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Harvard Square in Cambridge in Middlesex County, Massachusetts — The American Northeast (New England)
 

The Founding of Newtowne / Newtowne and Cambridge

This Is the Place

— 1630 —

 
 
The Founding of Newtowne side of the marker image. Click for full size.
By Devry Becker Jones (CC0), January 28, 2023
1. The Founding of Newtowne side of the marker
Inscription.
The Founding of Newtowne
Massachusetts Bay Colony
The Puritans of Lincolnshire and East Anglia, England, in anticipation of their emigration to New England, organized the Massachusetts Bay Company in 1628, and obtained a grant of the territory between the Merrimac and the Charles Rivers from King Charles I for their settlement. They chose John Winthrop as Governor, Thomas Dudley as Deputy Governor, and "the Assistants," who together acted as a kind of executive committee or council in the negotiations of July and August, 1629 for a transfer of the government of the Colony from the Company in Britain to the settlers in Massachusetts (recorded October 15, 1629).

In April and May, 1630, seventeen vessels with "nearly 1,000 souls" sailed from Britain preceded on March 29, 1630 by the Arbella, with Winthrop, Dudley, and the Assistants, which landed in Salem on June 22, 1630. They settled in Charlestown about July 1st and organized what is now known as the First Church of Boston on August 27, 1630. At this same time other arrivals settled in Watertown, in Medford, and in Dorchester. (Thomas Graves had built a house on Graves Neck in what is now East Cambridge in 1629.) When problems of water supply were encountered in Charlestown, Winthrop, Dudley, and the Assistants accepted the invitation
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of the hermit William Blackstone to move to Trimountain, which they renamed Boston on September 17, 1630.

Boston and Newtowne
Concerned that Boston was too open to attack from the sea by King Charles or the French, Winthrop, Dudley, and the Assistants rowed up the Charles River on September 30, 1630, in search of what Winthrop called "a fit place for a fortified town." The first high ground near the river channel was then somewhat northeast of what is now the Anderson Bridge (about on the site of Standish Hall), and there they landed. Tradition has it that from there they walked up a "rounded hill" to what is now Winthrop Square (southwest corner of Boylston and Mt. Auburn Streets), and there Deputy Governor Dudley stuck his cane in the ground and announced, "This is the place."

After a second trip and "diverse meetings," all the members of the council signed an agreement on December 18 or 28, 1630, "to build houses in the next spring (1631) and to winter there (Newtowne) the next year" (1631-32).

And so it came about that a gridiron plat of streets and lots (the fist town plan in the English colonies of America) was laid out for the area south of what is now Massachusetts and east of Brattle and Eliot Streets.

Settlement in Newtowne
By July 26, 1631, eight houses were completed and occupied by Dudley, Bradstreet,
Newtowne and Cambridge side of the marker image. Click for full size.
By Devry Becker Jones (CC0), January 28, 2023
2. Newtowne and Cambridge side of the marker
Lockwood, Poole, "Capt." Patrick, Spencer, Kirman, and Sackett. Governor Winthrop's house was never completed. His failure to comply with the agreement triggered a feud between Winthrop and Dudley which lasted the rest of their lives. With Governor Winthrop in Boston, the General Court met alternately in Newtowne and Boston until 1638.

In the spring of 1632, the arrival of the "Braintree Company" and its minister, the Reverend Thomas Hooker, greatly increased the size of Newtowne so that by the spring of 1635 there were 86 houses. Hooker was "settled" as minister on October 11, 1633, when the first meeting house was constructed, at the southwest corner of Mt. Auburn and Dunster Streets. This meeting house served as church and meeting place for the Colony's General Court and town meetings.

In October, 1635, The Reverend Thomas Shepard came to Newtowne. In addition of the departure of Reverend Hooker and his company to what is now Hartford, Connecticut, in the spring of 1636, Shepard was installed as Minister in February, 1636, to serve until 1647.

[Captions:]
1. Old Cambridge and its environs in 1640. The heavy dotted line shows the route of Winthrop and Dudley from Charlestown to the site of Newtowne in 1630.

2. This conjectural view of Cambridge in 1668 is a romantic impression; none of the structures shown survived
The Founding of Newtowne side of the marker image. Click for full size.
By Devry Becker Jones (CC0), January 28, 2023
3. The Founding of Newtowne side of the marker
long enough to be recorded. Harvard College is at the bottom, and the courthouse, on the site of the present subway kiosk, is to the right of center. The creek was used for used for shipping until the construction of Memorial Drive in 1900. Winthrop Square, the location of this marker, is the unfenced area with two trees in the center of the view.

3. This map of Cambridge in 1632 shows the town as it was laid out in 1630-31. This plan also shows the location of the Great Bridge o1660 and of the first Harvard building, erected in 1638. The map is an accurate reconstruction based on early property descriptions.

Newtowne and Cambridge
Historical Events of the Early Period
Significant events of the early years of Cambridge include the arrival of Stephen Daye with the first printing press in America in 1639. Day's widow married President Dunster of Harvard, thus establishing the Printery at the College, antecedent of the University Press, the Riverside Press, and the Athenaeum Press of later Cambridge.

