A concise history of Marlborough from its founding through the Revolutionary era.
This non-fiction work surveys how a Puritan settlement grew into a town, detailing land grants, governance, education, and daily life. It also recounts conflicts with Native peoples, frontier fortifications, and key figures who shaped the town’s early years. Drawing on town records and period events, the book provides a grounded portrait of a community at the heart of early Massachusetts history.
The narrative moves from the initial grant and layout of lots to the formation of schools, churches, and local government. It covers the Indian Planting Field, the first minister’s house, the building of meeting houses, and the evolution of Marlborough’s public life. War, captivity, and recovery are woven into the town’s experience from King William’s War through the French and Indian era and into the Revolution.
What you’ll experience
- A chronological account of Marlborough’s founding, growth, and institutions
- Vaits of life in a Puritan town, including education, law, and punishment
- Encounters with war, frontier fortifications, and frontier diplomacy
- Profiles of early settlers and local leaders who shaped the town
Ideal for readers of local history, colonial America, and continuity of small-town life in New England.