This book about Westford describes the effect of the mills'' demise in
the 1950s, and chronicles the town's recent development into a very
appealing bedroom community for workers in Boston.
From its incorporation in 1729 through the late nineteenth century,
Westford, Massachusetts, was a farming community sparsely populated by
families of English ancestry. But in the first years of the twentieth
century, a significant change occurred in Westford when mills that had
opened in the town''s Forge Village and Graniteville sections began to
recruit workers from Russia, Poland, England, Ireland, Scotland, Italy,
and Canada. Westford depicts what the arrival of the mills and the mill
workers meant to the town and its evolution in the twentieth century.