.
Lowell is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, in the United States. With an estimated population of 108,861,[2] it is the fourth-largest city in Massachusetts, after Boston, Worcester, and Springfield, and the second-largest in what the U.S. Census Bureau defines as Boston's metropolitan area.[3]
Incorporated in 1826, Lowell became known as the cradle of the American Industrial Revolution, and many of the city's historic sites have been preserved by the National Park Service.[4] Lowell is home to the University of Massachusetts Lowell, a Carnegie-classified research university and the second largest public university in Massachusetts. Along with Cambridge, Lowell is one of Middlesex County's historical county seats[5] prior to the abolition of county government in 1997.
History
The Massachusetts Mill at the confluence of the Merrimack and Concord Rivers
Main articles: History of Lowell, Massachusetts and Timeline of Lowell, Massachusetts
Founded in the 1820s as a planned manufacturing center for textiles, Lowell is located along the rapids of the Merrimack River, 25 miles northwest of Boston in what was once the farming community of East Chelmsford, Massachusetts. The so-called Boston Associates, including Nathan Appleton and Patrick Tracy Jackson of the Boston Manufacturing Company, named the new mill town after their visionary leader, Francis Cabot Lowell,[6] who had died five years before its 1823 incorporation. As Lowell's population grew, it acquired more land from neighboring towns, and diversified into a full-fledged urban center. Many of the men who composed the labor force for constructing the canals and factories had immigrated from Ireland, escaping the poverty and Potato Famines of the 1830s and 1840s. The mill workers, young single women called Mill Girls, generally came from the farm families of New England.
Saint Anne's Episcopal Church, built 1824
By the 1850s, Lowell had the largest industrial complex in the United States. The textile industry wove cotton produced in the South. In 1860, there were more cotton spindles in Lowell than in all eleven states combined that would form the Confederacy.[7] The city continued to thrive as a major industrial center during the 19th century, attracting more migrant workers and immigrants to its mills. Next were the Catholic Germans, then a large influx of French Canadians during the 1870s and 1880s. Later waves of immigrants included Portuguese, Polish, Lithuanians, Swedes, Greeks, and eastern European Jews. They came to work in Lowell and settled in ethnic neighborhoods, with the city's population reaching almost 50% foreign-born by 1900.[8] By the time World War I broke out in Europe, the city had reached its economic and population peak of over 110,000 people.
The Mill Cities' manufacturing base declined as many companies began to relocate to the South in the 1920s.[8] The city fell into hard times, and was even referred to as a "depressed industrial desert" by Harper's Magazine in 1931, as the Great Depression worsened. At this time, more than one-third of its population was "on relief", as only three of its major textile corporations remained active.[8] Several years later, the mills were reactivated, making parachutes and other military necessities for the World War II effort. However, this economic boost was short-lived and the post-war years saw the last textile plants close.
Mills sat abandoned after industry left the city in the early twentieth century.
In the 1970s, Lowell became part of the Massachusetts Miracle, being the headquarters of Wang Laboratories. At the same time, Lowell became home to thousands of new immigrants, many from Cambodia, following the genocide at the hands of the Khmer Rouge. The city continued to rebound, but this time, focusing more on culture. The former mill district along the river was partially restored and became part of the Lowell National Historical Park, founded in the late 1970s.
Former mill agent's house
At this same time, the Lowell City Development Authority created a Comprehensive Master Plan which included recommendations for zoning adaptations within the city. The city's original zoning code was adopted in 1926 and was significantly revised in 1966 and 2004, with changes included to respond to concerns about overdevelopment.[9]
Although Wang went bankrupt in 1992, the city continued its cultural focus by hosting the nation's largest free folk festival, the Lowell Folk Festival, as well as many other cultural events. This effort began to attract other companies and families back to the urban center. Additional historic manufacturing and commercial buildings were adapted as residential units and office space. By the 1990s, Lowell had built a new ballpark and arena, which became home to two minor league sports teams, the Lowell Devils and Lowell Spinners. The city also began to have a larger student population. The University of Massachusetts Lowell and Middlesex Community College expanded their programs and enrollment.
In 2002, in lieu of updating the Comprehensive Master Plan, more broad changes were recommended so that the land use and development would be consistent with the current master plan. The most significant revision to the 1966 zoning code is the adoption of an inclusion of a transect-based zoning code and some aspects of a form-based code style of zoning that emphasizes urban design elements as a means to ensure that infill development will respect the character of the neighborhood or district in question. By 2004, the recommended zoning changes were unanimously adopted by the City Council and despite numerous changes to the 2004 Zoning Code, it remains the basic framework for resolving zoning issues in Lowell to this day.[10]
Pawtucket Canal
The Hamilton Canal District (HCD) is the first district in Lowell in which regulation and development is defined by Form-Based Code (HCD-FBC) and legislated by its own guiding framework consistent to the HCD Master Plan.[11] The HCD is a major redevelopment project that comprises 13-acres of vacant, underutilized land in downtown Lowell abutting former industrial mills. Trinity Financial was elected as the Master Developer to recreate this district with a vision of making a mixed-use neighborhood. Development plans included establishing the HCD as a gateway to downtown Lowell and enhanced connectivity to Gallagher Terminal.[12][13]
In July 2012, Lowell youth led a nationally reported campaign to gain voting privileges for 17-year-olds in local elections; it would have been the first municipality to do so.[14][15] The 'Vote 17' campaign was supported by national researchers; its goals were to increase voter turnout, create lifelong civic habits, and increase youth input in local matters.[16] The effort was led by youth at the United Teen Equality Center in downtown Lowell.[17]
Geography
Aerial view of LeLacheur Park and the UMass-Lowell campus
Lowell in 1876
Lowell is located at 42°38′22″N 71°18′53″W (42.639444, -71.314722).[18] According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 14.5 square miles (38 km2).13.8 square miles (35.7 km²) of it is land and 0.8 square miles (2.1 km2) of it (5.23%) is water.
