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() is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 10,471 at the 2000 census.
Although no significant battles of the American Revolution were fought in the area, Leicester citizens played a large role in the conflict's start. At a Committee of Safety meeting in 1774, Leicester's Colonel William Henshaw declared that "we must have companies of men ready to march upon a minute's notice"—coining the term "minutemen", a nickname for the militia members who fought in the revolution's first battles. Henshaw would later become an adjutant general to Artemas Ward, who was second in command to George Washington in the Continental Army.
Leicester's own standing militia fought along with other minutemen at the first conflict between Massachusetts residents and British troops, the Battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775. A few months later on June 17, 1775, a freed slave and Leicester resident named Peter Salem fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill, where he killed British Major John Pitcairn. Both men are memorialized in Leicester street names (Peter Salem Road, Pitcairn Avenue).
Leicester also held a leading role in Massachusetts' second great revolution, the coming of industrialization. As early as the 1780s, Leicester's mills churned out one-third of American hand cards, which were tools for straightening fibers before spinning thread and weaving cloth. By the 1890s when Leicester industry began to fade, the town was producing one-third of all hand and machine cards in North America.
Ruth Henshaw Bascom (1772-1848),the wife of Reverand Ezekial Lysander Bascom and daughter of Colonel William Henshaw and Phebe Swan, became America's premier portrait folkartist and pastelist producing over one thousand portraits from 1789 to 1846.(
Eli Whitney, the man who invented the cotton gin and devised the idea of interchangeable parts, went to school at Leicester Academy, which eventually became Leicester High School. Ebenezer Adams, who would later be the first mathematics and natural philosophy professor at the Phillips Exeter Academy, was the academic preceptor in Leicester in 1792. Leicester's Pliny Earle helped Samuel Slater build the first American mill in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, by building the first carding machine. This began the American Industrial Revolution.
Other social leaders who came from Leicester include Charles Adams, United States military officer and foreign minister, born in town; Emory Washburn, governor of Massachusetts from 1854-1855, and Samuel May, a pastor and active abolitionist in the 1860s, whose house was a stop on the underground railroad. He also served as secretary of the Massachusetts Anti-Slave Society. This house has also become a part of the Becker College campus.
Joseph Lennerton III (Lenny), a resident of Leicester and current member of the Leicester High School Faculty, has immortalized much of Leicester's history in his book, which includes photographs of historic buildings in Leicester, most of which have subsequently been destroyed by fire.