The publication in 1641 of the "Body of Liberties," a bill of rights, and the "New England Confederation" anticipated provisions later included in the U.S. Constitution, while the "Cambridge Platform" of religious liberties was published in 1646.

The American Revolution started
Newtowne and Cambridge side of the marker image. Click for full size.
By Devry Becker Jones (CC0), January 28, 2023
4. Newtowne and Cambridge side of the marker
in Old Cambridge in September, 1774, with the forced resignation of Lt. Gov. Thomas Oliver and the Cambridge members of the Mandamus Council. George Washington took command of the Continental Army on Cambridge Common on July 3, 1775.

In 1780, the Massachusetts Constitution was drafted in the Fourth Meeting House in Harvard Square, and Cambridge was the first town to approve it. It is now the oldest constitution in the world.

The College
October 28, 1636, has been celebrated ever since as the date when the Colony's General Court, "dreading to leave an illiterate ministry," appropriated funds for a "colledge," which on November 15, 1637, was "ordered to be at Newtowne."

In recognition of the education at Cambridge University in England of so many of the leaders of the Colony, the name of Newtowne was then changed to Cambridge, and following the bequest to the college by John Harvard of £700 and all his library, the General Court voted in 1639 "that the Colledge … to be built at Cambridge shalbee called Harvard Colledge."

The Town
The original grant for Newtowne included an area southwest of Watertown over what is now Allston, Brighton and Newton, and northwest "some eight miles from the village." In 1641 the General Court extended the town boundaries northwest between Charlestown and Watertown "almost to the Merrimac,"
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to "Shawshin" or what is now Tewksbury.

As the population of outlying areas reached numbers capable of supporting their own parish church and minister, the areas thus served were set off as separate town. Thus Billerica was set off in 1655 and Bedford was later set off in turn from Billerica. Cambridge Village, now Newton, followed in 1688; Cambridge Farms, now Lexington, in 1713; West Cambridge, now Arlington and part of Belmont, in 1807; and Little Cambridge, now Brighton, and then including Allson, in 1837.

Meanwhile, parts of the original Watertown were added to Cambridge, west of Sparks Street to the middle of Fresh Pond and including Gerry's Landing in 1754, and to the present western city boundary in 1880 and 1881. Adjustments were also made in the Cambridge-Somerville boundary in 1820 at Shady Hill and in 1856 northwest of Porter Square.

The Meeting house on Watch Hill in what is now Harvard Square was the Town Hall as well as the Church, and when Middlesex County was established in 1643 Cambridge became the shiretown or county seat with a court house on the site of the present Harvard Coop and a jail on Winthrop Street west of the Market Place.

Bridges
Bridges across the Charles River and the turnpikes to them shortened the distance to Boston (as recorded on the milestone in the Burying Ground) and changed Cambridge from a village around Harvard College to three rival villages, shown on the Hales map of 1830. In 1780 the West Boston Bridge (the present Longfellow Bridge), stimulated the development of Cambridgeport, and Andrew Craigie's development in East Cambridge started with the Canal Bridge or Craigie Bridge of 1807 on the site of the present Charles River Dam. With the construction of a new Middlesex County Courthouse designed by Charles Bulfinch in East Cambridge in 1815, and a new town hall in Cambridgeport in 1830, Old Cambridge was left with Harvard College as its focal point.

[Captions:]
1. This map shows the area of present day Cambridge as it appeared just before the Revolution. The area enclosed by a dotted line corresponds to the plan of Cambridge on the other panel.

2. Cambridge once included part or all of nine present day Massachusetts towns, and extended from Needham nearly to the Merrimack River.

3. Hales map of 1830 shows the rapid expansion of Cambridge into three widely separated villages after the opening of the Charles River bridges in 1793 and 1807.

 
Erected 1980 by Cambridge Historical Commission.
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Bridges & ViaductsChurches & ReligionColonial EraEducationGovernment & PoliticsSettlements & Settlers. A significant historical month for this entry is February 1636.
 
Location. 42° 22.359′ N, 71° 7.233′ W. Marker is in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in Middlesex County. It is in Harvard Square. Marker is on Mount Auburn Street west of John F. Kennedy Street, on the right when traveling east. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 100 Mt Auburn St, Cambridge MA 02138, United States of America. Touch for directions.
 
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker. Prof. John Winthrop (a few steps from this marker); Here Stood the Original Meeting House... (about 300 feet away, measured in a direct line); Judge Samuel Danforth (about 400 feet away); Simon and Anne Bradstreet (about 500 feet away); Cambridge (about 500 feet away); Stephen Daye (about 500 feet away); Fourth Meeting House (about 600 feet away); Near this spot… (about 600 feet away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Cambridge.
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on March 13, 2024. It was originally submitted on February 1, 2023, by Devry Becker Jones of Washington, District of Columbia. This page has been viewed 703 times since then and 232 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4. submitted on February 1, 2023, by Devry Becker Jones of Washington, District of Columbia.

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Apr. 25, 2024