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BELMONT BIO
The Town of Belmont is a pleasant, residential suburb which has
unexpectedly achieved international notoriety as the childhood home of the
bride of the Crown Prince of Japan. Residents report polite but
persistent Japanese tourists knocking on likely doors hoping to discover
the Princess's former house, and international tour guides persist in
planning tours of the affluent community.
Before the Prince found his Cinderella, Belmont was a quiet community on
the western suburban corridor of Boston, situated on the divide between
the watersheds of the Charles and the Mystic Rivers. The town was
largely agricultural until the early 19th century when the turnpike and
railroad linked the area to Boston, stimulating the creation of several
large suburban estates. Although there were extensive market
gardens in Belmont, the town underwent rapid subdivision development when
trolley routes connected it directly to Boston. A Belmont farmer was
the first to import and breed Holstein cows, and historians note that the
conservatories on an estate in Belmont sparked the first use of hothouses
to grow fruit and vegetables commercially. This was done so
successfully that huge Belmont market gardens under glass produced enough
fruit to make the town first in the country in the value of its fruit
products and second in the country for vegetables during some years in the
19th century.
A small town of about 4.6 square miles, Belmont residents are proud of
their quiet, well-mannered community and appear unexcited by its present
fame.
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