Jump to content

Lynn, Massachusetts

From Niidae Wiki
Revision as of 00:11, 22 April 2025 by imported>Citation bot (Add: work, authors 1-1. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Neko-chan | #UCB_webform 150/500)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Short description Template:Other uses Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox settlement

Lynn is the eighth-largest municipality in Massachusetts, United States,<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore</ref> and the largest city in Essex County. Situated on the Atlantic Ocean, Template:Convert north of the Boston city line at Suffolk Downs, Lynn is part of Greater Boston's urban inner core<ref>http://www.mapc.org/icc Template:Webarchive . Metropolitan Area Planning Commission. Retrieved on 2016-06-06.</ref> and is a major economic and cultural center of the North Shore.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Settled by Europeans in 1629, Lynn is the 5th oldest colonial settlement in the Commonwealth.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> An early industrial center, Lynn was long colloquially referred to as the "City of Sin", owing to its historical reputation for crime and vice. Today, however, the city is known for its<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="The Boston Globe">Template:Cite news</ref> immigrant population, historic architecture, downtown cultural district, loft-style apartments, and public parks and open spaces,<ref>https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2012/08/08/lynn-sin-label-outdated-residents-insist/YhFRQtTGjftW7APTZsLdQL/story.html Template:Webarchive . Boston Globe. Retrieved on 2016-06-06.</ref> which include the oceanfront Lynn Shore Reservation; the 2,200-acre, Frederick Law Olmsted-designed Lynn Woods Reservation; and the High Rock Reservation and Park designed by Olmsted's sons.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Lynn also is home to Lynn Heritage State Park,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the southernmost portion of the Essex Coastal Scenic Byway,<ref>http://www.essexheritage.org/aboutbyway Template:Webarchive . Essex National Heritage Area. Retrieved on 2016-06-07.</ref> and the seaside, National Register-listed Diamond Historic District.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The population was 101,253 at the 2020 United States census.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

[edit]

Template:See also

Indigenous

[edit]

The area that is now known as Lynn was inhabited for thousands of years by Native Americans prior to English colonization in the 1600s. At the time of European contact, the area today known as Lynn was primarily inhabited by the Naumkeag people<ref name="Perley-1912">Template:Cite book</ref> under the powerful sachem Nanepashemet who controlled territory from the Mystic to the Merrimack Rivers. Colonists would not establish a legal agreement with the Naumkeag over the use of their land in Lynn until 1686 after a smallpox epidemic in 1633, King Philip's War, and missionary efforts significantly reduced their numbers and confined them to the Praying Town of Natick.<ref name="Perley-1912" />

17th century

[edit]

English colonists settled Lynn not long after the 1607 establishment of Jamestown, Virginia and the 1620 arrival of the Mayflower at Plymouth.<ref>https://archive.org/details/historyoflynn02lewi History of Lynn (1829). Retrieved on 2016-03-16</ref> European settlement of the area was begun in 1629 by Edmund Ingalls, followed by John Tarbox of Lancashire in 1631. The area today encompassing Lynn was originally incorporated in 1629 as Saugus, the Massachusett name for the area. Three years after the settlement in Salem, five families moved onto Naumkeag lands in the interior of Lynn, then known as Saugus, and the Tomlin family constructed a large mill between today's Sluice and Flax Ponds. The mill not only supplied grains and sustenance for the settlers and trade with the Naumkeag people, but was used to create brews and many fermented casks of hops and wines to send back to King George in England.Template:Citation needed

Lynn takes its name from King's Lynn, Norfolk, England, in honor of Reverend Samuel Whiting (Senior), Lynn's first official minister who arrived from King's Lynn in 1637.<ref name="Whiting_1637">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="cihist">Brief History of Lynn Template:Webarchive at City of Lynn website</ref>

A noteworthy early Lynn colonist, Thomas Halsey, left Lynn to settle the East End of Long Island, where he and several others founded the Town of Southampton, New York. The resulting Halsey House—the oldest extant frame house in New York State (1648)—is now open to the public, under the aegis of the Southampton Colonial Society.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

As English settlement pushed deeper into Naumkeag territories, disease, missionary efforts, and loss of access to seasonal hunting, farming, and fishing grounds caused significant disruption to Naumkeag lifeways. In 1675, Naumkeag sachem Wenepoykin joined Metacomet in resisting English colonization in King Philip's War, for which he was enslaved and sent to Barbados.<ref name="Perley-1912" /> In 1686, under pressure to demonstrate legal title for lands they occupied during the administrative restructuring of the Dominion of New England, the selectmen of Lynn and Reading purchased a deed from Wenopoykin's heirs Kunkshamooshaw and Quonopohit for 16 pounds of sterling silver,<ref name="Perley-1912" /> though by this time they and most surviving Naumkeag were residents of the Natick Praying Town.

