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  1. Arlington is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. The town is six miles (10 km) northwest of Boston, and its population was 46,308 at the 2020 census.

    • Arlington Center
    • Spy Pond Park
    • Minuteman Commuter Bikeway
    • Cyrus Dallin Art Museum
    • Jason Russell House
    • The Regent Theatre
    • Old Schwamb Mill
    • Robbins Farm Park
    • Capitol Theatre
    • Arlington Reservoir

    There’s much to admire about downtown Arlington, with its museums, entertainment amenities, historic buildings, acres of green space and easy access for pedestrians and cyclists via the Minuteman Commuter Bikeway. One prominent building is the Robbins Library (1892), in an Italian Renaissance style, and containing the country’s oldest continuously ...

    This green lung for Arlington is just a few steps from downtown and is linked by the Minuteman Commuter Bikeway. Formed by a retreating glacier at the end of the last Ice Age, Sky Pond covers more than 100 acres, and the public park here wraps around the northern and eastern shore. There’s a waterfront trail parallel to the bikeway, connecting a ch...

    Between the Bedford Depot in the northwest and Alewife Station in the southeast, this 10-mile rail trail is both a useful commuter artery and a compelling trip back to the first hours of the Revolutionary War in April 1775. Running through Arlington, the Minuteman Commuter Bikeway tallies closely with the famous Midnight Ride made by Paul Revere to...

    The sculptor Cyrus Edwin Dallin (1861-1944) was a fascinating figure who moved to Arlington in 1900 and spent the rest of his life in the city. He is best known for Boston’s equestrian statue of Paul Revere (1885), and for Appeal to the Great Spirit (1908) in front of Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts. The latter was typical of Dallin’s oeuvre, as he de...

    On April 19, 1775, this house and its surrounding yard witnessed the bloodiest skirmish in the first battle in the Revolutionary War. Arlington (then Menotomy), was in the path of the British march to Boston, and they cleared every dwelling to eliminate snipers. The fighting continued to the Jason Russell house, where a company of minute-men engage...

    This historic entertainment institution in downtown Arlington was built as a vaudeville stage using innovative fire-proof construction methods in 1916. The Regent Theatre’s 500-seat auditorium was revamped a decade later to screen movies and remained a local cinema until the mid-1990s. Since then this venue has become a vibrant performing arts cent...

    In Arlington you’ll have a unique opportunity to visit what is thought to be the oldest continuously-operating mill in the United States. By Mill Brook, the site of the Old Schwamb Mill was developed in the early 1680s, and the present building went up in 1861. Now, just as it did then, the Old Schwamb Mill produces hand-turned oval and circular fr...

    On former farmland donated to the city by the wealthy Robbins family, this park sits on quite a slope, with sports amenities at the top and a playground towards the bottom. Standing on the rise you’ll get a complete panorama of the Boston skyline, about seven miles to the southeast. This is one of the best hills in the area for sledding in winter, ...

    To watch the latest Hollywood releases, Arlington’s main destination is this six-screen theater in an historic movie palace from 1925. Found in East Arlington, the Capitol Theatre was turned into a multiplex in the mid-1980s, and each auditorium has a style matching the original interiors. Outside, the marquee is also unchanged since the theater’s ...

    Straddling the line with Lexington is the 65-acre reservoir constructed in the early 1870s to serve as Arlignton’s water supply. In little more than two decades, Arlington had joined the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA), making the reservoir redundant. So since the 1890s this place has been a recreation area, for walking, swimming, bo...

  2. Oct 9, 2010 · Arlington Commemorates October In October Arlington commemorates and celebrates Shardiya Navratri, World Mental Health Day, Hispanic Heritage Month, LGBTQIA+ History Month, Sukkot, Diwali, Rosh Hashanah, Indigenous Peoples' Day, and more. Learn more.

  3. Arlington is a bustling suburb of Boston. Visit and you’ll find history, art, theater, kid-friendly fun and interesting neighborhoods. You’ll also find bike paths, lush open spaces, unique, independently owned shops, and a ton of dining options. Make a plan to visit soon and discover all that Arlington has to offer. WELCOME TO ARLINGTON.

  4. Arlington, founded over 350 years ago, remains proud of its history, even as it has grown into a thoroughly modern community.

  5. Arlington, town (township), Middlesex county, east-central Massachusetts, U.S. It is a northwestern suburb of Boston. Settled in 1635 as part of Cambridge, it was known as Menotomy (from an Algonquian word meaning “swift waters”) until separately incorporated as West Cambridge in 1807.

  6. Arlington is a town of 46,000 people (2020) in Massachusetts. It is a largely residential town; many of its residents are employed in Cambridge, Boston and surrounding towns. It has several historical sites that reflect its history that dates back to the early 17th century. Belmont is a town with a population of 27,000 (2020). Understand. [edit]