Waltham was first settled by the English in 1634 as part of
Watertown, and was officially incorporated as a separate town in 1738, but the area was inhabited for thousands of years prior to English colonization. At the time of European arrival, Waltham was in a border zone between the territories of the
Pawtucket confederation and the
Massachusett, with nearby native settlements at
Nonantum and
Pequosset (Watertown). Early settlers recorded the presence of an "Indian Stockade" near today's
Cambridge Reservoir, and an "Indian Hollow" in today's Calvary Cemetery. A native trail through Waltham, the "Old Connecticut Path" saw continued use after colonization and became the basis for present day
Route 20. The first record of the name is from the articles of incorporation, dated January 15, 1738. In the early 19th century,
Francis Cabot Lowell and his friends and colleagues established in Waltham the Boston Manufacturing Company—the first integrated textile mill in the United States—with the goal of eliminating the problems of co-ordination, quality control, and shipping inherent in the subcontracting based textile industry. The Waltham–Lowell system of production derives its name from the city and the founder of the mill. The city is home to a number of large estates, including
Gore Place, a mansion built in 1806 for former
Massachusetts governor
Christopher Gore, the
Robert Treat Paine Estate, a residence designed by architect
Henry Hobson Richardson and landscape architect
Frederick Law Olmsted for philanthropist
Robert Treat Paine, Jr. (1810–1905), and the
Lyman Estate, a estate built in 1793 by Boston merchant
Theodore Lyman I. In 1857, the
Waltham Model 1857 watch was produced by the
American Watch Company in the city of Waltham, Massachusetts. In the late 19th and early 20th century, Waltham was home to the
brass era automobile manufacturer
Metz, where the first production motorcycle in the U.S. was built. Another first in Waltham industrial history involves the method to mass-produce the
magnetron tube, invented by Percy Spencer at
Raytheon. During World War II, the magnetron tube technology was applied to radar. Later, magnetron tubes were used as components in microwave ovens. Waltham was also the home of the
Walter E. Fernald State School, the western hemisphere's oldest publicly funded institution serving people with
developmental disabilities. The storied and controversial history of the institution has long been covered by local and, at times, national media.
Timeline • 1703 –
Grove Hill Cemetery established. • 1738 – Town of Waltham incorporated from
Watertown, Massachusetts. • 1755 – Part of
Cambridge annexed to Waltham. • 1793 –
The Vale (residence) built. • 1810 – Waltham Cotton and Wool Factory Company formed. • 1813 –
Boston Manufacturing Company in business. • 1820 •
First Congregational Church founded. • Manufacturers' Library active. • 1827 – Rumford Institute organized. • 1833 –
The Hive newspaper begins publication. • 1835 – Waltham Bank established. • 1837 – Methodist Episcopal Church organized. • 1849 • Part of
Newton annexed to Waltham. •
Christ Episcopal Church built. • 1851 – Tornado. • 1852 – Baptist Church organized. • 1853 – Waltham Gas Light Company incorporated. •
Mount Feake Cemetery established. • Waltham Agricultural Library Association formed. • 1859 – Town of
Belmont separates from Waltham. • 1863 –
Waltham Free Press begins publication. • 1866 – Emmet Literary Association formed. • 1870 • Waltham Horological School established. • Waltham Foundry Co. established. • 1876 •
Waltham Weekly Record begins publication. • 1884 • City of Waltham incorporated. •
Harrington Block built. • 1885 • Board of Trade organized. • Waltham Hospital founded. • Waltham Training School for Nurses established. • 1886 –
Robert Treat Paine Estate built. • 1888 – Sesquicentennial. • 1890 • Population: 18,707. •
Massachusetts School for the Feeble-Minded relocates to Waltham. • 1891 –
O'Hara Waltham Dial Company organized. • 1893 •
Waltham Evening News begins publication. •
Beaver Brook Reservation and
Charles River Reservation established. • 1894 •
Linden Street Bridge constructed. • Waltham Bicycle Park opens. • 1924 –
Waltham News Tribune newspaper in publication. • 1936 – Hovey Players (theatre group) founded. • 1938 –
County Courthouse built. • 1941 – Waltham Garden Club founded. • 1948 –
Brandeis University established. • 1961 –
Rose Art Museum founded at Brandeis University. • 1968 •
Bentley University relocates to Waltham. •
WBRS on air. • 1970 – Population: 61,582. • 1971 • Waltham Museum established. •
Robert Drinan becomes
Massachusetts's 3rd congressional district representative. • 1975 –
Aerosmith musical group rents
Wherehouse. • 1976 – Waltham Mills Artists Association open studios begins (approximate date) • 1980 –
Charles River Museum of Industry established. • 1982 –
Parexel International Corporation headquartered in Waltham. • 1985 – Waltham Philharmonic Orchestra formed. • 1987 –
Joseph P. Kennedy II becomes
Massachusetts's 8th congressional district representative. • 1988 –
Global Petroleum Corporation headquartered in Waltham (approximate date). • 1995 –
Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc. headquartered in Waltham. • 1996 •
Lionbridge Technologies Inc. headquartered in Waltham. • City website online. • 1999 – Waltham Land Trust incorporated. • 2003 –
Raytheon Company and
Roving Software Inc. headquartered in Waltham. • 2004 • Jeannette A. McCarthy becomes mayor. • Brandeis University's Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism nonprofit established. • 2006 –
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. headquartered in Waltham. • 2007 •
PerkinElmer, Inc. headquartered in Waltham. •
Waltham Symphony Orchestra formed. • 2010 – Population: 60,632. • 2011 •
A triple homicide occurs on September 11. •
Watch City Steampunk Festival begins. • 2013 –
Katherine Clark becomes
Massachusetts's 5th congressional district representative.
Pronunciation The name of the city is pronounced with the primary stress on the first syllable and a full vowel in the second syllable, , though the name of the Waltham watch was pronounced with a reduced
schwa in the second syllable: . At one time, most people would have pronounced it in the British way, "Walthum", but when people came to work in the mills from Nova Scotia, the pronunciation evolved. The local version became a phonetic sounding to accommodate French speakers who could not pronounce it in the British way. In some areas, the city is referred to as "The Waltham". ==Geography==