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===Healthcare===
===Healthcare===
* [http://www.lawrencegeneral.org/ Lawrence General Hospital]
* [http://www.lawrencegeneral.org/ Lawrence General Hospital]
* [http://www.glfhc.org/ Greater Lawrence Family Health Center]


===Transportation===
===Transportation===

Revision as of 17:38, 9 June 2009

Lawrence, Massachusetts
Ayer Mill
Ayer Mill
Nickname: 
Immigrant City
Location in Essex County in Massachusetts
Location in Essex County in Massachusetts
CountryUnited States
StateMassachusetts
CountyEssex
Settled1655
Incorporated1847
Government
 • TypeMayor-council city
 • MayorMichael J. Sullivan (R)
 • City Council President
Patrick Blanchette
Area
 • Total7.4 sq mi (19.2 km2)
 • Land7.0 sq mi (18.0 km2)
 • Water0.5 sq mi (1.2 km2)
Elevation
50 ft (15 m)
Population
 (2007)
 • Total70,066
 • Density10,009.4/sq mi (3,892.6/km2)
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDST)
ZIP code
01840, 01841, 01842, 01843
Area code351 / 978
FIPS code25-34550
Websitewww.cityoflawrence.com

Lawrence is a city in Essex County, Massachusetts, United States on the Merrimack River. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 72,043. Surrounding communities include Methuen to the north, Andover to the southwest, and North Andover to the southeast. It and Salem are the county seats of Essex County.Template:GR Lawrence is also part of the Merrimack Valley.

Manufacturing products of the city include electronic equipment, textiles, footwear, paper products, computers, and foodstuffs. Lawrence was, for a while, the residence of Robert Frost, where he published his first poem.

History

Founding and rise as a textile center

Massachusetts National Guardsmen with fixed bayonets surround a parade of strikers.

Europeans first settled the area in 1640. The site of the city – formerly parts of Andover and Methuen – was purchased in 1845 by a group of Boston industrialists headed by the wealthy merchant and congressman Abbott Lawrence, the community's namesake. The city was incorporated in 1853.

The industrialists, most prominently Lawrence, established textile mills near sources of abundant waterpower. Lawrence's location on the Merrimack River, just downriver of Lowell and a short train ride from Boston was an ideal location to set up an industrial center. The Merrimack was dammed right above the city, and a canal was dug on both the north and the south banks to provide power to the factories that would soon be built on its banks.

The Bread and Roses strike of 1912

Working conditions in the mills were unsafe and in 1860 the Pemberton Mill collapsed, killing 145 workers.[1] As immigrants flooded into the United States in the mid to late 19th century, the population of Lawrence abounded with skilled and unskilled workers from almost every nation in Europe, including, but not limited to: Ireland, France, Italy, Germany, Belgium, Poland, Lithuania, and French-Canadians from the Maritime Provinces of Quebec, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Yankee Farm girls from all over New England. Lawrence became the Immigrant City very early in its existence, and can reasonably boast that for its small geographic size (less than 6 square miles) it has had more immigrants from a greater variety of countries in the world per capita, than any other City of its size on Earth.

In 1912 the so-called Bread and Roses strike or the Lawrence textile strike, one of greatest labor actions in American history, began when Massachusetts law reduced the work week from 56 hours to 54 hours and subsequently lowered wages for thousands of women and child workers. The strike began on January 11, 1912 when mill workers discovered their pay had been reduced. The average worker at the time earned a mere $7 a week and paid an equal amount for their monthly rent. Unlike the strikes of today fewer than 1000 of the 25,000 strikers were members of a union. The Industrial Workers of the World (I.W.W.) provided most of the leadership for the strike and also provided food and clothing for the strikers. The Massachusetts National Guard, private and city police countered 25,000 strikers for two months. Although there were many skirmishes between the police, militia and the strikers only 2 people died and relatively few were injured on either side. Immigrant groups normally mistrustful of one another banded together in the common cause of higher wages. When police and National Guard assaulted a group of women and children, public outcry forced mill owners to capitulate. The striking workers won wage increases for themselves and thousands of workers across New England. One of the major companies involved in the strike was the American Woolen Company, led by a Portuguese immigrant, William Madison Wood who had risen through the ranks in the textile industry.