Physical
Lowell's canal system (1975)
Lowell is located at the confluence of the Merrimack and Concord rivers. The Pawtucket Falls, a mile-long set of rapids with a total drop in elevation of 32 feet, ends where the two rivers meet. At the top of the falls is the Pawtucket Dam, designed to turn the upper Merrimack into a millpond, diverted through Lowell's extensive canal system.
The Merrimack, which flows southerly from Franklin, New Hampshire to Lowell, makes a northeasterly turn there before emptying into the Atlantic Ocean at Newburyport, Massachusetts, approximately 40 miles downriver from Lowell. It is believed that in prior ages, the Merrimack continued south from Lowell to empty into the ocean somewhere near Boston. The glacial deposits that redirected the flow of the river left the drumlins that dot the city, most notably, Fort Hill in the Belvidere neighborhood. Other large hills in Lowell include Lynde Hill, also in Belvidere, and Christian Hill, in the easternmost part of Centralville at the Dracut town line.
The Concord, or Musketaquid (its original name), forms from the confluence of the Assabet and Sudbury rivers at Concord, Massachusetts. This river flows north into the city, and the area around the confluence with the Merrimack was known as Wamesit. Like the Merrimack, the Concord, although a much smaller river, has many waterfalls and rapids that served as power sources for early industrial purposes, some well before the founding of Lowell. Immediately after the Concord joins the Merrimack, the Merrimack descends another ten feet in Hunt's Falls.
There is a ninety-degree bend in the Merrimack partway down the Pawtucket Falls. At this point, the river briefly widens and shallows. Here, Beaver Brook enters from the north, separating the City's two northern neighborhoods, Pawtucketville and Centralville. Entering the Concord River from the southwest is River Meadow, or Hale's Brook. This brook flows largely in a man-made channel, as the Lowell Connector was built along it. Both of these minor streams have limited industrial histories as well.
The bordering towns (clockwise from north) are Dracut, Tewksbury, Billerica, Chelmsford, and Tyngsborough. The border with Billerica is a point in the middle of the Concord River where Lowell and Billerica meet Tewksbury and Chelmsford.
The ten communities designated part of the Lowell Metropolitan area by the 2000 US Census are Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Lowell, Pepperell, Tewksbury, Tyngsborough, and Westford, and Pelham, NH. See Greater Lowell.
Neighborhoods
The Acre neighborhood
Lowell has eight distinct neighborhoods: the Acre, Back Central, Belvidere, Centralville, Downtown, Highlands, Pawtucketville, and South Lowell.[19] The city also has five ZIP codes: four are geographically distinct general ZIP codes, and one (01853) is for post-office boxes only.
The Centralville neighborhood, ZIP Code 01850, is the northeastern section of the city, north of the Merrimack River and east of Beaver Brook. Christian Hill is the section of Centralville east of Bridge Street.
The Highlands, ZIP Code 01851, is the most populated neighborhood, with almost a quarter of the city residing here. It is located in the southwestern section of the city, bordered to the east by the Lowell Connector and to the north by the railroad. Lowellians further distinguish the sections of the Highlands as the Upper Highlands and the Lower Highlands, the latter being the area closer to downtown. Middlesex Village, Tyler Park, and Drum Hill are in this ZIP Code.
Downtown, Belvidere, Back Central, and South Lowell make up the 01852 ZIP Code, and are the southeastern sections of the city (south of the Merrimack River and southeast of the Lowell Connector). Belvidere is the mostly residential area south of the Merrimack River, east of the Concord River, and north of the Lowell and Lawrence railroad. Belvidere Hill is a Historic District along Fairmount Street. Lower Belvidere is the section west of Nesmith Street. Back Central is an urban area south of downtown, toward the mouth of River Meadow Brook. South Lowell is the area south of the railroad and east of the Concord River. Other neighborhoods in this ZIP Code are Ayers City, Bleachery, Chapel Hill, the Grove, Oaklands, Riverside Park, Swede Village, and Wigginsville. Although the use of the names of these smaller neighborhoods has been in decline in the past decades, there has been recently a reemergence of their use.
