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== History == {{More citations needed section|date=June 2007}} The area itself is named after jurist and Civil War general [[Charles Devens]]. In 2011, the CDP tried to secede from Ayer, Shirley, and Harvard and become the 352nd town in the state but failed the vote. Some residents are still looking to secede to become a town. ===Military use=== {{Main|Fort Devens}} The area operated as Camp Devens and later [[Fort Devens]] from 1917 to 1996. The Fort's sitting was due primarily to its location at a major hub of the rail network in New England. The [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] base was officially closed in 1996 after 79 years of service. Some parcels were retained by the federal military for use as the Devens Reserve Forces Training Area, reactivated as a smaller Fort Devens in 2007. ===Civilian use=== The process for distribution of surplus land parcels on the former Fort Devens allowed the [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]], [[Shriver Job Corps]], [[Massachusetts National Guard]], [[Massachusetts Veterans]] and [[MassDevelopment]]<ref>[http://www.massdevelopment.com/ MassDevelopment website], massdevelopment.com. Accessed August 25, 2022.</ref> to acquire the land. The Bureau of Prisons established the [[Federal Medical Center, Devens]], a prison hospital. The bulk of the land was purchased by MassDevelopment for $17 million. MassDevelopment is a quasi-public development authority that has been given the task of turning Devens into a residential and business community. Since the closing of the military base, many of the existing buildings have been renovated or reconstructed; housing developments now exist, along with a growing business park, a new hotel, restaurants, two disc golf courses and a [[golf]] course. Veterans of the [[United States Army Security Agency|Army Security Agency]] have also expressed interest in building a museum there, as Fort Devens was their principal training facility for more than two decades.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} A comprehensive disposition process has been ongoing since 2003, charged with determining the future political governance of Devens. During 2005-06 it was determined that the governance scenario best suited for the regional stakeholders was to create a new independent town. On October 24, 2006, a vote to confirm the disposition recommendation for future governance was voted down by two of the six stakeholders, the adjoining towns of Harvard and Ayer (residents of Shirley, the Devens residents, MassDevelopment and the Devens Enterprise Commission supported the resolution). On November 7, 2006, during the state elections, the second opportunity to vote on Devens disposition had only Harvard voting against the scenario with the towns of Ayer and Shirley supporting Devens as a town. Devens's disposition will now be determined by another disposition process or by the state legislature. Residents of Devens vote in either Harvard or Ayer but still have no elected representatives that have municipal authority in Devens. MassDevelopment maintains the utilities (such as gas, electricity and water) and contracts out public safety services such as firefighting and police.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} Devens is home to, among other enterprises, [[New England Studios]], a film studio opened in 2014 <ref name=Gee>{{cite news|last=Gee|first=Kelsey|title=In the Works: Film Studio|url=https://www.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10000872396390443517104577573421140617792|access-date=January 1, 2014|newspaper=[[The Wall Street Journal]]|date=August 7, 2012}}</ref> and [[Commonwealth Fusion Systems]], a [[Corporate spin-off|spinoff]] of the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] which raised $1.8 billion in December 2021 to build a [[tokamak]] fusion device.
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