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Hopedale is on
the southeastern edge of Worcester County and
occupies the valley of the upper Mill River.
Benjamin Albee set up a grist mill on the Mill
River to grind settlers' corn in 1669 in the
first recorded settlement. Until the mid-19th
century, the town followed the pattern of many
communities with a combination of agriculture
and small industry. But in 1842, Adin Ballou and
his followers, idealists who wanted to combine
biblical individualism with social
responsibility and religious liberalism,
purchased 600 acres in what is now downtown
Hopedale to establish Fraternal Community Number
One. Thirty houses, chapel and workshops were
built on an architectural plan for the 170
people who joined in the social experiment,
which combined farming with manufacturing, and
took strong social stands on temperance, women's
rights and abolition.
Unfortunately,
disagreements over how to administer the
community ended in bankruptcy by 1856 and George
and Ebenezer Draper, followers of Ballou, took
over the property. The brothers made doors,
window sashes and blinds and ran a printing
office, but they discovered early on that their
most profitable business was making textile
machinery. By 1880 there were 400 patents held
in Hopedale for textile machinery, 800 Draper
employees and $1 million in sales. By 1892, with
the advent of the Northrop Loom, Draper became
the largest producer of textile machinery in the
country. There were 78,000 Northrop looms sold
in 1903 because they used less power and could
be operated by untrained hands (which resulted
in the textile industry abandoning New England
and moving south). By World War I, the majority
of the 400,000 looms in the United States had
been made by Draper and the company was selling
to China, Russia and Mexico.
The Drapers
believed that good houses make good workers and
created a model self-contained company town with
one of the best collections of architecturally
significant double houses in the country, built
on hills and in valleys in garden settings which
preserved the views. The company charged low
rents, and provided high quality housing,
impeccable maintenance and recreation
opportunities. Workers left their handsomely
designed duplex houses to walk to work at
Hopedale Machine, or Northrop Loom, or Hopedale
Elastic and left work to play in company parks
or stroll along company streets. In addition,
the Drapers donated the high school, playground
and bandstand to the town and built roads,
sidewalks, sewage systems and water and gas
lines to service their 250 buildings of worker
housing. Only one strike, in 1913, was ever
recorded in Hopedale through the most turbulent
eras of American labor unrest.
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| Form
of Government: |
Open
Town Meeting |
| Population
(2010): |
5,911 |
| Registered
Voters (2010): |
3,942 |
| School
Enrollment (2011): |
1,110 |
| County: |
Worcester |
| Square
Miles: |
5.12 |
| Public
Road Miles (2009): |
32.72 |
| Income
Per Capita (1999): |
$24,791 |
| Median
Family Income (1999): |
$68,571 |
| EQV
Per Capita (2010): |
$125,510 |
| Average
Tax Bill (2011): |
$4,350 |
| Residential
Tax Rate (2011): |
$14.39 |
| Commercial
Tax Rate (2011): |
$23.05 |
| Operating
Budget (2010): |
$22,049,597 |
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