The Merrimack Valley is a region along the Merrimack River in the state of Massachusetts.

The Merrimack is one of the larger waterways in New England and has helped to define the livelihood and culture of those living along it for millennia. The Valley was a major center of the textile industry in the 19th century.

The original settlers of the Merrimack Valley were various tribes of the Pennacook Indians. The river provided an easy means of transportation, an exceptional source of salmon as well as other fish, and the land along the river banks was suitable for hunting and sometimes farming.

While the Merrimack had been used for small manufacturing concerns for decades, in the early 1820s, a group of investors from Boston founded the city of Lowell, to take advantage of the 32-foot drop of the Merrimack over the Pawtucket Falls. Lowell, the first large-scale planned textile center in America, remained the nation’s largest into the 1850s.

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1600

Pennacook Indians Lived in Merrimack Valley

Prior to English colonization, many various tribes of the Pennacook Indians hunted, foraged, and settled the lands in the Merrimack Valley.
1635

Town of Concord founded

1637

Town of Tewksbury founded

1642

City of Woburn founded

1643

Massachusetts General Court established the County of Middlesex

1655

Town of Billerica founded
Town of Chelmsford founded

1658

Town of Harvard founded

1673

Town of Dunstable founded

1683

Town of Stow founded

1701

Town of Dracut founded

1714

Town of Littleton founded

1729

Town of Bedford founded
Town of Westford founded

1730

Town of Wilmington founded

1735

Town of Acton founded

1753

Count Rumford (Benjamin Thompson) born in Woburn.

1754

Town of Lincoln founded

1775

The 'Shot Heard Around the World

The ‘shot heard round the world’ is fired in Concord. The first battle of the American Revolutionary War was the Battle at Lexington and Concord.
The Town of Lexington was founded.
The Bedford Flag is the oldest complete flag known to exist in the United States. It is celebrated as the flag carried by the Bedford Minuteman, Nathaniel Page, to the Concord Bridge at the beginning of the American Revolution, but it was already an antique on that day. It was made for a cavalry troop of the Massachusetts Bay militia early in the colonial struggle for the continent that we call “the French and Indian Wars.”
Hartwell Tavern in Lincoln plays important role in American Revolutionary War
1783

Town of Boxborough founded

1796

Pawtucket Canal opens

1799

Town of Burlington founded

1803

Middlesex Canal opens

1805

Town of Carlisle founded

1809

Town of Tyngsborough founded

1813

Phineas Whiting & Josiah Fletcher open a cotton mill near present day Lower Locks in Lowell

1816

Bowers’ saw mill and grist mill built

1817

Henry David Thoreau is born in Concord

1821

Merrimack Manufacturing Company

Merrimack Manufacturing Company founded in Chelmsford by Patrick Tracy Jackson, Nathan Appleton, Kirk Boott, and several others
1822

Francis Cabot Lowell

A wealthy Boston merchant, and his investors built the first integrated spinning and weaving factory in the world at Waltham using water power. After his death, his partners moved north to the more powerful Merrimack River and named their new mill town at the Pawtucket Falls on the Merrimack River "Lowell," after their visionary leader. The Waltham-Lowell system, pioneered by Lowell and first introduced at the Waltham mill, was expanded to the new industrial city of Lowell and soon spread to the Midwest and the South. The mechanized textile system, introduced by Francis Cabot Lowell, remained dominant in New England for a century until the industry shifted to the Midwest and the South. By the close of the nineteenth-century the United States had a thriving textile industry for home consumption and for export.
1823

Merrimack Mills

Merrimack Mills (later The Merrimack Manufacturing Company) becomes the first of the major textile manufacturing concerns to begin operations in Lowell. It recruits Yankee women to work in its textile mills.
1824

St Anne’s Church in Lowell is established Merrimack Valley’s first newspaper
Lowell Daily Journal established

1825

Ralph Waldo Emerson

opened a school in Chelmsford, and Hamilton Manufacturing Company is incorporated.
1826

City of Lowell founded

Daily stage coaches run between Merrimack Valley and Boston.
1828

Appleton Manufacturing Company is incorporated and Lowell Manufacturing Company incorporated

1829

Lowell Institution for Savings founded

1830

Middlesex, Tremont, and Suffolk Manufacturing Companies are established

1831

Lowell High School opens

Lawrence Manufacturing Company is incorporated
Steel pens were first used in Woburn
1833

President Jackson along with VP and future President Martin Van Burn visit Lowell