Further European settlement of Lynn led to several independent towns being formed, with Reading created in 1644; Lynnfield in 1782; Saugus in 1815; Swampscott in 1852; and Nahant in 1853. The City of Lynn was incorporated on May 14, 1850.<ref name="Semi-Centennial_Incorporation"/><ref name="cityoflynn.net">Template:Cite web</ref>

Colonial Lynn was an early center of tannery and shoe-making, which began in 1635. The boots worn by Continental Army soldiers during the Revolutionary War were made in Lynn, and the shoe-making industry drove the city's growth into the early nineteenth century.<ref name=cihist/> This legacy is reflected in the city's seal, which features a colonial boot.<ref>City of Lynn Template:Webarchive official website</ref>

19th century

[edit]
File:Lynn Historical Aerial.jpg
Aerial Illustration of Lynn, Template:Circa

In 1816, a mail stage coach was operating through Lynn. By 1836, 23 stage coaches left the Lynn Hotel for Boston each day. The Eastern Railroad Line between Salem and East Boston opened on August 28, 1838. This was later merged with the Boston and Maine Railroad and called the Eastern Division. In 1847 telegraph wires passed through Lynn, but no telegraph service station was built until 1858.<ref>USigs.org Template:Webarchive, History of Lynn Ch2-1814–1864 pub1890.</ref>

File:Lynn Diamond Historic District Nahant St.jpg
Nahant Street in Diamond Historic District

During the middle of the nineteenth century, estates and beach cottages were constructed along Lynn's shoreline, and the city's Atlantic coastline became a fashionable summer resort.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Many of the structures built during this period are today situated within the National Register-listed Diamond Historic District.

Further inland, industrial activity contemporaneously expanded in Lynn. Shoe manufacturers, led by Charles A. Coffin and Silas Abbott Barton, invested in the early electric industry, specifically in 1883 with Elihu Thomson, Edwin J. Houston, and their Thomson-Houston Electric Company.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> That company merged with Edison Electric Company of Schenectady, New York, forming General Electric in 1892, with the two original GE plants being in Lynn and Schenectady. Coffin served as the first president of General Electric.<ref>Amphilsoc.org Template:Webarchive, Elihu Thomson Papers at the American Philosophical Society</ref>

Initially the General Electric plant specialized in arc lights, electric motors, and meters. Later it specialized in aircraft electrical systems and components, and aircraft engines were built in Lynn during WWII. That engine plant evolved into the current jet engine plant during WWII because of research contacts at MIT in Cambridge.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Gerhard Neumann was a key player in jet engine group at GE in Lynn. The continuous interaction of material science research at MIT and the resulting improvements in jet engine efficiency and power have kept the jet engine plant in Lynn ever since.Template:Citation needed

File:Soldiers' Monument, Library and common, Lynn, Mass.jpg
Postcard depicting a soldier monument in Lynn, MA

One of the largest strikes of the early labor movement began in the shoe factories of Lynn on February 22, 1860, when Lynn shoemakers marched through the streets to their workplaces and handed in their tools, protesting reduced wages.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Known as the 1860 New England Shoemakers Strike, it was one of the earliest strikes of its kind in the United States.Template:Citation needed

In 1841, abolitionist Frederick Douglass, moved to Lynn as a fugitive slave. Douglass wrote his first autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, while living in Lynn. The publication would become Douglass's best-known work. Douglass, his wife, and their five children lived in Lynn until 1848.<ref name="itemlive.org-2018">Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1870, Esther Hill Hawks, a renowned a female physician, and activist during the American Civil War, moved to Lynn becoming one of the three first female physicians in Lynn, providing her gynecology services to many women. Later on in 1874, opening her own practice.

