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Hudson Public Schools

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90-591: The Hudson Public Schools District is a coalition of public schools located in Hudson , Middlesex County , Massachusetts . The superintendent of Hudson Public Schools is Dr. Brian Reagan. The Hudson Public Schools' office is located at 155 Apsley Street in Hudson in the former Harriman Grammar School building. 42°23′46.12″N 71°34′07.69″W  /  42.3961444°N 71.5688028°W  / 42.3961444; -71.5688028 Hudson, Massachusetts Hudson

180-700: A Polish American club, and other Portuguese American clubs. In 2003 the Hudson Portuguese Club replaced its original Port Street clubhouse with a function hall and restaurant built on the same site. The Portuguese American community in Hudson traces its history to at least 1886, when a certain José Maria Tavares arrived in town. José's brothers João "John" and Manuel joined him the following year. In 1888 three more Portuguese immigrants reached Hudson: eighteen-year-old José "Joseph" Braga, and António Chaves and his sister Maria. In 1889

270-423: A factory system of labor . Throughout this period, much of the U.S. population remained in small scale agriculture. Despite a small percentage of the population then working in industry, the U.S. government took action to promote the expansion of U.S. industry. An important example is Alexander Hamilton 's proposal of the "American School" ideas which supported high tariffs to protect U.S. industry. This idea

360-497: A broadband internet subscription. The Town of Hudson has an open town meeting form of government, like most New England towns. The executive assistant is an official appointed by the Select Board who is responsible for the day-to-day administrative affairs of the town. They function with authority delegated to the office by the town charter and bylaws. The current executive assistant is Thomas Gregory. The Select Board

450-521: A center of business and social life, with employees living on or near the mill. The company grew rapidly and by the mid-19th century had become the largest supplier of gunpowder to the United States military. In the late 1700s, Robert Fulton of Pennsylvania proposed plans for steam-powered vessels to both the United States and British governments. Having developed significant technical knowledge in both France and Great Britain, Fulton returned to

540-419: A demonstration for Congress in which he assembled muskets from parts chosen randomly from his supply. While this demonstration was later proved to be fake, it popularized the idea of interchangeable parts, and Eli Whitney continued using the concept to allow relatively unskilled laborers to produce and repair weapons quickly and at a low cost. Another important innovator is Thomas Blanchard , who in 1819 invented

630-630: A dry goods store in the hamlet from 1799 onward and served many years as a Marlborough selectman, town clerk, town assessor, and postmaster. Today, Felton remains immortalized in the Silas Felton Hudson Historic District and two Hudson street names: Felton Street and Feltonville Road. According to the United States Census Bureau , the town has a total area of 11.8 square miles (30.7 km ), of which 11.5 square miles (29.8 km )

720-417: A factory for waterproofing fabrics by rubber coating were constructed. Private banks, five schools, a poor farm , and the current town hall were also built during this time. The population hovered around 4,000 residents, most of whom lived in modest houses with small backyard gardens. Some of Hudson's wealthier citizens built elaborate Queen Anne Victorian mansions, and many of them still exist. One of

810-446: A fellow Lithuanian American, operated a silver fox farm. The community was large and active enough to support the social and recreational Lithuanian Citizens' Club, located on School Street from 1926 to 1960. Hudson's population hovered around 8,000 from the 1920s to the 1950s, when developers purchased some farms surrounding the town center. The new houses built on this land helped double Hudson's population to 16,000 by 1970. From

900-595: A few miles of paddling northeast until the mill dam in the Stow section of Gleasondale . On the border with Stow are Lake Boon , a popular vacation spot prior to the widespread adoption of the automobile but now a primarily residential neighborhood, and White Pond , which historically provided drinking water to Maynard and is still owned by that town. On the border with Marlborough is Fort Meadow Reservoir , which once provided drinking water to Hudson and Marlborough. The Town of Hudson owns and maintains Centennial Beach on

990-481: A fire that burned down 40 buildings and 5 acres (20,000 m ) of central Hudson. Nobody was hurt, but the damages were estimated at $ 400,000 in 1894 (the equivalent of approximately $ 11.1 million in 2018). The town was substantially rebuilt within a year or two. By 1900, Hudson's population reached about 5,500 residents and the town had built a power plant on Cherry Street. Many houses were wired for electricity, and to this day Hudson produces its own power under