Post-War history

Lawrence was a great wool-processing center until that industry declined in the 1950s. The decline left Lawrence a struggling city. The population of Lawrence declined from over 80,000 residents in 1950 to approximately 64,000 residents in 1980, the low point of Lawrence's population.

Urban renewal

Merrimack River at Lawrence

Like other northeastern cities suffering from the effects of Post World War II industrial decline, Lawrence has often made efforts at revitalization, some of them controversial. For example, half of the enormous water-powered[citation needed] Wood Mill, once the largest mills in the world, was knocked down in the 1950s . More significantly, under the guise of "urban renewal", large tracts of downtown Lawrence were razed in the mid-1970s and replaced with a parking lots and a three-story parking garage connected to a new Intown Mall intended to compete with newly constructed suburban malls. The historic Theater Row along Broadway was also razed, destroying ornate movie palaces of the 1920s and 1930s that entertained mill workers through the Great Depression and the Second World War. Additionally, the city's main post office, an ornate federalist style building at the corner of Broadway and Essex Street, was razed. Most of the structures were replaced with one-story, steel-frame structures with large parking lots, housing such establishments as fast food restaurants and chain drug stores, fundamentally changing the character of the center of Lawrence.[2]

Lawrence also attempted to increase its employment base by attracting industries unwanted in other communities, such as waste treatment facilities and incinerators. From 1980 until 1998, private corporations operated two trash incinerators in Lawrence. Activist residents successfully blocked the approval of a waste treatment center on the banks of the Merrimack River near the current site of Salvatore's Pizza on Merrimack Street.

Recently, however, the focus of Lawrence's urban renewal has shifted to preservation rather than sprawl. What remains of the historic Wood Mill has been purchased for development and renovation into sustainable luxury loft apartments heated and cooled by the largest residential geothermal exchange system in North America.

Events of the 1980s and 1990s

Hispanic immigrants from the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico began arriving in Lawrence in significant numbers in the late 1960s, attracted by cheap housing and a history of tolerance toward immigrants. In 1984, tensions between remaining working class whites and increasing numbers of Hispanic youth flared into a riot, centered at the intersection of Haverhill Street and Railroad Street where a number of buildings were destroyed by Molotov cocktails and over 300 people were arrested.[3]

Lawrence saw further setbacks during the recession of the early 1990s as a wave of arson plagued the city. Over 200 buildings were set alight in an eighteen month period in 1991–92, many of them abandoned residences and industrial sites.[4]

Recently, a sharp reduction in violent crime starting in 2004 and massive private investment in former mill buildings along the Merrimack River, including the remaining section of the historic Wood Mill – to be converted into commercial, residential and education uses – have lent encouragement to boosters of the city. One of the final remaining mills in the city is Malden Mills. Additionally, Lawrence's downtown has seen a resurgence of business activity as Hispanic-owned businesses have opened along Essex Street, the historic shopping street of Lawrence that remained largely shuttered since the 1970s. In June 2007, the City approved the sale of the Intown Mall, largely abandoned since the early 1990s recession, to Northern Essex Community College for the development of a medical sciences center. A large multi-structure fire in January 2008 was national news and destroyed many wooden structures just south of downtown.

History of Lawrence immigrant communities

Lawrence has been aptly nicknamed the "Immigrant City."[5] Starting with the Irish in the 1840s, it has been home to numerous different immigrant communities, most of whom arrived during the great wave of European immigration to America that ended in the 1920s. Since early 1970s, Lawrence has become home to a sizable Hispanic population, reaching over 68% of the population of Lawrence by 2006.