The ZIP Code 01854 is the northwestern portion of the city and includes Pawtucketville; the University of Massachusetts Lowell; and the Acre. Pawtucketville is where Jack Kerouac resided around the area of University Avenue (previously known as Moody Street). The north campus of UMass Lowell is in Pawtucketville. The older parts of the neighborhood are around University Avenue and Mammoth Road, whereas the newer parts are around Varnum Avenue. Middle and elementary schools for this area include Wang Middle School, Pawtucketville Memorial, McAvinnue Elementary School, and private school Ste Jeanne d'Arc. Pawtucketville is the official entrance to the Lowell-Dracut-Tyngsboro State Forest. Pawtucketville's Lowell–Dracut–Tyngsborough State Forest is the probable site of a Native American tribe, and in the age of the Industrial Revolution was a prominent source where granite for canals and factory foundations were obtained.[20]
Demographics
Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1830 6,474 —
1840 20,796 +221.2%
1850 33,383 +60.5%
1860 36,827 +10.3%
1870 40,928 +11.1%
1880 59,475 +45.3%
1890 77,696 +30.6%
1900 94,969 +22.2%
1910 106,294 +11.9%
1920 112,759 +6.1%
1930 100,234 −11.1%
1940 101,389 +1.2%
1950 97,249 −4.1%
1960 92,107 −5.3%
1970 94,239 +2.3%
1980 92,418 −1.9%
1990 103,439 +11.9%
2000 105,167 +1.7%
2010 106,519 +1.3%
* = population estimate.
Source: United States Census records and Population Estimates Program data.[21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31]
According to the 2010 Census,[32] there were 106,519 people residing in the city. The population density was 7,842.1 people per square mile (2,948.8/km²). There were 41,431 housing units at an average density of 2,865.5 per square mile (1,106.7/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 60.3% White, 20.2% Asian American (12.5% Cambodian, 2.0% Indian, 1.7% Vietnamese, 1.4% Laotian, 0.6% Chinese, 0.2% Filipino, 0.1% Korean, 0.1% Thai, 0.1% Burmese), 6.8% African American, 0.3% Native American, 8.8% from other races, 3.6% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 17.3% of the population (11.3% of the population is Puerto Rican, 1.9% Dominican, 1.5% Colombian, 0.5% Mexican, 0.2% Salvadoran, 0.2% Guatemalan).[32] Non-Hispanic Whites were 49.3% of the population in 2013,[33] compared to 92.5% in 1980.[34]
There are about 6,000 Africans living in Lowell.[35] The come from a wide range of countries including Liberia, Kenya, and Togo.
In the twenty-year span from 1990 to 2010, the city's ethnic population more than doubled, increasing from 23.5 percent of residents to 47.2 percent.[36] In 2010, Lowell had the highest proportion of residents of Cambodian origin of any place in the United States, at 12.5% of the population. Estimates of the total number of Cambodians living in the city of Lowell range from 11,000[37] to 25,000-35,000.[38] The Government of Cambodia had opened up its third U.S. Consular Office in Lowell, on April 27, 2009, with Sovann Ou as current advisor to the Cambodian Embassy.[38] The other two are in Long Beach and Seattle, Washington, which also have a large community.
In 2010, there were 38,470 households, and 23,707 families living in Lowell; the average household size was 2.66 and the average family size was 3.31. Of those households, 34.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 35.9% were married couples living together, 14.7% had a female householder with no husband present, 38.4% were non-families, 29.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 8.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.[32]
Lowell has also experienced a significant increase in the number of residents between the ages of 50-69 while the percentages of residents under the age of 15 and over the age of 70 decreased.[36] In 2010 the city's population had a median age of 32.6.[39] The age distribution was 23.7% of the population under the age of 18, 13.5% from 18 to 24, 29.4% from 25 to 44, 23.3% from 45 to 64, and 10.1% who were 65 years of age or older. For every 100 females there were 98.6 males; while for every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 97.6 males.[39]
The median income for a household in the city was $51,714, according to the American Community Survey 5-year estimate ending in 2012.[40] The median income for a family was $55,852. Males had a median income of $44,739 versus $35,472 for females. The per capita income for the city was $22,730. About 15.2% of families and 17.5% of individuals were below the poverty line, including 24.5% of those under age 18 and 13.2% of those age 65 or over.[41]
Crime
Fires have ravaged some of the city's old buildings over the years. Pictured is the Varnum Building, a 1882 building subsequently demolished in 2010.
Police station in the city's Highlands neighborhood
The city of Lowell is primarily policed and protected by the Lowell Police Department, secondarily by the Massachusetts State Police, the UMass Lowell Police, and the National Park Service.
