Groton, Massachusetts Explained

Official Name:Groton, Massachusetts
Settlement Type:Town
Motto:"All Are Welcome", "Faith, Labor"
Mapsize:250px
Coordinates:42.6111°N -71.575°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Massachusetts
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Middlesex
Established Title:Settled
Established Date:1655
Established Title2:Incorporated
Established Date2:1655
Government Type:Open town meeting
Leader Title:Administrative Officer
Leader Name: Jean E. Kitchen[1]
Leader Title1:Board of
   Selectmen
Leader Name1:George F. Dillon, Jr.[2]
Peter S. Cunningham
John L. Saball
Mihran Keoseian, Jr.
1 Vacancy
Area Total Km2:87.3
Area Total Sq Mi:33.7
Area Land Km2:84.9
Area Land Sq Mi:32.8
Area Water Km2:2.4
Area Water Sq Mi:0.9
Elevation M:98
Elevation Ft:320
Population Total:11315
Population As Of:2020
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:Eastern
Utc Offset:−5
Timezone Dst:Eastern
Utc Offset Dst:−4
Postal Code Type:ZIP Code
Postal Code:01450
Area Codes:351/978
Blank Name:FIPS code
Blank Info:25-27480
Blank1 Name:GNIS feature ID
Blank1 Info:0619399
Named For:Groton, Suffolk, England

Groton is a town in northwestern Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States, within the Greater Boston metropolitan area. The population was 11,315 at the 2020 census. An affluent bedroom community roughly 45 miles from Boston, Groton has a large population of professional workers, many of whom work in Boston's tech industry. It is loosely connected to Boston by highways (Route 2) and commuter rail (the MBTA Fitchburg Line).

The town has a long history dating back to the colonial era. It was a battlefield in King Philip's War and Queen Anne's War, and several Grotonians played notable roles in the American Revolution (including William Prescott, the American commander at the Battle of Bunker Hill) and Shays' Rebellion. Groton is home to two college-preparatory boarding schools: Lawrence Academy at Groton, founded in 1792; and Groton School, founded in 1884. Notable Groton residents include U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and journalists Peter Gammons, Steve Kornacki, and Dan Shaughnessy.

History

Early frontier settlement

The area surrounding modern-day Groton has, for thousands of years, been the territory of various cultures of indigenous peoples. They settled along the rivers, which they used for domestic tasks, fishing and transportation. Historic tribes were the Algonquian-speaking Nipmuc and Nashaway Indians.[3]

Groton began as a trading post of John Tinker, who conducted business with the Nashaway tribe at the confluence of Nod Brook and the Nashua River. The Nashaway called the area Petapawag, meaning "swampy land." As Tinker had, other pioneers followed the Algonquian trails from Massachusetts Bay. They found the region productive for fishing and farming.[3]

The town was officially settled and incorporated in 1655. It was named for Groton in Suffolk, England, the hometown of Massachusetts governor John Winthrop; Winthrop's son Deane was one of the town's founding selectmen.[4] Called The Plantation of Groton, it included all of present-day Groton and Ayer, almost all of Pepperell and Shirley, large parts of Dunstable, Littleton, and Tyngsborough, plus smaller parts of Harvard and Westford in Massachusetts, as well as Nashua and Hollis, New Hampshire.[3]

During King Philip's War, when English colonists and Native Americans tried to destroy each other, on March 13, 1676, Native Americans raided and burned all buildings except for four Groton garrisons.[5] Among those killed was John Nutting, a Groton Selectman. Survivors fled to Concord and other safe havens. Two years later, many returned to rebuild.[3] The rebuilt town was heavily militarized, and recorded a garrison of 91 men in 1692.[6]

In 1694, Abenaki warriors attacked the town again during the Raid on Groton (during King William's War). Lydia Longley and two of her siblings were taken captive; the rest of their family was killed. Lydia was taken to Montreal where she was ransomed, converted to Catholicism, and joined the Congregation of Notre Dame, a non-cloistered order.