Immigrant communities, 1845–1920

Lawrence became home to large groups of immigrants from Europe, beginning with the Irish in 1845, Germans after the social upheaval in Germany in 1848, and French Canadians seeking to escape hard northern farm life from the 1850s onward. A second wave began arriving after 1900, as part of the great mass of Italian and Eastern European immigrants, including Jews from Russia, Poland, Lithuania and neighboring regions. Immigration to the United States was severely curtailed in the 1920s with the Immigration Act of 1924, when foreign born immigration to Lawrence virtually ceased for over 40 years.[5] In 1890, the foreign-born population of 28,577 was comprised as follows, with the significant remainder of the population being children of foreign born residents: 7,058 Irish; 6,999 French Canadians; 5,131 English; 2,465 German; 1,683 English Canadian.[6] In 1920, towards the end of the first wave of immigration, most ethnic groups had numerous social clubs in the city. The Portuguese had 2; the English had 2; the Jews had 3; the Armenians, 5; the Lebanese and Syrians, 6; the Irish, 8; the Polish, 9; the French Canadians and Belgian-French, 14; the Lithuanians, 18; the Italians, 32; and the Germans, 47.[7] However, the center of social life, even more than clubs or fraternal organizations, was churches. Lawrence is dotted with churches, many now closed, torn down or converted into other uses. These churches signify, more than any other artifacts, the immigrant communities that once lived within walking distance of each church.[7]

The Irish

Irish immigrants arrived in Lawrence at its birth, which nearly coincided with the Great Potato Famine of 1842, the event that drove great numbers of Irish out of Ireland. The Great Stone Dam, constructed in from 1845–1848 to power the nascent textile mills, was largely built by Irish laborers. The first Irish immigrants settled in the area south of the Merrimack River near the intersection of Kingston Street and South Broadway. Their shantytown settlement put them close to the dam being constructed, but away from the Essex Corporation row houses built north of the river to attract New England farm girls as millworkers. The religious needs of the Irish were initially met by the Immaculate Conception church, originally erected near the corner of Chestnut and White Street in 1846, the first Roman Catholic church in Lawrence. By 1847, observers counted over ninety shanties in the Irish shantytown. In 1869,[8] the Irish were able to collect sufficient funds form their own church, St. Patrick’s, on South Broadway.[7]

The Germans

The first sizable German community arrived following the revolutions of 1848.[5] However, a larger German community was formed after 1871, when industrial workers from Saxony were displaced by economic competition from new industrial areas like the Ruhr.[9] The German community was characterized by numerous school clubs, shooting clubs, national and regional clubs, as well as men’s choirs and mutual aid societies,[9] many of which were clustered around the Turn Verein, a major social club on Park Street.[7]

The Italians

Some Italian immigrants celebrated Mass in the basement chapel of the largely Irish St. Laurence O’Toole Church, at the intersection of East Haverhill Street and Newbury Street, until they had collected sufficient funds to erect the Holy Rosary Church in 1909 nearby at the intersection of Union Street and Essex Street.[7] Immigrants from the Sicilian province of Catania maintained a particular devotion to three Catholic martyrs, Saint Alfio, Saint Filadelfo and Saint Cirino, and in 1923 began celebrating a procession on their feast day.[10] Although most of the participants live in neighboring towns, the Feast of Three Saints festival continues in Lawrence today.

The French Canadians

French Canadians were the second major immigrant group to settle in Lawrence. In 1872, they erected their first church, St. Anne’s, at the corner of Haverhill and Franklin Streets. Within decades, St. Anne’s established a “missionary church”, Sacred Heart on South Broadway, to serve the burgeoning Québécois community in South Lawrence.[7]

The Lebanese

Lawrence residents frequently referred to their Arabic-speaking Middle Eastern community as "Syrian." In fact, most so-called Syrians in Lawrence were from present-day Lebanon, and were largely Maronite Christian.[7] Lebanese immigrants organized St. Anthony’s Maronite Church in 1903 [11], as well as St. George’s Orthodox Church, the oldest Greek Orthodox-rite Church in the United States.[7]