On February 1, 1866, Mary Baker Eddy experienced the "fall in Lynn", in which Eddy was badly injured but reportedly healed herself through prayer alone. This was a significant milestone in the development of the Christian Science religion.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1889 a massive fire swept through the downtown of Lynn, and would not be matched in size until nearly 100 years later.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> At the time the loss was the third largest from fire in New England history. A total of 296 building were destroyed, including 142 homes, 25 stores, the Central Square railroad depot, four banks and four newspaper buildings. It was estimated that 200 families were made homeless and 10,000 jobs were lost. Estimates put the total loss as high as Template:US$.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

20th century

[edit]

Lynn experienced a wave of immigration during the late 1800s and early 1900s. During the 30 years between 1885 and 1915, Lynn's immigrant population increased from 9,800 to 29,500, representing nearly one-third of the city's total population.<ref name="jhcns.org">Template:Cite web</ref> Polish and Russian Jews were the largest single group, numbering more than 6,000.<ref name="jhcns.org" /> The first Jewish settlers in Lynn, a group of twenty Hasidic European families, mostly from Russia, formed the Congregation Anshai Sfard, a Hasidic, conservative Jewish synagogue in 1888.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Catholic churches catering to the needs of specific language and ethnic groups also testify to the waves of immigrants. St. Jean Baptiste parish, eventually including a grammar school and high school, was founded in 1886, primarily for French-Canadians. Holy Family Church conducted services in Italian beginning in 1922, and St. Michael's church also provided church services and a grammar school for the Polish-speaking community, beginning in 1906.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> St. Patrick's church and school was a focus of the Irish-American community in Lynn.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> St. George's Greek Orthodox Church was founded in Lynn in 1905.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Later in the 20th century, the city became an important center of greater Boston's Latino community.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Additionally, several thousand Cambodians settled in Lynn between 1975 and 1979 and in the early 1980s.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>

At the beginning of the 20th century, Lynn was the world-leader in the production of shoes. 234 factories produced more than a million pairs of shoes each day, thanks in part to mechanization of the process by an African-American immigrant named Jan Ernst Matzeliger.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> From 1924 until 1974, the Lynn Independent Industrial Shoemaking School operated in the city.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> However, production declined throughout the 20th century, and the last shoe factory closed in 1981.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In the early 1900s, the Metropolitan District Commission acquired several coastal properties in Lynn and Nahant, in order to create Lynn Shore and Nahant Beach Reservations, and to construct adjoining Lynn Shore Drive.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> When it opened to the public in 1910, Lynn Shore Drive catalyzed new development along Lynn's coastline, yielding many of the early 20th century structures that constitute a majority of the contributing resources found in the National Register-listed Diamond Historic District.<ref name="cityoflynn.net"/>

In 1970, Massachusetts authorized rent control in municipalities with more than 50,000 residents.<ref name=enacted>Template:Cite web</ref> Voters in Lynn, Somerville, Brookline, and Cambridge subsequently adopted rent control.Template:R Voters in Lynn approved a measure to continue rent control measures, which had been in place since February 1972, on November 7, 1972, by a 22,229 to 15,568 margin.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On June 4, 1974, the city council, led by mayor David L. Phillips, voted 7–4 in favor of abolishing the existing rent control measures, replacing them with a "Rent Grievance and Elderly Assistance Board."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite court</ref>

During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Lynn suffered several large fires. On November 28, 1981, a devastating inferno engulfed several former shoe factories, located at Broad and Washington Streets. Seventeen downtown buildings were destroyed in less than twelve hours, with property losses estimated to be totaling at least Template:US$. At least 18 businesses were affected, resulting in the estimated loss of 1,500 jobs.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The Lynn campus of the North Shore Community College, planning for which was already underway at the time of the fire, now occupies much of the burned area.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

File:Lynn Washington St at Broad St.jpg
Lynn Washington Street at Broad Street
View over Lynn Shore Drive to Nahant and Boston
View over Lynn Shore Drive to Nahant and Boston

Some data suggest a reputation for crime and vice in Lynn.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In order to counter its reputation as "the city of sin", Lynn launched a "City Of Firsts" advertising campaign in the early 1990s, which promoted Lynn as having:Template:Citation needed

In a further effort to rebrand the municipality, city solicitor Michael Barry proposed renaming the city Ocean Park in 1997, but the initiative was unsuccessful.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Despite losing much of its industrial base during the 20th century, Lynn remained home to many companies, such as:

21st century

[edit]