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1080-477: A portrait portraying one of the library's major benefactors: Charles Hudson, Lewis Dewart Apsley , and Andrew Carnegie. Apsley funded his own portrait as well as that of Charles Hudson, while the portrait of Carnegie was a 1935 gift from the Carnegie Corporation . These portraits are displayed on the landing of the stair going up to the third floor reading room. Hudson Public Library is a member of

1170-640: A quiet reading room, and also houses the periodicals collection, a community meeting room, and staff offices. In 1966 a two-story Modernist addition was added at the rear of the original building, more than doubling the library's size. The children's department, housed on the library's first floor, was expanded and renovated in 2002. The second floor serves as the adults' and teens' department. The Hudson Public Library's collection has grown to approximately 65,000 books, periodicals, audio recordings, video recordings, historical records, and other items as of 2020. As part of its collection HPL owns three oil paintings, each

1260-528: A religion are likely Roman Catholics or Protestants , based on the churches existing in town. A small portion of town residents are Jewish , Muslim , Buddhist , or Orthodox , but there are not currently synagogues, mosques, temples, or Orthodox churches in Hudson. Nevertheless, the town lends its name to the 1907 Hudson Incident —a key event in the Albanian Orthodox Church 's formation—in which an Albanian nationalist died in Hudson and

1350-580: A sawmill on Tannery Brook, a tributary stream of the Assabet River today crossed by Main Street, in the mid-1700s. This was followed by another mill on the Assabet in 1788 and a blacksmith 's forge in 1790. Joel Cranston opened a pub and general store—the settlement's first—in 1794. Silas Felton (1776–1828) arrived in the settlement in 1799, joining Cranston in business: it was not long before

1440-648: A separate Marlborough , claiming the journey to attend Hudson's town meeting was "vastly fatiguing." Their petition was denied by the Massachusetts General Court . Samuel Witt later served on committees of correspondence during the 1760s. At least nine men from the area fought with the Minutemen on April 19, 1775, as they harassed British troops along the trade route to Boston. The area established itself as an early industrial center . Business partners Phineas Sawyer and Jedediah Wood built

1530-492: A separate town. They cited the difficulty of attending town meeting, as their predecessors had in 1743, and also noted that Marlborough's high school was too far for most Feltonville children to practicably attend. This petition was approved by the Massachusetts General Court on March 16, 1866. A committee suggested naming the new town Hudson after Congressman Charles Hudson , who was born and raised in

1620-729: A small but well-documented Lithuanian American community. This community originated in 1897, when Anthony Markunas arrived in Hudson. Another early Lithuanian immigrant was Michael Rimkus, who owned and operated a grocery store on the corner of Loring and Broad streets from 1908 to 1950. It appears Lithuanians came to Hudson from larger communities located in Nashua , Worcester , and Boston . Apparently Hudson's Lithuanians were known for their herb gardens—where they grew rue , chamomile , and mint —and beekeeping . For many years Mr. Karol Baranowski maintained on apiary on Lois Street (now Mason Street). His next-door neighbor Dominic Janciauskas,

1710-641: Is Hudson Public Schools , a district open to Hudson residents and through school choice to any area students. The superintendent of Hudson Public Schools is Dr. Brian Reagan. Prior to starting ninth grade Hudson students may choose to attend either Hudson High School or Assabet Valley Regional Technical High School . Assabet Valley Regional Technical High School is open to students from Berlin, Hudson, Maynard, Northborough, Southborough, Westborough, and Marlborough. The first public library in Hudson opened in 1867 thanks to $ 500 (~$ 10,900 in 2023) in financial assistance from Charles Hudson and matching funds provided by

1800-573: Is Rev. Thomas John. The First Federated Church on Central Street was built between 1967 and 1968. It is a Baptist – Congregational church associated with American Baptist Churches USA and the United Church of Christ . The Baptist portion of the federated congregation traces its origins to 1844, when Feltonville residents invited a revivalist preacher to hold services for them. This Baptist community grew large enough to build and open their own Feltonville Baptist Church building in 1851; it

