The city is home to two symphony orchestras, the
New Philharmonia Orchestra of Massachusetts and the Newton Symphony Orchestra. The
Joanne Langione Dance Center, an American youth dance school was founded in 1976.
Points of interest •
Crystal Lake is a natural lake located in Newton Centre. Its shores, mostly lined with private homes, also host two small parks, a designated swimming area, and a bathhouse. Previously known as Wiswall's Pond, it became known as Crystal Lake sometime between 1855 and 1875. The name was given by a nineteenth-century commercial ice harvester that sold ice cut from the pond in winter. • The Jackson Homestead, now the
Newton History Museum at the Jackson Homestead, is best known for its history as a stop on the
Underground Railroad. It was built in 1809 as a farmhouse designed in the
Federal style, and is now a museum with paintings, costumes, photographs, manuscripts, maps and historical artifacts. •
Heartbreak Hill, notably challenging stretch of the Boston Marathon, on Commonwealth Avenue between Walnut Street and Boston College. • Newton is home to many exclusive golf courses such as Woodland Country Club, Charles River Country Club, and Brae Burn Country Club, which held the United States Open in 1919. •
City Stable and Garage, historic building • The
John A. Fenno House is a historic house at 171 Lowell Avenue, built , and a rare local example of Gothic Revival styling. • The
House at 173–175 Ward Street is one of the city's few Federal style houses, built •
Echo Bridge is a notable 19th-century masonry arch bridge with views of the river and Hemlock Gorge in
Hemlock Gorge Reservation just off
Route 9 in Newton Upper Falls. •
Norumbega Park was located in Auburndale on the Charles River. Opening in 1897 as a
trolley park, it was a popular
amusement park through the 1950s before closing in 1963. Its
Totem Pole Ballroom became a well-known dancing and entertainment venue for
big bands touring during the 1940s as well as other famous performers such as
Doris Day,
Bing Crosby,
Eydie Gorme and
The Four Lads. The park is now a popular dog-walking site with hills, meadows, woods, and access to the river. • Auburndale Cove is a multipurpose picnic and recreational area on the Charles River just down the walking path from Norumbega Park. •
Chestnut Hill Reservoir is a very popular park with residents of Newton, Brookline, and the Brighton section of Boston. Although completely within the Boston city limits, it is directly contiguous to the Newton city limits. Designed by
Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of Central Park in New York City and the Emerald Necklace in Boston, the park offers beautiful views of the Boston skyline, and is framed by stately homes and the campus of Boston College. Although not generally used to supply water to Boston, the reservoir was temporarily brought back online on May 1, 2010, during a failure of a connecting pipe at the end of the MetroWest Water Supply Tunnel. •
Bullough's Pond is an old mill pond transformed into a landscape feature when Newton became a suburban community in the late nineteenth century. It has been the subject of two books, ''Reflections in Bullough's Pond: Economy and Ecosystem in New England,
by Diana Muir, and Once Around Bullough's Pond: A Native American Epic,
by Douglas Worth. It was long maintained by the city as an ice skating venue, but skating is no longer allowed. A scene from the 2008 remake of The Women'' was filmed there. • The city of Newton has designated several roads in the city as "scenic". Along with this designation come regulations aimed at curbing tree removal and trimming along the roads, as well as stemming the removal of historic stone walls. The city designated the following as scenic roads: Hobart Rd., Waban Ave., Sumner St., Chestnut St., Concord St., Dudley Rd., Fuller St., Hammond St., Valentine St., Lake Ave., Highland St., and Brookside Ave. • The
United Parish of Auburndale, constructed in 1857, oldest wooden church building in Newton. •
The First Baptist Church in Newton Centre, constructed in 1888, was designed by
John Lyman Faxon in the
Richardsonian Romanesque style pioneered by architect
Henry Hobson Richardson. • The
WHDH-TV tower is one of the tallest free-standing lattice towers in the United States. • The primary campus of
Boston College, a
Jesuit research university, and the campus of its
law school are located in
Chestnut Hill. ==Government==