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NATICK BIO
The Town of Natick is a suburban industrial center located on the upper
basin of the Charles and Concord Rivers with an extensive complex of
ponds. The town was from earliest Colonial days a prime target for
development, possessing as it did good agricultural land, fish runs and
water power. Established in 1650 on the Charles River, Natick had the
first and the largest Indian praying town in the colonies, one that became
a model for all other attempts to inculcate European standards into
Indians. John Eliot, the great missionary, secured a charter of 6,000
acres for the Indians and converted them to Christianity.
Unfortunately, Natick's Indian population was forcibly resettled on Deer
Island during the King Philip's
war and essentially never returned. In Colonial days, Natick was an
agricultural community with some orchards and some lumbering. Grist
and sawmills were established and Indian ownership and control gave way to
white dominance between 1676 and 1776. Local tradition claims that several
loads of Natick men shipped out to the California gold rush in 1849 and
1850, returning with enough capital to start independent businesses in the
town. The shoe industry dominated the community by the early 19th century,
with the first shoe sole manufacturer
established in 1827 and shoes shipped to the southern and western markets
by 1830. The town's products, including baseballs manufactured in Natick,
were shipped to Boston on the Boston and Worcester Railroad. The
town saw
rapid growth including an Irish, English, Nova Scotian, Italian and
Armenian immigrant population which came to take jobs in the shoe plants
and by the 1880's, Natick was the third largest shoe production community
in the country. In modern times, Natick has become an industrial
Boston-oriented suburban
community with heavy strip development on Route 9.
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