Belmont is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, Massachusetts. The population was 24,194 at the 2000 census.
History
Belmont was founded on March 18, 1859 by former citizens of, and land from, the bordering towns of Watertown, Massachusetts (to the south), Waltham, Massachusetts (to the west), and Arlington, Massachusetts, then known as West Cambridge, (to the north). It is bordered by Cambridge, Massachusetts (to the east). The town was named after Bellmont, the 200 acre (0.8 km2) estate of one of the leading advocates of and largest donor to its creation, John Perkins Cushing. The easternmost...
Belmont is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, Massachusetts. The population was 24,194 at the 2000 census.
History
Belmont was founded on March 18, 1859 by former citizens of, and land from, the bordering towns of Watertown, Massachusetts (to the south), Waltham, Massachusetts (to the west), and Arlington, Massachusetts, then known as West Cambridge, (to the north). It is bordered by Cambridge, Massachusetts (to the east). The town was named after Bellmont, the 200 acre (0.8 km2) estate of one of the leading advocates of and largest donor to its creation, John Perkins Cushing. The easternmost section of the town, including the western portion of Fresh Pond, Cambridge, Massachusetts, was annexed by Cambridge in 1880 in a dispute over a slaughterhouse licensed in 1878 on Fresh Pond, so that Cambridge could protect Fresh Pond, a part of its municipal water system. Much of that area is now a major commercial and office center for the city of Cambridge.
Preceding its incorporation, Belmont was an agrarian based town, with several large farms servicing Boston for produce and livestock. It remained largely the same until the turn of the twentieth century, when tram service and better roads were introduced, making the town more attractive as a residential area, most notably for the building of large estates.
The economics of the town shifted from purely agrarian to a commercial greenhouse base: much of the flower and vegetable needs of Boston were met from the Belmont hothouses which persisted until about 1983 when Edgar s, the last large greenhouse firm in the area, closed. Other commercial enterprises in Belmont included mining and waste management. The reclamation of a large dump and quarry off Concord Avenue into sites for the Belmont High School (Belmont, Massachusetts) and the Clay Pit Pond (Belmont, Massachusetts) stands as a lasting example of environmental planning. With the introduction of automobiles and highways Belmont continued its transition to a commuter-based suburb throughout the twentieth century.
Belmont was the home of the headquarters of the John Birch Society from the organization's founding in 1958 until its relocation to Appleton, Wisconsin in 1989. It was located at 395 Concord Avenue, next-door to the Belmont branch of the Post Office. Today the building houses the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research