1920, from Springfield's Kimball Hotel).

Significant Massachusetts towns and cities in the valley's so-called "Knowledge Corridor" include Northampton, Amherst, Easthampton, Holyoke, Chicopee, West Springfield, East Longmeadow, Longmeadow, Ludlow, Agawam, and Westfield.

The Hilltowns edit

The Hilltowns include the areas of Berkshire, Franklin, Hampshire, and Hampden counties west of and above the escarpment bordering the ancient rift valley through which the Connecticut River flows. Elevations increase from about 200 feet (60 m) to at least 1,000 feet (300 m) in the escarpment zone. On top, elevations rise gradually to the west. Williamsburg in Hampshire County and Becket in Berkshire County are prominent hilltowns. Generally, the hilltowns west of the Connecticut River Valley were less attractive for agricultural uses, which resulted in later migration there than, for example, the fertile Connecticut River Valley. Subsistence farming predominated in this area.

The 1,000-foot elevation difference between uplands and the Connecticut River Valley produced streams and rivers with gradients around 40 feet/mile (8 meters/km) flowing through steep-sided valleys, notably the Westfield and Deerfield rivers and their larger tributaries. Mills were built to exploit the kinetic energy of falling water, and mill towns grew up around them, or company towns integrating production, residential and commercial activities.

The development of steam engines to free industrialization from reliance on water power brought about the so-called Second Industrial Revolution when railroads were built along the rivers to take advantage of relatively gentle grades over the Appalachians. And so as hilltop farming towns declined in importance, industrial towns in the river valleys rose to local prominence.

The Quabbin and Quaboag regions edit

In northern Massachusetts, the higher altitude area to the east of the Connecticut River Valley is known as the North Quabbin region. These northern municipalities include Warwick, Orange, Petersham, Phillipston, Wendell, New Salem, and Athol near the New Hampshire border.

The South Quabbin region (formerly the Swift River Valley) includes the towns of Barre, Belchertown, Pelham, Ware, Hardwick, Leverett, and Shutesbury. This area once included the four "Lost Towns" of Enfield, Dana, Greenwich, and Prescott, which were destroyed to make way for the Quabbin Reservoir.

Farther south, the area called the Quaboag Hills includes Hampden, Monson, Wales, Warren, Holland, and Wilbraham on the Connecticut border. Numerous other towns stretching east towards Worcester are sometimes included in the Quaboag Valley region.

Geology is similar to the Hilltown-Berkshire uplands with resistant metamorphic rocks overlain by thin and rocky soil. With less relief, the river valleys are less pronounced, but still moderately high gradient. The Quaboag Hills and Valley, the Quabbin Regions, and populated places stretching east towards Worcester are all locally known as "Hill Towns"; a term interchangeable with the Hill Towns west of the Pioneer Valley.

Geology edit

The mountain range in Berkshire County at the western end of Massachusetts is conventionally known as the "Berkshires". Geologically, however, the Berkshires are a westward continuation of uplands west of the Connecticut River and a southern extension of Vermont's Green Mountains.

The Hilltown-Berkshire upland ends at the valley of the Housatonic River which flows south to Long Island Sound, and in the extreme north west of Massachusetts at the Hoosic River, a tributary of the Hudson. From these valleys, uplands to the east appear as a rounded mountain range, rising some 1,600 feet (490 meters) although they are actually a plateau. West of the Housatonic-Hoosic valley system rises the narrower Taconic Range along the New York border. Upper tributaries of the Hoosic separate Massachusetts' highest peak, Mount Greylock 3,491 ft (1,064 meters) from both ranges, however Greylock's geology connects it with the Taconics.

Most of this region is a rolling upland of schist, gneiss and other resistant metamorphics with intrusions of pegmatite and granite. Scraping by continental glaciers during the Pleistocene left thin, rocky soil that supported hardscrabble subsistence farming before the Industrial Revolution. There was hardly a land rush into such marginal land, but the uplands were slowly settled by farmers throughout most of the 18th century and organized into townships. Then in the early 1800s better land opened up in Western New York and the Northwest Territory. The hilltown agricultural population went into a long decline and fields began reverting to forest.

The Connecticut River Valley is an ancient downfaulted graben or rift valley that formed during the Mesozoic Era when rifting developed in the Pangaea supercontinent to separate North America from Europe and South America from Africa. Secondary rifts branched off the main crustal fracture, and this one was eventually occupied by the Connecticut River. The Metacomet Ridge is a series of narrow traprock ridges where lava penetrated this rift zone, beginning at the northern end of the graben near Greenfield and extending south across Massachusetts and Connecticut to Long Island Sound. Fossil dinosaur footprints in Holyoke attest to the life present in this region during the Mesozoic.

As continental glaciers receded near the end of the last glacial period, a moraine at Rocky Hill, Connecticut, dammed the river to create Lake Hitchcock, extending northward some 200 miles (320 km) inundating places such as Springfield, Agawam, and West Springfield, while certain highlands remained above water, (i.e. sections of Holyoke).

Accumulation of fine sediments during the era of Lake Hitchcock accounts for this region's exceptionally rich agricultural soil, which attracted settlers as early as 1635. Although the Connecticut River Valley's soil is the richest in New England, many of its fields have been covered by urban and suburban development. Regardless, the valley remains New England's most productive farmland. Tobacco, tomatoes, sweet corn, and other vegetables are still produced there in commercial quantities.

Demographics edit

Berkshire, Franklin, Hampshire and Hampden counties, in the year 2020 collectively had 828,188 residents, a population greater than that of any one of the six smallest U.S. states. The population amounted to approximately 12.84% of the 2000 population of the entire state of Massachusetts, which was 6,349,097.[17] Its average population density is 293.07 inhabitants per square mile (113.16/km2), compared to 422.34/km2 (1,093.87/sq mi) for the rest of Massachusetts, and 312.68/km2 (809.83/sq mi) for the state as a whole.

Western Massachusetts' population is concentrated in the cities and suburbs along the Connecticut River in an urban axis surrounding Springfield that is contiguous with greater Hartford, Connecticut (i.e. the Knowledge Corridor.) A secondary population concentration exists in the Housatonic-Hoosic valley due to the industrial heritage of Pittsfield and North Adams, and the development of tourism throughout that valley. This far-western zone is linked to New York City and Albany, New York, more than with the rest of Massachusetts, however both populated zones are ultimately part of the Northeast megalopolis. The rest of western Massachusetts is lightly populated, particularly the Hilltowns where densities below 50 persons per square mile (20 per km2) are the rule.

