Waban, Massachusetts

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Beacon Street

Waban is one of the thirteen villages within the city of Newton in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States.

Origin of name[]

Waban was named for Waban, the first Massachusett converted to Christianity, in 1646. Although Waban lived in Nonantum, a hill in the northeasternmost part of Newton, the area around the present village of Waban was a favored hunting ground. Dr. Lawrence Strong, in his history of the town, wrote:

My father, William Chamberlain Strong, was very active in securing the right-of-way for the Boston and Albany Railroad at the time the Newton Circuit Road was built. The location of a station here marked a potential village, and a name was required. My father had previously lived on Nonantum Hill in Brighton, where Waban, the Chief of the Indian tribe Nonantum, had his wigwam, and where Eliot, the Apostle to the Indians, preached. A memorial marks this spot today. So the name "Waban" for the new village easily suggested itself to my father. I am told Waban, or Wabanoki, means "east" in the Indian tongue. The spelling of the name cannot be held to coincide with its pronunciation. I believe the pronunciation is correct and the correct spelling would be either Wauban or more probably Waughban.[1]

Education[]

Waban has two elementary schools, , named after Albert Angier who was killed fighting in World War I,[2] and , (formerly Beethoven) named for Dr. Frank Zervas school principal.

The village was one of two in Newton to retain its branch library, the last of sixteen original branches closed by June 2008. In September 2009, the Waban branch library re-opened as the Waban Library Center, a community-based facility run by the Waban Improvement Society.

Poor farm[]

An area near where the shopping area of Waban now stands was originally the site of a working farm for the indigent.

Zip code ranking[]

In the Washington Post's 2013 study of the most affluent and well-educated zip codes in America, Waban (02468) ranked third in the nation. The study was based on an index of the percent of college graduates and median household income in each of America's zip codes. It ranked only behind Kenilworth, Illinois and Short Hills, New Jersey, making it the most affluent zip code in the state.[3]

Notable people[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Lawrence Watson Strong, "History and Tradition of Waban."
  2. ^ "Newton's Angier School celebrates 90th birthday". wickedlocal.
  3. ^ https://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/local/2013/11/09/washington-a-world-apart/
  4. ^ [1]

Coordinates: 42°19′40″N 71°13′38″W / 42.32778°N 71.22722°W / 42.32778; -71.22722

External links[]

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