By Dr. Nancy Watson
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Waltham, MA

Waltham was incorporated in 1738 and later became a city in 1884, growing from a farming settlement into a center of the American Industrial Revolution known as “Watch City” for the Waltham Watch Company. The power of the Charles River helped shape its industrial identity, leaving a legacy still visible along its riverbanks and downtown streets. Waltham is also personally meaningful to me — it is the city where I practiced chiropractic for many years, becoming part of its evolving community story.

Waltham, MA

Recent Posts

The Music Hall 

The Music Hall 

The ornate facade of the Music Hall rises above the storefronts below with decorative brickwork, pointed finials, and the vertical “Music Hall” sign still prominently centered on the building. This building reflects a period in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when prosperous manufacturing cities built halls like this for concerts, lectures, theatre prosecutions, dances, political meetings […]

Waltham, Massachusetts
Monument to Columbus

Monument to Columbus

On the Common in Waltham, there is a granite stone set quietly among the other memorials that mark the town’s history. It does not rise high but if you stop and read it, the inscription reads:  “A Quincentennial Commemorative to Christopher Columbus. The European discoverer of the New World in 1492…….” The wording continues in a […]

Waltham, Massachusetts
Lyman Estates

Lyman Estates

In Waltham stands another remarkable site connected to early American horticulture and estate life: The Lyman Estate. This estate preserves one of the finest surviving country houses of the Federal period as well as one of the oldest continuously operating greenhouse complexes in the United States.   The estate was built in 1793 for Theodore Lyman, a wealthy Boston […]

Waltham, Massachusetts
Nathan P. Banks Statue

Nathan P. Banks Statue

I stop at statues, sometimes to admire the sculpture itself, but always to ask what about this person’s life was so memorable that a town or community would place their image in such a prominent location. That was certainly true for the large, prominent sculpture I found on the Waltham Common. There, standing in bronze, is […]

Waltham, Massachusetts
Waltham Watch Company 

Waltham Watch Company 

The great brick factory along the Charles River was once the heart of the Waltham Watch Company, founded in 1850 as the American Horologe Company. It became the first company in the United States to successfully manufacture watches using interchangeable parts, pioneering precision mass production and helping launch the American Industrial Revolution. At its height in […]

Waltham, Massachusetts