In the early 2000s, the renovation and adaptive re-use of downtown historic structures, together with new construction, launched a revitalization of Lynn, which remains ongoing.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Arts, culture, and entertainment have been at the forefront of this revitalization, with new arts organizations, cultural venues, public art projects,<ref name="Murals enliven downtown Lynn">Template:Cite news</ref> and restaurants emerging in the downtown area.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2012, the Massachusetts Cultural Council named downtown Lynn one of the first state-recognized arts and culture districts in Massachusetts.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2015, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker established a task force, composed of representatives of multiple state and municipal public agencies, to further Lynn's revitalization.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:Lynn Flatiron Building Under Renovation.jpg
Lynn "Flatiron" Building Undergoing Conversion to Loft Apartments, November 2016
File:Lynn Public Library.JPG
Public Library
File:Lynn17.JPG
High Rock Tower Reservation

Formerly vacant industrial buildings continue to be converted into loft spaces,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and historic homes, particularly Lynn's Diamond Historic District, are being restored.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2016, several large land parcels in Lynn were acquired by major developers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In November 2018, construction began on downtown Lynn's first luxury midrise—a 259-unit, 10-story building on Monroe Street.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> in December 2019, ground was broken on a 331-unit waterfront development on Carroll Parkway.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Many of the recent and pending large real estate projects in Lynn are Transit-oriented developments, sited within a half-mile of Lynn station, which provides 20-minute train service to North Station.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Lynn's revitalization has been bolstered by the city's emergence as a center of creative placemaking.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 2017, swaths of the city's downtown were transformed by a series of large-scale murals, painted on buildings by local, national, and international artists, as part of the city's inaugural Beyond Walls festival.<ref name="Murals enliven downtown Lynn"/> Light-based interventions, including projections onto High Rock Tower,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> the installation of vintage neon signs on downtown buildings, and large-scale LED-illuminations of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority rail underpasses bisecting Lynn's Downtown,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> also have been deployed.<ref name="The Boston Globe"/> In 2017, Mount Vernon Street, in the core of the downtown Central Square area, began to host block parties, food trucks, and other special events.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In recent years, Lynn has attracted a substantial and growing LGBT population.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In April 2018, The Boston Globe named Lynn one of the "Top spots to live in Greater Boston in 2018."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

On August 18, 2021, the new Frederick Douglass Park on Exchange Street was dedicated, directly across the street from the site of the Central Square railroad depot where Douglass was forcibly removed from the train in 1841. The park features a bronze bas-relief sculpture of Douglass.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The park had been in the works since at least 2019 when a bill was filed in the Massachusetts Senate to designate the park area and its management by the Massachusetts DCR.

On September 16, 2021, Mayor McGee introduced Vision Lynn, a 20-year comprehensive planning project to expand Lynn's diversity and improve infrastructure further.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the following year and a half, Lynn's Planning Department held many opportunities for Lynners to discuss what they see for the future of the city. On April 10, 2023,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> a draft of the plan was shared on the planning departments website to allow for greater public comment. After May 15, 2023, the public comment window will be closed and the committee will release a final draft to be endorsed and adopted by the city.

Lynn earned the moniker "Condom Capital of the USA"<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> after Global Protection, a subsidiary of Karex, the world's largest condom manufacturer, relocated to the former Garelick Farms facility.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Top employers

[edit]
# Employer # of employees
1 GE Aerospace 2,500
2 Lynn Public Schools 1,243
3 North Shore Community College 991
4 All Care VNA 630
5 Eastern Bank 500
6 Kettle Cuisine 500

Geography

[edit]

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of Template:Convert, of which Template:Convert is land and Template:Convert (19.87%) is water. Lynn is located beside Massachusetts Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. Lynn's shoreline is divided in half by the town of Nahant, which divides Lynn Harbor to the south from Nahant Bay to the north. The city lies north of the Saugus River, and is also home to several brooks, as well as several ponds, the largest being Breed's Pond and Walden Pond (which has no relation to a similarly named pond in Concord). More than one-quarter of the town's land is covered by the Lynn Woods Reservation, which takes up much of the land in the northwestern part of the city. The city is also home to two beaches, Lynn Beach and King's Beach, both of which lie along Nahant Bay, as well as a boat ramp in Lynn Harbor.

