Transform your property with stunning outdoor lighting. Rose Lights brings life to Shirley, Middlesex County, and MA for style and security.
At Rose Lights, we are committed to delivering first-class outdoor lighting services in Shirley, Middlesex County, and MA. Our team of professionals, including a master electrician, specializes in a wide range of lighting projects. We provide customized answers to meet your needs for residential exterior lighting or landscape lighting services. Trust us to light up your home with style and security.
Outdoor lighting is more than just a design element; it’s essential for safety and aesthetics. At Rose Lights, we understand the importance of proper lighting. It improves your home’s exterior security. Our outdoor lighting design and installation make us a trusted partner in Middlesex County. With our professional lighting services, including motion sensor lighting and low-voltage lighting, we cater to residential and commercial needs. Call us at 774-482-1991 to learn how we can transform your property with our lighting solutions.
The inhabitants at the time of European encounter were Nipmuc (or Pennacook) Indians, who called the area Catacunemaug. Once part of “The Plantation of Groton,” Shirley was first settled by English pioneers about 1720.
In 1753 it separated from Groton and was incorporated, named in honor of William Shirley, governor of Massachusetts (1741-1757). The town established a paper mill around 1790, and the first of seven cotton mills in 1812. Other local products included iron, nails, textiles, rope, belts, suspenders, and athletic equipment. Two of the large 19th-century mill buildings have been subdivided and adapted for use by 21st-century businesses.
A utopian religious community, Shirley Shaker Village, was established in Shirley in 1793. The Shakers advocated pacifism, common property, celibacy, and communal living. They are renowned for their plain architecture and furniture. The Shaker movement peaked in the 1840s, but gradually dwindled, perhaps because of greater employment opportunities offered by the Industrial Revolution, or because succeeding generations grew less tolerant of the Shaker church’s insistence on self-abnegation. Shirley Shaker Village closed in 1908.
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