to
Update
1 in 3 homeowners
sold without
a traditional agent
Saving an average of
$9,562
Cities Near Natick, MA
7 Overlook Rd
Natick, MA (in city)
3 Bed, 1+ Bath
Home
1567 sq.ft.
4 Whispering Lane
35 Photos
4 Whispering Ln
Natick, MA (in city)
4 Bed, 4+ Bath
Home
4080 sq.ft.
2-floor custom build contemporary Colonial. Over 5400 square fee of living space, including 1400
…
more»
9 Photos
72 Parker Rd
Wellesley, MA (2.2 miles)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath
Home
2091 sq.ft.
New England Cape transformed into a cross between a downtown loft and a Tuscan Farmhouse. Fabulous
…
more»
3 Winter Ter
Framingham, MA (4.6 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath
Home
2600 sq.ft.
6 Photos
8 Comiskey Rd
Dover, MA (4.8 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath
Home
1680 sq.ft.
Sunny, well maintained and updated colonial in prime location, 5 minutes to Needham train. Quiet
…
more»
12 Photos
17 Westfield Dr
Holliston, MA (6.4 miles)
4 Bed, 2 Bath
Home
1932 sq.ft.
8 Rooms, 4 BR, 2B home located in great neghborhood. Features include siding, updated modern
…
more»
15 Photos
16 Clemmons St
Southborough, MA (7.2 miles)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath
Home
3150 sq.ft.
This property features spectacular water views from a centrally located, quiet and private 1.8 acre
…
more»
Local city information for Natick, MA
Natick () is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. Natick is located near the center of the MetroWest region of Massachusetts, with a population of 32,170 at the 2000 census. Only 15 miles west of Boston, Natick is considered part of the Greater Boston area. The center of population of Massachusetts in 2000 was located in Natick.
Natick was first settled in 1651 by John Eliot, a Puritan missionary born in Widford, Hertfordshire, England who received a commission and funds from England's Long Parliament to settle the Massachusett Indians on both sides of the Charles river, on land deeded from the settlement at Dedham. They were called Praying Indians - Eliot was best known for attempting to preserve
the culture (minus the religion) of the Native Americans by putting them in thirteen planned towns where they could continue by their own rule, with Natick as the political and spiritual center. Eliot and Praying Indian translators printed America's first written Bible in the Algonquian language.
The colonial government placed such settlements in a ring of villages around Boston as a defensive strategy. Natick was the first and best documented of such settlements. The land was granted by the General Court, part of the Dedham Grant.
A school was set up, a government established, and the Indians were encouraged to convert to Christianity. In November, during King Philip's War, the Natick Indians were sent to Deer Island. Many died of disease and cold, and the Indians who survived found their homes destroyed. The Indian village did not fully recover, and the land held in common by the Indian community was slowly sold off to white settlers to cover debts, and, by 1785, most of the Natick Indians had drifted away.
In 1775, both English and Praying Indian citizens of Natick participated in the Battles of Lexington and Bunker Hill, as well as serving in the Continental Army. The names of the Praying Indian soldiers from Natick are memorialized on a stone marker, along with all of Natick's Revolutionary War veterans, on a stone marker on Pond St near downtown Natick.
The town was officially incorporated in 1781. Henry Wilson, born in 1812 and eighteenth Vice President of the United States, lived most of his life in Natick as a shoemaker and schoolteacher, and is buried there. He is the namesake of one of Natick's middle schools.
Though Natick was primarily a farming town, the invention of the sewing machine in 1858 led to the growth of several shoe factories. The business flourished and peaked by 1880, when Natick, with twenty-three operating factories, was third in the nation in the quantity of shoes produced. The shoes made in Natick were primarily heavy work shoes with only one or two companies adding lighter dress shoes to their line. Natick was famous for its brogan, a heavy ankle-high boot worn by soldiers in the American Civil War. The wound core for a more resilient ball was developed by John W. Walcott and combined with the figure-eight stitching devised by Col. William A. Cutler. It was manufactured by the firm of H. Harwood & Sons in their factory built in 1858 - the first plant in the world for the manufacture of baseballs. In 1988 the H. Harwood & Sons factory was converted into baseball factory condominiums
In 1874, a great fire in downtown Natick demolished 18 business blocks, two shoe factories, the Town Hall, Natick's only fire engine house and the Congregational Church, as well as many private homes. Though no lives were lost, the loss of property was greater in proportion to the town's wealth than the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. In 1875, Natick's new Central Fire Station was completed on Summer Street and opened with grand ceremony on the same city block where the great fire was first discovered. The Central Fire Station is now the home of a private non-profit community performing arts center called The Center for Arts in Natick (TCAN).
Natick has a long history of playing host to a portion of the Boston Marathon every Patriots Day. The Marathon route includes miles 8 to 12 and passes through the center of town along Route 135.
List your home on the MLS in Natick, Massachusetts