1890-669: Is a group of publicly elected officials who are the executive authority of the town. The Select Board was formerly known as the Board of Selectmen. The title was officially changed by an affirmative vote of Article 26 of the Hudson Town Meeting on May 1, 2021. There are five positions on the Hudson Select Board, currently filled by Scott R. Duplisea, Judy Congdon, Diane G. Bemis, James D. Quinn, and Steven C. Sharek. The Select Board elect from among their membership

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1980-563: Is a mostly suburban bedroom community with many residents commuting to Boston or Worcester . Before becoming a separate incorporated town in 1866, Hudson was a neighborhood and unincorporated village within the town—now city—of Marlborough , and had various names during that time. From 1656 until 1700, present-day Hudson and the surrounding area was known as the Indian Plantation or the Cow Commons . From 1700 to 1800,

2070-466: Is a town in Middlesex County , Massachusetts , United States, with a total population of 20,092 as of the 2020 census . Before its incorporation as a town in 1866, Hudson was a neighborhood and unincorporated village of Marlborough, Massachusetts , and was known as Feltonville . From approximately 1850 until the last shoe factory burned down in 1968, Hudson was a mill town specializing in

2160-487: Is land and 0.3 square miles (0.9 km ) (2.87%) is water. The Assabet River runs prominently through most of Hudson. The river arises from wetlands in Westborough and flows northeast 34 miles (55 km), starting at an elevation of 320 feet (98 m). It descends through the towns of Northborough , Marlborough , Berlin , Hudson, Stow , Maynard , Acton , and finally Concord , where it merges with

2250-492: Is most associated with starting up the textiles industry in the U.S. and who initially brought the textile technology to the U.S. was Samuel Slater . Slater learned that Americans were interested in textile techniques used in England, but since exporting such technical designs were illegal in England, he memorized as much as he could and departed for New York City . Moses Brown , a leading Rhode Island industrialist, secured

2340-574: Is the dam, but upstream provides miles of flat water—depending on the season, as far southeast as the dam at Millham Reservoir in Marlborough. Another canoe and kayak launch exists farther upstream behind Hudson High School, accessible via an unpaved parking lot on Chapin Street. There is also boat access downstream of the dam at Main Street Landing, accessible from the paved Assabet River Rail Trail parking lot on Main Street, and providing

2430-711: The Azorean island of Santa Maria , with a smaller amount from the island of São Miguel , the Madeira islands, or from the Trás-os-Montes region of mainland Portugal. The Portuguese community in Hudson maintains the Hudson Portuguese Club, which was established in 1919. It has outlived Hudson's other ethnic clubs, including the Buonovia Club ( Italian American ), the Lithuanian Citizens' Club,

2520-530: The CW MARS regional library consortium and catalog. This allows Hudson cardholders to borrow items from other central and western Massachusetts public libraries and gives cardholders from those libraries access to Hudson's collection. In fiscal year 2008, the Town of Hudson spent 1.19% ($ 614,743) of its budget on its public library—approximately $ 31 per person, per year. The majority of Hudson residents who practice

2610-481: The Industrial Revolution affected the U.S. economy , progressing it from manual labor, farm labor and handicraft work, to a greater degree of industrialization based on wage labor . There were many improvements in technology and manufacturing fundamentals with results that greatly improved overall production and economic growth in the U.S. The Industrial Revolution occurred in two distinct phases,

2700-717: The Massachusetts Central Railroad and the Fitchburg Railroad , later the Central Massachusetts Railroad Company , and later by Boston & Maine , until both were closed in 1965. Railroads allowed the development of larger factories, some of the first in the country to use steam power and sewing machines . By 1860, Feltonville had 17 shoe and shoe-related factories, which attracted Irish and French Canadian immigrants. Feltonville residents fought for

2790-739: The Sudbury River to form the Concord River , at an elevation of 100 feet (30 m). The dam in central Hudson is one of nine historic mill or flood control dams on the Assabet River. A portion of the Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge is located in Hudson. There are various public access points to the Assabet River in Hudson. The back of the Hudson Public Library parking lot provides access to launch canoes and kayaks. Downstream

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2880-516: The Taylor Memorial Bridge to the town, connecting the public Wood Park and Apsley Park across the Assabet River. Today, the majority of Hudson residents are of Irish or Portuguese descent, with lesser populations of Brazilian, Italian, French, French Canadian, English, Scotch-Irish, Greek, and Polish descent. About one-third of Hudson residents are of Portuguese descent or birth. Most people of Portuguese descent in Hudson are from

