Roxbury, Massachusetts Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Roxbury is a neighborhood within Boston, Massachusetts. It was one of the first towns founded in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630 and became a city in 1848. The City of Roxbury was annexed to Boston in 1868. The original town of Roxbury included the current neighborhoods of Jamaica Plain and West Roxbury, and much of Back Bay.
The First Church of Roxbury
As Roxbury developed in the 19th century, the northern part became an industrial town with a large immigrant community, while the majority of the town remained agricultural and saw the development of some of the first streetcar suburbs in the United States. This led to the incorporation of the old Roxbury village as one of Massachusetts's first cities, and the rest of the town was established as the town of West Roxbury.
As the 20th century proceeded, Roxbury became home to the majority of Boston's African-American population, and a large portion of the city's Jewish residents. In the 1980s local residents organized a ballot referendum in Boston to restore Roxbury's status as an independent city which would be called Mandela, and while the majority of voters in Roxbury approved the measure, it failed to pass in the rest of Boston in the 1986 vote.
Fort Hill Tower, site of Revolutionary War fortifications
It was originally called "Rocksbury" because of its hilly geography and the many large outcroppings of Roxbury puddingstone, a rock formation composed of small stones that were surrounded by lava from ancient volcanos.
Other notable Roxbury residents include: Bobby Brown, Cid Corman, Louis Farrakhan, Charles Dana Gibson, Edward Everett Hale, Roy Haynes, Malcolm X, Samuel Pierpont Langley, John L. Sullivan, Joseph Warren, and mayor Maurice Tobin.
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