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Newton was settled as a part of Cambridge in 1630, was incorporated as a town known as Cambridge Village in 1688, then the town was renamed to Newton in 1766 and became a city in 1873. Currently Newton is a part of Massachusetts' Middlesex County. Newton is made up of 13 villages: Auburndale, Chestnut Hill, Newton Centre, Newton Corner, Newton Highlands, Newton Lower Falls, Newton Upper Falls, Newtonville, Nonantum, Oak Hill, Thompsonville, Waban and West Newton. Newton is located in Easten Massachusetts, bordered by Needham, Wellesley, Weston, Waltham, Watertown, Brookline and Boston. The city is a distance of 8 miles west of Boston and is accessible to Boston on both a commuter rail train and the Green "D" line train. On the Worcester commuter rail Newton has three stops (Auburndale, West Newton and Newtonville) and on the Green "D" line seven stops (Riverside, Woodland, Waban, Eliot, Newton Highlands, Newton Centre and Chestnut Hill).
The city of Newton has fifteen elementary schools (Angier, Bowen, Burr, Cabot, Countryside, Franklin, Horace Mann, Lincoln-Eliot, Mason-Rice, Memorial-Spaulding, Peirce, Underwood, Ward, Williams, Zervas), four middle schools (Bigelow, Brown, F.A. Day, Oak Hill) and two high schools (Newton North and Newton South). |
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