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Cities Near Bedford, MA

$189,100 View on Map
GWT1761
1301 Albion Rd
Bedford, MA (in city)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Condominium
1450 sq.ft.

Sunny, Updated Home in a Great Neighborhood

$489,000 View on Map
AWT7866 15 Photos
46 Notre Dame Rd
Bedford, MA (in city)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1390 sq.ft.
Update 4/10/2012: UNDER AGREEMENT  Sun-filled, delightful, expanded …more»
$619,000 View on Map
PWW1111
31 Page Rd
Bedford, MA (in city)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2326 sq.ft.
$1,099,000 View on Map
PPM2560 26 Photos
26 Page Rd
Bedford, MA (in city)
5 Bed, 3+ Bath Home
4077 sq.ft.
Beautiful custom home by master builder in established, quiet neighborhood. High-end finishes …more»
$849,000 View on Map
TJW9349 21 Photos
280 Silver Hill Rd
Concord, MA (3.0 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
3549 sq.ft.
LOCATION. Off Monument Street Concord MA. 5.63 acres. 3549 sqft. 4 BRs, 4 baths. All wood floors. …more»
$730,000 View on Map
PMT2700
194 Cambridge Tpke
Concord, MA (3.3 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2400 sq.ft.
$1,999,999 View on Map
MPP5324 5 Photos
Jonas Stone Circle
Lexington, MA (3.9 miles)
6 Bed, 4+ Bath Home
6550 sq.ft.
A magnificent colonial estate is set on over an acre of land at the end of a cul-de-sac.  With …more»
$298,000 View on Map
WGG3845
5 April Ln Apt 31
Lexington, MA (4.6 miles)
1 Bed, 1 Bath Condominium
918 sq.ft.
$449,900 View on Map
MWW7090
45 Casey Cir
Waltham, MA (4.9 miles)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Condominium
2119 sq.ft.
$675,000 View on Map
GDA5415
166 Lowell St
Lexington, MA (5.0 miles)
5 Bed, 2 Bath Multiple Family Home
2278 sq.ft.
 

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Local city information for Bedford, MA

Bedford is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. It is within the Greater Boston area, north-west of the city of Boston. The population of Bedford was 12,595 at the 2000 census.


The following compilation comes from Ellen Abrams (1999) based on information from Abram English Brown’s History of the Town of Bedford (1891), as well as other sources such as The Bedford Sampler Bicentennial Edition containing Daisy Pickman Oakley’s articles, Bedford Vital Records, New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Town Directories, and other publications from the Bedford Historical Society.:

Bedford was first settled in 1640 and was taken mostly from Billerica with some land added from Concord and Lexington when officially incorporated in 1729.

In 1630 came the arrival of John Winthrop and Thomas Dudley of the Massachusetts Bay Company. Aboard the Arabella from Yarmouth, England, Winthrop and Dudley sailed, and after a difficult ten week voyage, they landed on the shores of the New World, with Salem and Boston Harbor being the Arabella's earliest destinations. In 1637, the General Court of Massachusetts granted some 2,200 acres (9 km²) of land, including Huckins Farm land to the first residential Governor Winthrop and Deputy Governor Dudley. The following year, the two men agreed to divide the land so that the parcel south of the two large boulders by the Concord River (Brothers Rocks) belonged to Governor Winthrop and north of the Rocks was to belong to Deputy Governor Dudley. Later, Dudley became governor. Dudley’s son Rev. Samuel Dudley and Winthrop’s daughter Mary were married, thus Brothers Rocks were so named because of this marriage of families.

Governor Winthrop’s grandson, Fitz John Winthrop, in 1664, sold 1,200 acres (5 km²) of this land (including what is present day Huckins Farm ) to Job Lane, a skilled artisan and house builder. Upon his death, he passed much of this land to his son, Col. John Lane in the 1690s. The land later passed to his son, Capt. John Lane, in 1714. John Lane and his wife, Catherine (Whiting), lived on the site, and after she died, he married Hannah Abbott. Upon his death in 1763, their son, Samuel Lane, inherited the land we know as Huckins Farm. Some time after Samuel Lane died in 1802, the house was removed and Peter Farmer built the present farmhouse in the 1840s. We know that Peter and Dorcas Farmer had two children in the late 1820s and 1830s. Later, Banfield succeeded Farmer as the owner.

Samuel W. Huckins, born in 1817, settled on the land about 1870. Huckins was respected for his good judgment and was honored with various offices in town. Maps circa 1875 indicate that what we know as Dudley Road was called Huckins Street. Samuel Huckins lived there until his death in 1892. He had a son, Henry, who was born in 1849, and was living in Bedford in 1910.

In the late 1800s, Dudley Leavitt Pickman, descendant of an old Salem merchant family, and his wife Ellen fell in love with the land. They bought a substantial parcel (mostly Winthrop’s land and a portion of Dudley’s grant). Huckins Farm was a part of this purchase. A direct descendant of both Winthrop and Dudley, Pickman bought the land without knowledge of the Winthrop-Dudley grant. He discovered later that he had purchased his ancestors' lands. The land was used as a dairy farm and apple orchard, in addition to the fields, pasture land, bog garden, and ponds. Chestnut trees lined the old road between the fields. A portion of Dudley Road was named Chestnut Avenue around that time. (Today's Dudley Road and Winthrop
Avenue in Bedford, as well as Pickman Drive, are named these families.)

A large portion of the Pickman land, Huckins Farm, was sold to a developer for condominium development in 1987, and other parcels including the large Pickman house (Stearns Farm) were sold to private parties.

Due to its proximity to the intersections of Routes 128 and 3, Bedford, in recent decades, has seen an influx of high-technology companies, particularly along the Burlington border.

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