In 1704, during Queen Anne's War, an Abenaki raiding party kidnapped Matthias Farnsworth III from his home and brought him to Montreal.

In June 1707, Abenaki warriors abducted three children of the large family of Thomas Tarbell and his wife Elizabeth (Wood), cousins to the Longleys who were abducted in 1694. The raiders took them overland and by water to the Mohawk mission village of Kahnawake (also spelled Caughnawaga) south of Montreal. The two Tarbell boys, John and Zachariah, were adopted by Mohawk families and became fully assimilated. They later each married chiefs' daughters, had families, and became respected chiefs themselves.[7] They were among the founders in the 1750s of Akwesasne, after moving up the St. Lawrence River from Kahnawake to escape the ill effects of traders. The brothers' older sister Sarah Tarbell was ransomed by a French family, and converted to Catholicism. Renamed as Marguerite, she followed Lydia Longley in joining the Congregation of Notre Dame, and served with them for the rest of her life.[7] [8] [9] In the late nineteenth century, a plaque was installed about the Tarbell children at the site of the family's former farm in Groton. Descendants with the Tarbell surname are among the Mohawk living at Kahnewake and Akwesasne in the 21st century.

Revolutionary era and early republic

The townsfolk of Groton supported the Patriot cause in the American Revolutionary War. Following the Boston Tea Party, the town passed a resolution thanking Boston "for their wise, prudent and spirited conduct at this alarming crisis," and resolved to boycott the tea industry until duties on tea were lifted.[10]

In 1775, local minutemen assembled on the common in front of the First Parish Church of Groton before marching to the Battles of Lexington and Concord.[11] Groton sent 101 men to the battle, but they arrived too late to participate.[12] The American commander at the Battle of Bunker Hill, William Prescott, was born in Groton, and Groton lost 10 or 12 men at the battle, more than any other town.[13] [14] [15]

This patriotic feeling did not last very long, and a majority of Groton residents aligned with the rebels during Shays' Rebellion.[16] Job Shattuck, a former Continental Army officer and Groton's largest landowner,[17] organized an early tax revolt in 1782.[18] He escaped with a fine, but rose up again in 1786 and led a mob that shut down the Middlesex County Courthouse in Concord, Massachusetts. He was captured by a search party that included some pro-government Groton residents.[19] He was sentenced to death but pardoned by Governor John Hancock.Early Groton developed a strong economy, assisted in large part by its advantageous location near the confluence of the Nashua and Squannacook Rivers. By 1790 it was the second-largest town in Middlesex County, with 1,840 residents. Agriculture was the backbone of the economy, but Groton also saw the birth of several industrial enterprises.[20] In the early 1800s, the Hollingsworth family (Hollingsworth & Vose) acquired a paper mill in West Groton.[21] In 1828, a large soapstone quarry was discovered in the area; Groton eventually hosted the nation's largest soapstone factory, which exported soapstone products as far away as China.[22] The area was connected to several railroad lines in the 1840s, one of which now survives as the MBTA Fitchburg Line, Groton's present-day commuter rail link to Boston.[23] [24] [25]

Starting in the 1840s, Catholic immigrants (mainly Irish, but also some French Canadians) began moving to the Nashoba Valley in large numbers.[26] St. Mary's Catholic Church was established in 1858 to serve the Catholic residents of Groton Junction (now Ayer).[27] Ayer split off from Groton in 1871, and in 1904, one of the local private schools donated Sacred Heart Church for the use of the Catholics who stayed in Groton proper.[28]

African-Americans have lived in the area since at least the 1770s, when private Pomp Phillis was called up to fight at Lexington and Concord.[29] In addition, historian Jeremy Belknap wrote that "a negro man belonging to Groton" fired the shot that killed British general John Pitcairn at the Battle of Bunker Hill.[30] [31]

