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The Town of Uxbridge
lies on the southern border of Massachusetts at
the Rhode Island line. The community is
industrial, agricultural and residential in
nature and both the Blackstone River, two of its
major tributaries and several large brooks run
through town. Established as a town in 1727,
Uxbridge's bountiful water power provided the
basis for large scale industrial development
beginning as early as 1775. Uxbridge was the
site of a Nipmuck Indian village as well as of
one of the Christian Indian settlements
established to protect Indian converts. Quakers
from Rhode Island established a colony in the
town and built the earliest meetinghouse in
Uxbridge in 1770, a building which still
survives.
Residents
established the Uxbridge Social and Instructive
Library in 1775 and a grammar school in 1788.
Good quality iron ore, which had been mined
since the 1730's, supported a forge and a
triphammer. In that era the town was primarily a
prosperous agricultural settlement with
dispersed farms, but it was also the site of saw
and grist mills and a gin distillery. Textile
manufacturing had been introduced when Daniel
Day erected a small carding and spinning mill,
which was the second textile mill on the
Blackstone River and the third one in the state.
Capron Mills in 1820 introduced power loom
weaving of woolen cloth in their factory on the
Mumford River, the first such looms ever
constructed. In 1827, major industrial complexes
such as the massive granite Crown and Eagle
Mills assumed great economic importance. The
Crown and Eagle boasted a large-scale water
power system and clusters of worker's duplexes.
But agriculture
remained a basic component of the town's economy
and residents also grew grain and potatoes,
managed apple orchards, dairy farms and cattle
herds. Settlers traded their agricultural
produce and manufactured and forest products for
foreign goods in Providence and their commercial
ties with that city were strong.
The Blackstone
Canal, completed in 1828, facilitated the
transport of agricultural goods, raw materials
and finished products to all points between
Worcester and Providence. Since Uxbridge was
halfway between the two, it became an overnight
stopping place for canal boats. Immigration
grew, primarily of people from Ireland, to work
the mills and make shoes and boots and by 1855,
560 people produced 2.5 million yards of cotton
and woolen cloth in Uxbridge mills.
The town's stone
quarries produced the stone to rebuild Boston
after the Great fire, and during the Civil War
several of the town's mills ran on 24-hour
shifts to fill government orders. In the First
World War the town's economy boomed again as the
mills worked to produce khaki overcoat cloth for
America, France and Italy. As late as 1983,
Calumet Mill was still making fancy woolens in
Uxbridge. The town retains over 60 handsome
Federalist houses as a legacy of its history.
|
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| Form
of Government: |
Open
Town Meeting |
| Population
(2004): |
12,243 |
| Registered
Voters (2004): |
8,501 |
| School
Enrollment (2006): |
2,324 |
| County: |
Worcester |
| Square
Miles: |
29.29 |
| Public
Road Miles (2004): |
11.03 |
| Income
Per Capita (1999): |
$24,540 |
| Median
Family Income (1999): |
$70,068 |
| EQV
Per Capita (2004): |
$104,201 |
| Average
Tax Bill (2006): |
$3,440 |
|
Tax Rate (2006): |
10.79 |
| Operating
Budget (2006): |
$34,377,367 |
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