Milton, MA
Milton was incorporated in 1662, originally part of the town of Dorchester before becoming one of the earliest independent communities in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Situated along the Neponset River and near Boston, Milton developed as a prosperous agricultural town with early industries powered by the river’s mills. The area became known for shipbuilding, paper mills, and later the chocolate manufacturing of the Walter Baker Company at Lower Mills. With its proximity to Boston and its rolling landscape at the foot of the Blue Hills, Milton evolved into a community that blended early industry, farming, and eventually suburban life while preserving much of its colonial character.
Recent Posts
Suffolk Resolves
Standing along the roadside in Milton is a marker that points to one of the lesser known but deeply important chapters in America’s journey toward independence: the story of the Suffolk Resolves House. This large colonial home appears quiet and elegant. Yet this site is connected to events that helped shape the spirit of resistance leading directly to the American Revolution, The […]
Civil War Monument
There are some monuments that are built in the immediate aftermath of events, when memory is fresh, when loss is close, when the need to mark what has happened feels urgent. And then there are others that come later. In Milton, the Civil War Monument near Town Hall belongs to that second kind. It does […]
Eustis Estate
During the long months of the covid shutdown, I found myself watching closely for the reopening of historic house museums so I could continue my explorations. One of the first places to open its doors again in early 2020 was the Eustis Estate Museum in Milton. When we heard it had reopened, Marty and I […]