Economic decline and social unrest

Groton's economic growth slowed in the second half of the nineteenth century. The soapstone quarry shut down in 1868. The town's population nearly halved (3,584 to 1,862) from 1870 to 1880, although most of this was due to the 1871 secession of Ayer, which had 1,600 residents in 1870.[32]

In the 19th century and early part of the 20th century, Groton's population was largely white and Christian; people have debated whether it was a sundown town. The town became a center of the Second Ku Klux Klan, which was active in Massachusetts in the 1920s. This incarnation of the Klan expressed primarily anti-Catholic and anti-immigrant prejudice, while also opposing racial minorities.[33] Local schoolmaster Endicott Peabody summarized the movement as follows: "There is an astonishing tendency among some of the respectable people in this part of the world to justify [the Klan's] existence on the ground that the Jews and Roman Catholics are taking possession of the country."[34] The Klan held a rally in Groton in September 1924. In 1925, an Irish resident reported a cross burning on Gibbet Hill, not far from Main Street.[35] In October 1926, a group of 400 Klansmen were meeting in a field in the town when they were fired upon with guns used by a group of approximately 100 people opposed to the Klan; the police reported that over 100 gunshots were exchanged between the two groups, but no casualties were reported.[36] In 1927, the local Klan chapter endorsed a full slate of candidates for the town elections, with partial success.[37] The Klan appears to have peaked as an organized force in the area by 1931, when Klan head Hiram Wesley Evans visited West Townsend to implore the remaining Klansmen to rebuild the local chapters.[38] The rate of inter-confessional marriages, which decreased significantly from 1924 to 1928, began rising again starting in 1929.[39]

In 2020, Groton unanimously approved a measure denouncing racial bigotry and advocating equality in recognition of earlier violence and the contemporary social justice movement.[40]

Economic revival

Starting in the 1950s, the town of Groton enjoyed an economic revival as Boston's high-tech sector expanded along the Route 128 beltway. Although Groton does not lie on Route 128, the gravity of the suburban beltway pulled exurban towns like Groton into Boston's economic orbit. The town attracted professional workers, and the population expanded rapidly, nearly quadrupling since 1950.[41] (A group led by Marion Stoddart, the wife of one such technology worker, sponsored the cleanup of the Nashua River;[42] previously, the river was so polluted with sludge that on some days, animals could run across it.[43]) In 2021, Groton's per capita income ranked 32nd out of 341 towns and cities in Massachusetts. In addition, as of 2015, 31 Groton residents reported incomes over $1 million.[44] Town representatives describe Groton as a "bedroom community"[45] and "a relatively affluent town" where "[m]ost residents are well-educated and hold high-paying professional, managerial, or other office jobs."[46]

In the 21st century, the town has sought to preserve its rural character and to slow population growth; as of 2017, 42% of the town's 32.5 square miles of land was permanently protected from development.[47] In the 2000s, Geotel Communications founder Steven Webber purchased the 338-acre Gibbet Hill Farm to prevent residential development on the site; the town meeting reportedly greeted his intervention with a standing ovation.[48] Town representatives state that they welcome tourists and seek to encourage "a constant trickle rather than a deluge of visitors." In 2017, the town adopted the motto "All Are Welcome" and placed six waystones engraved with the motto on the major roads entering the town.

Although the town's policies have successfully slowed population growth, town amenities have generally improved. Gibbet Hill now hosts a farm-to-table steakhouse.[49] [50] In 2017, the nation's largest Shirdi Sai Baba temple opened in Groton; it cost approximately $11 million to build.[51] The 126,000-square-foot Groton Hill Music Center opened in 2022 and includes a 1,000-seat (expandable to 2,300) concert hall, a 300-seat secondary performance hall, a professional orchestra, and a community music school;[52] [53] [54] it was the gift of an anonymous donor, posthumously revealed to be Sterilite owner Albert Stone.[55] [56] The Groton-Dunstable Regional School District is currently building a new $88.4 million campus for its elementary school, which is scheduled to open in 2024.[57] However, the annual per-pupil expenditures in the 2022–23 school year were $19,392.35, just below the state average of $20,133.67,[58] and in April 2024, voters rejected a proposed $7.6 million/3 year tax increase for the school district by a 3-to-2 margin.[59]