In descending order of size, its largest communities are: Springfield, Chicopee, Pittsfield, Westfield, Holyoke, Northampton, Agawam, West Springfield, Amherst Center (CDP), Easthampton, Longmeadow (CDP), East Longmeadow, North Adams, and Greenfield (CDP).

Economy edit

Western Massachusetts has been compared as a microcosm of the rest of the United States.[18] The third largest city in Massachusetts, Springfield is situated in the region, and it has struggled financially coming close to bankruptcy at the beginning of the 21st century.[19] The unemployment rate in the area lags behind that of eastern Massachusetts by double[20][21] though officials have pushed for ways to lure more longer-term business growth into the region to tap the abundance of students being turned out by colleges and universities in the area.[22] To combat the higher cost of telecommunications which were roughly double that of eastern Massachusetts, the government of the Commonwealth invested $45.4 Million in building out a broadband network using Federal grant under the 'Massachusetts Technology Park - MassBroadband 123' initiative,[23] funds which were matched by $45 million in federal investment.[24] The 1,200 mile 'middle mile' project was completed in early 2014,[25] connecting public institutions throughout central and western Massachusetts, but also providing a fiber-optic backbone to allow for further expansion in these regions. Building off of that project, the Commonwealth launched a 'Last Mile' initiative targeting 54 communities that were unserved or under-served by broadband. That program has invested in municipal fiber-to-the-home networks,[26] which are also supported by municipal bonds; private provider projects;[27] and advanced wireless projects[28] to connect homes and businesses in these communities. Small, rural towns such as Mount Washington, Mass., now have access to internet speeds that reach 500 megabit per second (Mbps) symmetrical service.[29] In recent years there has been a push for adding high-speed rail from western Massachusetts for eastern Massachusetts.[30][31] The residents of western Massachusetts have vibrant culture in and support the local mix of arts, tourism, and culture.[32]

Education edit

The decline of manufacturing as the region's economic engine since World War II—and in particular, since the controversial closing of the Springfield Armory—was counterbalanced in western Massachusetts by growth in post-secondary education and healthcare.

This created new jobs, land development, and had gentrifying effects in many college towns. State and community-funded schools (e.g., University of Massachusetts Amherst and Westfield State University) were conspicuous in their growth, as were the region's highly regarded liberal arts colleges, including Williams founded 1793, Amherst founded 1821, Mount Holyoke founded 1837, Smith founded 1871, and American International founded 1885.

Despite the gains in higher ed, the region has sought to obtain equitable share of the state's education budget to place into local primary education as well. Several communities in western Massachusetts have fought to have changes made the Chapter 70 structure which the state presently uses to allocate education funding to cities and towns.[33]

Colleges and universities edit

Government and politics edit

Western Massachusetts used to be the Republican stronghold in an otherwise heavily Democratic state, but it is now consistently viewed by political analysts as one of the most politically liberal regions in the United States. In 2006 and 2010, the region voted heavily in favor of Democratic gubernatorial candidate Deval Patrick.

In Crash!ng the Party, Ralph Nader includes western Massachusetts as one of the few places in the country where he believes small-town spirit is still strong. In a 2010 editorial, the Boston Globe berated communities in northern western-Massachusetts for resisting efforts to force consolidation of local school districts.[34] In response, the Franklin County School Committee Caucus released a map that overlaid the county north-to-south over Metro Boston. The overlay reached from Rhode Island in the south to New Hampshire in the north and Framingham in the west.

In 2008 the Office of the Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts opened a local office in western Massachusetts.

Counties edit

The western portion of Massachusetts consists approximately of the four counties of Franklin, Hampshire, Hampden and Berkshire. This set of four counties is sometimes regarded as defining western Massachusetts; for example, the Western Massachusetts Office of the Governor serves residents of these counties. Towns at the western edge of Worcester County, especially those near the Quabbin Reservoir, may be considered to be in western Massachusetts for some purposes; for example, two Worcester County towns have telephone numbers in western Massachusetts's area code 413.

Hampden County, with over half of the population of western Massachusetts, includes the City of Springfield; to the north, Hampshire County contains the college towns of Northampton, Amherst and South Hadley; further north, rural Franklin County borders Vermont and New Hampshire; to the west is Berkshire County, bordering New York, Vermont and Connecticut and the other three counties.

After a number of county governments were eliminated in Massachusetts in the late 1990s (including Franklin, Hampshire, Hampden, Berkshire and Worcester), most county functions were assigned to the state government. The municipalities of Franklin and Hampshire counties then organized two voluntary county-oriented "regional councils of government".

Attitude towards eastern Massachusetts/Boston edit

Some residents of western Massachusetts are critical towards Boston, the state's capital and largest city. This group believes that the Massachusetts legislative and executive branches know little of and care little about western Massachusetts, which comprises 20% of the total population of the state.[35] Among the incidents that have created this feeling:

  • The dismantling, submerging and disincorporation of four western Massachusetts towns, Prescott, Enfield, Greenwich (formerly in Hampshire County) and Dana (formerly in Worcester County), to build the Quabbin Reservoir that supplies water to Boston. Also disruption of small towns accompanying flood control projects such as Knightville Reservoir and construction of the Massachusetts Turnpike.
  • Extreme inequities in additional state assistances per capita for western Massachusetts cities compared with eastern Massachusetts cities—for example, in 2006, for every $278.66 Boston received, its neighbor Cambridge received $176.37, Greater Boston's westernmost city, Worcester, received $67.50, while the City of Springfield received $12.04 per person.[36]
  • Former state House Speaker Tom Finneran's use of parliamentary rules to deny Northampton an election to fill a vacant House seat.[37][38]
  • Abolishing county governance[39] placed formerly local property and employees under the direct administration of the eastern capital. This also affected representation of low-population/large-land rural towns which previously relied on their county seat in budgeting of road maintenance funding.