2970-627: The cotton gin , Éleuthère Irénée du Pont 's improvements in chemistry and gunpowder making, and other industrial advancements necessitated by the War of 1812 , as well as the construction of the Erie Canal , among other developments. As Western Europe industrialized in the mid-to-late 1700s, the United States remained agrarian with resource processing, gristmills, and sawmills being the main industrial, non-agrarian output. As demand for U.S. resources increased, canals and railroads became important to

3060-666: The "Father of the American Industrial Revolution". But Slater also earned the pejorative "Slater the Traitor" from many in Great Britain who felt he betrayed them in bringing British textile techniques to the Americas. With the invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney in 1794, American slaveholders had the means to make cotton production significantly more profitable. The era of King Cotton

3150-466: The 1780s, the Erie Canal was proposed, then re-proposed in 1807 with a survey being funded in 1808. Construction began in 1817 and the original canal was about 363 miles with 34 numbered locks from Albany to Buffalo . Prior to the Erie Canal, bulk goods were limited to shipping by pack animal, there were no railways and water was the most cost-effective way to ship bulk goods. Use of this new canal

3240-579: The 1970s through the 1990s high-technology companies built plants in Hudson, most notably the Hudson Fab semiconductor factory built by Digital Equipment Corporation in 1979. Just before Digital folded in 1998, Intel bought this facility. Under Intel's ownership, the plant continued producing silicon chips and wafers . At the height of the Great Recession in the late 2000s, Hudson lost many local businesses. Particularly affected were

3330-532: The 2000 census, there were 18,113 people, 6,990 households, and 4,844 families residing in the town. The population density was 1,574.4 inhabitants per square mile (607.9/km ). There were 7,168 housing units at an average density of 623.0 per square mile (240.5/km ). The racial makeup of the town was 94.12% White , 0.91% Black or African American , 0.13% Native American , 1.40% Asian , 0.06% Pacific Islander , 1.40% from other races, and 1.98% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3.06% of

3420-733: The Assabet River intersected with the territories of three other related Algonquian-speaking peoples: the Massachusett , Pennacook , and Wampanoag . In 1650, the area that would become Marlboro and Marlborough was part of the Ockookangansett Indian Plantation for the Praying Indians . During King Philip's War , English settlers forcibly evicted the Indias from their plantation, imprisoning and killing many of them; most survivors did not return after

3510-457: The Assabet. Other early settlers include Jeremiah Barstow, who built a house near today's Wood Square in central Hudson, and Robert Barnard, who purchased the house from Barstow. The area became known as Hoe's Mills, Barnard's Mills, or simply The Mills throughout the 1700s. The settlement was originally part of the town of Hudson. In June 1743, area residents Samuel Witt, John Hapgood, and others petitioned to break away from Hudson and become

3600-506: The Azorean islands of Santa Maria or São Miguel. By 1916 immigrants from mainland Portugal reached Hudson, including a certain João "John" Rio and family. As early as the 1920s, Hudson's Portuguese population exceeded 1000 individuals—more than 10% of Hudson's total population at the time. Some were employed as factory workers, though many also owned small businesses. Hudson also welcomed

3690-470: The Blanchard lathe, which could produce identical copies of wooden gun stocks. Interchangeable parts made the development of the assembly line possible. In addition to making production faster, the assembly line eliminated the need for skilled craftsmen because each worker would only do one repetitive step instead of the entire process. The first Industrial Revolution had a profound effect on labor in

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3780-494: The Civil War, rifles with interchangeable parts had been developed, and after the war, more complex devices such as sewing machines and typewriters were made with interchangeable parts. In 1798, Eli Whitney obtained a government contract to manufacture 10,000 muskets in less than two years. By 1801, he had failed to produce a single musket and was called to Washington to justify his use of Treasury funds. There, he created

3870-485: The Embargo Act resulted in the expansion of new, emerging US domestic industries across the board, particularly the textile industry, and marked the beginning of the manufacturing system in the United States, reducing the nation's dependence upon imported manufactured goods. The early Industrial Revolution, which lasted into the mid-19th century, was marked by shift in labor, from an outwork system of labor towards