In 2008, the violent crime rate for Lowell was 1,126.3 per 100,000 of the population, ranking it the 7th most violent city in Massachusetts right ahead of Boston with 1,104 per 100,000.[42] Lowell's crime rate has dropped tremendously since the 1990s
Since 1990, Lowell has averaged about 5 homicides per year with the highest being 13 homicides in 2006. As of 2008, the crime index rating was 446.8. The national average was 320.9. Lowell has been locally notorious over the years for being a place of high drug trafficking and gang activity. The Lowell Police Department has made positive progress in bringing the crime rates down in recent years. In the years from 1994 to 1999, crime dropped 50 percent, the highest rate of decrease for any city in America with over 100,000 residents.[43] In 2009, Lowell was ranked as the 139th most dangerous city of over 75,000 residents in the United States, out of 393 communities. Out of Massachusetts cities, nine are larger than 75,000 residents, and Lowell was fifth most dangerous or safest.[44] For comparison Lowell is rated safer than Boston (104 of 393), Providence RI (123), Springfield (51), Lynn (120), Fall River (103), and New Bedford (85), but rated more dangerous than Cambridge (303), Newton (388), Quincy (312), and Worcester (175).[44]
Income
See also: List of Massachusetts locations by per capita income
Data is from the 2009-2013 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates.[45][46][47]
Rank ZIP Code (ZCTA) Per capita
income Median
household
income Median
family
income Population Number of
households
Middlesex County $42,861 $82,090 $104,032 1,522,533 581,120
Massachusetts $35,763 $66,866 $84,900 6,605,058 2,530,147
United States $28,155 $53,046 $64,719 311,536,594 115,610,216
1 01852 $26,878 $48,951 $59,749 33,106 13,668
Lowell $23,136 $49,452 $55,915 107,466 39,258
2 01851 $22,714 $51,630 $55,094 29,791 10,264
3 01850 $22,503 $51,538 $56,817 15,496 5,494
4 01854 $19,646 $42,947 $52,389 29,073 9,832
Arts and culture
Annual events
The Boott Cotton Mill Museum & Trolley
The National Park Boat Tour
February: Winterfest - celebration of winter.
March: Lowell Women's Week[48] - A week of events recognizing women’s achievements, struggles, and contributions to the Lowell community past and present. Irish Cultural Week - A celebration of Irish history and hulture within the Greater Lowell community.
April: Lowell Film Festival[49]- Showcases documentary and feature-length films focusing on a variety of topics of interest to the Greater Lowell community and beyond
May: Doors Open Lowell[50] - A celebration of preservation, architecture, and design where many historic buildings that normally have limited public access are open for viewing
June: African Festival[51] - A celebration of the various African communities in and around Lowell
July: Lowell Folk Festival - A three-day free folk music and traditional arts festival attended by on average 250,000 people on the last weekend in July
August: Lowell Southeast Asian Water Festival[52] - celebrates Southeast Asian culture
October: Lowell Celebrates Kerouac Festival[53] - A celebration of the works of Jack Kerouac and his roots in the city of Lowell
October: Bay State Marathon marathon and half marathon
Points of interest
Among the many tourist attractions, Lowell also currently has 39 places on the National Register of Historic Places including many buildings and structures as part of the Lowell National Historical Park.
Lowell National Historical Park: Maintains Lowell's history as an early manufacturing and immigrant city. Exhibits include weave rooms, a waterpower exhibit, and paths along 5.6 miles of largely restored canals.
Lowell-Dracut-Tyngsboro State Forest: Hiking, biking, and cross-country skiing trails in an urban state forest
University of Massachusetts Lowell: State university
Vandenberg Esplanade: Walking, biking, swimming, and picnicking park along the banks of the Merrimack River. Contains the Sampas Pavilion.
Lowell High School: The first desegregated and co-educational high school in the United States
Western Avenue Studios:[54] Largest complex of artists studios on the east coast of the United States at 122 Western Avenue.
Jack Kerouac's birthplace: In the Centralville section of the city at 9 Lupine Road.
Bette Davis's birthplace: In the Highlands section of the city at 22 Chester Street.
Rosalind Elias's birthplace: In the Acre neighborhood at 144 School Street .
Lowell Cemetery: burial site of many of Lowell's wealthy industrialists from the Victorian era, as well as several U.S. Congressmen, a Massachusetts Governor, and a U.S. Senator. 77 Knapp Avenue.
Edson Cemetery: burial site of Jack Kerouac, John McFarland, Passaconaway and William Preston Phelps. 1375 Gorham Street.
The Acre: Lowell's gateway neighborhood where waves of immigrants have established their communities.
University of Massachusetts Lowell Radiation Laboratory: The site of a small nuclear reactor at the school
Yorick Building: Former home of the gentlemen's club the "Yorick Club", currently a restaurant & function facility.
Little Cambodia: In 2010, the city began an effort to make it a tourist destination.[55]
Culture
Lowell Memorial Auditorium
Birthplace of painter James McNeill Whistler.
The Boott Cotton Mill and Museum
In the early years of the 1840s when the population quickly exceeded 20,000, Lowell became very active as a cultural center, with the construction of the Lowell Museum, the Mechanics Hall, as well as the new City Hall used for art exhibits, lectures, and for the performing arts. The Lowell Museum was lost in a devastating fire in the early morning of January 31, 1856,[56] but was quickly rehoused in a new location. The Lowell Art Association was founded in 1876, and the new Opera House was built in 1889.[57]
Continuing to inspire and entertain, Lowell currently has a plethora of artistic exhibitions and performances throughout a wide range of venues in the city:
Museums and public galleries
The Lowell Gallery
119 Gallery [58]
The American Textile History Museum[59]
Ayer Lofts Artist Live-work Lofts
The Boott Cotton Mills Museum: Lowell National Historic Park
Brush Art Gallery and Studios
The New England Quilt Museum
National Streetcar Museum[60]
Patrick J. Mogan Cultural Center: Lowell National Historic Park
Whistler House Museum of Art - Art museum in birthplace of James McNeill Whistler.
