Make your home the envy of the neighborhood this Christmas. Rose Lights provides high-quality light installations in Framingham, transforming your home into a winter wonderland.
Rose Lights is a locally owned and operated business serving Middlesex County, MA. We specialize in creating dazzling Christmas light displays for homes and businesses. Our team has a keen eye for design and uses only the highest quality, weather-resistant LED lights to make sure your display shines brightly throughout the holiday season. We’re known for our attention to detail and customer satisfaction.
In Framingham, MA, the holidays are a special time of year. Transform your home with festive cheer by choosing Rose Lights for your Christmas light installation. We use commercial-grade LED lights that are energy-efficient and long-lasting. These lights create a vibrant display and withstand the harsh winter weather in Middlesex County. With our professional installation, you can avoid the risks of DIY and know your lights are safely secured. Call 774-482-1991 today to schedule a consultation.
Prior to European colonization, the region around Framingham was inhabited by the indigenous Nipmuc. They lived in settlements established alongside the Washakamaug (“eel fishing place”) or what is today called Farm Pond. The Nipmuc people used game management techniques through the hunting of deer and beaver, fishing in ponds and streams, as well as established growing areas for the Three Sisters (squash, corn, beans) in the nearby hills. The ancient Native trail later known as the Old Connecticut Path also ran through this area. During the initial period of colonization of the region by Puritan settlers, the Nipmuc suffered a rapid decline in population due to the introduction of foreign infectious diseases to which they had no immunity and violence related to settler colonialism. Many of the Nipmuc people were forced into praying towns including nearby Natick.
The first European settler in the area was John Stone who established a farm on the west bank of the Sudbury River in 1647. In 1660, Thomas Danforth, an official of the Bay Colony received a grant of land at “Danforth’s Farms” and began to accumulate over 15,000 acres (100 km2).
Between 1675 and 1676, King Philip’s War created great tensions between English settlers and the Nipmuc people in the area. During this time, Nipmuc leader Tantamous, who lived on Nobscot Hill and who resisted Christianization by the English, was arrested with his family members and other Nipmuc men by the colonial government in 1676 for what the colony deemed treason and they were incarcerated on Deer Island. He would escape, be recaptured, and later hung on Boston Common. In January 1676, a group of Nipmuc men went to the Eames family homestead to demand that they return a stolen corn harvest. Although the historical record is unclear as to the exact details, this would result in an outbreak of violence between the Nipmuc men and the Eames family, where Mary Eames and five children were killed.
Learn more about Framingham.©Rose Lights. All Rights Reserved.
Quicklinks
Wait! Before You Go!
Get $50 Off Now!
New Customers Only - Use Code: 50-OFFLIGHTS
We Usually Respond To Requests Within A Couple of Hours