Make your home the envy of the neighborhood this Christmas. Rose Lights provides high-quality light installations in Natick, 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 Natick, 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.
Natick was settled in 1651 by John Eliot, a Puritan missionary born in Widford, England, who received a commission and funds from England’s Long Parliament to settle the Massachusett Indians called Praying Indians on both sides of the Charles River, on land deeded from the settlement at Dedham. Natick was the first of Eliot’s network of praying towns and served as their center for a long time. While the towns were largely self-governing under Indian leaders, such as Waban and Cutshamekin, the praying Indians were subject to rules governing conformity to Puritan culture (in practice Natick, like the other praying towns, combined both indigenous and Puritan culture and practices). Eliot and Praying Indian translators printed America’s first Algonquian language Bible. Eventually, the church in Natick was led for several decades by an indigenous pastor, Rev. Daniel Takawambait.
The colonial government placed such settlements in a ring of villages around Boston as a defensive strategy. Natick was the first and best documented settlement. The land was granted by the General Court as part of the Dedham Grant.
After a period of expansion and little focus on evangelism, Reverend John Robinson told the New Englanders to prioritize missionary work over growth, “the killing of those poor Indians….How happy a thing it had been if you had converted some before you had killed any.” Chastened in the wake of the Mystic Massacre which occurred during the Pequot War, sincere efforts at evangelizing began. A school was set up, a government established, and the Indians were encouraged to convert to Christianity. In November 1675, during King Philip’s War, the Natick Indians were sent to Deer Island. Many died of disease and cold, and those 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 to white settlers to cover debts. By 1785, most of the Natick Indians had drifted away. After King Philip’s War, Elliot’s and a few other missionaries’ opposition to the executions and enslavement of Indians were eventually silenced by death threats.
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