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, Groton has a total area of 33.7 square miles (87.3 km2), of which 32.8 square miles (84.9 km2) is land and 0.9 square miles (2.4 km2) (2.79%) is water. Groton is the largest town in Middlesex County in terms of square mileage. The town is drained by the Nashua River, Squannacook River, and Merrimack River.[60] The center of the town is dominated mainly by Gibbet Hill, with several other large hills throughout the town.

Groton is served by state routes 40, 111, 119 and 225. It borders the towns of Pepperell, Dunstable, Tyngsborough, Westford, Littleton, Ayer, Shirley, and Townsend.

Groton has a hot-summer humid continental climate (Dfa) bordering on Dfb and monthly averages range from in January to in July.[61] The hardiness zone is 5b.[62]

Climate

In a typical year, temperatures in Groton are below for 195 days per year. Annual precipitation is typically 45.7 inches per year (high in the US) and snow covers the ground 68 days per year, or 18.6% of the year (high for the US). It may be helpful to understand the yearly precipitation by imagining nine straight days of moderate rain per year. The humidity is below 60% for approximately 25.4 days, or 7% of the year.[63]

Demographics

See also: List of Massachusetts locations by per capita income and Groton (CDP), Massachusetts.

As of the census[64] of 2000, there were 9,547 people, 3,268 households, and 2,568 families residing in the town. The population density was 291.3sp=usNaNsp=us. There were 3,393 housing units at an average density of 103.5sp=usNaNsp=us. The racial makeup of the town was 97.22% White, 0.35% Black or African American, 0.13% Native American, 0.97% Asian, 0.02% Pacific Islander, 0.27% from other races, and 1.04% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.14% of the population.

There were 3,268 households, out of which 46.8% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 70.0% were married couples living together, 6.3% had a female householder with no husband present, and 21.4% were non-families. Of all households 17.1% were made up of individuals, and 5.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.90 and the average family size was 3.31.

The age distribution of the town's population was 32.6% under the age of 18, 4.2% from 18 to 24, 32.7% from 25 to 44, 23.5% from 45 to 64, and 7.0% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 36 years. For every 100 females, there were 98.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 94.5 males.

The median income for a household in the town was $118,041, and the median income for a family was $136,653. Males had a median income of $101,117 versus $60,402 for females. The per capita income for the town was $44,756. About 1.1% of families and 1.8% of the population were below the poverty line, including 1.0% of those under age 18 and none of those age 65 or over.[65]

Sports

Groton annually hosts the National Shepley Hill Horse Trials, an equestrian competition. The Groton-Dunstable Crusaders high school boys and girls athletic teams also compete in the town.

Government

The town of Groton is governed by an open town meeting and administered by an elected five-member select board and appointed town manager.[66]

The town has a large proportion of swing voters. 58.9% of Groton voters chose Republican Mitt Romney in the 2002 Massachusetts gubernatorial election,[67] 55.0% chose Republican Scott Brown in the 2010 U.S. Senate election,[68] and 53.8% chose Republican Charlie Baker in the 2014 Massachusetts gubernatorial election.[69] By contrast, 50.8% of Groton voters chose Democrat Barack Obama in the 2012 U.S. presidential election,[70] 63.9% chose Democrat Ed Markey in the 2020 U.S. Senate election,[71] and 67.2% chose Democrat Joe Biden in the 2020 U.S. presidential election.[72]

Voter Registration and Party Enrollment as of February 1, 2021[73]
PartyNumber of VotersPercentage
Democratic1,91521.92%
Republican1,08912.47%
Unaffiliated5,66264.81%
Total8,736100%

Education

Public schools

District schools

See main article: Groton-Dunstable Regional School District.