Western Avenue Studios - A converted mill with over 160 working artists and musicians.
Interactive and live performances
Arts League of Lowell
Angkor Dance Troupe - Cambodian classical and folk dance company and youth program[61]
Center for Lowell History, University of Massachusetts Lowell - local history library and archive
Lowell Memorial Auditorium - Mid-sized venue for live performances.
Lowell Summer Music Series - Boarding House Park
Lowell Rocks - Lowell nightlife and entertainment web site
Lowell Telecommunication Corporation (LTC) - A community media and technology center
Merrimack Repertory Theater - Professional equity theater
Play by Player's Theatre Company - critically acclaimed community theater
Lowell Philharmonic Orchestra - Community orchestra presenting free concerts and offering youth programs
RRRecords - Internationally known record label and store
Standing Room Only Players - musical review troupe
The Gentlemen Songsters The Lowell Chapter of The Barbershop Harmony Society -Causing Harmony In The Merrimack Valley.
Lowell Poetry Network - A network of area poets and appreciators of poetry who host readings, receptions, and open mics.
UMass Lowell Department of Music Performances
The United Teen Equality Center A by teens, for teens youth center promoting peace, positivity and empowerment for young people in Lowell.
Sports
Ramalho’s West End Gym trains the city's boxers.
Boxing
Boxing forms an important part of Lowell's working class culture. The city's auditorium hosts the annual New England Golden Gloves tournament, which featured fighters such as Rocky Marciano, Sugar Ray Leonard, and Marvin Hagler. Micky Ward and Dicky Eklund both began their careers in Lowell, the subject of the 2010 film The Fighter.[62] Arthur Ramahlo's West End Gym is where many of the city's boxers train.[63]
Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell
Teams
University of Massachusetts Lowell River Hawks, NCAA Division I Hockey, Soccer, Basketball, Baseball, Softball, Track & Field, Field Hockey Cross Country, Volleyball
Lowell Spinners - Class A short-season professional baseball affiliate of the Boston Red Sox
Lowell All-Americans - NECBL (Collegiate Summer Baseball)
New England Riptide - National Pro Fastpitch League (Major League Softball)
Lowell Nor'easter - Semi-Professional football team (New England Football League)
Greater Lowell United FC - Semi-Pro soccer team (NPSL)[64][65]
Venues
LeLacheur Park, home of the Lowell Spinners baseball team
Edward A. LeLacheur Park Baseball Stadium, shared by Lowell Spinners and the University of Massachusetts Lowell
Lowell Memorial Auditorium - performance and boxing venue.
Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell - multi-use sports and concert venue (6500 seats hockey, 7800 concerts)- the University of Massachusetts Lowell River Hawks, and various arena shows. On April 1, 2006, the arena held the 2006 World Curling Championships.
Cawley Memorial Stadium- Stadium for Lowell High School and other sporting events around the Merrimack Valley. Uses FieldTurf. Home of the MICCA Marching Band Championship Finals
Sampas Pavilion - Outdoor amphitheater on the banks of the Merrimack River
Stoklosa Alumni Field - Baseball stadium, used by Lowell All-Americans (4,000 seats)
Costello Athletic Center indoor arena on campus of the University of Massachusetts Lowell
UMass Lowell Bellgarde Boathouse used as a rowing and kayaking center for UMass Lowell and the greater Lowell area
Government
See also: List of mayors of Lowell, Massachusetts
Lowell City Council (as of 11/22/12)[66]
Rodney M. Elliott (Jan. 1998–present), Mayor
John Leahy (Sept. 2012–present), Vice Mayor
Corey Belanger (Jan. 2014–present)
Edward J. Kennedy, Jr. (Jan. 1978-Jan. 1986, Jan. 2012–present)
William F. Martin (Jan. 2000–present)*
Rita M. Mercier (Jan. 1996–present)*
James Milinazzo (Jan. 2004-Jan. 2012, Jan. 2014–present)*
Dan Rourke (Jan. 2014–present)
William Samaras (Jan. 2014–present)
* =former mayor
Lowell has a Plan E form of council-manager government.[67] There are nine city councilors and six school committee members, all elected at large in a non-partisan election. The City Council chooses one of its members as mayor, and another as vice-mayor; the mayor serves as chair of the council and school committee, and performs certain ceremonial duties. As of January 2012, the members of the Lowell School Committee are Mayor Rodney Elliott, David Conway, Stephen Gendron, James Leary, Vice Chair Connie Martin, Kimberly Scott and Kristin Ross-Sitcawich. The administrative head of the city government is the City Manager, who is responsible for all day-to-day operations, functioning within the guidelines of City Council policy, and is hired by and serves at the pleasure of the City Council as whole. As of April 2014, the City Manager is Kevin J. Murphy.[68]
Lowell is represented in the Massachusetts General Court by State Representatives Thomas Golden, Jr. (16th Middlesex 1995 to Present), David Nangle (17th Middlesex 2000 to Present), Rady Mom (18th Middlesex 2014 to Present), and by State Senator Eileen Donoghue (1st Middlesex), all of whom are Democrats. Federally, the city is part of Massachusetts's 3rd congressional district and represented by Democrat Niki Tsongas. The state's senior member of the United States Senate is Democrat Elizabeth Warren, elected in 2012. The state's junior member of the United States Senate is Democrat Ed Markey, elected in 2013.