1834

The Mill Girls

The "Mill girls" "turn out"; first major strike in Lowell. A second mill girls strike happens in 1836.
Belvidere Manufacturing Company is founded
James Abbott McNeill Whistler is born in Lowell
Michel Chevalier, Davey Crockett, George Thompson and Daniel Webster visit Lowell
1835

Boston & Lowell Railroad started
Boott Cotton Mills is incorporated
Ralph Waldo Emerson moves to Lexington

1839

Massachusetts Mills incorporated
Whitney Mills incorporated

1840

Ben Butler begins his political career

Lowell Corporation Hospital, the first industrial hospital in the U.S. opens in Lowell
1842

Nathaniel Hawthorne moves to Concord
Charles Dickens visits Lowell

1843

Establishment of Dr. J. C. Ayer's laboratory in Lowell
President Tyler visits Lowell

1847

President Polk visits Lowell

1848

Abraham Lincoln visits Lowell

1849

Edgar Allen Poe attends poetry lecture in Lowell

1850

Largest Industrial Center

Annual production of 50,000 miles of cloth makes Lowell the largest industrial center in the U.S.
1857

Thomas H Benton visits Lowell

1868

General Ulysses S. Grant visits Lowell

Published in 1868, Little Women is set in the Alcott family home, Orchard House, in Concord and is loosely based on Alcott's childhood experiences with her three sisters, Abigail May Alcott Nieriker, Elizabeth Sewall Alcott, and Anna Alcott Pratt.
1886

Statue of Liberty is dedicated; stairs built by Lowell Company.

1887

Lowell and Dracut Street Railway Company chartered

Pilling Shoe Company established
Whittier Cotton Mills incorporated
1893

Lowell City Hall dedicated

Lowell General Hospital opens
Electric Trolley System in Lowell completed
1896

Merrimack River overflows its banks

1899

O'Sullivan Rubber Company started

1908

Bette Davis is born in Lowell

1911

Charles G. Sampas born in Lowell

1917

Demoulas Supermarkets founded

1922

Lowell Memorial Auditorium dedicated by Vice President and future president Calvin Coolidge
Jack Kerouac is born in Lowell

1923

Ed McMahon is born in Lowell

1925

Edith Nourse Rogers takes over as Representative after her husband dies

1931

Olympia Dukakis is born in Lowell

1936

Great flood of 1936

1938

Walter Gropius moves to Lincoln

Walter Gropius moves to Lincoln and uses his new home as a showcase for his Harvard students as well as an example of modernist landscape architecture in America.
1941

Hanscom Air Force Base built in Bedford
Paul Tsongas is born in Lowell

1946

Golden Gloves in Lowell begin

1950

deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum established in Lincoln

1951

Dwight Eisenhower visits Lowell
John Ogonowski born in Lowell

1955

Drumlin Farm in Lincoln becomes wildlife sanctuary

1957

Joan Fabrics opens in Lowell
Richard Michael Linnehan born in Lowell

1963

Michael Chiklis born in Lowell

1965

“Irish” Micky Ward born in Lowell

1966

Tom Glavin is born in Concord

1971

Scott Grimes born in Lowell

1973

Grace Shoe Company opens in Lowell

1975

Lowell State and Lowell Tech merged in 1975 as the University of Lowell

1976

Wang Laboratories opens Lowell headquarters

1985

Lowell Celebrates Kerouac!

1987

Lowell National Historical Park is established
Paul Tsongas, former Lowell City Councilor, is elected to the U. S. Senate

1990

Lowell Folk Festival begins Middlesex Community College (MCC) establishes permanent Lowell campus

1991

University of Lowell becomes University of Massachusetts Lowell

1998

Tsongas Arena (now Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell) opens
LeLacheur Park opens

2001

Former President George W. Bush visits Lowell

2012

Rock band, PVRIS, founded in Lowell

2014

Market Basket

Market Basket shareholders remove Arthur T. Demoulas as CEO of the supermarket chain. After several months of employee protests, he buys out the opposing side of family for $1.5 billion dollars
2016

Lowell Kinetic Sculpture Race begins

2019

Lowell Irish Festival starts in Lowell
Lowell National Historical Park quarter launched by U.S. Mint

2020

Covid-19 grips the world

2021

Greater Merrimack Valley Convention & Visitors Bureau

Rick Lofria takes over as Executive Director of Merrimack Valley Convention & Visitors Bureau