3960-459: The Feltonville neighborhood. By his own account, in response to this honor, Charles Hudson offered to donate $ 500 (~$ 10,405 in 2023) towards establishing a free public library. Town citizens gratefully voted to accept Congressman Hudson's gift. Over the next twenty years, Hudson grew as several industries settled in town. Two woolen mills, an elastic-webbing plant, a piano case factory, and

4050-645: The First Industrial Revolution occurred during the later part of the 18th century through the first half of the 19th century and the Second Industrial Revolution advanced following the American Civil War . Among the main contributors to the First Industrial Revolution were Samuel Slater 's introduction of British industrial methods in textile manufacturing to the United States, Eli Whitney 's invention of

4140-511: The Jeffersonian-dominated Congress did not renew it. State legislatures were persuaded to charter their own banks to continue helping merchants, artisans, and farmers who needed loans, and, by 1816, there were 246 state-chartered banks. With these banks, states were able to support internal transportation improvements, such as the Erie Canal , which stimulated economic development. The Industrial Revolution altered

4230-640: The King Roman Catholic Church (see below). On the morning of September 23, 1965, a fire severely damaged the 1877 Baptist church, which had to be demolished. After fundraising for a new structure, the First Federated Church broke ground at Central Street on Palm Sunday , March 19, 1967, and opened the new church on Palm Sunday one year later, April 7, 1968. The church's current pastor is Rev. Yvonne Miloyevich. The First United Methodist Church of Hudson on Felton Street

4320-706: The Lady of Fátima Feast / Festa da Nossa Senhora de Fátima. The oldest of these is the Império Micaelense festival, which traces its origins to 1914. Such festivals are a common religious and sociocultural event in the Azores and in Portuguese communities of Azorean descent throughout the United States, Canada, and Brazil. Carmel Marthoma Church on River Road is the newest church building in Hudson, constructed in 2001. The congregation traces its beginnings to

4410-503: The U.S. Companies from the era, such as the Boston Associates , would recruit thousands of New England farm girls to work in textile mills. These girls often received much lower wages than men, though the work and pay gave young women a sense of independence that they did not feel working on a farm. The First Industrial Revolution also marked the beginning of the rise of wage labor in the United States. As wage labor grew over

4500-462: The U.S. economy and set the stage for the United States to dominate technological change and growth in the Second Industrial Revolution and the Gilded Age . The Industrial Revolution also saw a decrease in labor shortages which had characterized the U.S. economy through its early years. This was partly due to a transportation revolution happening at the same time, low population density areas of

4590-664: The U.S. economy. Some technologies that advanced the Industrial Revolution in the U.S. were appropriated from British designs by ambitious British entrepreneurs hoping to use the technology to create successful companies in the U.S. Much of the Industrial Revolution in the U.S. originated in the Lehigh Valley region of eastern Pennsylvania , where anthracite coal , iron ore , steel , textile , and industrial sectors experienced breakthroughs and emerged as global manufacturing leaders. One entrepreneur who

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4680-506: The U.S. were better able to connect to the population centers through the Wilderness Road and the Erie Canal , with steamboats and later rail transport , leading to urbanization and an increased labor force available around larger cities, including Chicago , Philadelphia , and New York City , and labor force shortages elsewhere as workers fled to these highly populated cities. Also, quicker movement of resources and goods around

4770-711: The Union during the American Civil War . Twenty-five of those men died doing so. Two existing houses—the Goodale Homestead on Chestnut Street (Hudson's oldest surviving building, dating from 1702) and the Curley home on Brigham Street (formerly known as the Rice Farm)—have been cited as waystations on the Underground Railroad . On May 16, 1865, Feltonville residents once again petitioned to become

4860-503: The United States, working with Robert R. Livingston to open the first commercially successful steamboat operating between New York City and Albany . Fulton built a new steamboat sturdy enough to take down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, he was an early member on a commission to plan the Erie Canal , and Fulton designed the first working muscle-powered submarine, the Nautilus . In

4950-403: The area became known as Feltonville. Feltonville's—and later Hudson's—significant role in the shoe industry may trace its origins to Daniel Stratton. A shoemaker , Stratton opened his Feltonville shop in 1816, expanding it to a small factory on Washington Street in 1821. In the 1850s, Feltonville received its first railroads. There were two Feltonville train stations, originally operated by