Long a haven for small, independent businesses, western Massachusetts has expressed conflicted feelings towards big box corporations, leading to controversies about zoning changes and variances that would allow companies such as Wal-Mart to build in western Massachusetts towns. The debate has been particularly strong in northern towns; for example, in Greenfield, Massachusetts.[40]

Transportation edit

Interstates edit

U.S. Routes edit

State highways edit

Bridges and tunnels edit

Airports edit


Nearby airports edit

Rail and bus edit

 
The Hartford Line provides regular commuter rail service between Springfield, Hartford, and New Haven, with tentative plans to increase service frequency and provide additional stops[41]
  • Amtrak operates three lines through western Massachusetts. All three stop at Springfield Union Station.
  • CTRail's Hartford Line started operating to Union Station-Springfield as the northern terminus. Trains operate from New Haven, CT with multiple stops in Connecticut along the way. The New Haven–Springfield Line was upgraded in conjunction with the launch of the Hartford Line service. The project received funding from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Federal Government, and the State of Connecticut. Amtrak trains on the route between New Haven and Springfield reach speeds of 110 mph (177 km/h).

The following regional transit authorities operate in western Massachusetts:

Leisure activities and places of historical interest edit

Outdoor recreation edit

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ . Gonewengland.about.com. Archived from the original on 2013-05-14. Retrieved 2016-05-07.
  2. ^ "Western Massachusetts | Western MA | Things to Do in Western Mass". Massvacation.com. 2016-04-04. Retrieved 2016-05-07.
  3. ^ "Quabbin Reservoir Fishing Guide". Mass.gov. Retrieved 2016-05-07.
  4. ^ Bruhac, Margaret (May 2007). HISTORICAL ERASURE AND CULTURAL RECOVERY: INDIGENOUS PEOPLE IN THE CONNECTICUT RIVER VALLEY (Thesis).
  5. ^ Wright, Henry Andrew (1949). The Story of Western Massachusetts.
  6. ^ Wayne Phaneuf (22 May 2011). "375 years of changing business and work landscape help define Springfield". MassLive.com. The Republican. Springfield, Mass. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
  7. ^ Hart, Albert Bushnell, ed. (1927). Commonwealth History of Massachusetts. New York: The States History Company. OCLC 1543273.
  8. ^ Thomas, Peter (2004). "Chapter 1: Into the Maelstrom of Change". In Buckley, Kerry (ed.). A Place Called Paradise. Historic Northampton Museum and Education Center, published. ISBN 1-55849-485-5.
  9. ^ Brooks, Lisa (2018). Our Beloved Kin: A New History of King Philip's War. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-19673-3.
  10. ^ Brooks, Lisa (2018). Our Beloved Kin: A New History of King Philip's War. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-19673-3.
  11. ^ Pynchon, John (19 August 1675). "Cherackuson". Letter to John Winthrop Jr.
  12. ^ Barrows, Charles (1911). The Story of Springfield in Massachusetts for the Young. The Connecticut Valley Historical Society.
  13. ^ Wright, Henry Andrew (1905). Indian Deeds of Hampden County. Lewis Historical Publishing Party Inc.
  14. ^ "Conflict and Cooperation among the First Peoples and European Settlers". Our Plural History. Springfield Technical Community College.
  15. ^ Hahn, John Willard (1946). The Background of Shays's Rebellion: A Study of Massachusetts History, 1780–1787. University of Wisconsin–Madison. p. 33.
  16. ^ . Hartford Springfield News. Archived from the original on 2018-12-15. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
  17. ^ "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
  18. ^ What's It Worth To Move To Western Mass.? Maybe $10,000
  19. ^ This Small New England City Was on the Verge of Bankruptcy. Now It’s a Turnaround Success Story.
  20. ^ 'Most of the growth is to the east': Springfield gains jobs, but unemployment rate stays well above Worcester and Boston
  21. ^ Economy in Springfield, Massachusetts
  22. ^ Business 2018: Valley’s economy is riding high, experts more optimistic than they’ve been in years
  23. ^ Federal government grants to expand broadband Internet access in Western Massachusetts, Broadband USA.
  24. ^ "Construction, Turnover Complete on New 1,200 Mile Fiber Backbone for Western and Central Massachusetts". broadband.masstech.org (MBI). Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  25. ^ Demers, Phil; Staff, Berkshire Eagle (19 February 2014). "Massachusetts Broadband Institute announces completion of rural high-speed network". The Berkshire Eagle. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  26. ^ "'Last Mile' broadband project update for small towns in western Mass". WWLP. 2018-08-23. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  27. ^ Serreze, Mary (2018-09-07). "Officials celebrate Comcast broadband expansion in 9 rural Western Massachusetts towns". MassLive. The Republican. Springfield, Mass. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  28. ^ Parnass, Larry (18 June 2018). "Savoy, Florida back wireless route to last-mile internet". The Berkshire Eagle. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  29. ^ "Little engine that could: Mount Washington flips switch on fiber". The Berkshire Eagle. 6 November 2017. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  30. ^ East-west rail gains headway in western Mass.
  31. ^ MA: MassDOT: East-West rail ridership could be 4 times greater than expected, but project out of reach without federal help - Jim Kinney, June 11th, 2020
  32. ^ "Western Mass. 'Hilltowns' look for a foothold"
  33. ^ School funding overhaul requires a much larger state commitment
  34. ^ "School Board Districts at the Elementary School Level". 13 December 2010. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  35. ^ Mazarakis, James (September 20, 2016). "Bridging the divide between eastern and western Massachusetts". Op/Ed. Massachusetts Daily Collegian. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  36. ^ Springfield Panel (PDF), Urban Land Institute, 24–29 September 2006
  37. ^ "Northampton Special Election". Green-Rainbow Party of Massachusetts. Archived from the original on 2013-04-15.
  38. ^ Phillips, Frank (21 December 2001). "Hampshire district's empty seat suits speaker". The Boston Globe.
  39. ^ "Historical Data Relating to the Incorporation of and Abolishment of Counties in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts". Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
  40. ^ . Making Change at Walmart. United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. Archived from the original on October 7, 2008.
  41. ^ Yonkunas, Rachel (December 27, 2018). "State Leaders Are Hoping to Expand State Rail Service Beyond Springfield". WFSB Eyewitness News 3.