Lowell City Hall
Registered Voters and Party Enrollment as of February 15, 2012[69]
Party Number of Voters Percentage
Democratic 20,420 40.48%
Republican 4,542 9.00%
Unenrolled 25,110 49.78%
Other 374 0.74%
Total 50,446 100%
Education
Lowell Public Schools
Type and location
Type Public
Grades K-12
Country United States
Location 155 Merrimack Street, Lowell, MA 01852
District information
Superintendent Jean M. Franco[70]
Schools 24
Budget $195,910,244 total
$13,167 per pupil[71]
Students and staff
Students 14,075[72]
Teachers 984[73]
Student-teacher ratio 14.3 to 1[73]
Other information
Website Lowell Public Schools
Colleges and universities
With a rapidly growing student population, Lowell has been considered an emerging college town.[74] With approximately 10,000 students at Middlesex Community College (MCC) and 17,000 students at University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell is currently home to 27,000 college students. UMass Lowell is the second largest state university and fifth largest university in Massachusetts, while MCC is the second largest Associate's college in Massachusetts.[75]
Middlesex Community College
University of Massachusetts Lowell
Recreation Center at UMass Lowell
Primary and secondary schools
Public schools
Lowell Public Schools operates district public schools. Lowell High School is the district public school. Non-district public schools include Greater Lowell Technical High School, Lowell Middlesex Academy Charter School, Lowell Community Charter Public School.[76]
Private schools
Lowell Catholic High School, est. 1989, is in Lowell.
Private grade schools include:[77]
Hellenic American Academy, est. 1908 as the first Greek Orthodox day school in the United States (135 Students) (Grades K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:12[78]
Franco-American School, est. 1963 (Grades K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:13[79]
St. Louis School, (457 Students) (Grades K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:19
Ste Jeanne d'Arc School, est. 1910 (375 Students) (Grades K1-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:17[80]
St. Margaret School, (357 Students) (Grade K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:20
St. Patrick School, (181 Students) (Grade K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:15
St. Michael Elementary School, (407 Students) (Grade K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:16
Immaculate Conception School, (324 Students) (Grade K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:17
St. Stanislaus School, est. 1906 (124 Students) (Grade K-8) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:12[81]
Community Christian Academy, (185 Students) (Grade K-12) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:9
Riverside School, Nonsectarian, Special Education School (25 Students) (Grades 4-11) Teacher/Student Ratio 1:5
Libraries
Pollard Memorial Library in August 2011
Pollard Memorial Library / Lowell City Library
The first Lowell public library was established in 1844 with 3,500 volumes, and was set up in the first floor of the Old City Hall, 226 Merrimack St. In 1872, the expanding collection was relocated down the street to the Hosford Building[82] at 134 Merrimack St. In 1890-91, the City of Lowell hired local Architect Frederick W. Stickney to design the new Lowell City Library, known as "Memorial Hall, in honor of the city's men who lost their lives in the American Civil War.[83][84] In 1981, the library was renamed the Pollard Memorial Library in memory of the late Mayor Samuel S. Pollard. And, in the mid-2000s the century old National Historic building underwent a major $8.5m renovation.[85] The city also, recently expanded the library system to include the Senior Center Branch, located in the City of Lowell Senior Center.[86]
In fiscal year 2008, the city of Lowell spent 0.36% ($975,845) of its budget on its public libraries, which houses 236,000 volumes, and is a part of the Merrimack Valley Library Consortium. Currently, circulation of materials averages around 250,000 annually, with approximately one-third deriving from the children's collection.[83][87] In fiscal year 2009, Lowell spent 0.35% ($885,377) of its budget on the library—some $8 per person.[88]
As of 2012, the Pollard Library purchases access for its patrons to databases owned by: EBSCO Industries; Gale, of Cengage Learning; Heritage Archives, Inc.; New England Historic Genealogical Society; OverDrive, Inc.; ProQuest; and World Trade Press.[89]
Lydon Library
The Lydon Library is a part of the University of Massachusetts Lowell system, and is located on the North Campus. The building is named in honor of President Martin J. Lydon, whose vision expanded and renamed the college during his tenure in the 1950s and 1960s.[90] Its current collection concentrates on the sciences, engineering, business management, social sciences, humanities, and health.[91]
O'Leary Library
The O'Leary Library is a part of the University of Massachusetts Lowell system, and is located on the South Campus. The building is named in honor of former History Professor and then President O'Leary, whose vision helped merge the Lowell colleges during his tenure in the 1970s and 1980s.[92] Its current collection concentrates on music and art.[93]
Center for Lowell History
The Center for Lowell History [special collections and archives] is a part of the University of Massachusetts Lowell system, established in 1971 to assure the safekeeping, preservation, and availability for study and research of materials in unique subject areas, particularly those related to the Greater Lowell Area and the University of Massachusetts Lowell. Located downtown in the Patrick J. Mogan Cultural Center at 40 French Street, the Center is committed to the design and implementation of historical, educational, and cultural programs that link the University and the community in developing an economically strong and multi-culturally rich region. Its current collections and archives focus on historic and contemporary issues of Lowell (including: industrialization, textile technology, immigration, social history, regional history, labor history, women's history, and environmental history.[94]
Media
The Sun is the city's daily newspaper.
