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Massachusetts Facts

Massachusetts, according to the 2000 United States census, has a population of 6,349,097. It has a gross area of 8,257 square miles and a net land area of 7,838, and ranks 13th in population and 45th in area among the states of the nation. It is divided into 14 counties, varying in size and population from Nantucket (area 50.34 sq. mi., pop. 9,520) to Worcester (area 1575.95 sq. mi., pop. 750, 963) and Middlesex (area 844.21 sq. mi., pop. 1,465,396).

The counties are made up of 49 cities and 302 towns, of which Boston with a population of 589,141 is the largest and Gosnold with a population of 86 is the smallest. More than half of Massachusett's total population lives in the Greater Boston area. Other Massachusetts cities over or approximating 100,000 population are:

  1. Boston: 589,141
  2. Worcester: 172,648
  3. Springfield: 152,082
  4. Lowell: 105,167
  5. Cambridge: 101,355
  6. New Bedford: 93,768
  7. Brockton: 94,304
  8. Fall River: 91,938
  9. Lynn: 89,050
  10. Quincy: 88,025

A third of the population is of foreign stock. Of the total total population, 55.2% identified with a single ancestry group, 33% with the multi-ancestry group, and 11.7% were not specified. Of the single ancestry groups, the six leading groups were: Irish (21%), English (14.5%), Italian (13.6%), French (9.9%), Portuguese (6%) and Polish (5.1%). In 2000, African-Americans comprised 5.4%, Hispanics 6.8%, Native Americans .2%, and Asians 3.8% of the State.

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Boundaries

Massachusetts lies between the parallels of 41 degrees 10' and 42 degrees 53' north latitude and between 69 degrees 57' and 73 degrees 30' west longitude. It has a shoreline of approximately 1,980 miles on the Atlantic Ocean, Massachusetts Bay, and Buzzards Bay. The state is 190 miles, east-west, and 110 miles, north- south, at its widest parts. The northern, or New Hampshire-Vermont border, runs almost due east and west for 135 miles; the western, or New York boundary, is 49 miles long. On the south, Massachusetts borders Connecticut for 91 miles and Rhode Island for 65 miles.

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Time

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is on United States Eastern Standard Time, and by law employs the Daylight Saving Plan, advancing the clock one hour at 2 a.m. on the first Sunday in April, and retarding it one hour at 2 a.m. on the last Sunday in October.

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Climate

The prevailing wind is from the west, with an average velocity of 10 to 13 miles per hour. Average monthly temperatures in Boston range from 28.2 degrees in January to 72.0 degrees in July. The lowest temperature recorded by the U.S. Weather Bureau in Gloucester since its establishment (October 1870) was -18 degrees in February 1934; the highest, 104 degrees in July 1911. The last killing frost generally occurs before May 10, and the earliest fall frost usually comes in late September or early October. The normal annual precipitation is 44.23 inches.

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Topography

Massachusetts topography varies greatly; from the rocky shores, sandy beaches and salt marshes of the coast; through rolling hills, and fertile valley to lofty wooded hills in the western part of the state.

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Minerals

Although valuable mineral resources are not usually credited to Massachusetts, the mining of non-metallic minerals is a considerable industry within the state. Clay, lime, marble, sand and gravel, silica, quartz, granite, limestone, sandstone, slate, and traprock are all mined to a varying extent. From time to time small deposits of alum, asbestos, barite, feldspar, graphite, mica, peat, and semi-precious stones, such as the beryl, aquamarine, and tourmaline have been worked. Test borings in the Narragansett Basin (southeastern Massachusetts) indicate the possibility of fairly substantial coal deposits.

There is no metal mining in Massachusetts, but ores of copper, gold, iron, lead, silver, zinc, and other metallic minerals have at times been discovered.

Dolomitic marbles are found in Ashley Falls, West Stockbridge, and Lee, all in Berkshire County. Verd antique is quarried near Westfield, in Hampden County. The Quincy quarries produce monumental granite (including that used for the Washington Monument), while building granites come chiefly from Milford, West Chelmsford, Becket, and Fall River. In South Framingham isfound diatomite, a hydrous or opaline form of silica. Mineral production within the state was valued at $101,100,000 in 1984. The valuation was based on returns from clay, lime, sand, and stone (mostly granite and basalt).