Other public schools

Private schools

Groton previously hosted Prescott Elementary School (1927–2008, now closed),[75] the Catholic Country Day School of the Holy Union (1949–2017, now closed),[76] and the Lowthorpe School of Landscape Architecture (1901–1945, merged with the Rhode Island School of Design).[77]

Points of interest

Buildings and structures

Conservation land

Over 30% of the land in Groton, Massachusetts is protected open space.[84] The majority of this open space is accessible to the public. Groton also has over 100 miles of trails. Many of these trails can be walked and biked, others are available for hunting and/or camping. The trails are made and maintained by the Groton Trail Committee and the land itself is owned and managed by the Groton Conservation Trust, The Groton Conservation Commission, the Massachusetts Audubon Society, The New England Forestry Foundation, The Massachusetts Department of Conservation & Recreation, and The Massachusetts Department of Fish and Game.

Notable people

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.townofgroton.org/main?cmd=get-dept&id=22
  2. http://www.townofgroton.org/main?cmd=get-dept&id=14
  3. Web site: Town of Groton, Massachusetts . May 30, 2006 .
  4. Book: Butler, Caleb . History of the town of Groton, including Pepperell and Shirley, from the first grant of Groton plantation in 1655 . 1848 . Boston, Press of T.R. Marvin . The Library of Congress . 12–13.
  5. Web site: A Brief History of Groton, MA. September 20, 2014 . TownofGroton.org . November 18, 2014.
  6. Butler, p. 91.
  7. John Demos, The Unredeemed Captive: A Family Story from Early America, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1994, pp. 186 and 224
  8. http://www.wampumchronicles.com/history.html Darren Bonaparte, "The History of Akwesasne"
  9. http://www.wampumchronicles.com/firstfamilies.html Darren Bonaparte, "First Families of Akwesasne"
  10. Green, pp. 121-22.
  11. Book: Green, Samuel Abbott . Groton During the Revolution . University Press . 1900 . 4.
  12. Green, p. 125.
  13. Web site: William Prescott . November 18, 2014 . theamericanrevolution.org.
  14. Green, pp. 198-200.
  15. Book: Conklin, Edwin P. . Middlesex County and Its People: A History . 1927 . Lewis Historical Publishing Company . 512 . en.
  16. Green, pp. 128-31.
  17. Web site: Shays' Rebellion - Person: Job Shattuck . March 21, 2024 . shaysrebellion.stcc.edu.
  18. Book: Szatmary, David P. . Shays' Rebellion : the making of an agrarian insurrection . 1980 . Amherst, Mass. : University of Massachusetts Press . Internet Archive . 978-0-585-08419-0 . 43.
  19. Green, p. 134.
  20. Conklin, pp. 513-14.
  21. Web site: Madden . James Lester . 1954 . A History of Hollingsworth & Whitney Company . March 20, 2024 . University of Maine Digital Commons.
  22. Gordon . C. David . January 2013 . Walking Through History: Groton's Soapstone Quarry . Then and Now: Newsletter of the Groton Historical Society . 14 . 1 . 1, 6.
  23. Book: Karr, Ronald Dale . The Rail Lines of Southern New England . Branch Line Press . 1995 . 0942147022 . 192–214.
  24. Web site: George H. Walker & Co. . 1889 . Ayer Junction, part of Ayer . Atlas of Middlesex County, Massachusetts . WardMaps LLC.
  25. Web site: Downtown Ayer MBTA Commuter Rail Station Town of Ayer MA . April 26, 2024 . www.ayer.ma.us.
  26. Wolkovich . William . Winter 1990 . The Ku Klux Klan in the Nashoba Valley, 1840-1933 . Historical Journal of Massachusetts . 18 . 1 . 62.
  27. Web site: History . March 20, 2024 . St Nicholas Parish.
