Boston's Metropolitan Past: Baxter & Eliot's 1893 Plan

 

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Population of the Boston Metropolitan Region, 1880-1890

During the 1880s, the Boston metropolitan area grew rapidly. Baxter and Eliot describe a metropolitan area comprised of twelve cities and twenty-four towns. At the time of the plan, the metropolitan area population was 888,000, forty percent of the total population of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (p.xi).

TWELVE CITIES

TWENTY-FOUR TOWNS

Boston

Medford

Arlington

Hyde Park

Swampscott

Cambridge

Newton

Belmont

Melrose

Wakefield

Chelsea

Quincy

Braintree

Milton

Watertown

Everett

Somerville

Brookline

Nahant

Wellesley

Lynn

Waltham

Canton

Needham

Weston

Malden

Woburn

Dedham

Revere

Weymouth

 

 

Hingham

Saugus

Winchester

 

 

Hull

Stoneham

Winthrop

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Notes:

The City of Boston's population also grew during this period, from 362,839 in 1880 448,477 in 1890. The population of Lynn increased from 38,274 to 55,727. (In the plan, Baxter projected that Lynn would soon grow to a population of 100,000. The city reached its peak population of 102,320 in 1930.) The population of Cambridge increased from 52,669 to 70,028; Revere went from 2,263 to 5,668; Winthrop went from 1,043 to 2,726; Everett went from 4,159 to 11,068.