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Soil

Massachusetts soils vary widely in color and in character. Broadly speaking, the uplands contain an abundance of mineral matter, while more or less organic matter is present in the lowlands.

The western region is hilly and is separated by the Connecticut River Valley from a central upland plateau region which slopes to the Atlantic coast. Except on Cape Cod where there are long stretches of sandy, treeless flats, almost all of the land was originally covered with dense forests. Even after the forests were cleared or thinned, however, the soil did not yield readily to cultivation by the early farmers, and their skill and patience were taxed heavily before it became productive. The most arable soil is found in the broad Connecticut Valley in the west-central part of Massachusetts. Rich alluvial deposits are found in the fertile river valleys.

On the whole, Massachusetts soils yield profitably when production is carried on under modern procedures. Even the sandy soils on Cape Cod have been made extremely fruitful when farmed by skillful agriculturists. In fact, Cape Cod and the South Shore produce the biggest cranberry crop in the world.

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Farming

Major farm products, on the basis of income, are milk, nursery and greenhouse, eggs, vegetables, cattle, hogs, sheep, cranberries, and fruit. Total cash receipts from farm marketings in 1987 were $393,000,000 of which milk and livestock accounted for $124 million and crops $268 million.

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Manufacturing

A listing of our eight major manufactured products, in order of largest amounts of value added by manufacture, shows non-computer electronic machinery first, followed by computer and electronic equipment, instruments, chemicals, transportation, fabricated metal products, paper printing and publishing, and rubber plastics. Of the fifty states, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts ranks 6th in value by manufacture.

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Rivers

There are 4,230 miles of rivers within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The largest is the Connecticut, which flows from north to south. Its tributaries are the Deerfield, Westfield, Chicopee, and Miller's rivers. In the far western part of the state the Housatonic River flows south and the Hoosic River flows north between the Hoosac and Taconic mountain ranges.

The Merrimack River, in the northeast, rises in New Hampshire and empties into the Atlantic Ocean. It is navigable for shipping up to a distance of about 15 miles from its mouth. The Nashua and Concord rivers are tributaries of the Merrimack. The Blackstone River flows south from the center of Massachusetts. The Mystic and Charles rivers flow into Boston Harbor, and the Taunton River enters Mount Hope Bay at Fall River.

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Lakes

Massachusetts has more than 1,100 lakes and ponds. The largest of these, Quabbin Reservoir (24,704 acres) and Wachusett Reservoir (4,160 acres) are manmade. These two reservoirs will provide Metropolitan Boston with most of its water for many years to come.

Among those of natural origin, the largest are Assawompsett Pond (2,656 acres) in Lakeville and Middleborough, drained by the Taunton River; North Watuppa Pond (1,805 acres) and South Watuppa Pond (1,551 acres) in Fall River and Westport, drained by the Quequechan River; Long Pond (1,361 acres) in Lakeville and Freetown, drained by the Taunton River; Lake Chargoggagogmanchaugagochaubunagungamaug - usually and mercifully called Lake Webster (1,188 acres) - in Webster, drained by the French River; Herring Pond (1,157 acres) in Edgartown on the island of Martha's Vineyard; Great Quittacas Pond (1,128 acres) in Lakeville, Rochester and Middleborough, drained by the Taunton River; Lake Quinsigamond (1,051 acres) in Worcester, Shrewsbury, and Grafton; and Monponsett Pond (756 acres) in Halifax and Hanson, drained by the Taunton River.

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Islands

Lying off Cape Cod are Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, and the Elizabeth Island group.

Martha's Vineyard, triangular in shape, is about 19 miles long and less than 10 miles in width. It contains the towns of Edgartown, Chilmark, Tisbury, West Tisbury, Gay Head, and Oak Bluffs.

Nantucket, also roughly triangular, about 15 miles long and from three to four miles wide, was once famed for its whaling industry. Both Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket are now popular summer resorts.

