whighlander
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I argue that it is the comparison of interest, because public transit and walking are complementary modes. On the other hand, automobile infrastructure is almost invariably detrimental to walking and certain types of transit (mixed ROWs). Remember, we just spent $22 billion because people hated walking under the "Green Monster" (and also it was falling apart).
It is irrelevant to me if the transit is provided by steel wheels or rubber tires.
I also don't care -- for this purpose of discussion -- about places out on Rt 128. I said "within cities" and Rt 128 is clearly not inside a city. Cars will always be best for sprawl-to-sprawl transportation.
Mathew -- you need to read some history
What you call sprawl and associate with things such as the GI Bill after WWII and other "meddling" has its roots in the very beginning of settlement in Massachusetts
Boston was settled (officially) in 1630 as the port for the Massachusetts Bay Colony -- a theocratic colony founded by what today would be called the educated elite
As soon as the seaport settlement was anchored and functioning efficiently -- people started moving out -- here's a sample heading NW from the Boston Stone in the Blackstone Block -- basically following Mass Ave.
1) Cambridge (near Harvard Sq.) -- (3 mi line of sight or 8 miles due to roads to the Boston neck) was settled in 1630-1631 as Newtowne the capital of the colony
a) the first college in North America (Harvard) was instituted in 1636 to train ministers for the colony
b) all the rest of Cambridge is mostly 19th Century
2) Arlington (6 miles from Boston) was originally settled in 1635 as a farming village within the Cambridge land grant under the name Menotomy
a) major advantage was water power available along Mill Brook
b) In 1637 Captain George Cooke built the first of seven mills were built along the stream, including the Old Schwamb Mill, (1650) which survives to this day -- the longest working mill in the country.
c) incorporated on February 27, 1807 as West Cambridge
d) In 1867 renamed -- Arlington to honor of those Civil War dead buried in Arlington National Cemetery
e) Classic streetcar suburb and somewhat summer resort at Park Circle where the Watertower off Rt-2 is located
1870 3,261 —
1880 4,100 +25.7%
1890 5,029 +22.7%
1900 8,603 +71.1%
1910 11,187 +30.0%
1920 18,665 +66.8%
1930 36,094 +93.4%
1940 40,013 +10.9%
1950 44,353 +10.8%
1960 49,953 +12.6%
1970 53,524 +7.1%
1980 48,219 −9.9%
1990 44,630 −7.4%
2000 42,389 −5.0%
2010 42,844 +1.1
3) Lexington (10 to 12 miles line of sight) was first settled in 1642 as an agricultural extension of Cambridge, Massachusetts
a) In 1691 incorporated as Cambridge Farms -- a parish with a separate church and minister, but still under jurisdiction of the Town of Cambridge
b) in 1713 incorporated as Lexington -- a separate town
c) provided Boston with much of its produce for many years
d) population grew very slowly for many decades
e) in 1846 of the Lexington and West Cambridge Railroad, later the Boston and Maine Railroad open -- Lexington became a bedroom community and a summer resort (1850 census 1,893 residents)
f) East Lexington was settled later as a manufacturing center and functioned quasi-independently until the late 19th Century
g) Lexington's conversion to bedroom community accelerated when streetcars made it to Arlington Heights and eventually in the early 20th C the Middlesex & Boston Street Railway line made commuting from as far as the Bedford border possible-- later cars started to be available though roads were still primitive
1880 2,460 +8.0%
1890 3,197 +30.0%
1900 3,831 +19.8%
1910 4,918 +28.4%
1920 6,350 +29.1%
1930 9,467 +49.1%
1940 13,187 +39.3%
h) after WWII high tech boomed along Rt-128 and population surged
1950 17,335 +31.5%
1960 27,691 +59.7%
1970 31,886 +15.1%
2010 31,394
4) Bedford -- 15 miles from Boston was first settled around 1640
a) the town proper was incorporated in 1729 with land from Concord (about 3/5) and from Billerica (about 2/5)
b) a purely agricultural community for many decades: 1850 975 residents -- 1920 1,362 residents
c) Street railway and later automobiles and superhighways transformed it first into a bedroom community and then high tech industry center
1920 1,362 +10.6%
1930 2,603 +91.1%
1940 3,807 +46.3%
1950 5,234 +37.5%
1960 10,969 +109.6%
1970 13,513 +23.2%
2010 13,320
5) Carlisle -- 19 miles from Boston -- first settled in 1651 on parcels of land of the neighboring towns of Acton, Billerica, Chelmsford and Concord.
a) became a district of Concord in 1780 and was officially incorporated as a town in 1805.
b) still mostly agricultural though becoming a bedroom community for Rt-128
c) very slow growth until very recently -- mostly due to 2 acre zoning
1850 632
1920 463
1930 560 +21.0%
1940 747 +33.4%
1950 876 +17.3%
1960 1,488 +69.9%
1970 2,871 +92.9%
1980 3,306 +15.2%
1990 4,333 +31.1%
2000 4,717 +8.9%
2010 4,852
6) Lincoln -- 15 miles from Boston -- settled in 1654 -- considered a part of Concord
a) in 1754 incorporated as a separate town due to the distance to an established parish
b) agricultural community even after the arrival of the railroad
1850 719 —
1860 718 −0.1%
1870 791 +10.2%
1880 907 +14.7%
1890 987 +8.8%
1900 1,127 +14.2%
1910 1,175 +4.3%
1920 1,042 −11.3%
c) population began to increase with opening of Rt-2 -- now Rt-2A -- never developed any industry except for the part of Hanscom inside the town
1930 1,493 +43.3%
1940 1,783 +19.4%
1950 2,427 +36.1%
1960 5,613 +131.3%
1970 7,567 +34.8%
d) as is true for most of these communities population peaked in the late 1960's and early 1970's with the Baby Boomers having kids
1980 7,098 −6.2%
1990 7,666 +8.0%
2000 8,056 +5.1%
2010 6,362
7) Concord -- 19 miles from Boston -- settled in 1635 when British settlers led by Rev. Peter Bulkley and Simon Willard negotiated a land purchase from a local tribe
a) in 1635 incorporated as Concord in appreciation of the peaceful acquisition
b) situated at the confluence of the Sudbury and Assabet rivers -- the rivers were rich with fish and the land was lush and arable -- slow grow agricultural community
c) in 1845 the Fitchburg Railroad opened from Boston to Fitchburg -- later sold to the Boston and Maine Railroad in 1919 and then the MBTA in 1976 -- today's Fitchburg CR Line -- 2 stops in Concord -- slow growth as agricultural and bedroom community
1850 2,249 —
1860 2,246 −0.1%
1870 2,412 +7.4%
1880 3,922 +62.6%
1890 4,427 +12.9%
1900 5,652 +27.7%
1910 6,421 +13.6%
1920 6,461 +0.6%
d) old Rt-2 and growing number of automobiles
1930 7,477 +15.7%
1940 7,972 +6.6%
1950 8,623 +8.2%
e) new Rt-2 and Rt-128 -- birth of Concord as high tech center
1960 12,517 +45.2%
1970 16,148 +29.0%
1980 16,293 +0.9%
1990 17,076 +4.8%
2000 16,993 −0.5%
2010 17,668 +0.5%