Upgrade your home with low voltage lighting from Rose Lights in Chelmsford, Middlesex County, and MA. Call us for free consultation and installation at 774-482-1991!
At Rose Lights, we specialize in designing stunning outdoor spaces with our low-voltage lighting systems. Based on Chelmsford and MA, we bring years of work to each project to make your property stand out beautifully. Our skilled Worcester County electricians are dedicated to delivering quality and satisfaction. For residential landscape lighting or commercial, we’ve got the lights. Reach out to us at 774-482-1991 for your lighting needs.
Low-voltage lighting is not just about aesthetics but safety and functionality. With Rose Lights, you get more than just lights; you get a complete lighting solution that improves security and adds value to your property. Our skills in landscape lighting installation enable your home improvement lighting to be beautiful and practical. As leading exterior lighting contractors in Middlesex County, we offer viable alternatives that are durable and energy-efficient. Appreciate the work of our designed lighting systems in Chelmsford and MA. Contact us today at 774-482-1991 to get started!
The Pennacook inhabited the area for thousands of years prior to European colonization. Settler-colonizers from the adjacent communities of Woburn and Concord founded Chelmsford in 1652. An act of the Massachusetts General Court in the last week of May 1655 incorporated Chelmsford as a town; it was named after Chelmsford, England. The nearby communities of Groton and Billerica were incorporated at the same time. Chelmsford originally contained the neighboring town of Westford, as well as parts of Carlisle, Tyngsborough and a large part of Lowell (formerly known as East Chelmsford).
Successive Pennacook leaders Passaconaway and Wonalancet strove to maintain a friendship with the European settler-colonizers who founded Chelmsford within their territory. Despite this determinedly pro-peace stance, Chelmsford settlers became increasingly violent towards the tribe, often forcing the Pennacook to flee north temporarily or permanently. On one notable occasion, a handful of Pennacook who were too sick or elderly to flee with their kin remained behind and Chelmsford settlers burnt them alive in their dwelling. Eventually most Pennacook refugees permanently moved north to join relations in Odanak, but their descendants among the Abenaki First Nation and other tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy continue to view Chelmsford as part of their ancestral and unceded homeland.
Several women of Chelmsford were suspected of being witches, such as Sarah (Hildreth) Byam and Martha Sparks. In 1691, Martha was held in the Boston Gaol for witchcraft, appeared in court, but was eventually set free after about a month. Some relate her freedom to the influence of the Chelmsford minister.
Learn more about Chelmsford.
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