Lynn is located in the southern part of Essex County and is Template:Convert northeast of Boston and Template:Convert west-southwest of Cape Ann. The city is bordered by Nahant to the southeast, Swampscott to the east, Salem to the northeast, Peabody to the north, Lynnfield to the northwest, Saugus to the west and Revere (in Suffolk County) to the south. Lynn's water rights extend into Nahant Bay and share Lynn Harbor with Nahant. There is no land connection to Revere; the only connection is the General Edwards Bridge across the Pines River. Besides its downtown district, Lynn is also divided into East Lynn and West Lynn, which are further divided into even smaller areas.

Lynn is loosely segmented into the following neighborhoods:

Central:

  • Downtown / Business District
  • Central Square

West Lynn:

  • Pine Hill
  • McDonough Sq./ Barry Park
  • Tower Hill / Austin Sq. – Saugus River
  • The Commons
  • The Brickyard
  • Walnut St./Lynnhurst
  • Veteran's Village

East Lynn:

  • Diamond District / Lynn Shore
  • Wyoma Sq.
  • The Highlands
  • The Fay Estates
  • Ward 1 / Lynnfield St.
  • Goldfish Pond
  • The Meadow / Keaney Park

Climate

[edit]

Lynn experiences cold, snowy winters and warm, humid summers. The climate is similar to that of Boston.

According to the Köppen climate classification, Lynn has either a hot-summer humid continental climate (abbreviated Dfa), or a hot-summer humid sub-tropical climate (abbreviated Cfa), depending on the isotherm used.

Template:Weather box

Demographics

[edit]

Template:Historical populations

File:Race and ethnicity 2020 Lynn, MA.png
Map of racial distribution in Lynn, 2020 U.S. census. Each dot is one person: Template:Legend inline Template:Legend inline Template:Legend inline Template:Legend inline Template:Legend inline Template:Legend inline

2020 census

[edit]
Lynn, Massachusetts – Racial and ethnic composition
Template:Nobold
Race / Ethnicity (NH = Non-Hispanic) Pop 2000<ref name=2000CensusP004>Template:Cite web</ref> Pop 2010<ref name=2010CensusP2>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Partial<ref name=2020CensusP2>Template:Cite web</ref> % 2000 % 2010 Template:Partial
White alone (NH) 55,630 42,969 34,536 62.47% 47.57% 34.11%
Black or African American alone (NH) 8,165 9,494 10,735 9.17% 10.51% 10.60%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 168 178 115 0.19% 0.20% 0.11%
Asian alone (NH) 5,686 6,210 6,822 6.39% 6.87% 6.74%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 39 37 28 0.04% 0.04% 0.03%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 349 407 1,077 0.39% 0.45% 1.06%
Mixed Race or Multi-Racial (NH) 2,630 2,021 3,380 2.95% 2.24% 3.34%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 16,383 29,013 44,560 18.40% 32.12% 44.01%
Total 89,050 90,329 101,253 100.00% 100.00% 100.00%

2010 census

[edit]

As of the census of 2010, there were 90,329 people, 33,310 households, and 20,988 families residing in the city.<ref name="american_fact_finder">Template:Cite web</ref>

The racial makeup of the city was:

Hispanic or Latino of any race were 32.1% of the population (10.5% Dominican, 6.3% Guatemalan, 5.4% Puerto Rican, 2.8% Salvadoran, 1.7% Mexican, 0.6% Honduran, 0.4% Colombian, 0.4% Spanish, 0.2% Peruvian, 0.2% Cuban).<ref name="american_fact_finder" />

Cambodians form the largest Asian origin group in Lynn, with 3.9% of Lynn's total population of Cambodian ancestry. Other large Asian groups are those of Vietnamese (1.0%), Indian (0.4%), Chinese (0.3%), and Laotian (0.2%) ancestry.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 24.9% under the age of 18 and 75.1% over 18. Males accounted for 49% and females 51%.<ref name="american_fact_finder" />

Between 2009 and 2013, the median household income in Lynn was $44,849. The per capita income was $22,982. About 21.0% of the population was considered below the poverty line.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Asian population

[edit]

