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MASSACHUSETTS
To the first colonists of the Massachusetts
Bay Company, their arrival near the site of modern
Salem in 1630 marked a crucial moment in history.
Puritans who had decided to leave England before
it was engulfed by civil war, saw their purpose,
in the words of Governor John Winthrop, as the
establishment of a Utopian "City upon a hill."
Their new colony of MASSACHUSETTS was to be a
beacon to the rest of humanity, an exemplar of
sober government along sound spiritual principles.
Not all those who followed, however, shared the
same motivation; the story is often told of the
preacher who told his congregation that they had
come to New England to build a new kingdom of
God, only to be challenged by a vociferous parishioner
who said he had come to fish. In their own terms,
the Puritans were not successful: as waves of
immigration brought all kinds of dissenters and
free-thinkers from Europe, society in New England
inevitably became secular. However, their influence
remained.
A clarity of thought and forcefulness of purpose
can be traced from the foundation of Harvard College
in 1636, through the intellectual impetus behind
the Revolution and the crusade against slavery,
to the nineteenth-century achievements of writers
such as Melville, Emerson, Hawthorne and Thoreau.
Other traditions, too, have helped shape the state
– poor migrants from Ireland and Italy, freed
and escaped slaves from the Southern states, Portuguese
seamen – even if they have not always been welcome.
The anti-immigrant "Know-Nothing" party of the
1850s acquired considerable public support; in
1927, the Italian anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti
came up against conservative old Massachusetts,
and were framed and executed on murder charges.
As recently as the 1970s, Boston experienced racial
conflicts that matched the bitterness of those
erupting throughout the nation. This has been
somewhat healed of late, as have any economic
doldrums that plagued the city for the latter
half of the century, and a new sense of confidence
– so emblematic of Boston's storied past – has
taken hold.
Boston is East Coast America at its best, and
spending a few days there is strongly recommended.
It's a place that isn't content to rest on its
laurels – the history is visible, but there's
a great deal of modern life and energy besides,
thanks in part to the presence of Cambridge, the
home of Harvard University, just across the river.
Several further historic towns are within easy
reach – Salem to the north, Concord and Lexington
just inland, and Plymouth to the south. Provincetown,
a three-hour ferry ride across the bay at the
tip of Cape Cod, is great fun to visit, and the
rest of the Cape offers historic towns, lovely
beaches – and huge crowds.
Except for a handful of college towns such as
Amherst, inland Massachusetts is much quieter;
its settlements are naturally concentrated where
the land is fertile, such as along the Connecticut
River valley and in the Berkshires to the west.
Central and western Massachusetts
The 150 miles of Massachusetts that stretch inland
to the west of Boston have always been obliged
to play second fiddle to the state capital. Just
ten years after the Revolution, the farmers who
struggled to make a living from this indifferent
soil so resented the imposition of taxes by the
prosperous merchants of the east that they rose
in Shay's Rebellion; their pitchforks were no
match for the guns of the new nation.
These days the citizens of the west are eager
to promote themselves as cultural rivals of the
big city, with the Berkshires hosting the celebrated
Tanglewood music festival in summer. Amherst,
the home of such diverse talents as Emily Dickinson
and Dinosaur Jr, is a stimulating little college
community, as is its larger neighbor, Northampton;
both have all the cafés, restaurants and bookstores
you could want. Another delightful college town
is Williamstown in the far northwest corner, set
at the end of the incredibly scenic Mohawk Trail.
To
view Vacation Rental Homes in MASSACHUSETTS click
here.
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