General and cited references edit

  • "Hilltown Families".
  • . Archived from the original on 2 April 2019.
  • "(Map of) Massachusetts Cities and Towns" (PDF). Citizen Information Service, Secretary of the Commonwealth. 27 February 2019.
  • "Homepage". Exploring Western Massachusetts. Local history blog.

External links edit

  • Western Massachusetts Economic Development Council
  • Western Mass culture, arts, and tourism, Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism
  • Western Massachusetts Map (modern)—YellowMaps
  • Western Massachusetts 1855 Bowles—Old State Map Reprint—1855 map at Old Maps

western, massachusetts, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writ. 42 20 N 72 50 W 42 333 N 72 833 W 42 333 72 833 This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of the style of writing in this article is disputed Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Western Massachusetts news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Map showing the area typically considered to make up western Massachusetts dark green Worcester County is usually considered to be in central Massachusetts light green although western parts of Worcester County are sometimes considered western Massachusetts Western Massachusetts known colloquially as western Mass is a region in Massachusetts one of the six U S states that make up the New England region of the United States Western Massachusetts has diverse topography 22 colleges and universities including UMass in Amherst MA with approximately 100 000 students 1 and such institutions as Tanglewood the Springfield Armory and Jacob s Pillow The western part of western Massachusetts includes the Berkshire Mountains where there are several vacation resorts The eastern part of the region includes the Connecticut River Valley which has a number of university towns the major city Springfield and numerous agricultural hamlets 2 In the eastern part of the area the Quabbin region is a place of outdoor recreation 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Native inhabitants 1 2 Colonial and early Federal period 2 Geography 2 1 Berkshire Mountains 2 2 Connecticut River Valley 2 3 The Hilltowns 2 4 The Quabbin and Quaboag regions 2 5 Geology 3 Demographics 4 Economy 5 Education 5 1 Colleges and universities 6 Government and politics 6 1 Counties 6 2 Attitude towards eastern Massachusetts Boston 7 Transportation 7 1 Interstates 7 2 U S Routes 7 3 State highways 7 4 Bridges and tunnels 7 5 Airports 7 5 1 Nearby airports 7 6 Rail and bus 8 Leisure activities and places of historical interest 8 1 Outdoor recreation 9 See also 10 Citations 11 General and cited references 12 External linksHistory editNative inhabitants edit Archeological efforts in the Connecticut River Valley have revealed traces of human life dating back at least 9 000 years Pocumtuck tradition describes the creation of Lake Hitchcock in Deerfield by a giant beaver possibly representing the action of a glacier that retracted at least 12 000 years ago Western Massachusetts was originally settled by Native American societies including the Pocomtuc Nonotuck Mohawk Nipmuck and Mahican Various sites indicate millennia of fishing horticulture beaver hunting and burials The passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act in 1990 ordered museums across western Massachusetts and the country to repatriate these remains to Native peoples an ongoing process The region was inhabited by several Algonkian speaking Native American communities culturally connected but distinguished by the place names they assigned to their respective communities Agawam low land Woronco in a circular way Nonotuck in the midst of the river Pocumtuck narrow swift river and Sokoki separated from their neighbors The modern day Springfield metropolitan area was inhabited by the Agawam people 4 The Agawam as well as other groups belong to the larger cultural category of Alongkian Indians In 1634 a plague probably smallpox reduced the Native American population of the Connecticut River Valley to a tiny percentage of its previous size Governor Bradford of Massachusetts writes that in Windsor notably the site of a trading post where European diseases often spread to Native populations of 1 000 of the Native Americans 150 of them died With so many dead English colonists were emboldened to attempt significant settlement of the region 5 Colonial and early Federal period edit The first European explorers to reach western Massachusetts were English Puritans who in 1635 at the request of William Pynchon settled the land that they considered most advantageous for both agriculture and trading in modern day Agawam adjacent to modern Metro Center Springfield In 1636 a group of English colonists lured by the promise of a great river and the northeast s most fertile farmland ventured to Springfield where they established a permanent colony Originally this settlement was called Agawam Plantation and administered by the Connecticut Colony Springfield lies only 4 miles north of Connecticut however Agawam included lands as far south as Windsor Locks as far north as Holyoke and as far west as Westfield 6 In 1640 Springfield voted to separate from the Connecticut Colony following a series of contentious incidents and after a brief period of independence decided to align with the coastal Massachusetts Bay Colony shaping the region s political boundaries The Massachusetts Bay Colony settled at the Connecticut River Valley s most fertile land stretching from Windsor Connecticut once part of Springfield to Northampton Massachusetts from 1636 to 1654 7 For the next several decades Native people experienced a complex relationship with European settlers The fur trade stood at the heart of their economic interactions a lucrative business that guided many other policy decisions White settlers traded wampum cloth and metal in exchange for furs as well as horticultural produce Because of the seasonal nature of goods provided by Native people compared with the constant availability of colonial goods a credit system developed Land the natural resource whose availability did not fluctuate served as collateral for mortgages in which Native people bought goods from the colonists in exchange for the future promise of beavers However trade with the colonists made pelts so lucrative that the beaver was rapidly overhunted The volume of the trade fell from a 1654 high of 3723 pelts to a mere 191 ten years later With every mortgage Native people lost more land although their population recovered and expanded from the old plague 8 In a process that historian Lisa Brooks calls the deed game colonists acquired an increasing amount of land from Indian tribes through debt fraudulent purchases and a variety of other methods 9 Native people began to construct and gather in palisaded forts structures that were not necessary beforehand These sites were excavated in the 19th and 20th centuries by anthropologists who took cultural objects and human remains and displayed them for years in area museums With the passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act NAGPRA in 1990 a long process of repatriation began citation needed Tensions between the colonists and surrounding Indian tribes which had already been poor for some time continued to deteriorate in the years preceding the outbreak of King Philip s War Colonial encroachment on Indian lands combined with the