History
The Revolutionary Valley includes the historic Merrimack Valley, a region shaped by the Merrimack River and the communities that have lived along its banks for thousands of years. The Merrimack is one of New England’s great waterways. It has long provided transportation, food, trade routes, and fertile ground for the people who depended on it. For the Pennacook and other Indigenous nations, the river sustained daily life through its abundant salmon, fish, and surrounding forests.
The river’s power also shaped a turning point in American history. In the early 1800s, the 32-foot drop of the Merrimack at Pawtucket Falls inspired a group of Boston investors to establish Lowell, the first large-scale planned textile city in the United States. With its network of canals and mills, Lowell became a national center of industry and innovation, drawing workers, immigrants, and ideas from around the world. By the 1850s, it stood as the country’s largest textile hub and a symbol of the Industrial Revolution.
Today, the legacy of the Merrimack River can still be felt throughout the Revolutionary Valley. Its influence shaped our towns, our culture, and the spirit of resilience and creativity that continues here. The river remains a thread connecting past and present, reminding us of the many communities who built this region and the stories that continue to unfold along its banks.
Pennacook Indians Lived in Merrimack Valley
Town of Concord founded
Town of Tewksbury founded
City of Woburn founded
Massachusetts General Court established the County of Middlesex
Town of Billerica founded
Town of Chelmsford founded
Town of Harvard founded
Town of Dunstable founded
Town of Stow founded
Town of Dracut founded
Town of Littleton founded
Town of Bedford founded
Town of Westford founded
Town of Wilmington founded
Town of Acton founded
Count Rumford (Benjamin Thompson) born in Woburn.
Town of Lincoln founded
The 'Shot Heard Around the World
The Town of Lexington was founded.
The Bedford Flag is the oldest complete flag known to exist in the United States. It is celebrated as the flag carried by the Bedford Minuteman, Nathaniel Page, to the Concord Bridge at the beginning of the American Revolution, but it was already an antique on that day. It was made for a cavalry troop of the Massachusetts Bay militia early in the colonial struggle for the continent that we call “the French and Indian Wars.”
Hartwell Tavern in Lincoln plays important role in American Revolutionary War
Town of Boxborough founded
Pawtucket Canal opens
Town of Burlington founded
Middlesex Canal opens
Town of Carlisle founded
Town of Tyngsborough founded
Phineas Whiting & Josiah Fletcher open a cotton mill near present day Lower Locks in Lowell
Bowers’ saw mill and grist mill built
Henry David Thoreau is born in Concord
Merrimack Manufacturing Company
Francis Cabot Lowell
Merrimack Mills
St Anne’s Church in Lowell is established Merrimack Valley’s first newspaper
Lowell Daily Journal established
Ralph Waldo Emerson
City of Lowell founded
Appleton Manufacturing Company is incorporated and Lowell Manufacturing Company incorporated
Lowell Institution for Savings founded
Middlesex, Tremont, and Suffolk Manufacturing Companies are established
Lowell High School opens
Steel pens were first used in Woburn
President Jackson along with VP and future President Martin Van Burn visit Lowell
The Mill Girls
Belvidere Manufacturing Company is founded
James Abbott McNeill Whistler is born in Lowell
Michel Chevalier, Davey Crockett, George Thompson and Daniel Webster visit Lowell
Boston & Lowell Railroad started
Boott Cotton Mills is incorporated
Ralph Waldo Emerson moves to Lexington
Massachusetts Mills incorporated
Whitney Mills incorporated
Ben Butler begins his political career
Nathaniel Hawthorne moves to Concord
Charles Dickens visits Lowell
Establishment of Dr. J. C. Ayer's laboratory in Lowell
President Tyler visits Lowell
President Polk visits Lowell
Abraham Lincoln visits Lowell
Edgar Allen Poe attends poetry lecture in Lowell
Largest Industrial Center
Thomas H Benton visits Lowell
General Ulysses S. Grant visits Lowell
Statue of Liberty is dedicated; stairs built by Lowell Company.
Lowell and Dracut Street Railway Company chartered
Whittier Cotton Mills incorporated
Lowell City Hall dedicated
Electric Trolley System in Lowell completed
Merrimack River overflows its banks
O'Sullivan Rubber Company started
Bette Davis is born in Lowell
Charles G. Sampas born in Lowell
Demoulas Supermarkets founded
Lowell Memorial Auditorium dedicated by Vice President and future president Calvin Coolidge
Jack Kerouac is born in Lowell
Ed McMahon is born in Lowell
Edith Nourse Rogers takes over as Representative after her husband dies
Olympia Dukakis is born in Lowell
Great flood of 1936
Walter Gropius moves to Lincoln
Hanscom Air Force Base built in Bedford
Paul Tsongas is born in Lowell
Golden Gloves in Lowell begin
deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum established in Lincoln
Dwight Eisenhower visits Lowell
John Ogonowski born in Lowell
Drumlin Farm in Lincoln becomes wildlife sanctuary
Joan Fabrics opens in Lowell
Richard Michael Linnehan born in Lowell
Michael Chiklis born in Lowell
“Irish” Micky Ward born in Lowell
Tom Glavin is born in Concord
Scott Grimes born in Lowell
Grace Shoe Company opens in Lowell
Lowell State and Lowell Tech merged in 1975 as the University of Lowell
Wang Laboratories opens Lowell headquarters
Lowell Celebrates Kerouac!
Lowell National Historical Park is established
Paul Tsongas, former Lowell City Councilor, is elected to the U. S. Senate
Lowell Folk Festival begins Middlesex Community College (MCC) establishes permanent Lowell campus
University of Lowell becomes University of Massachusetts Lowell
Tsongas Arena (now Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell) opens
LeLacheur Park opens
Former President George W. Bush visits Lowell
Rock band, PVRIS, founded in Lowell
Market Basket
Lowell Kinetic Sculpture Race begins