The Jews

Jewish merchants became increasingly numerous in Lawrence and specialized in dry goods and retail shops. The fanciest men's clothing store in Lawrence, Kap's, established in 1902 and closed in the early 1990s, was founded by Elias Kapelson, born in Lithuania. Jacob Sandler and two brothers also immigrated from Lithuania in approximately 1900 and established Sandlers Department Store, which continued in business until 1978. In the 1880s, the first Jewish arrivals established a community around Common, Valley, Concord and Lowell Streets. In the 1920s, the Jews of Lawrence began congregating further up Tower Hill, where they erected two synagogues on Lowell Street above Milton Street, as well as a Jewish Community Center on nearby Haverhill Street. All three institutions had closed their doors by 1990 as the remaining elderly members of the community died out or moved away.[7]

The Polish

The Polish community of Lawrence was estimated to be only 600–800 persons in 1900. However by 1905, the community had expanded sufficiently to fund the construction of the Holy Trinity Church at the corner of Avon and Trinity Streets.[7] Their numbers grew to 2,100 Poles in 1910. Like many of their immigrant brethren from other nations, most of the Poles were employed in woolen and worsted goods manufacturing.[12]

The English

A sizable English community, comprised mainly of unskilled laborers that arrived after 1880, sought work in the textile mills where they were given choice jobs by the Yankee overseers on account of their shared linguistic heritage and close cultural links.

Yankee farmers

Not all immigrants to Lawrence were foreign-born or their children. Yankee farmers, unable to compete against the cheaper farmlands of the Midwest that had been linked to the East coast by rail, settled in corners of Lawrence. Congregationalists were the first Protestant denomination to begin worship in South Lawrence, with the erection in 1852 of the first South Congregational Church on South Broadway, near the corner of Andover Street.[7]

New immigrants, 1970 to present

Immigration of foreign born workers to Lawrence largely ceased in 1921 with the passage of strict quotas against immigrants from the countries that had supplied the cheap, unskilled workers. Although many quotas were lifted after the Second World War, foreign immigration to Lawrence only picked up again in the late 1960s with Hispanic immigrants from the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico as well as other Latin American countries. Immigrants from southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam, have also settled in Lawrence. As an indication of recent immigration trends, St. Patrick’s Church, the largest Catholic church in Lawrence and once an Irish bastion, has celebrated Spanish masses on Sundays since 1999. A mass in Vietnamese is also offered every other week.[13] St. Mary's of the Assumption parish has been offering Spanish masses since the early 1990s and still to this day receives increasing numbers of people at their Spanish and English masses. Since the 1990s, increasing numbers of former Catholic churches, closed since the 1980s when their Irish or Italian congregations died out, have been bought by Hispanic evangelical churches. [14]

The 2000 Census revealed the following population breakdown, illustrating the shift toward newer immigrant groups:

· Dominican Republic - 22% · Puerto Rican - 22% · Other Hispanic or Latino - 12% · Irish - 7% · Italian - 7% · French (except Basque) - 5% · Black or African American - 5% · French Canadian - 5% · English - 3% · Arab - 2% · German - 2% · Lebanese - 2% · Central American: - 1% · Polish - 1% · Portuguese - 1% · Guatemalan - 1% · Vietnamese - 1% · South American - 1% · Spanish - 1% · Cambodian - 1% · Scottish - 1% · Cuban - 1% · Scotch-Irish - 1% · Ecuadorian - 1%.[15]

Geography

High Service Water Tower (1895), also called Tower Hill Water Tower, a notable eyecatcher or folly, named an American Water Landmark in 1979 by the American Water Works Association.

Lawrence is located at 42°42′13″N 71°9′47″W / 42.70361°N 71.16306°W / 42.70361; -71.16306Invalid arguments have been passed to the {{#coordinates:}} function (42.703741, -71.162979).Template:GR According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 7.4 square miles (19.2 km²), of which, 7.0 square miles (18.0 km²) of it is land and 0.4 square miles (1.2 km²) of it (6.07%) is water.

Aside from the Merrimack River, other water features include the Spicket River, which flows into the Merrimack from Methuen, and the Shawsheen River, which forms the southeastern border of the city. Additionally, Lawrence has two power canals that were formerly used to provide hydropower to the mills - one on the north bank of the river, the other on the south. Channeling water into these canals is the Great Stone Dam, which lies across the entire Merrimack and was, at the time of its construction in the 1840s, the largest dam in the world.

The highest point in Lawrence is the top of Tower Hill in the northwest corner of the city, rising approximately 240 feet above sea level. Other prominent hills include Prospect Hill, in the northeast corner of the city, and Mount Vernon, along the southern edge of the city. Most industrial activity was concentrated in the flatlands along the rivers.

Den Rock Park, a wooded conservation district on the southern edge of Lawrence that spans the Lawrence-Andover town line, provides recreation for nature lovers and rock-climbers alike.[16]


Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18508,282
186017,639113.0%
187028,92164.0%
188039,15135.4%
189044,65414.1%
190062,55940.1%
191085,89237.3%
192094,2709.8%
193085,068−9.8%
194084,323−0.9%
195080,536−4.5%
196070,545−12.4%
197066,915−5.1%
198063,175−5.6%
199070,20711.1%
200072,0432.6%
2007 (est.)70,066

As of the censusTemplate:GR of 2000, there were 72,043 people, 24,463 households, and 16,903 families residing in the city. The population density was 10,351.4 people per square mile (3,996.5/km²). There were 25,601 housing units at an average density of 3,678.4/sq mi (1,420.2/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 48.64% White, 4.88% African American, 0.81% Native American, 2.65% Asian, 0.10% Pacific Islander, 36.67% from other races, and 6.25% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race mainly Dominican or Puerto Rican were 59.71% of the population.

There were 24,463 households out of which 41.4% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 36.6% were married couples living together, 25.7% had a female householder with no husband present, and 30.9% were non-families. 25.5% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.0% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.90 and the average family size was 3.46.

In the city the population was spread out with 32.0% under the age of 18, 11.1% from 18 to 24, 30.3% from 25 to 44, 16.7% from 45 to 64, and 9.8% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 30 years. For every 100 females there were 91.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 86.8 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $25,983, and the median income for a family was $29,809. Males had a median income of $27,772 versus $23,137 for females. The per capita income for the city was $11,360. About 21.2% of families and 34.3% of the population were below the poverty line, including 31.7% of those under age 18 and 20.1% of those age 65 or over.

By 2006, the population of Lawrence was estimated to be more than 68% Hispanic.[17]

Government

Local

Form of government:
Plan B - "Weak mayor" - Mayor and city council, the councillors being elected partly at large and partly from districts or wards of the city. Party primaries prohibited.[18]

Lawrence has an established City Charter and its form of government is a Mayor-council government. There are nine city councilors and six school committee members; most are elected by district; three city council members are elected at large. There are six districts in Lawrence and all elections are non-partisan. The Mayor serves as the seventh member and chair of the school committee. The city council chooses one of its number as president who serves as chair of the council. The city of Lawrence also elects three members to the Greater Lawrence Technical School Committee these members are elected at-large.

The current Mayor is Michael J. Sullivan; the current City Council President is Patrick J. Blanchette. Sullivan, a Republican, has been mayor of Lawrence since 2001 and the city has experienced its lowest crime rates since the 1960s [citation needed] under him.