decimation of the native population with European diseases led to increasing Native resentment and hostility towards the colonists Though some Indians became integrated into colonial society with many being employed in white households numerous pieces of legislation were passed which prevented Indians from marrying settlers and staying in colonial settlements after dark while colonists were prevented from living among the Indians 10 In 1662 the leader of the eastern Massachusetts Wampanoag Indian tribe Wamsutta died shortly after being questioned at gunpoint by Plymouth colonists Wamsutta s brother Chief Metacomet known to inhabitants of Springfield as Philip began a war against colonial expansion in New England which spread across the region As the conflict grew in its initial months colonists throughout western Massachusetts became deeply concerned with maintaining the loyalty of their Indians 11 The Agawams cooperated even providing valuable intelligence to the colonists citation needed In August 1675 a group of colonists in Hadley demanded the disarming of a fort of Nonotuck Indians Unwilling to relinquish their weapons they left on the night of August 25 A hundred colonists pursued them catching up to them at the foot of Sugarloaf Hill which was a sacred space for the Nonotucks called the Great Beaver The colonists attacked but the Nonotucks forced them to withdraw and were able to keep moving 12 The shedding of Native blood on sacred land was an attack on their entire kinship network and caused Native peoples in western Massachusetts to join the ongoing conflict citation needed Following the war the greater part of the Native American population left western Massachusetts behind 13 Many refugees of the war joined the Wabanaki in the north where their descendants remain today Native American influence remains evident in the land and culture of western Massachusetts from the practice of tobacco farming to the names of cities and rivers 14 In 1777 George Washington and Henry Knox selected Springfield for the site of the fledgling United States National Armory Built atop a high bluff overlooking the Connecticut River Washington and Knox agreed that Springfield provided an ideal location beside a great river and at the confluence of major rivers and highways For the following 200 years the Springfield Armory would bring concentrated prosperity and innovation to Springfield and its surrounding towns After the American Revolution a rebellion led by Daniel Shays culminated in a battle at the National Armory in Springfield 15 Geography editBerkshire Mountains edit The Berkshires have long been patronized by artists e g Herman Melville who wrote Moby Dick while living in Pittsfield Edith Wharton who wrote The House of Mirth and Ethan Frome while living in Lenox and Norman Rockwell many of whose painting were based on scenes that he observed in the town of Stockbridge Cultural institutions include Lenox s Tanglewood Becket s Jacob s Pillow and Stockbridge s Norman Rockwell Museum as well the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown The city of Pittsfield is the largest community located in the Berkshires Connecticut River Valley edit New England s largest river the Connecticut flows through the center of its agricultural valley Nearly bisected by the Holyoke Range and the Mount Tom Range this relatively small area contains a number of college towns urban environments and rural hamlets The portion of this valley in Massachusetts is also commonly referred to as the Pioneer Valley At its southern tip the Springfield Hartford region is home to 29 colleges and universities and over 160 000 university students the United States second highest concentration of higher learning institutions after the Boston metropolitan area 16 better source needed Innovations originating in the valley include the sports of basketball James Naismith 1895 and volleyball William Morgan 1895 the first American automobile Duryea 1893 the first motorcycle company Indian 1901 the first use of interchangeable parts in manufacturing Thomas Blanchard 1825 and the first commercial radio station WBZ 1920 from Springfield s Kimball Hotel Significant Massachusetts towns and cities in the valley s so called Knowledge Corridor include Northampton Amherst Easthampton Holyoke Chicopee West Springfield East Longmeadow Longmeadow Ludlow Agawam and Westfield The Hilltowns edit The Hilltowns include the areas of Berkshire Franklin Hampshire and Hampden counties west of and above the escarpment bordering the ancient rift valley through which the Connecticut River flows Elevations increase from about 200 feet 60 m to at least 1 000 feet 300 m in the escarpment zone On top elevations rise gradually to the west Williamsburg in Hampshire County and Becket in Berkshire County are prominent hilltowns Generally the hilltowns west of the Connecticut River Valley were less attractive for agricultural uses which resulted in later migration there than for example the fertile Connecticut River Valley Subsistence farming predominated in this area The 1 000 foot elevation difference between uplands and the Connecticut River Valley produced streams and rivers with gradients around 40 feet mile 8 meters km flowing through steep sided valleys notably the Westfield and Deerfield rivers and their larger tributaries Mills were built to exploit the kinetic energy of falling water and mill towns grew up around them or company towns integrating production residential and commercial activities The development of steam engines to free industrialization from reliance on water power brought about the so called Second Industrial Revolution when railroads were built along the rivers to take advantage of relatively gentle grades over the Appalachians And so as hilltop farming towns declined in importance industrial towns in the river valleys rose to local prominence The Quabbin and Quaboag regions edit In northern Massachusetts the higher altitude area to the east of the Connecticut River Valley is known as the North Quabbin region These northern municipalities include Warwick Orange Petersham Phillipston Wendell New Salem and Athol near the New Hampshire border The South Quabbin region formerly the Swift River Valley includes the towns of Barre Belchertown Pelham Ware Hardwick Leverett and Shutesbury This area once included the four Lost Towns of Enfield Dana Greenwich and Prescott which were destroyed to make way for the Quabbin Reservoir Farther south the area called the Quaboag Hills includes Hampden Monson Wales Warren Holland and Wilbraham on the Connecticut border Numerous other towns stretching east towards Worcester are sometimes included in the Quaboag Valley region Geology is similar to the Hilltown Berkshire uplands with resistant metamorphic rocks overlain by thin and rocky soil With less relief the river valleys are less pronounced but still moderately high gradient The Quaboag Hills and Valley the Quabbin Regions and populated places stretching east towards Worcester are all locally known as Hill Towns a term interchangeable with the Hill Towns west of the Pioneer Valley Geology edit The mountain range in Berkshire County at the western end of Massachusetts is conventionally known as the Berkshires Geologically however the Berkshires are a westward continuation of uplands west of the Connecticut River and a southern extension of Vermont s Green Mountains The Hilltown Berkshire