Spring Hill is a glacial
drumlin with an elongated summit roughly north of Summer Street, between Lowell and Cedar Streets in central Somerville. Its name derives from a spring that was useful for farmers who originally settled the area in the 17th century. The construction of the
Boston and Lowell Railroad in the 1840s, with a station at the base of the hill, spurred residential construction in the area for businessmen working in
Charlestown and
Boston. The tract of land making up this district was purchased by
George O. Brastow, a native of
Wrentham who later became the first
mayor of Somerville. In 1843, Brastow lotted one of Somerville's first residential
subdivisions on the hill's south side between Central and Belmont Streets. Several original houses from this development remain on Atherton Street and off Harvard Street. The well-known Boston surveyor
Alexander Wadsworth helped Brastow successfully lay out this subdivision to attract substantial homes on country estates for privileged suburbanites that held proprietary and managerial jobs. Its desirability was reinforced by expansive views of Cambridge and Boston, as well as easy access to Boston via the
Fitchburg Railroad. Brastow's subdivision is the centerpiece of the Spring Hill Historic District, listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1989. The district encompasses the city's best-preserved residential subdivision from the mid-19th century, with later infill construction in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1889, a water standpipe (tower) was erected on the hill between Belmont and Lowell Streets (present-day Bailey Park), making municipal drinking water available to Somerville residents at higher elevations, and so facilitated additional housing development in the city's more elevated areas. By the end of the 19th century, the street grid had reached its present form, and the neighborhood filled with predominantly multi-family homes. Growth was fueled by the extension of
streetcar lines from
Lechmere Square and industrialization along Somerville Avenue and the Fitchburg Railroad. Spring Hill is home to
Somerville Hospital, opened in 1891 on Highland Avenue, the
Round House, located on Atherton Street, and the Somerville Museum, located on Central Street. At one time this neighborhood was home to both journalist
Howie Carr and
Winter Hill Gang leader
Howie Winter. They lived one street apart, on Madison Street and Montrose Street, respectively. This was revealed in Carr's book about Irish mobster
James "Whitey" Bulger, "The Brothers Bulger." ==Architecture and landmarks==