| Lowell National Historical Park | |
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| Location | Massachusetts, USA |
| Nearest city | Lowell, Massachusetts |
| Coordinates | Coordinates: |
| Area | 141 acres (0.57 km²) |
| Established | June 5, 1978 |
| Visitors | 722,458 (in 2005) |
| Governing body | National Park Service |
Lowell National Historical Park is a National Historical Park of the United States located in Lowell, Massachusetts. Established in 1978, it is operated by the National Park Service and comprises a group of different sites in and around the city of Lowell related to the era of textile manufacturing in the city during the Industrial Revolution. It is the oldest urban national park in the nation.
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History
- See the History of Lowell, Massachusetts article for a detailed history of the city
First settled by Europeans in the 17th century, East Chelmsford (later re-named Lowell in honor of the founders' deceased business partner) became an important manufacturing center along the Merrimack River in the early 1820s. It was seen as an attractive site for the construction of a planned industrial city, with the Middlesex Canal (completed in 1803) linking the Merrimack to the Charles River, which flows through Boston, and with the powerful 32' Pawtucket Falls. The already existent Pawtucket Canal, designed for transportation around the Pawtucket Falls on the Merrimack, became the feeder canal for a 5.6 mile long system of power canals based around the falls. Unlike many other mill towns, however, Lowell's manufacturing facitilities were built based on a planned community design. Specifically Lowell was planned as reaction to the mill communities in Great Britain, which were perceived as cramped and inhumane. Initially the factories of Lowell were built with ample green space and accompanying clean dormitories, in a style that anticipated such later architectural trends as the City Beautiful movement in the 1890s. Lowell attracted both immigrants from abroad and migrants from within New England and Quebec (including a large proportion of young women) who lived in the dormitories and worked in the mills. The mill industry in Lowell went into a steep decline in the middle 20th century and by the 1960s, the city's manufacturing district was largely in ruins. Urban renewal plans called for the paving over of the canals. The idea of creating a historic district in Lowell was largely the idea of local teacher Patrick J. Mogan, who insisted that any revitalization of the city should be based on its industrial and ethnic heritage. Mogan believed that this was the soul of the city—and not incidentally, a key to its economic salvation. As a result, group of community organizations began cooperating on a comprehensive plan to renovate the historic heart of the city. In 1978, the United States Congress established Lowell National Historical Park and the Lowell Historic Preservation Commission. The legislation to create the park was sponsored by United States Senator and Lowell native Paul Tsongas. The restoration gathered momentum in the 1980s, including the renovation of the canals and former mill facilities into museums, as well as the construction of a waterfront walkway.
Description
The park includes a Visitor Center, as well as many restored and unrestored sites from the 19th century. The Visitor Center provides a free self-guided tour of the history of Lowell, including display exhibits such as the patent model of a loom by local inventor S. Thomas. A footpath along the Merrimack Canal from the Visitor's Center is lined with plaques describing the importance of various existing and former sites along the canal. The Boott Mills along the Merrimack river, on the Eastern Canal, is the most fully restored manufacturing site in the district, and one of the oldest. The Boott Mill provides a walk-through museum with living recreations of the textile manufacturing process in the 19th century. The walking tour includes a detour to a memorial to local author Jack Kerouac, who described the mid-20th century declined state of Lowell in several of his books. A walkway along the river leads to several additional unrestored mill sites, providing views of restored and unrestored canal raceways once used by the mills. Additionally, the park includes the Patrick J Mogan Cultural Center, which focuses on the lives of Lowell's many generations of immigrants. Other exhibits include a working trolley, canal boat tours exploring some of the city's gatehouses and locks, and the River Transformed / Suffolk Mill Turbine Exhibit, which shows how water power, namely the Francis Turbine, was once used to run Lowell's textile factories.
See also
External links
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| National Park Service |
National Historical Parks: Adams • Boston • Lowell • Minute Man • New Bedford Whaling • National Historic Sites: Boston African American • Frederick Law Olmsted • John Fitzgerald Kennedy • Longfellow • Salem Maritime • Saugus Iron Works • Springfield Armory • Other: Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area • Cape Cod National Seashore |
| State Parks |
Alewife Brook • Ames Nowell • Ashland • Bash Bish Falls • Blackstone River and Canal Heritage • Borderland • Boston Harbor Islands • Bradley Palmer • C. M. Gardner • Callahan • Castle Island State Park • Chicopee Memorial • City Square • Clarksburg • Cochituate • Connecticut River Greenway • Demarest Lloyd • Dighton Rock • Dunn • Ellisville Harbor • Fall River Heritage • Gardner Heritage • Great Brook Farm • Halibut Point • Hampton Ponds • Holyoke Heritage • Hopkinton • Lake Lorraine • Lake Wyola • Lawrence Heritage • Lowell Heritage • Lynn Heritage • Massasoit • Maudslay • Moore • Mount Holyoke Range • Natural Bridge • Nickerson • Pearl Hill • Pilgrim • Quinsigamond • Robinson • Roxbury Heritage • Rutland • Skinner • South Cape Beach • Wahconah Falls • Webb Memorial • Wells • Western Gateway Heritage • Whitehall • Wompatuck |
| State Parks: Reservations |
Beaver Brook • Belle Isle Marsh • Blue Hills • Breakheart • Charles River • Chestnut Hill • Cutler • Dorchester Shores • Elm Bank • Fort Phoenix • Hammond Pond • Hemlock Gorge • Horseneck Beach • Jug End • Lynn Shore • Middlesex Fells • Mount Everett • Mount Greylock • Mount Sugarloaf • Mount Tom • Myles Standish • Mystic River • Nahant Beach • Nantasket Beach • Nasketucket Bay • Neponset River • Pope John Paul II • Purgatory Chasm • Quincy Quarries • Quincy Shore • Revere Beach • Rumney Marsh • Salisbury Beach • Sandy Point • Scusset Beach • Stony Brook • Upper Charles River • Wachusett Mountain • Walden Pond • Weymouth • Wilson Mountain |
| State Parks: Other |
Appalachian Trail • Ashuwillticook Rail Trail • Cape Cod Rail Trail • Fort Revere • Lake Dennison Recreation Area • Lower Neponset River Trail • Nashua River Rail Trail • Norwottuck Rail Trail • Quabbin Reservoir • Southwest Corridor Park • Squantum Point Park • Streeter Point Recreation Area • Sudbury Reservoir • Wachusett Reservoir • Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Reseach Reserve • Ware River Watershed Area |
| State Forests |
Beartown • Brimfield • Chester-Blandford • DAR • Douglas • Erving • F. Gilbert Hills • Federated Women's Club • Freetown-Fall River • Georgetown Rowley • Granville • Harold Parker • Kenneth Dubuque Memorial • Leominster • Lowell-Dracut-Tyngsboro • Manuel F. Correllus • Mohawk Trail • Monroe • Mount Grace • Mount Washington • Myles Standish • October Mountain • Otter River • Pittsfield • Sandisfield • Savoy Mountain • Shawme-Crowell • Spencer • Tolland • Upton • Wendell • Willard Brook • Willowdale • Windsor |
| Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation | |


