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Constituency of the
Massachusetts State Senate
Current 
 
–[[, Massachusetts|]]

The Middlesex and Worcester District is one of 40 electoral districts that each send one senator to the Massachusetts Senate. The district is represented by state Sen. Jamie Eldridge of Acton, a Democrat.

The district includes several suburban cities and towns in western Middlesex County and eastern Worcester County, from which it takes its name.

The exact towns in the district have varied with each redistricting since the district was created in 1960, but it has always included Marlborough and, except for four years in the eary 1970s, Acton.


Senators

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Senator Party Hometown Years Notes
Edward L. Burke Democratic Framingham 1971
–1974
Redistricted to 1st Middlesex and Norfolk District
Chester G. Atkins Democratic Acton, Harvard,
Concord
1975
–1984
Redistricted from 5th Middlesex District
Left to run for Congress
Paul Cellucci Republican Hudson 1985
–1990
Left to run for lieutenant governor
Robert Durand Democratic Marlborough 1991
–1999
Resigned mid-term to become state secretary of environmental affairs
Pam Resor Democratic Acton 1999
–2006
Originally elected in a special election
Did not run for re-election
Jamie Eldridge Democratic Acton 2007–
present

Cities and towns

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Under the apportionment plan of 2011, the Middlesex and Worcester District consists of Ayer, Boxborough, Harvard, Hudson, Littleton, Marlborough, Maynard, the eastern third of Northborough (precinct 3), Shirley, Southborough, Stow, the southern half of Sudbury (precincts 2 and 3), and Westborough.

The towns of the district follow roughly a south-to-north line along Interstate 495, with a dogleg northwest along the Route 2 corridor. Most of the district towns fall within the broadest definition of the MetroWest region, the outer suburbs west of Boston.

History

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The Middlesex and Worcester District can trace its history back to the apportionment of 1960. Before the middle of the 20th century, senatorial districts in Massachusetts tended to stay within county lines, particularly in the populous counties of Eastern Massachusetts.

Up to 1857, Massachusetts state senators were elected on county-wide ballots, with larger counties electing several candidates at-large. Middlesex County had three to five at-large senators; Worcester County chose a slate of four to six.

Following the institution of single-member districts, Worcester County towns of today's Middlesex and Worcester District were part of the East Worcester District (Southborough, Westborough) or the North East Worcester District (Harvard); most of the Middlesex County towns were collected, with others, in the inaugural 4th Middlesex District, with the exception of Sudbury in the 3rd Middlesex District.

As legislative district boundaries changed over the next 100 years, the principle of keeping Middlesex towns in Middlesex districts, and Worcester towns in Worcester districts, held true along the border between the two counties, although constant renumbering and redrawing of the intra-county lines meant that the towns of the future Middlesex and Worcester District found themselves in various districts over the years.

1960-1970: Harvard to Holliston

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The first district to straddle the Middlesex-Worcester line included several of the present-day Middlesex and Worcester District towns, but with additional communities added, particularly to the southwest in the Framingham-Natick area of southern Middlesex County. The district covered Acton, Ashland, Berlin, Bolton, Boxborough, Framingham, Harvard, Holliston, Hopkinton, Hudson, Lancaster, Marlborough, Maynard, Natick, Northborough, Sherborn, Stow, Sudbury and Wayland.

The northeastern part of this district -- Acton, Boxborough, Hudson, Maynard, Stow and Sudbury -- had been part of the 5th Middlesex District in the previous apportionment, in 1948; the southeastern tier, Ashland, Framingham, Holliston, Hopkinton, Natick, Sherborn and Wayland, had been in the Middlesex and Norfolk District. Berlin, Bolton, Harvard, Lancaster and Northborough, all in Worcester County, were all previously in the 4th Worcester District.

1971-1974: Boylston to Medway

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All of the northeastern towns were removed from the district in the redistricting of 1970, along with three towns on the eastern border, Natick, Sherborn and Wayland, and two towns in the northwestern border, Harvard and Lancaster. Five other towns were added to the west and south. The district now consisted of Ashland, Berlin, Bolton, Boylston, Framingham, Holliston, Hopedale, Hopkinton, Marlborough, Medway, Northborough, Southborough and Upton. Despite the addition of a Norfolk County town, Medway, the district retained the name Middlesex and Worcester District.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1970: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Edward L. Burke of Framingham 28,443 53.0
Republican William L. Randall of Framingham 25,209 47.0
Total votes 55,649
Massachusetts Senate elections, 1972: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Edward L. Burke of Framingham 48,593 72.5
Republican William E. Blizard of Framingham 18,464 27.5
Total votes 71,357

1975-1994: Ayer to Marlborough

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Three years later, another redistricting split the southern half of the district between several other districts, mainly the 1st Middlesex and Norfolk and Worcester and Middlesex districts, and returned several towns to the north of the Middlesex and Worcester District. Cities and towns in the district now included Acton, Ayer, Berlin, Bolton, Boxborough, Concord, Harvard, Hudson, Littleton, Marlborough, Maynard, Northborough, Shirley, Stow and Sudbury.

Edward L. Burke was re-elected in the 1st Middlesex and Norfolk District. The Middlesex and Worcester District inherited incumbent Senator Chester G. Atkins from the former 5th Middlesex District

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1974: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Chester G. Atkins of Acton 31,993 69.9
Republican George F. Rohan of Concord 13,766 30.1
Total votes 72,307

Atkins moved to Harvard before the 1976 election.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1976: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Chester G. Atkins of Harvard 45,083 69.6
Republican Louis F. LeBlanc of Hudson 19,657 30.4
Total votes 70,051

The reapportionment of 1977 returned Wayland to the district and dropped three towns on its western edge. Cities and towns in the Middlesex and Worcester District were Acton, Ayer, Berlin, Boxborough, Concord, Harvard, Hudson, Littleton, Marlborough, Maynard, Stow, Sudbury and Wayland,

Atkins moved to Concord before the 1978 election, in which he faced no Republican opponent after defeating Robert C. Bowler in the Democratic primary. He beat Bowler again in the 1980 primary election.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1980: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Chester G. Atkins of Concord 42,353 65.1
Republican Frank J. Valianti of Marlborough 22,717 34.9
Total votes 70,869
Massachusetts Senate elections, 1982: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Chester G. Atkins of Concord 35,232 66.5
Republican Frank J. Valianti of Marlborough 17,774 33.5
Total votes 56,762

Atkins ran successfully for Congress in 1984, leaving an open seat. Joseph W. Mullin won a three-way race for the Democratic nomination; state Representative Paul Cellucci of Hudson was the sole Republican candidate.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1984: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Paul Cellucci of Hudson 37,150 54.5
Democratic Joseph W. Mullin of Maynard 31,003 45.5
Total votes 73,318

Cellucci was re-elected with no opponents in 1986.

Redistricting in 1987 removed Concord and Wayland but added Westford, for a Middlesex and Worcester District incorporating Acton, Ayer, Berlin, Boxborough, Harvard, Hudson, Littleton, Marlborough, Maynard, Stow, Sudbury and Westford.

Cellucci continued to represent this district after being re-elected with no opponents in 1988. He gave up his Senate seat in 1990 to run successfully for statewide office as Bill Weld's lieutenant governor.

For the 1990 open seat in the Middlesex and Worcester District, the GOP chose William M. Monnie of Stow in its primary election; the only Democratic candidate was state Representative Robert Durand.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1990: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert Durand of Marlborough 29,368 50.2
Republican William M. Monnie of Stow 29,143 49.8
Total votes 64,206
Massachusetts Senate elections, 1992: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert Durand of Marlborough 41,358 60.2
Republican William M. Monnie of Stow 27,278 39.7
Total votes 74,268

1995-present: Shirley to Westborough

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Lines drawn in 1993 removed Sudbury and Westford, and returned Northborough, Southborough and part of Westborough to the district. Communities in the Middlesex and Worcester District were Acton, Ayer, Berlin, Boxborough, Harvard, Hudson, Littleton, Marlborough, Maynard, Northborough, Shirley, Southborough, Stow and three precincts of Westborough.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 1994: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert Durand of Marlborough 35,984 63.7
Republican John L.J. Matson of Westborough 20,451 36.2
Total votes 60,663
Massachusetts Senate elections, 1996: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert Durand of Marlborough 47,137 71.4
Republican William M. Monnie of Stow 18,865 28.6
Total votes 71,994
Massachusetts Senate elections, 1998: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert Durand of Marlborough 38,393 72.4
Republican William M. Monnie of Stow 14,579 27.5
Total votes 56,474

Durand resigned in early 1999 to become secretary of environmental affairs in the cabinet of Paul Cellucci, who had by then succeeded to the office of governor. In the ensuing special Democratic primary election, state Representative Pam Resor defeated four others for her party's nomination.

Special election, March 16, 1999: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Pam Resor of Acton 8,528 53.2
Republican Richard G. Yurkus of Marlborough 6,439 40.1
Independent Mark A. Oram of Marlborough 1,039 6.5
Total votes 16,118
Massachusetts Senate elections, 2000: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Pam Resor of Acton 54,787 83.3
Libertarian Kamal Jain of Littleton 10,883 16.5
Total votes 76,818

In 2001, the district was redrawn to again to exclude Berlin and part of Northborough, and include part of Sudbury. The Middlesex and Worcester District now consisted of Acton, Ayer, Boxborough, Harvard, Hudson, Littleton, Marlborough, Maynard, part of Northborough, Shirley, Southborough, Stow, part of Sudbury, and Westborough. These lines remained unchanged in the redistricting of 2011.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 2002: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Pam Resor of Acton 36,164 59.9
Republican Mary Jane Hillery of Sudbury 24,133 40.0
Total votes 65,746
Massachusetts Senate elections, 2004: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Pam Resor of Acton 47,353 59.6
Republican Rod Jané of Westborough 32,054 40.3
Total votes 83,359

Resor was re-elected with no opponents in 2006. She decided not to run for re-election in 2008, instead endorsing her former aide and state Representative Jamie Eldridge.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 2008: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jamie Eldridge of Acton 46,458 57.0
Republican Steven Levy of Marlborough 34,989 42.9
Total votes 88,547
Massachusetts Senate elections, 2010: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jamie Eldridge of Acton 37,482 57.1
Republican George M. Thompson of Westborough 28,133 42.9
Total votes 69,659
Massachusetts Senate elections, 2012: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jamie Eldridge of Acton 52,922 64.5
Republican Dean J. Cavaretta of Stow 28,797 35.1
Total votes 89,400

Eldridge was re-elected with no opposition in 2014.

Massachusetts Senate elections, 2016: Middlesex and Worcester District
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jamie Eldridge of Acton 55,698 64.2
Republican Ted Busiek of Littleton 26,865 31.0
Independent Terra Friedrichs of Acton 4,033 4.7
Total votes 95,640

References

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http://electionstats.state.ma.us/