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  1. Cambridge was a county seat of Middlesex County, along with Lowell, until the abolition of executive county government. Though the county government was abolished in 1997, the county still exists as a geographical and political region.

  2. May 11, 2024 · Originally settled as New Towne in 1630 by the Massachusetts Bay Company, it was organized as a town in 1636 when it became the site of Harvard College (now an undergraduate school of Harvard University ). The town was renamed for Cambridge, England, in 1638 and became a county seat in 1643.

  3. The Middlesex-South District (larger) with the county seat in Cambridge consisted of the remaining 44 cities and towns of Middlesex County.

  4. Cambridge comprised four physically separate, rival villages before it became a city in 1846. Cambridgeport grew up along the new road to Boston. East Cambridge became an industrial village and county seat after Craigie's Bridge opened in 1809.

  5. May 30, 2021 · First settled in 1630 by Thomas Dudley, who wanted to make Newtown the capital of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Cambridge was later incorporated as a town in the colony about six years later. The following is a timeline of the history of Cambridge: 1630: In December, Newtown is settled by Thomas Dudley. 1631:

  6. Cambridge became a city in 1846, uniting three rival villages -- Old Cambridge, Cambridgeport and East Cambridge. Old Cambridge had grown slowly and still retained its charming rural character. Small shops catered to the community and to students.

  7. 1632 - First Parish meeting house built. 1636 - The "New College" founded. 1636 - Newe Towne was established as a town in the Massachusetts Bay Colony on September 8. 1638. Newe Towne renamed "Cambridge." [1] John Harvard, a Puritan minister, bequeaths his library and half his monetary estate to the college.

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