The Elizabeth Islands are a group of about 22 small islands lying between Vineyard Sound and Buzzards Bay. On one of those, Cuttyhunk, Bartholemew Gosnold established a colony in 1602, abandoning it the same year.

The Boston Harbor Island group includes The Four Brewsters, Bumpkin, Calf, Deer, Gallop's, George's (used for thousands of Confederate prisoners of war during the Civil War), Grape, The Graves, Green, Hangman, Long, Lovell's, Nixes Mate, Paddock's, Raccoon, Rainsford, Sheep, Slate, Spectacle and Thompson. Some islands have been made part of the mainland by the great amount of landfill that has gone on over the years. Governor's Island, where the first apple and pear trees in America were planted, is now a part of Boston's Logan International Airport. Most of the islands have been used for farming, resort-recreation areas, public facilities, or fortifications.

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Mountains

Massachusetts landscape was extensively re-formed during the last Ice Age; the only substantial ranges left are the Berkshire Hills and the Blue Hills.

Mount Greylock, altitude 3,491 feet, in Berkshire County, is the highest mountain in Massachusetts. Other important mountains are Mount Williams (2,951 feet) in North Adams; East Mountain (2,660 feet) in Hancock; Mount Everett (2,602 feet) in Mt. Washington; Spruce Hill (2,588 feet) in Adams; Mount Frissel (2,453 feet) in Mt. Washington; Potter Mountain (2,391 feet) in Lanesboro; French Hill (2,214 feet) in Peru; and Mount Wachusett (2,006 feet) in Princeton.

Massachusetts Cities
AMESBURY AMHERST ANDOVER ARLINGTON
ASHLAND ATTLEBORO AUBURN AYER
BEDFORD BILLERICA BOSTON BOURNE
BRAINTREE BREWSTER BROCKTON BROOKLINE
BURLINGTON CAMBRIDGE CAPE COD CHARLESTOWN
CHATHAM CHELMSFORD CHELSEA CHICOPEE
COHASSET CONCORD DANVERS DEDHAM
DENNISPORT DORCHESTER EAST ORLEANS EASTHAM
EDGARTOWN FAIRHAVEN FALMOUTH FITCHBURG
FOXBORO FRAMINGHAM FRANKLIN GARDNER
GLOUCESTER GREAT BARRINGTON GREENFIELD HADLEY
HANCOCK HAVERHILL HOLYOKE HUDSON
HULL HYANNIS LAWRENCE LEE
LENOX LEOMINSTER LEXINGTON LOWELL
LUDLOW MALDEN MANSFIELD MARBLEHEAD
MARLBORO MARLBOROUGH MARTHAS VINEYARD MEDFORD
METHUEN MIDDLEBORO MILFORD NAMBOUR
NANTUCKET NATICK NEEDHAM NEW BEDFORD
NEWTON NORTH ADAMS NORTH ATTLEBORO NORTH CHELMSFORD
NORTH DARTMOUTH NORTH FALMOUTH NORTH TRURO NORTHAMPTON
NORWOOD OAK BLUFFS PEABODY PITTSFIELD
PLYMOUTH PONCE PROVINCETOWN QUINCY
RAYNHAM REVERE ROCKLAND ROCKPORT
ROWLEY SALEM SANDWICH SAUGUS
SCITUATE SEEKONK SHARON SHREWSBURY
SOMERSET SOMERVILLE SOUTH DEERFIELD SOUTH WELLFLEET
SOUTH YARMOUTH SOUTHBOROUGH SPRINGFIELD STOCKBRIDGE
STOUGHTON STURBRIDGE SUDBURY SUTTON
TEWKSBURY VINEYARD HAVEN WAKEFIELD WALTHAM
WATERTOWN WELLESLEY WEST BOYLSTON WEST DENNIS
WEST SPRINGFIELD WEST YARMOUTH WESTBOROUGH WESTFIELD
WESTFORD WESTMINSTER WESTPORT WEYMOUTH
WILLIAMSTOWN WINTHROP WOBURN WORCESTER
LEOMINSTER