Transform your space with Rose Lights’s outdoor lighting services. Elevate curb appeal and security with Installations.
At Rose Lights, we specialize in complete outdoor lighting services that brighten your property while improving security. Located in Hudson, MA, our team of electricians will install top-level electrical services. With years in residential lighting projects, we’re dedicated to bringing your vision to life with precision and care. Trust us for all your lighting installation and repair needs in Middlesex County and MA.
Outdoor lighting plays an essential role in adding to the beauty and security of your property. At Rose Lights, we offer various services, from landscape lighting installation to motion sensor lighting setups. Our expertise in low-voltage lighting and electrical fixture installation helps your home or business in Middlesex County shine brightly. If you’re looking for residential exterior lighting or commercial lighting contractor services, our team at Hudson, MA, is here to help. Call us today at 774-482-1991 to get started on your lighting project!
Indigenous people lived in what became central Massachusetts for thousands of years prior to European settlement. Indigenous oral histories, archaeological evidence, and European settler documents attest to historic settlements of the Nipmuc people in present-day Hudson and the surrounding area. Nipmuc settlements along the Assabet River intersected with the territories of three other related Algonquian-speaking peoples: the Massachusett, Pennacook, and Wampanoag.
In 1650, the area that would become Hudson and Marlborough was part of the Ockookangansett Indian Plantation for the Praying Indians. During King Philip’s War, English settlers forcibly evicted the Indians from their plantation, imprisoning and killing many of them; most survivors did not return after the conflict. The first recorded European settlement of the Hudson area occurred in 1698 or 1699 when settler John Barnes was granted 1 acre (0.40 ha) of Indian lands straddling both banks of the Assabet River. Barnes built a gristmill on the Assabet River’s north bank on land that would one day be part of Hudson. In 1699 or 1700 Barnes sold his gristmill to Joseph Howe, who built a sawmill and bridge across the Assabet. Other early settlers include Jeremiah Barstow, who built a house near today’s Wood Square in central Hudson, and Robert Barnard, who purchased the house from Barstow. The area became known as Howe’s Mills, Barnard’s Mills, or simply The Mills throughout the 1700s.
The settlement was originally part of the town of Marlborough. In June 1743, area residents Samuel Witt, John Hapgood, and others petitioned to break away from Marlborough and become a separate town, claiming the journey to attend Marlborough’s town meeting was “vastly fatiguing.” Their petition was denied by the Massachusetts General Court. Samuel Witt later served on committees of correspondence during the 1760s. At least nine men from the area fought with the Minutemen on April 19, 1775, as they harassed British troops along the route to Boston.
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