5040-559: The auspices of the Hudson Light and Power Department, a non-profit municipal utility owned by the town. The brick Hudson Armory building accommodating local Massachusetts militia , and later units of the Massachusetts National Guard , opened in 1910. Electric trolley lines were built connecting Hudson with the towns of Leominster , Concord , and Marlborough, though these only remained in existence until

5130-405: The average family size was 3.11. In the town, the population was spread out, with 24.0% under the age of 18, 6.7% from 18 to 24, 33.5% from 25 to 44, 23.6% from 45 to 64, and 12.2% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37 years. For every 100 females, there were 97.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 94.6 males. The median income for a household in the town

5220-490: The conflict. The first recorded European settlement of the Hudson area occurred in 1698 or 1699 when settler John Barnes was granted 1 acre (0.40 ha) of Indian lands straddling both banks of the Assabet River . Barnes built a gristmill on the Assabet River's north bank on land that would one day be part of Hudson. In 1699 or 1700 Barnes sold his gristmill to Joseph Howe, who built a sawmill and bridge across

5310-674: The congregation worshiped at the Methodist church in Gleasondale (then known as Rock Bottom), until 1863. Sometime in the succeeding decades the congregation built an ornate wood-framed church on Main Street, which they lost in the 1911 fire. The current pastor is Chris Jones. Industrial Revolution in the United States Employment In the United States from the late 18th and 19th centuries,

5400-610: The corner of Green and Central streets. In 1918, after some time of combined worship, the Congregational and Baptist churches decided to merge into one congregation—the First Federated Church—and worship at the Baptists' Church Street building. The Congregational church building became a community hall with bowling alleys until it was sold to a French Catholic congregation in 1927: this church would become Christ

5490-482: The country drastically increased trade efficiency and output while allowing for an extensive transport base for the U.S. to grow during the Second Industrial Revolution. Techniques to make interchangeable parts were developed in the U.S., and allowed easy assembly and repair of firearms or other devices, minimizing the time and skill needed to repair or assemble devices. By the beginning of

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5580-561: The downtown commercial district and industrial establishments. Further bad news came in 2013 when Intel, Hudson's largest employer and charitable donor, announced it would close its Hudson semiconductor factory and layoff 700 employees by 2014. Initially Intel tried to find a buyer for the facility, but when none came forward by 2015, Intel announced it would demolish the plant. However, Intel's campus in Hudson includes an 850-person microprocessor research and development facility that did not close, and remains operational as of 2020. Since

5670-560: The early 1970s as a prayer fellowship that met in the greater Boston area. In 1981 the parent Mar Thoma Syrian Church officially recognized this gathering as a congregation and part of its Diocese of North America and Europe. In 1984 the congregation registered as a legal entity in Massachusetts, with nine families becoming members. As of 2018 the congregation numbered 120 families residing throughout Massachusetts, Connecticut , New Hampshire , and Rhode Island . The current vicar

5760-522: The economic growth as transportation necessitated and the U.S. population was sparse, especially in areas where resources were being extracted such as the American frontier . This made it necessary to expand technological capabilities, which led to an Industrial Revolution in America as entrepreneurs, businesses competed with and learned from each other to develop better technology, fundamentally altering

5850-454: The finest is the 1895 Colonel Adelbert Mossman House on Park Street, which is on the National Register of Historic Places . The town maintained five volunteer fire companies during the 1880s and 1890s, one of which manned the Eureka Hand Pump, a record-setting pump that could shoot a 1.5-inch (38 mm) stream of water 229 feet (70 m). Despite this glut of fire companies, on July 4, 1894, two boys playing with firecrackers started

5940-499: The first Spirit of Hudson Food and Brewfest to showcase local restaurants and breweries. Since then, the event has evolved into a large food and beer fest featuring dozens of restaurants and breweries, from tiny local producers to internationally known craft beer stalwarts such as Harpoon and Stone Brewing . The first microbrewery in Hudson, Medusa Brewing Company, opened downtown in 2015. A second—Ground Effect Brewing Company—followed in 2018. In 2022 Ground Effect changed hands with

6030-427: The late 1920s. The factories in town continued to grow, attracting immigrants from England , Germany , Portugal , Lithuania , Poland , Greece , Albania , and Italy . By 1928 nineteen languages were spoken by the workers of the Firestone-Apsley Rubber Company . These immigrants usually lived in boarding houses near their places of employment. In 1926 Hudson industrialists Thomas Taylor and Frank Taylor donated