  28. Web site: O'Connor . Anne . December 19, 2014 . New life for old Groton chapel . https://web.archive.org/web/20231023105010/https://www.nashobavalleyvoice.com/2014/12/19/new-life-for-old-groton-chapel/ . October 23, 2023 . February 25, 2024 . Nashoba Valley Voice . en-US.
  29. Green, p. 25.
  30. Web site: Bunker Hill . March 20, 2024 . American Battlefield Trust . en-US.
  31. Green, pp. 200-01.
  32. Conklin, pp. 485, 512.
  33. Wolkovich, p. 70.
  34. Book: Ashburn, Frank D. . Peabody of Groton . . 1967 . 2nd . Cambridge, MA . 236.
  35. Wolkovich, p. 77.
  36. News: Pan . Deanna . Once a Ku Klux Klan stronghold, Groton fights its reputation as a 'sundown town' . . October 7, 2020 . October 8, 2020 .
  37. Wolkovich, p. 75.
  38. Wolkovich, p. 76.
  39. Wolkovich, p. 79.
  40. News: Pan . Deanna . October 7, 2020 . Once a Ku Klux Klan stronghold, Groton fights its reputation as a 'sundown town' . October 8, 2020 . The Boston Globe.
  41. Web site: Census - Geography Profile: Groton town, Middlesex County, Massachusetts . November 7, 2021 . United States Census Bureau.
  42. Web site: Olsen . Francesca . April 25, 2013 . River activist Marion Stoddart to speak about her quest to clean the Nashua . March 20, 2024 . The Berkshire Eagle . en.
  43. Web site: Klaft . Lynne . June 28, 2009 . Savior of the Nashua River . March 20, 2024 . The Worcester Telegram & Gazette . en-US.
  44. Web site: Seltz . Johanna . April 27, 2015 . Where do the most millionaires live in Mass.? . March 20, 2024 . Boston Globe . en-US.
  45. News: Rhodes . Shane . February 24, 2023 . Making Groton a 'destination' — Destination Groton Committee urges everyone to 'enjoy the experience' . April 26, 2024 . Fitchburg Sentinel & Enterprise.
  46. Web site: Town of Groton 2019-2026 Open Space and Recreation Plan . March 20, 2024 . Town of Groton.
  47. News: Lefferts . Jennifer Fenn . February 14, 2017 . What is it like to live in Groton? . March 20, 2024 . The Boston Globe.
  48. Web site: Houle . Barbara M. . August 23, 2010 . Up on the hill . March 20, 2024 . The Worcester Telegram & Gazette . en-US.
  49. Web site: Agnew . Meaghan . October 5, 2021 . The Best Steakhouses in Boston . March 20, 2024 . Thrillist . en.
  50. Web site: Kearnan . Scott . July 30, 2019 . At Groton's Bucolic Gibbet Hill Grill, a Citified Chef Is Growing an All-New Garden of Delights . March 20, 2024 . Boston Magazine . en-US.
  51. Web site: Wire . A. B. . April 6, 2017 . NESSP launches fundraising campaign for the completion of North America's largest Sai temple - The American Bazaar . April 26, 2024 . en-US.
  52. Web site: A village of music: Groton Hill Music Center enters its first full season . March 20, 2024 . Worcester Business Journal . en-US.
  53. Web site: The Groton Hill Music Center . March 20, 2024 . EJ+P . en-US.
  54. Web site: Orchestra of Indian Hill To Begin 48th Season as Vista Philharmonic Orchestra . March 20, 2024 . Groton Hill Music Center . en-US.
  55. Web site: Rifkin . Glenn . June 10, 2022 . Groton Hill Music Center Gets Ready to Open Its Doors . March 20, 2024 . The Arts Fuse . en-US.
  56. Web site: ALBERT STONE Obituary (1928 - 2023) - Groton, MA - Boston Globe . March 20, 2024 . Legacy.com.
  57. Web site: Brighton . Prudence . May 20, 2023 . School build projects may get relief . April 26, 2024 . Lowell Sun . en-US.
  58. Web site: Massachusetts Department Of Elementary And Secondary Education - Per Pupil Expenditures Statewide Report . April 26, 2024 . profiles.doe.mass.edu.
  59. Web site: Brighton . Prudence . April 4, 2024 . Groton-Dunstable override defeated . April 26, 2024 . Lowell Sun . en-US.