upland ends at the valley of the Housatonic River which flows south to Long Island Sound and in the extreme north west of Massachusetts at the Hoosic River a tributary of the Hudson From these valleys uplands to the east appear as a rounded mountain range rising some 1 600 feet 490 meters although they are actually a plateau West of the Housatonic Hoosic valley system rises the narrower Taconic Range along the New York border Upper tributaries of the Hoosic separate Massachusetts highest peak Mount Greylock 3 491 ft 1 064 meters from both ranges however Greylock s geology connects it with the Taconics Most of this region is a rolling upland of schist gneiss and other resistant metamorphics with intrusions of pegmatite and granite Scraping by continental glaciers during the Pleistocene left thin rocky soil that supported hardscrabble subsistence farming before the Industrial Revolution There was hardly a land rush into such marginal land but the uplands were slowly settled by farmers throughout most of the 18th century and organized into townships Then in the early 1800s better land opened up in Western New York and the Northwest Territory The hilltown agricultural population went into a long decline and fields began reverting to forest The Connecticut River Valley is an ancient downfaulted graben or rift valley that formed during the Mesozoic Era when rifting developed in the Pangaea supercontinent to separate North America from Europe and South America from Africa Secondary rifts branched off the main crustal fracture and this one was eventually occupied by the Connecticut River The Metacomet Ridge is a series of narrow traprock ridges where lava penetrated this rift zone beginning at the northern end of the graben near Greenfield and extending south across Massachusetts and Connecticut to Long Island Sound Fossil dinosaur footprints in Holyoke attest to the life present in this region during the Mesozoic As continental glaciers receded near the end of the last glacial period a moraine at Rocky Hill Connecticut dammed the river to create Lake Hitchcock extending northward some 200 miles 320 km inundating places such as Springfield Agawam and West Springfield while certain highlands remained above water i e sections of Holyoke Accumulation of fine sediments during the era of Lake Hitchcock accounts for this region s exceptionally rich agricultural soil which attracted settlers as early as 1635 Although the Connecticut River Valley s soil is the richest in New England many of its fields have been covered by urban and suburban development Regardless the valley remains New England s most productive farmland Tobacco tomatoes sweet corn and other vegetables are still produced there in commercial quantities Demographics editBerkshire Franklin Hampshire and Hampden counties in the year 2020 collectively had 828 188 residents a population greater than that of any one of the six smallest U S states The population amounted to approximately 12 84 of the 2000 population of the entire state of Massachusetts which was 6 349 097 17 Its average population density is 293 07 inhabitants per square mile 113 16 km2 compared to 422 34 km2 1 093 87 sq mi for the rest of Massachusetts and 312 68 km2 809 83 sq mi for the state as a whole Western Massachusetts population is concentrated in the cities and suburbs along the Connecticut River in an urban axis surrounding Springfield that is contiguous with greater Hartford Connecticut i e the Knowledge Corridor A secondary population concentration exists in the Housatonic Hoosic valley due to the industrial heritage of Pittsfield and North Adams and the development of tourism throughout that valley This far western zone is linked to New York City and Albany New York more than with the rest of Massachusetts however both populated zones are ultimately part of the Northeast megalopolis The rest of western Massachusetts is lightly populated particularly the Hilltowns where densities below 50 persons per square mile 20 per km2 are the rule In descending order of size its largest communities are Springfield Chicopee Pittsfield Westfield Holyoke Northampton Agawam West Springfield Amherst Center CDP Easthampton Longmeadow CDP East Longmeadow North Adams and Greenfield CDP Economy editWestern Massachusetts has been compared as a microcosm of the rest of the United States 18 The third largest city in Massachusetts Springfield is situated in the region and it has struggled financially coming close to bankruptcy at the beginning of the 21st century 19 The unemployment rate in the area lags behind that of eastern Massachusetts by double 20 21 though officials have pushed for ways to lure more longer term business growth into the region to tap the abundance of students being turned out by colleges and universities in the area 22 To combat the higher cost of telecommunications which were roughly double that of eastern Massachusetts the government of the Commonwealth invested 45 4 Million in building out a broadband network using Federal grant under the Massachusetts Technology Park MassBroadband 123 initiative 23 funds which were matched by 45 million in federal investment 24 The 1 200 mile middle mile project was completed in early 2014 25 connecting public institutions throughout central and western Massachusetts but also providing a fiber optic backbone to allow for further expansion in these regions Building off of that project the Commonwealth launched a Last Mile initiative targeting 54 communities that were unserved or under served by broadband That program has invested in municipal fiber to the home networks 26 which are also supported by municipal bonds private provider projects 27 and advanced wireless projects 28 to connect homes and businesses in these communities Small rural towns such as Mount Washington Mass now have access to internet speeds that reach 500 megabit per second Mbps symmetrical service 29 In recent years there has been a push for adding high speed rail from western Massachusetts for eastern Massachusetts 30 31 The residents of western Massachusetts have vibrant culture in and support the local mix of arts tourism and culture 32 Education editThe decline of manufacturing as the region s economic engine since World War II and in particular since the controversial closing of the Springfield Armory was counterbalanced in western Massachusetts by growth in post secondary education and healthcare This created new jobs land development and had gentrifying effects in many college towns State and community funded schools e g University of Massachusetts Amherst and Westfield State University were conspicuous in their growth as were the region s highly regarded liberal arts colleges including Williams founded 1793 Amherst founded 1821 Mount Holyoke founded 1837 Smith founded 1871 and American International founded 1885 Despite the gains in higher ed the region has sought to obtain equitable share of the state s education budget to place into local primary education as well Several communities in western Massachusetts have fought to have changes made the Chapter 70 structure which the state presently uses to allocate education funding to cities and towns 33 Colleges and universities edit Amherst College American International College Bard College at Simon s Rock Bay Path University Berkshire Community College Cambridge College Conway School of Landscape Design Elms College Five Colleges Association