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Medway, Massachusetts

Medway, Massachusetts
Town
Sanford Mills on the Charles River
Sanford Mills on the Charles River
Official seal of Medway, Massachusetts
Seal
Motto: "A Green Community"
Location in Norfolk County in Massachusetts
Location in Norfolk County in Massachusetts
Coordinates: 42°08′30″N 71°23′50″W / 42.14167°N 71.39722°W / 42.14167; -71.39722Coordinates: 42°08′30″N 71°23′50″W / 42.14167°N 71.39722°W / 42.14167; -71.39722
Country United States
State Massachusetts
County Norfolk
Settled 1657
Incorporated 1713
Founder Henry Garnsey
Medway 300 January 1, 2013
Government
 • Type Open town meeting
Area
 • Total 11.5 sq mi (29.9 km2)
 • Land 11.5 sq mi (29.7 km2)
 • Water 0.1 sq mi (0.2 km2)
Elevation 200 ft (61 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 12,752
 • Density 1,108.9/sq mi (429.4/km2)
Demonym(s) Medwanian
Time zone Eastern (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) Eastern (UTC)
ZIP code 02053
Area code(s) 508 / 774
FIPS code 25-39975
GNIS feature ID 0619458
Website Town of Medway, Massachusetts

Medway is a town in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States with a population of about 13,000.

Medway (originally Midway) was first settled in 1657 and was officially incorporated in 1713. At that time, Medway began as a farming community of two hundred thirty-three. It was not long before the water power of the Charles River and Chicken Brook stimulated the formation of cotton and paper mills, straw and boot factories, and a variety of cottage industries. Medway demonstrates the central importance of the Charles River and the thriving town that grew alongside it. Today, the one-room schoolhouses are gone and the country stores have moved to the mall, but the open town meetings continue.

After nearby Medfield was established as a town in 1651, an increasing number of newcomers settled on the land west of the Charles River. By 1712, this settlement west of the Charles had grown large enough to petition the Massachusetts General Court for the creation of a separate new town. That petition was granted, and the town of Medway incorporated on October 25, 1713. At its founding by Henry Garnsey, and for 170 years afterward, the town of Medway included the land that is now Millis. Eventually, the eastern section of the town, known as East Medway, separated in 1885 to form the town of Millis, and Medway assumed the shape it has today.

The main cause for the independent formation of Millis from Medway was the physical separation caused by a massive tract of undevelopable land appropriately named in those times, the Great Black Swamp. The Black Swamp was at the geographical center point of Medway and East Medway. Had the land been developable, this would have been the ideal location for a central meeting house, as well as churches and schools. However, because the thick forest/swamp was completely undevelopable, this forced inhabitants of Medway and East Medway to form separate communities with their own respective necessities such as a meeting house and churches. Despite this natural separation, the town remained as one for over 170 years.

The oldest road in Medway was laid out in 1670 and was known for years as Old Mendon Road. Since that time, this road has been known by many names including The Road to the Wilderness, The Old County Road, The Middle Post Road, and most recently, Village Street. Village Street runs from the Millis border on the east and meanders along the Charles River before eventually joining Main Street just before the Bellingham border on the west. The heart of the old town of Medway is found along this road, with the central location of activity at Medway Village, where Holliston Street intersects with Village Street.


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