  60. Web site: Map of Massachusetts Watersheds . May 11, 2020 .
  61. Web site: PRISM Climate Group at Oregon State University.
  62. Web site: Interactive Map USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map . planthardiness.ars.usda.gov . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120128011725/http://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/InteractiveMap.aspx . January 28, 2012.
  63. Web site: Climate in Groton, Massachusetts . June 18, 2022 .
  64. Web site: U.S. Census website . . January 31, 2008 .
  65. http://www.factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ADPTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=06000US2501727480&-qr_name=ACS_2009_5YR_G00_DP5YR3&-ds_name=ACS_2009_5YR_G00_&-_lang=en&-_sse=on
  66. http://www.townofgroton.org/Town/AboutGroton.aspx About Groton
  67. Web site: PD43+ » 2002 Governor General Election Statewide (showing only Middlesex County) . March 20, 2024 . PD43+ . en-US.
  68. Web site: PD43+ » 2010 U.S. Senate Special General Election Statewide (showing only Middlesex County) . March 20, 2024 . PD43+ . en-US.
  69. Web site: PD43+ » 2014 Governor General Election Statewide (showing only Middlesex County) . March 20, 2024 . PD43+ . en-US.
  70. Web site: PD43+ » 2012 President General Election Statewide (showing only Middlesex County) . March 20, 2024 . PD43+ . en-US.
  71. Web site: PD43+ » 2020 U.S. Senate General Election Statewide (showing only Middlesex County) . March 20, 2024 . PD43+ . en-US.
  72. Web site: PD43+ » 2020 U.S. Senate General Election Statewide (showing only Middlesex County) . March 20, 2024 . PD43+ . en-US.
  73. Web site: Registration and Party Enrollment Statistics as of February 1, 2021. May 30, 2021. Massachusetts Elections Division.
  74. Web site: Groton.org . November 18, 2014 . Groton.org.
  75. Web site: Gunderson, Matt . March 6, 2008 . Officials forge on with Groton school closure . May 12, 2011 . Boston Globe, MA.
  76. Web site: Country Day School of the Holy Union . October 20, 2011 . Country Day.
  77. Knight, An Examination of the Lowthorpe School of Landscape Architecture for Women, Groton, Massachusetts, 1901–1945
  78. Web site: Groton Historical Society . October 20, 2011 . dead . https://archive.today/20081005004424/http://www.grotonhistoricalsociety.org/grotonhistoricalsociety/main/ . October 5, 2008 .
  79. Web site: Groton Public Library . October 20, 2011.
  80. Web site: Old Groton Inn . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110906022020/http://www.grotonstagecoachinn.com/index.htm . September 6, 2011 . October 20, 2011.
  81. Web site: Groton Wood. October 20, 2011.
  82. News: Nelson . Laura J. . Boston Globe Correspondent . Boston.com . NY Times Co. . August 13, 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120503211935/http://articles.boston.com/2011-08-04/news/29851184_1_inn-fire-historic-buildings-groton-fire-department . May 3, 2012 .
  83. Web site: The Groton Inn. The Groton Inn. March 16, 2018.
  84. Web site: Groton Trails Network. June 18, 2016.
  85. Web site: Andy Anderson Bio. Groton.org. November 18, 2014.
  86. Web site: National Rowing Hall of Fame. National Rowing Foundation. November 18, 2014.
  87. Book: Hoddeson. Lillian. Daitch. Vicki. True Genius: The Life and Science of John Bardeen. registration. November 11, 2002. Joseph Henry Press. 978-0309095112. 11.
  88. http://www.thegrotonline.com/2012/06/17/shelley-olds-picked-for-us-olympic-cycling-team/ Shelley Olds Picked For US Olympic Cycling Team | The Groton Line