6120-437: The mid-2010s Hudson's commercial downtown has witnessed an economic revitalization, with previously empty storefronts finding tenants. This is partly thanks to the town's increasing role as a regional culinary destination, including for craft beer. Hudson's craft beer scene arguably began in 1980 when the Horseshoe Pub & Restaurant opened. In 2012, the Hudson Rotary Club , Horseshoe Pub, and other local businesses organized

6210-410: The nascent town. This first library was a modest reading room in the Brigham Block building and contained 721 books. In 1873 the library moved to a room in the newly completed Hudson Town Hall. The current Hudson Public Library (HPL) building is a Carnegie library first built in 1905 using a $ 12,500 donation from Andrew Carnegie . It opened to the public on November 16, 1905. The original structure

6300-401: The opening of Clover Road Brewing Company, in the same location with the same head brewer, but new ownership. Although Hudson's population is now about 20,000, the town maintains the traditional town meeting form of government. Some light manufacturing and agricultural uses remain in the eastern end of town, a vestige of Hudson's dual agrarian and industrial history. However, today Hudson

6390-407: The population. There were 6,990 households, out of which 32.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 56.7% were married couples living together, 9.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 30.7% were non-families. Of all households, 25.2% were made up of individuals, and 9.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.57 and

6480-583: The positions of chairman, vice-chairman, and clerk. The Massachusetts legislature abolished the Middlesex County government in 1997. Former county agencies and institutions reverted to the control of the state government of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Certain county government positions, such as District Attorney and Sheriff , still function under the state government instead of a county government. Hudson's local public school district

6570-443: The production of shoes and related products. At one point, the town had 17 shoe factories, many of them powered by the Assabet River , which runs through town. The many factories in Hudson attracted immigrants from Canada and Europe. Today most residents are of either Portuguese or Irish descent, with a smaller percentage being of French , Italian , English , or Scotch-Irish descent. While some manufacturing remains in Hudson,

6660-589: The running water to power the machinery in the plant. Thus, many of the factories of the First Industrial Revolution were in the Northeastern United States To aid the expansion of industry, Congress chartered the Bank of the United States in 1791, giving loans to help merchants and entrepreneurs secure needed capital. However, Jeffersonians saw this bank as an unconstitutional expansion of federal power, so when its charter expired in 1811,

6750-434: The services of Slater, with Slater promising to recreate British textile designs. After an initial investment by Brown to fulfill initial requirements, a mill successfully opened in 1793 being the first water-powered roller spinning textile mill in America. By 1800, Slater's mill had been duplicated by many other entrepreneurs as Slater grew wealthier and his techniques more and more popular with Andrew Jackson calling Slater

6840-424: The settlement was known as Howe's Mills , Barnard's Mills , or The Mills , evidencing its early industrial history. From 1800 to 1828, the settlement was called New City , for reasons not entirely clear but perhaps related to increased population and industrialization. From 1828 until incorporation in 1866, the village was called Feltonville . The name Feltonville derives from that of Silas Felton, who operated

6930-419: The shores of Fort Meadow Reservoir. It is open to residents and non-residents for the cost of a daily or season pass, typically from June to August. Hudson is bordered by four towns and one city: Bolton and Stow on the north, the city of Marlborough on the south, Sudbury on the east, and Berlin on the west. The neighborhood and unincorporated village of Gleasondale straddles Hudson and Stow. As of

7020-606: The six-person Garcia family arrived. The 1890s saw the addition of the Bairos, Camara, Correia, and Luz families. In 1900 Mr. and Mrs. José "Joseph" Almada and Mrs. Almada's brother Manuel Silva settled in Hudson. By 1910 eleven more Portuguese families resided in Hudson: the Coito, Costa, Furtado, Grillo, Mello, Pereira, Pimentel, Rainha, Resendes, Ribeiro, and Sousa families. This initial group of Portuguese immigrants all hailed from

7110-556: The town is now primarily residential. Hudson is served by the Hudson Public Schools district. Indigenous people lived in what became central Massachusetts for thousands of years prior to European settlement. Indigenous oral histories, archaeological evidence, and European settler documents attest to historic settlements of the Nipmuc people in present-day Marlborough and the surrounding area. Nipmuc settlements along