Newspaper
The Sun, headquartered in downtown Lowell, is a major daily newspaper serving Greater Lowell and southern New Hampshire. The newspaper had an average daily circulation of about 42,900 copies in 2011.[95] Continuing a trend of concentration of newspaper ownership, The Sun was sold to newspaper conglomerate MediaNews Group in 1997 after 119 years of family ownership.[96]
Radio
WCAP AM 980, talk radio
WLLH AM 1400 Spanish Tropical
WUML FM 91.5, UMass Lowell-owned station
WCRB FM 99.5, Classical music, licensed to Lowell
Infrastructure
Transportation
A bus of the Lowell Regional Transit Authority
Lowell can be reached by automobile from Interstate 495, U.S. Route 3, the Lowell Connector, and Massachusetts Routes 3A, 38, 110, 113, and 133, all of which run through the city, the last one (Route 133) begins at the spot where Routes 110 and 38 branch off just south of the Merrimack River. Lowell can also be reached by Interstate 93 via exit 44B (I-495 south) in nearby Andover, and Interstate 95 via the U.S. Route 3 exit (32A) in nearby Burlington.[97] There are six bridges crossing the Merrimack River in Lowell, and four crossing the Concord River (not including the two for I-495).
For public transit, Lowell is served by the Lowell Regional Transit Authority, which provides fixed route bus services and paratransit services to the city and surrounding area. These connect at the Gallagher Transit Terminal to the Lowell Line of the MBTA commuter rail system, which connects Lowell to Boston. The terminal is also served by several intercity bus lines.[97]
The Lowell National Historical Park provides a free streetcar shuttle between its various sites in the city center, using track formerly used to provide freight access to the city's mills. An expansion is currently being planned to expand the system to 6.9 miles. The system might be turned over to the Lowell Regional Transit Authority after the extension is built.
Hospitals
Lowell General Hospital
Businesses started and/or products invented in Lowell
CVS/pharmacy
Moxie - the first mass-produced soft drink in the U.S.
Father John's Medicine[98]
Wang Laboratories - Massachusetts Miracle computer company
Telephone numbers, 1879, Lowell is the first U.S. city to have phone numbers, two years after Alexander Graham Bell demonstrates his telephone in Lowell.[99]
Francis Turbine - A highly efficient water-powered turbine
Market Basket - Chain of approximately 70 grocery stores in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
Cash Carriers
Fred C. Church Insurance (est. 1865)[100]
Stuarts Department Stores
Notable people
See List of People from Lowell, Massachusetts
International relations
Twin towns and sister cities
City State Year
Saint-Dié-des-Vosges France 1989
Berdiansk Ukraine 1997
Phnom Penh Cambodia 2015
References to Lowell
Music
The city is the subject of Death Cab for Cutie's song, "Lowell, MA," from their album We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes.
The city was also featured in the song "Lowell Man" by Tom Doyle. Doyle, of WROR-FM 105.7 in Boston, does many songs like this spoofing classic rock by rewording them to make fun of various things about New England ("Lowell Man" is a spoof of "Soul Man" by Sam & Dave).
The Dropkick Murphys' Warrior's Code tells story of Lowell Boxer Micky Ward, mentioning Lowell and several city facts in the song.
James Taylor's song "Millworker" is about a woman living in Lowell.
Tom Waits references the city on the album Small Change in the track "Bad Liver and a Broken Heart (In Lowell)".
Historical sources and novels
Lowell has also been the subject of a number of historical sources and novels. Some of the better known ones are:
Brian C.Mitchell's "The Paddy Camps:The Irish of Lowell 1821-1861", published by the University of Illinois Press, Urbana and Chicago,1988, and 2006 (Paperback).
Memorial stone of Jack Kerouac in Lowell
Jack Kerouac, who was born in Lowell, set several biographical novels there, including Visions of Gerard and Doctor Sax.
Katherine Paterson's novel Lyddie tells the fictional story of a Lowell Mill Girl in the 19th century who fights for better working conditions in the hot, crowded and dangerous mills.
In Avi's Beyond the Western Sea: Lord Kirkle's Money, Lowell is the destination of immigrants hoping to reach America and begin new lives.
Nancy Zaroulis' Call The Darkness Light, a novel about a young woman left alone in the world following the death of her father, tells the story of the mid-19th century Lowell Mill Girls and the realities of the textile industry.
Judith Rossner's Emmeline tells the partially fictionalized story of another 19th-century mill girl, as does Elizabeth Graver's novel Unravelling.
David Daniel's series of Alex Rasmussen novels follows the Lowell-based private eye's adventures in books including The Marble Kite and Goofy Foot.
Lloyd L. Corricelli's Ronan Marino Mystery Series includes Two Redheads & A Dead Blonde, which follows the Iraqi war veteran and private investigator's quest to find his girlfriend's murderer, and Chasing Curves, in which Ronan tries to clear a UMass Lowell baseball star accused of murdering his prospective agent's secretary.