City Council Lawrence School Committee Greater Lawrence Technical School Committee
  • Patrick J. Blanchette (District A)*
  • Grisel Silva (District B)
  • Jorge A. Gonzalez (District C)
  • Nicholas Kolofoles (District D)**
  • David Abdoo (District E)
  • Michael Fielding (District F)
  • Nilka Alvarez-Rodriquez (At-Large)
  • Frank Moran (At-Large)
  • Roger Twomey (At-Large)
  • James Vittorioso (District A)
  • Martina Cruz (District B)
  • Priscilla Baez (District C)
  • Samuel Reyes (District D)
  • Peter Larocque (District E)
  • Gregory Morris (District F)**
  • Michael J. Sullivan (Mayor)*
  • Gerald Silverman (Andover)
  • Richard Hamilton, Jr. (Lawrence)
  • Leo J. Lamontagne (Lawrence)
  • Pamela Neilon (Lawrence)
  • Tom Grondine (Methuen)
  • Kenneth Henrick (Methuen)*
  • John Driscoll (North Andover)

* = President/Chair
** = Vice President/Vice Chair

State and Federal

Template:Infobox Mass Town Govt

Education

Public schools

The City of Lawrence has a public school system managed by Lawrence Public Schools.

Charter schools

High schools

Private schools

Elementary schools

High schools

Higher education

Public

Private

Media

Newspapers

Radio

AM

FM

TV

Lawrence Community Access Television

Infrastructure

Healthcare

Transportation

Airport
The City of Lawrence owns the Lawrence Municipal Airport located in North Andover, MA.

Boating
Local boating at the Greater Lawrence Community Boating Program

Bus service
Local busing options include the Merrimack Valley Regional Transit Authority.

Rail service
Commuter rail to Boston is provided by the MBTA Haverhill/Reading Line at the Senator Patricia McGovern Transportation Center. Pan Am Railways has a freight yard in the south of the town and a short branch to Lowell Hill in the east

Roadways
Lawrence is circled with expressways. Interstate 495 runs from the south-eastern portion of the city through the eastern edge of the city, Interstate 93 is to the west, running through Andover, Massachusetts. The final part of the circle is "The Loop Connector" (named after the The Loop shopping center) which runs through Methuen, Massachusetts, parallel to Route 113. Major street-level routes include Routes 28 (north/south) and 110 (east/west).

Telecommunications

Lawrence is served only by the 978 area code. Area code 978 was created as a split from area code 508 on September 1, 1997.

Points of interest

Notable residents

References

Notes

  1. ^ "THE FALL OF THE PEMBERTON MILL". The New York Times. April 18, 1886. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ Lawrence Main Streets Inc
  3. ^ 10 O'Clock News | [Race riots in Lawrence]
  4. ^ Arson epidemic continues in Massachusetts town. (Lawrence, Massachusetts) | National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management | Find Articles at BNET.com
  5. ^ a b c Cole, Donald B. (1963). Immigrant City: Lawrence, Massachusetts, 1845-1921. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807808768.
  6. ^ Wadsworth, H.A. History of Lawrence, Massachusetts (Lawrence, 1880).
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Skulski, Ken; Dengler, Eartha; Khalife, Katherine (1995). Lawrence, Massachusetts. Dover, N.H: Arcadia Pub. ISBN 0-7524-0229-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Parish History
  9. ^ a b McCaffery, Robert Paul McCaffery. "Islands of Deutschtum: German-Americans in Manchester, New Hampshire and Lawrence, Massachusetts, 1870-1942". New German-American studies, vol 11. Peter Lang, 1996.
  10. ^ Festa of Saints Alfio, Filadelfo, and Cirino
  11. ^ St. Anthony’s Marionite Church Website
  12. ^ Polish Roots website
  13. ^ "Scenes from a Parish":Mass Humanities, Spring 1995
  14. ^ Betances, Yadira. "Protestant congregations eyeing vacant Catholic church properties Yadira Betances. Eagle-Tribune, December 26, 2006.
  15. ^ Current census data on Epodunk.com accessed 04/09/2008
  16. ^ Den Rock Park Trail Guide
  17. ^ REACHing Latinos in Lawrence, Massachusetts
  18. ^ 43 MGL 1, via Mass. gov

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