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Walpole
Mass. A group of sawmill residents who built along the great Cedar Swamp
petitioned the Annual Town Meeting of Dedham in 1721 for the privilege
of becoming a separate Town with their own minister. Their petition was
finally accepted in 1724 and they chose their Town's name in honor of the
Prime Minister of England, Sir Robert Walpole.
The route of the Post Road traversed
Walpole in which weekly postal service began in 1693 between New Hampshire
and Baltimore; then later the first stagecoach line in New England which
began in 1718. This ideal location is just 19 miles south of Boston and
26 miles north of Providence, and now has Routes 1, 1A, 27 as well as MBTA
Commuter Rail and bus service to Boston. Because of the natural resources
of Great Cedar Swamp, bog iron and the Neponset River which falls 151 feet
in Walpole, industry was attracted to locate early in Walpole.
The community has always maintained
an industrial tax base. Yet because of its vast 20 square miles of beautiful
land, many families have found the charm of its rural character to be an
ideal place to raise a family. Thus, the Town has evolved over time into
a growing bedroom community with a stable mix of commercial and industrial
land uses. The townspeople are known for their typical New England hard
work ethic, a very competitive attitude, particularly in sports; a strong
pride in community and its schools and promotes as its motto: "Walpole,
The Friendly Town".
Walpole Mass is located in Eastern
Massachusetts, bordered by Dover on the north, Medfield and Norfolk on
the west, Foxborough on the south, Sharon and Norwood on the east, and
Westwood on the northeast. Walpole is 18 miles southwest of Boston. |