Template:See also In 1990 Lynn had 2,993 persons of Asian origin. In 2000 Lynn had 5,730 Asians, an increase of over 91%, making it one of ten Massachusetts cities with the largest Asian populations. In 2000 the city had 3,050 persons of Cambodian origin, making them the largest Asian subgroup in Lynn. That year the city had 1,112 persons of Vietnamese origin and 353 persons of Indian origin. From 1990 to 2000 the Vietnamese and Indian populations increased by 192% and 264%, respectively.<ref name=Buote>Buote, Brenda J, "Asian population up in small cities" (Archive). Boston Globe. June 13, 2004. Retrieved on September 10, 2015.</ref>

By 2004 the Cambodian community in Lynn was establishing the Khmer Association of the North Shore.<ref name=Buote/>

Income

[edit]

Template:See also Data is from the 2009–2013 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Rank ZIP Code (ZCTA) Per capita
income
Median
household
income
Median
family
income
Population Number of
households
Massachusetts $35,763 $66,866 $84,900 6,605,058 2,530,147
Essex County $35,167 $67,311 $84,185 750,808 286,008
1 01904 $33,409 $80,903 $91,409 18,803 6,833
United States $28,155 $53,046 $64,719 311,536,594 115,610,216
Lynn $22,982 $44,849 $53,557 90,788 33,122
2 01901 $20,625 $23,467 $24,125 2,023 1,096
3 01902 $20,391 $37,275 $45,276 44,827 16,528
4 01905 $19,934 $42,490 $42,163 25,090 8,642

Government

[edit]

Template:See also Lynn is represented in the state legislature by officials elected from the following districts:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Lynn presidential election results<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Year Democratic Republican Third parties Total Votes Margin
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|2024 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|60.31% 18,982 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|37.70% 11,865 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|1.99% 625 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|31,472 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|22.51%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|2020 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|68.93% 24,662 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|29.14% 10,425 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|1.93% 690 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|35,777 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|39.79%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|2016 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|67.51% 22,164 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|28.36% 9,311 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|4.13% 1,355 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|32,830 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|39.15%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|2012 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|72.09% 23,124 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|26.54% 8,512 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|1.37% 440 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|32,076 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|45.55%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|2008 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|68.18% 20,276 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|29.32% 8,719 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|2.50% 744 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|29,739 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|38.86%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|2004 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|69.17% 19,372 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|29.90% 8,373 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.94% 262 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|28,007 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|39.27%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|2000 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|68.87% 18,836 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|24.78% 6,776 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|6.35% 1,738 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|27,350 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|44.10%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1996 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|67.84% 18,370 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|20.81% 5,634 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|11.36% 3,075 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|27,079 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|47.03%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1992 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|50.43% 15,275 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|24.27% 7,350 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|25.31% 7,665 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|30,290 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|25.12%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1988 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|59.30% 18,540 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|38.96% 12,182 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|1.73% 542 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|31,264 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|20.34%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1984 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|53.90% 17,103 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|45.52% 14,445 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.57% 182 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|31,730 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|8.38%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1980 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|49.20% 15,777 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|37.32% 11,966 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|13.48% 4,323 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|32,066 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|11.88%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1976 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|62.24% 21,430 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|33.63% 11,580 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|4.13% 1,422 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|34,432 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|28.61%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1972 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|62.06% 24,124 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|37.28% 14,490 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.66% 255 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|38,869 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|24.79%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1968 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|71.93% 28,740 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|23.77% 9,500 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|4.30% 1,718 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|39,958 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|48.15%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1964 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|84.07% 36,671 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|15.54% 6,779 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.39% 169 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|43,619 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|68.53%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1960 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|64.73% 31,001 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|34.96% 16,746 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.31% 149 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|47,896 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|29.76%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|1956 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|49.68% 24,191 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|50.05% 24,368 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.27% 131 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|48,690 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|0.36%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1952 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|52.19% 27,460 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|47.24% 24,856 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.56% 297 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|52,613 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|4.95%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1948 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|59.36% 27,954 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|37.70% 17,753 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|2.93% 1,382 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|47,089 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|21.66%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1944 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|57.10% 26,578 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|42.60% 19,826 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.30% 140 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|46,544 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|14.51%
align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|1940 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|55.84% 26,509 align="center" Template:Party shading/Republican|43.43% 20,617 align="center" Template:Party shading/Independent|0.73% 346 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|47,472 align="center" Template:Party shading/Democratic|12.41%
Voter registration and party enrollment as of October 26, 2024 – Lynn<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Party Number of voters Percentage
Template:Party color cell Democratic 20,181 32.39%
Template:Party color cell Republican 3,529 5.66%
Template:Party color cell Unenrolled 38,029 61.04%
Template:Party color cell Political Designations 179 0.29%
Total 62,305 100%