7200-432: Was $ 58,549, and the median income for a family was $ 70,145. Males had a median income of $ 45,504 versus $ 35,207 for females. The per capita income for the town was $ 26,679. About 2.7% of families and 4.5% of the population were below the poverty line , including 3.8% of those under age 18 and 8.7% of those age 65 or over. As of 2017 Census Bureau estimates, Hudson's population increased to 19,994. The town's racial makeup

7290-455: Was 92.6% white, 1.3% Black or African American, 0.1% Native American, 2.7% Asian, and 2.5% from two or more races, with Hispanic or Latino people of any race making up 6.7% of the population. According to 2017 Census Bureau estimates, 90.3% of Hudson residents graduated high school or higher, while 39.8% have a bachelor's degree or higher. The Census Bureau estimated that in the five-year period between 2013 and 2017, 86.3% of Hudson households had

7380-656: Was a cumulative addition to the Non-importation Act of 1806 (2 Stat. 379), which was a "Prohibition of the Importation of certain Goods and Merchandise from the Kingdom of Great Britain," the prohibited imported goods being defined where their chief value, which consists of leather, silk, hemp or flax, tin or brass, wool, glass, and paper goods, nails, hats, clothing, and beer. The prohibition of imports under

7470-463: Was a two-story Beaux-Arts design typical of Carnegie libraries and other American public buildings of the early twentieth century. Despite numerous additions over time the Carnegie building is mostly intact, including its original front entrance and handsome main stair. The town added a third story to the building in 1932 for a total cost of $ 15,000 (~$ 272,924 in 2023). Today the third floor serves as

7560-559: Was completed in 1912 or 1913 after the previous one, which was located across the street from the Unitarian Church in central Hudson, burned in a 1911 fire. The congregation traces its origins back to early settler Phineas Sawyer, who converted to Methodism in 1789 and opened his home to Methodist meetings in 1800. In 1828 Feltonville's Methodists built a brick meetinghouse on Gospel Hill in what would become eastern Hudson. This structure burned on December 28, 1852, after which

7650-477: Was copied by many and improved upon. The du Pont family emigrated to the United States due to repercussions from the French Revolution , bringing with them expertise in chemistry and gunpowder. E.I. du Pont observed that the quality of American gunpowder was poor, and opened Eleutherian Mills , a gunpowder mill on Brandywine Creek in 1802. The mill served as home for du Pont's family as well as

7740-615: Was embraced by the Whig Party in the early 19th century with their support for Henry Clay 's American System . This plan, proposed shortly after the War of 1812 , promoted not only protective tariffs , but also canals and roads to support the movement of manufactured goods around the country. As in Britain, the First Industrial Revolution in the United States revolved heavily around the textile industry. Early U.S. textile plants were located next to rivers and streams as they would use

7830-552: Was faster than using carts pulled by draft animals and cut transport costs by about 95%. The canal gave New York City's port a significant advantage over all other U.S. port cities and contributed to a growth in population in New York state and regions farther west. It inspired canals elsewhere, bringing a canal age . In response to British aggression against the U.S., Congress passed the Embargo Act of 1807 . The embargo

7920-465: Was located on Church Street behind the Unitarian Church, where the Hudson Boys and Girls Club stands today. A rapidly growing congregation necessitated a larger church built on the same site in 1877. The Congregational side of the church traces its origins to at least 1889, when Congregationalists from Hudson held meetings in downtown's Chase Block building. In 1902 they built their own church at

8010-601: Was refused burial rites by area Greek Orthodox priests. The Portuguese Roman Catholics in Hudson hold annual feasts or festivals honoring and celebrating the Holy Ghost and Our Lady of Fátima , known in Portuguese as Festas do Espírito Santo and Festa da Nossa Senhora de Fátima , respectively. There are three related but distinct festas in Hudson: the Império Mariense, the lmpério Micaelense, and

8100-518: Was underway by the early 1800s to such an extent that by the mid-19th century, southern slave plantations supplied 75% of the world's cotton. The introduction of the cotton gin was as unexpected as it was unprecedented. British textiles had expanded with no change in ginning principles in centuries. For the American planter class , up front costs were higher but productivity improvement among their slaves were clear and Whitney's original 1794 gin design

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