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They are the three largest cities in the state within 50 miles without rail. (Not even commuter rail: Revere and Brookline [technically a town] have no CR stops, and Somerville only has a sliver of the Porter CR platform.)
For the record, here are municipalities (or obvious pairs) within plausible CR range of Boston with their distance, population, last time they had commuter rail service, and route. Bolded cities have a station under construction, underlined have an existing Amtrak station, and italicized are those more likely to be served by rapid transit. Distances are between city halls as the crow flies; rail distances are typically 10-15% higher. Populations are above 30k, plus some perennial proposals. Last service is when the municipality last had local stop commuter service (short-lived services noted); most RI locations except Pawtucket never had many commuters to Boston. Crossed-out routes are abandoned; italicized are infill stops on active CR lines. A few cities (East Providence, North Providence, Dracut, etc) where the closest possible stop is in an already-served nearby city are mostly omitted. The I-91 corridor cities, at ~80 miles from Boston, are also omitted.
* Notes:
For the record, here are municipalities (or obvious pairs) within plausible CR range of Boston with their distance, population, last time they had commuter rail service, and route. Bolded cities have a station under construction, underlined have an existing Amtrak station, and italicized are those more likely to be served by rapid transit. Distances are between city halls as the crow flies; rail distances are typically 10-15% higher. Populations are above 30k, plus some perennial proposals. Last service is when the municipality last had local stop commuter service (short-lived services noted); most RI locations except Pawtucket never had many commuters to Boston. Crossed-out routes are abandoned; italicized are infill stops on active CR lines. A few cities (East Providence, North Providence, Dracut, etc) where the closest possible stop is in an already-served nearby city are mostly omitted. The I-91 corridor cities, at ~80 miles from Boston, are also omitted.
Location | Distance | Population | Last service | Line |
New Bedford + Fairhaven | 50 | 117k | 1958 | South Coast Rail |
Manchester NH | 48 | 115k | 1967 (1981) | NH Main Line |
Nashua NH + Hudson NH | 35 | 115k | 1967 (1981) | NH Main Line |
Fall River + Somerset | 46 | 112k | 1958 | South Coast Rail |
Pawtucket RI + Central Falls RI | 37 | 98k | 1981* | NEC |
Cranston RI | 44 | 83k | 1930s | NEC |
Revere | 4 | 62k | 1958** | Eastern Route |
Derry NH + Londonderry NH | 39 | 60k | 1953 | |
Taunton | 32 | 59k | 1958 | South Coast Rail |
Peabody | 13 | 55k | 1958 | Essex |
Methuen | 26 | 53k | 1953 | |
Barnstable | 63 | 49k | 1959 (1988) | Cape Main Line |
Everett | 3 | 49k | 1958 | Eastern Route |
Arlington | 6 | 46k | 1977 | |
Concord NH | 63 | 44k | 1967 (1981) | NH Main Line |
Woonsocket RI | 34 | 43k | 1956* | P&W |
Marlborough | 25 | 42k | 1939** | Agricultural Branch |
NH Seacoast towns* | 42 | 37k | 1967 | |
Chelmsford | 22 | 36k | 1967 | NH Main Line |
Coventry RI | 53 | 36k | 1930 | |
Cumberland RI | 36 | 36k | 1957* | P&W |
Watertown | 6 | 35k | 1938 | |
Dartmouth | 51 | 34k | 1919 | Watuppa Branch |
Lexington | 11 | 34k | 1977 | |
Dover NH | 59 | 33k | 1967 | Western Route |
Falmouth | 60 | 32k | 1959 (1988) | |
Portsmouth NH + Kittery ME | 52 | 32k | 1967 | |
Rochester NH | 65 | 32k | 1930s* | Ossipee Branch |
North Andover | 24 | 31k | 1974 | Western Route |
South Kingston RI | 67 | 31k | 1977 | NEC |
Tewksbury | 20 | 31k | 1965** | NH Main Line |
West Warwick RI | 51 | 31k | 1933 | |
Milford | 28 | 30k | 1959** | Franklin |
Salem NH | 30 | 30k | 1953 | |
Saugus | 7 | 29k | 1958 | |
Danvers | 16 | 28k | 1958 | Essex |
Merrimack NH | 41 | 27k | 1959 (1981) | NH Main Line |
Yarmouth | 62 | 25k | 1959 | Cape Main Line |
Wareham | 43 | 23k | 1959 (1988) | Cape Main Line |
Gardner | 50 | 21k | 1960 (1987) | Fitchburg Route |
Bourne | 48 | 20k | 1959 (1988) | Cape Main Line |
Sandwich | 50 | 20k | 1959 (1988) | Cape Main Line |
Foxboro | 23 | 19k | 1977** (2020) | Framingham Secondary |
Bellingham | 29 | 17k | 1938 (1940)** | Franklin |
Exeter NH | 43 | 16k | 1967 | Western Route |
Northborough | 30 | 16k | 1931 | Agricultural Branch |
Clinton | 32 | 15k | 1958 (1960)** | Agricultural Branch |
Durham NH | 54 | 15k | 1967 | Western Route |
Atkinson NH + Plaistow NH | 33 | 14k | 1967 | Western Route |
Tyngsborough | 29 | 12k | 1959 | NH Main Line |
Salisbury | 35 | 9k | 1959 |
* Notes:
- South Attleboro station, just over the state line, opened in 1990. A downtown Pawtucket/Central Falls station will open later this year.
- Direct Boston-Woonsocket service over the Millis Branch ended in 1930. Boston–Blackstone service ran until 1966.
- NH Seacoast towns = Seabrook, Hampton Falls, Hampton, North Hampton, Rye. Anywhere from 1 to 4 stations could be added if Portsmouth service resumed. Hampton Falls and Breakfast Hill (in Rye) closed in the 1930s, Atlantic and Seabrook closed in the 1950s, and Hampton and North Hampton lasted until the 1967 end of Portsmouth service.
- Boston–Cumberland service (at Valley Falls) ended in 1930.
- Rochester had rail service until 1961, with multiple daily trains until the 1950s, but commuter-suitable schedules ended in the 1930s.
- Linden station on the Saugus Branch was closed in 1958. The Eastern Route station at Revere was closed around 1956.
- Marlborough service via the Agricultural Branch ended in 1937. B&M Marlboro Branch service ran via South Acton until 1932, then as a Central Mass branch until 1939.
- East Billerica station, just over the Billerica border on the Western Route, closed in 1965. It would be the mostly likely spot for resumed Tewksbury service. Local Lowell–Lawrence service through Tewksbury ended around 1930.
- East Foxboro on the NEC, with one daily round trip a day, was closed in 1977. Prior to the 2019-2020 pilot, the last service to Foxboro on the Framingham Secondary was in 1933.
- Ashland–Bellingham–Milford–Franklin service ended in 1920. Milford–Boston service via Framingham lasted until 1959. Franklin–Bellingham Junction–Millis–Boston ran from 1926 to 1938, and briefly in 1940.
- Agricultural Branch service to Clinton ended in 1931. Worcester–Clinton–Ayer local service ran until 1953, plus a few months in 1960. Boston–Clinton service via the Central Mass (using a short section of the Worcester–Ayer line) ran until 1958.