Arlington

Massachusetts, United States
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Also known as: Menotomy, West Cambridge

Arlington, town (township), Middlesex county, east-central Massachusetts, U.S. It is a northwestern suburb of Boston. Settled in 1635 as part of Cambridge, it was known as Menotomy (from an Algonquian word meaning “swift waters”) until separately incorporated as West Cambridge in 1807. It was renamed for George Washington Parke Custis’s Virginia estate in 1867, when it was also reincorporated. Its early economy was dependent on market gardening, the shipping of ice (cut from Spy Pond), and the manufacture of textile cards. The town developed as a residential suburb with the arrival of the railway from Boston in 1846. The local economy is dominated by services and wholesale and retail trade, and there also is some light manufacturing.

Arlington’s Jason Russell House (1680) was the scene of a fierce skirmish with the British in which 12 minutemen were killed on April 19, 1775. Their graves are marked in the old cemetery of the town’s Unitarian Church. Area 6 square miles (16 square km). Pop. (2000) 42,389; (2010) 42,844.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.