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Pittsfield
Mass. Nestled within the beautiful Berkshire Hills of Western Massachusetts
is the City of Pittsfield, a place that residents note combines old-fashioned
New England tranquility and charm with contemporary living. Incorporated
in 1761, this diverse community of 50,000 people offers a rich quality
of life.
Here, residents and visitors enjoy
the cultural offerings of nearby Tanglewood, Jacobs Pillow, Williamstown
Theater Festival and other performing arts organizations and museums as
well as the four-season splendor of the Berkshire Hills. Pittsfield's industrial
base has earned it the epithet, "Plastics Technology Center of the Nation".
More than 40 area firms, including
G.E. Plastics, work together through Berkshire Plastics Network, a consortium
of independent plastics companies that includes every discipline in the
production of plastics products and components. Major area employers include
Berkshire Health Systems and Martin Marietta. Pittsfield's Fourth of July
Parade brings thousands of visitors to the city for the annual celebration.
Hancock Shaker Village, established
more than 200 years ago, gives visitors an opportunity to explore the simple
beauty and peacefulness of the Shaker way of life. At Arrowhead, another
Pittsfield landmark, Herman Melville completed "Moby Dick" and wrote several
other pieces. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Nathaniel
Hawthorne frequented the city. Today, many contemporary writers and artists
call Pittsfield home.
Pittsfield Mass is located in Western
Massachusetts, bordered by Lanesborough on the north; Lenox, Richmond,
and Hancock on the west; Dalton on the east; and Washington on the southeast.
Pittsfield is 55 miles northwest of Springfield and 136 miles west of Boston. |