Greenfield Community College Hampshire College Holyoke Community College Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Mount Holyoke College Smith College Springfield College Springfield Technical Community College University of Massachusetts Amherst Westfield State University Western New England University Williams CollegeGovernment and politics editWestern Massachusetts used to be the Republican stronghold in an otherwise heavily Democratic state but it is now consistently viewed by political analysts as one of the most politically liberal regions in the United States In 2006 and 2010 the region voted heavily in favor of Democratic gubernatorial candidate Deval Patrick In Crash ng the Party Ralph Nader includes western Massachusetts as one of the few places in the country where he believes small town spirit is still strong In a 2010 editorial the Boston Globe berated communities in northern western Massachusetts for resisting efforts to force consolidation of local school districts 34 In response the Franklin County School Committee Caucus released a map that overlaid the county north to south over Metro Boston The overlay reached from Rhode Island in the south to New Hampshire in the north and Framingham in the west In 2008 the Office of the Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts opened a local office in western Massachusetts Counties edit The western portion of Massachusetts consists approximately of the four counties of Franklin Hampshire Hampden and Berkshire This set of four counties is sometimes regarded as defining western Massachusetts for example the Western Massachusetts Office of the Governor serves residents of these counties Towns at the western edge of Worcester County especially those near the Quabbin Reservoir may be considered to be in western Massachusetts for some purposes for example two Worcester County towns have telephone numbers in western Massachusetts s area code 413 Hampden County with over half of the population of western Massachusetts includes the City of Springfield to the north Hampshire County contains the college towns of Northampton Amherst and South Hadley further north rural Franklin County borders Vermont and New Hampshire to the west is Berkshire County bordering New York Vermont and Connecticut and the other three counties After a number of county governments were eliminated in Massachusetts in the late 1990s including Franklin Hampshire Hampden Berkshire and Worcester most county functions were assigned to the state government The municipalities of Franklin and Hampshire counties then organized two voluntary county oriented regional councils of government Attitude towards eastern Massachusetts Boston edit Some residents of western Massachusetts are critical towards Boston the state s capital and largest city This group believes that the Massachusetts legislative and executive branches know little of and care little about western Massachusetts which comprises 20 of the total population of the state 35 Among the incidents that have created this feeling The dismantling submerging and disincorporation of four western Massachusetts towns Prescott Enfield Greenwich formerly in Hampshire County and Dana formerly in Worcester County to build the Quabbin Reservoir that supplies water to Boston Also disruption of small towns accompanying flood control projects such as Knightville Reservoir and construction of the Massachusetts Turnpike Extreme inequities in additional state assistances per capita for western Massachusetts cities compared with eastern Massachusetts cities for example in 2006 for every 278 66 Boston received its neighbor Cambridge received 176 37 Greater Boston s westernmost city Worcester received 67 50 while the City of Springfield received 12 04 per person 36 Former state House Speaker Tom Finneran s use of parliamentary rules to deny Northampton an election to fill a vacant House seat 37 38 Abolishing county governance 39 placed formerly local property and employees under the direct administration of the eastern capital This also affected representation of low population large land rural towns which previously relied on their county seat in budgeting of road maintenance funding Long a haven for small independent businesses western Massachusetts has expressed conflicted feelings towards big box corporations leading to controversies about zoning changes and variances that would allow companies such as Wal Mart to build in western Massachusetts towns The debate has been particularly strong in northern towns for example in Greenfield Massachusetts 40 Transportation editSee also Transportation in Massachusetts Interstates edit nbsp I 84 nbsp I 90 nbsp I 91 nbsp I 291 nbsp I 391U S Routes edit nbsp US 5 nbsp US 7 nbsp US 20 nbsp US 202State highways edit nbsp Route 2 nbsp Route 2A nbsp Route 5A nbsp Route 7A nbsp Route 8 nbsp Route 8A nbsp Route 9 nbsp Route 10 nbsp Route 19 nbsp Route 20A nbsp Route 21 nbsp Route 23 nbsp Route 30 nbsp Route 32 nbsp Route 33 nbsp Route 38 nbsp Route 41 nbsp Route 43 nbsp Route 47 nbsp Route 57 nbsp Route 62 nbsp Route 63 nbsp Route 66 nbsp Route 67 nbsp Route 71 nbsp Route 75 nbsp Route 78 nbsp Route 83 nbsp Route 97 nbsp Route 102 nbsp Route 106 nbsp Route 112 nbsp Route 116 nbsp Route 122 nbsp Route 141 nbsp Route 142 nbsp Route 143 nbsp Route 147 nbsp Route 159 nbsp Route 168 nbsp Route 181 nbsp Route 183 nbsp Route 186 nbsp Route 187 nbsp Route 189 nbsp Route 192 nbsp Route 225 nbsp Route 295 Bridges and tunnels edit Hoosac TunnelAirports edit Great Barrington Airport North Adams Airport Northampton Airport Orange Municipal Airport Pittsfield Municipal Airport Turners Falls Airport Westfield Barnes Regional Airport Westover Airport Nearby airports edit Logan International Airport in Boston 3 miles 4 8 km northeast of downtown Boston New England s largest transportation center Worcester Regional Airport in Worcester Massachusetts Manchester Boston Regional Airport in Manchester New Hampshire Albany International Airport West of the Berkshires in upstate New York Bradley International Airport South of Springfield in ConnecticutRail and bus edit See also Hartford Line Amtrak nbsp The Hartford Line provides regular commuter rail service between Springfield Hartford and New Haven with tentative plans to increase service frequency and provide additional stops 41 Amtrak operates three lines through western Massachusetts All three stop at Springfield Union Station Lake Shore Limited Line Travels from Chicago Illinois to Boston Travels from the capitol in Boston stops at Springfield Union Joseph Scelsi Intermodal Transportation Center Pittsfield MA and service onward to upstate New York towards Buffalo via Albany Northeast Regional Travels from Springfield to D C Virginia converges at New Haven CT into the mainline with the separate branch from Boston Vermonter Line Travels from Washington D C to Vermont with four stops in western Massachusetts including Union Springfield Holyoke station Union Northampton John W Olver Transit Center Greenfield MA CTRail s Hartford Line started operating to Union Station Springfield as the northern terminus Trains operate from New Haven CT with multiple stops in Connecticut along the way The New Haven Springfield Line was upgraded in conjunction with the launch of the Hartford Line service The project received funding from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts the Federal Government and the State of Connecticut Amtrak trains on the route between New Haven and Springfield reach speeds of 110 mph 177 km h Central Corridor Rail Line A proposed line is under review from New London CT This line would also have stations in western Massachusetts at Union Palmer Palmer MA Amherst station and Millers Falls before reaching Vermont The following regional transit authorities operate in western Massachusetts Berkshire Regional Transit Authority Franklin Regional Transit Authority Pioneer Valley Transit Authority connects with Connecticut Transit Hartford rail Leisure activities and places of historical interest editSusan B Anthony Birthplace Museum Arrowhead Herman Melville Basketball Hall of Fame The Big E Clark Art Institute The Five Colleges Amherst College Hampshire College Mount Holyoke College Smith College and UMass Amherst Forest Park in Springfield one of the largest urban parks in the U S featuring a zoo and Bright Nights during the holidays Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art Historic Deerfield Emily Dickinson Museum The Homestead and The Evergreens Jacob s Pillow MassMoCA National Yiddish Book Center The Quadrangle Dr Seuss Memorial The Mount Norman Rockwell Museum Tanglewood Six Flags New England J A Skinner State Park The Springfield Armory National Park Springfield Massachusetts Club Quarter Yankee Candle Shelburne Falls Bridge of Flowers Shelburne Falls Trolley Museum Wistariahurst Outdoor recreation edit Appalachian Trail Ashuwillticook Rail Trail Bash Bish Falls State Park Berkshire East Ski Area The Berkshires Blandford Ski Area Bosquet Ski Area Connecticut River Deerfield River Farmington River Jiminy Peak Lake Buel Lake Onota Mount Everett State Reservation Mount Greylock Mount Holyoke Mount Tom Otis Reservoir Pittsfield State Forest Quabbin Reservoir Ski Butternut Great Barrington Westfield RiverSee also editArea code 413 Cooperating Colleges of Greater Springfield Five College Consortium Geography of Massachusetts List of counties in Massachusetts Seven Sisters colleges Citations edit Colleges and Universities in Western Massachusetts Gonewengland about com Archived from the original on 2013 05 14 Retrieved 2016 05 07 Western Massachusetts Western MA Things to Do in Western Mass Massvacation com 2016 04 04 Retrieved 2016 05 07 Quabbin Reservoir Fishing Guide Mass gov Retrieved 2016 05 07 Bruhac Margaret May 2007 HISTORICAL ERASURE AND CULTURAL RECOVERY INDIGENOUS PEOPLE IN THE CONNECTICUT RIVER VALLEY Thesis Wright Henry Andrew 1949 The Story of Western Massachusetts Wayne Phaneuf 22 May 2011 375 years of changing business and work landscape help define Springfield MassLive com The Republican Springfield Mass Retrieved 2012 08 04 Hart Albert Bushnell ed 1927 Commonwealth History of Massachusetts New York The States History Company OCLC 1543273 Thomas Peter 2004 Chapter 1 Into the Maelstrom of Change In Buckley Kerry ed A Place Called Paradise Historic Northampton Museum and Education Center published ISBN 1 55849 485 5 Brooks Lisa 2018 Our Beloved Kin A New History of King Philip s War Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 19673 3 Brooks Lisa 2018 Our Beloved Kin A New History of King Philip s War Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 19673 3 Pynchon John 19 August 1675 Cherackuson Letter to John Winthrop Jr Barrows Charles 1911 The Story of Springfield in Massachusetts for the Young The Connecticut Valley Historical Society Wright Henry Andrew 1905 Indian Deeds of Hampden County Lewis Historical Publishing Party Inc Conflict and Cooperation among the First Peoples and European Settlers Our Plural History Springfield Technical Community College Hahn John Willard 1946 The Background of Shays s Rebellion A Study of Massachusetts History 1780 1787 University of Wisconsin Madison p 33 Articles that mention Knowledge Corridor Hartford Springfield News Archived from the original on 2018 12 15 Retrieved 2012 08 04 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved 2012 08 04 What s It Worth To Move To Western Mass Maybe 10 000 This Small New England City Was on the Verge of Bankruptcy Now It s a Turnaround Success Story Most of the growth is to the east Springfield gains jobs but unemployment rate stays well above Worcester and Boston Economy in Springfield Massachusetts Business 2018 Valley s economy is riding high experts more optimistic than they ve been in years Federal government grants to expand broadband Internet access in Western Massachusetts Broadband USA Construction Turnover Complete on New 1 200 Mile Fiber Backbone for Western and Central Massachusetts broadband masstech org MBI Retrieved 2019 10 11 Demers Phil Staff Berkshire Eagle 19 February 2014 Massachusetts Broadband Institute announces completion of rural high speed network The Berkshire Eagle Retrieved 2019 10 11 Last Mile broadband project update for small towns in western Mass WWLP 2018 08 23 Retrieved 2019 10 11 Serreze Mary 2018 09 07 Officials celebrate Comcast broadband expansion in 9 rural Western Massachusetts towns MassLive The Republican Springfield Mass Retrieved 2019 10 11 Parnass Larry 18 June 2018 Savoy Florida back wireless route to last mile internet The Berkshire Eagle Retrieved 2019 10 11 Little engine that could Mount Washington flips switch on fiber The Berkshire Eagle 6 November 2017 Retrieved 2019 10 11 East west rail gains headway in western Mass MA MassDOT East West rail ridership could be 4 times greater than expected but project out of reach without federal help Jim Kinney June 11th 2020 Western Mass Hilltowns look for a foothold School funding overhaul requires a much larger state commitment School Board Districts at the Elementary School Level 13 December 2010 Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 14 April 2011 Mazarakis James September 20 2016 Bridging the divide between eastern and western Massachusetts Op Ed Massachusetts Daily Collegian Retrieved October 8 2019 Springfield Panel PDF Urban Land Institute 24 29 September 2006 Northampton Special Election Green Rainbow Party of Massachusetts Archived from the original on 2013 04 15 Phillips Frank 21 December 2001 Hampshire district s empty seat suits speaker The Boston Globe Historical Data Relating to the Incorporation of and Abolishment of Counties in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Wal Mart Watch Greenfield MA stops Wal Mart rezoning Making Change at Walmart United Food and Commercial Workers International Union Archived from the original on October 7 2008 Yonkunas Rachel December 27 2018 State Leaders Are Hoping to Expand State Rail Service Beyond Springfield WFSB Eyewitness News 3 General and cited references edit Hilltown Families What to Do in Pioneer Valley Archived from the original on 2 April 2019 Map of Massachusetts Cities and Towns PDF Citizen Information Service Secretary of the Commonwealth 27 February 2019 Homepage Exploring Western Massachusetts Local history blog External links editWestern Massachusetts Economic Development Council Western Mass culture arts and tourism Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism Western Massachusetts Map modern YellowMaps Western Massachusetts 1855 Bowles Old State Map Reprint 1855 map at Old Maps Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Western Massachusetts amp oldid 1190280733, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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