Arts and culture

[edit]

Notable locations

[edit]

Template:See also

Parks and recreation

[edit]

Lynn was among the first communities in America to set aside a significant portion of its total land areas for open space—initially to secure a common public wood source. In 1693, Lynn restricted use of areas today encompassed by the Lynn Woods Reservation, and imposed fines for removing young trees. Although this land area was subsequently divided, in 1706, rights of public access were maintained, and, during the 19th century, recreational use of the woods increased.<ref name="nps.gov">Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1850, the first hiking club in New England—the Lynn Exploring Circle—was established. In 1881, a group of Lynn residents organized the Trustees of the Free Public Forest to protect Lynn Woods by acquiring land and gifting it to the city.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Frederick Law Olmsted was hired as a design consultant for Lynn Woods, in 1889, whereupon he recommended keeping the land wild, adding only limited public access improvements.<ref name="nps.gov"/>

Lynn Woods was among the natural resources that inspired landscape architect Charles Eliot and others to create Boston's Metropolitan Park System. In 1893, Eliot noted that Lynn Woods "constitute the largest and most interesting, because the wildest, public domain in all New England."<ref name="nps.gov"/>

Today, Lynn has 49 parks encompassing 1,540 aggregate acres, representing about 22% of the city's total 6,874-acre land area. Consequently, 96% of all Lynn residents live within a 10-minute walk of a park or open space.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The city's parks and open spaces include:

Education

[edit]
File:Lynn English High School.jpg
Lynn English High School

Lynn has three public high schools (Lynn English, Lynn Classical, and Lynn Vocational Technical High School), four middle/junior high schools, two alternative schools, and, as of Autumn 2015, 18 elementary schools.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> They are served by the Lynn Public Schools district.

KIPP: the Knowledge Is Power Program operates the KIPP Academy Lynn, a 5–8 charter middle school, and a charter high school called KIPP Academy Lynn Collegiate.

There is also an independent Catholic high school located in the city, St. Mary's High School. There are two Catholic primary schools, St. Pius V School and the now defunct Sacred Heart School. There is also one interdenominational Christian school, North Shore Christian School.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

North Shore Community College has a campus in downtown Lynn (with its other campuses located in Danvers and Beverly).

Infrastructure

[edit]

Transportation

[edit]

Lynn has no Interstate or controlled-access highways, the nearest being U.S. Route 1 in Saugus and Lynnfield, and the combined Interstate 95 and Route 128 in Lynnfield. (The original design of Interstate 95 called for a route that would have paralleled Route 107 and crossed Lynn—including Lynn Woods—but the project was cancelled in 1972.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>) However, Massachusetts State Route 1A, Route 107, Route 129 and Route 129A all pass through Lynn. Route 107 passes from southwest to northeast along a relatively straight right-of-way through the city. It shares a Template:Convert concurrency with Route 129A, which follows Route 129's old route through the city between its parent route and Route 1A. Route 129 passes from the north of the city before turning south and passing through the downtown area and becoming concurrent with Route 1A for Template:Convert. Route 1A passes from Revere along the western portion of the Lynnway, a divided highway within the city, before passing further inland into Swampscott. The Lynnway itself runs along the coastline, leading to a rotary, which links the road to Nahant Road and Lynn Shore Drive, which follows the coast into Swampscott.

Lynn is served by Lynn station on the Newburyport/Rockport Line of the MBTA Commuter Rail system, as well as River Works station (which is for GE Aviation employees only). A number of other stations were open until the mid 20th century. Numerous MBTA bus routes also connect Lynn with Boston and the neighboring communities. An extension of the Blue Line to downtown Lynn has been proposed, but not funded. A ferry service to downtown Boston was operated in 2014, 2015, and 2017.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The nearest airport is Boston's Logan International Airport, about Template:Convert south.

Notable people

[edit]

In literature and the arts

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Template:Reflist

Bibliography

[edit]

Template:See also

[edit]

Template:Commons category Template:Collier's poster

Template:Geographic location Template:Essex County, Massachusetts Template:Greater Boston Template:Massachusetts Template:New England Template:Northeast Megalopolis Template:Authority control