Mark Arsenault's novel Spiked details the fictional story of a news reporter in Lowell who tries to solve the murder of his co-worker, despite the interference from the brass of his daily newspaper, the local police, city politicians, hitmen, and a lovely Cambodian woman bent on revenge.
Films
School Ties - 1992: A Robert Mandel film starring Brendan Fraser, Matt Damon, Chris O’Donnell, Randall Batinkoff, and Andrew Lowery. Some of the opening scenes were filmed in Lowell.
High on Crack Street - 1995: An HBO film documenting the lives of three crack cocaine addicts.
Monkey Dance - 2004: Documentary film by Julie Mallozzi on the lives of three Cambodian-American adolescents in Lowell and how they were affected positively by traditional Cambodian dance, especially with Lowell's Angkor Dance Troupe.
The Busker - 2006: A film by director/writer Stephen Croke mostly filmed in Lowell. The film is based on a young street musician who has to deal with the racial tensions that surround him.
The Invention of Lying - 2009: A film by director/writer/star Ricky Gervais was filmed principally in Lowell. The film also stars Jennifer Garner, Rob Lowe, and Tina Fey.
The Fighter - 2010: A film by director David O. Russell starring Mark Wahlberg, based upon the life of Irish Micky Ward. Shooting began July 2009 and was completed in September of that year in Lowell, Massachusetts.
Here Comes the Boom - 2012: A film by director Frank Coraci starring Kevin James and Salma Hayek, a comedy about a high school teacher who takes up mixed martial arts in order to raise money for his school. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1648179/ Portions were shot in Lowell, Massachusetts. http://www.mafilm.org/made-in-mass/
Louis Cyr - 2013: A film by director Daniel Roby on the life of the famous French Canadian strong man Louis Cyr.
Honors
2010, Lowell designated as a "Green Community"[101]
1997 and 1998, Lowell was a finalist for the All-American City award.[102]
1999, Lowell received an All-American City award.[102]
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City of Lowell Master Plan Update: Existing Conditions Report, Department of Planning and Development, December 2011, 3.0 Land-Use pg 32
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Hamilton Canal District Master Plan, September 2008 pg. 6
Let 17-year-olds vote | The Great Debate
‘Vote 17’ movement pushing for teen voice in local elections | Fox News|date=11 July 2012
my testimony in favor of lowering the voting age to 17 in Lowell, MA « Peter Levine
Homepage | United Teen Equality Center
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Lowell's Neighborhoods
Lowell-Dracut-Tyngsboro State Forest
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July 2009 – Crime Policy Brief Series Vol. No 5 Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security; Data Source: 2008 Crime Data, Massachusetts State Police, Crime Reporting Unit. Population from U.S. Census 2008 estimates. Rate is per 100,000 persons
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Further reading
Library resources about
Lowell, Massachusetts
Resources in your library
Resources in other libraries
Dalzell, Robert F. Enterprising elite: The Boston Associates and the world they made (Harvard University Press, 1987)
Deitch, Joanne Weisman. The Lowell Mill Girls: Life in the Factory (Perspectives on History Series) (1998)
Dublin, Thomas. Women at Work: The Transformation of Work and Community in Lowell, Massachusetts, 1826-1860, (Columbia University Press, 1981)
Eno, Arthur Louis. Cotton was king: A history of Lowell, Massachusetts (New Hampshire Publishing Company, 1976)
Gross, Laurence F. The Course of Industrial Decline: The Boott Cotton Mills of Lowell, Massachusetts, 1835-1955 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993)
Malone, Patrick M., Waterpower in Lowell: Engineering and Industry in Nineteenth-Century America, Johns Hopkins Introductory Studies in the History of Technology (2009)
Mrozowski, Stephan A.; Ziesing, Grace H.; Beaudry, Mary C., Living on the Boott: Historical Archaeology at the Boott Mills Boardinghouses, Lowell, Massachusetts, The Lowell Historic Preservation Commission (1996)
Savard, Rita, "Three Hard Words: I Need Help: Jobs gone and bills mounting, many more in Greater Lowell seek food aid", The Lowell Sun, January 22, 2010
Stanton, Cathy, The Lowell Experiment: Public History in a Postindustrial City, University of Massachusetts Press. (2006)
Weible, Robert, ed. The Continuing Revolution: A History of Lowell, Massachusetts (1991)
Primary sources
Denenberg, Barry. So Far From Home: The Diary of Mary Driscoll, An Irish Mill Girl, Lowell, Massachusetts 1847 (Dear America Series) (2003)
Eisler, Benita, The Lowell Offering: Writings by New England Mill Women (1840-1945), J.B. Lippincott (1977); Norton (1998)
Larcom, Lucy, "Among Lowell Mill-Girls: a reminiscence", The Atlantic Monthly, v.XLVIII (48), no.268, November 1881, pp. 593–612.
The Lowell Historical Society, Lowell: The Mill City (MA) (Postcard History Series), Arcadia Publishing. (2005), illustrated postcards
External links
Portal icon Massachusetts portal
City of Lowell official web site
Merrimack Valley Region tourist information
Lowell Sun newspaper
University of Massachusetts Lowell, Center for Lowell History
Lowell Online
"Lowell, Massachusetts". The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
"Lowell". New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
"Lowell". Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org"
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