Transform your home’s exterior with our outdoor lighting services in Barre. Add curb appeal and security today!
At Rose Lights, we specialize in outdoor lighting services right here in Barre. Our team of skilled electricians provides answers from landscape lighting services to security lighting installations. We’re known in Worcester County for delivering quality and reliability. Whether you need patio lighting or electrical fixture installation, our expertise ensures your home lighting solutions meet your needs.
Outdoor lighting is more than just illumination-it’s an art that helps improve your home’s beauty and security. At Rose Lights, we offer a range of services in Barre, from residential landscape lighting to indoor lighting installation, making every corner of your property shine. Our expertise in low-voltage and LED lighting options guarantees energy savings and longevity. Trust us to light up your Barre, MA home with style and safety. For all your outdoor lighting needs, call 774-482-1991 today!
Originally called the Northwest District of Rutland, it was first settled by Europeans in 1720. The town was incorporated as a district on June 17, 1774, as Hutchinson after Thomas Hutchinson, colonial governor of Massachusetts. Eventually, along with 41 other districts in the state, they were all incorporated on August 23, 1775 by the Massachusetts Court. The next year on November 7, 1776, it was renamed Barre in honor of Colonel Isaac Barré, an Irish-born MP who was a champion of American Independence. “This township was originally known as Rutland, West District; but prior to 1770 its name was changed to “Hutchinson”, in honor of the Hon. Thomas Hutchinson who was Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts in 1765, became acting Governor in 1769, and Governor in 1770. When, in 1774, on account of his Tory proclivities, Governor Hutchinson resigned his office and went to England, his name and memory were so execrated by the patriots of the township of Hutchinson that, in 1776, the General Assembly of Massachusetts changed the name of the township to “Barré.”
In 1849 the Boston, Barre and Gardner Railroad was founded to build a railroad from Worcester to Barre, but it failed to raise enough capital to start construction. The project was revived in 1869, but it was re-routed to run between Worcester and Gardner, bypassing Barre. When the line opened in 1871 it was still called the Boston, Barre and Gardner RR, although it never reached Barre. The line’s nearest depot to Barre was at Hubbardston, 7 miles (11 km) away.
On April 11, 1943, Barre held a civic welcome for Basil Izzi, a local man who was a United States Navy Armed Guard and had recently survived 83 days in the Atlantic Ocean on a life raft after his ship, the Zaandam, was torpedoed. In 1988 the Barrre Gazette claimed that the welcoming parade in his honor was “still the longest parade on record in the Commonwealth”. Izzi died in 1979. On May 28, 2015, a road bridge near South Barre was renamed the “Seaman 2nd Class Basil D. Izzi Memorial Bridge” in his honor. The bridge carries Massachusetts Route 32 over the Ware River.
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