This is a small town with a long history, for an American town. First settled in 1662, incorporated in 1727, we are the middle of the Blackstone Valley. Birthplace of the American Industrial Revolution. We led the nation with some of the first mills and factories.
Ours was a bustling town, industrious and forward-thinking. We had some of the finest schools, research facilities, and hospitals. Our library was among the first free libraries in the nation. We were leaders. We had the first hospital for the mentally ill where they were cared for — as opposed to locking them in cages.
In the early 1900s, the mills and factories moved south, following the cotton. When they moved away, they left crumbling buildings, a polluted river and a persistent unemployment problem. But it wasn’t all bad.
It gave the valley’s natural beauty a chance to recover. By 1973, the Blackstone River was one of the most polluted rivers in the U.S. Today, it’s close to clean. Not completely, but substantially. There’s work still to be done, but it has come a long way. If you give nature a chance, she will come back. Sometimes, she needs a helping hand.
Farmland become forests. Parks were created and historical sites preserved. In 1986, the valley was designated as The John H. Chafee Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor (a National Heritage Corridor — the newest U.S. National Park). It’s dedicated to the history of the early American Industrial Revolution. The corridor stretches across 400,000 acres and includes 24 cities and towns. It follows the course of the river through Worcester County, Massachusetts down to its end in Providence County, Rhode Island. Uxbridge is the middle.
As a 21st century town, we don’t have a lot going for us. Little in the way of industry or business. No shopping centers. No night life or entertainment — not even a movie theater or coffee-house (but there are golf courses). No public transportation. Decent schools, but nothing exceptional. Not much in the way of services and if you live where we do, almost none.
We’re too far from Boston to be a true commuter town and too built up for a resort, though we were, once. I remember driving up here from New York when I was a young woman because the leaves are especially beautiful in the autumn and you could buy a phenomenal pumpkin.
What we have is some history, a bit of classic architecture, and nature. Glorious, rich, and bountiful nature. The area teems with life from turtles and trout, to beaver and deer. You are always near a river in Uxbridge, even if you can’t see it. It meanders through the valley, streams through parks, and under old stone bridges.
The river widens into ponds where herons, swans, geese, and ducks build nests. The trout are back. We even have a couple of designated swimming places and they are never crowded. October in the valley, in Uxbridge, can break your heart with its beauty.
So why don’t we protect it? Why do we act like it has no value? Why does the town act as if nature is the least valuable of our assets, useful for exploitation and always ready to sell it for industrial use?
It is our only asset. If we don’t protect it, this will be an ugly little town in the middle of nowhere. There will be no reason for anyone to want to be here.
It does not have to be that way. There’s an attitude of “oh well, it’s just trees.” This Gypsy Moth infestation has been devastating in this south part of the town. Other parts seem barely affected, but it’s patchy. When you drive up and down Route 122, you will go through sections of trees still in full leaf, then acres of bare oaks.
They can — and do — come back for another year of mass tree defoliation. Given the danger, taking measures to protect from a second year of infestation is cheap compared to the cost of losing the only thing we have going for us.
Trees recover from defoliation once.
Twice in a row? You lose a lot of trees.
Thrice? You will have forests full of dead trees.
How many years would it take to recover from that? Would we recover?
It’s time to treasure the beauty of this town and protect it. The “it’s no big deal” attitude is, not to put too fine a point on it, wrong. Short-sighted in the extreme. It is a very big deal. Our only big deal.
Categories: #BlackstoneRiver, #Photography, Nature, Woods
Wonderfully picturesque. Seems like the opposite of Austin. We don’t have too much history but it’s a boom town right now, but for how long? Everyplace has their ups and downs.
LikeLike
I have friends living in the hill country, which I understand is a sort of suburb of Austin. I hear it’s a nice city. Uxbridge isn’t a city. It was almost a city 100 years ago, but it just stopped when the mills closed. It went to sleep and has not quite woken up. Like many small towns, I guess.
LikeLike
There are a lot of small towns in Texas that have seen better days. The Hill Country is quite large and both Austin and San Antonio are on the eastern edge and there’s about 80 miles between Austin and San Antonio.
LikeLike
My friend Dorothy is on the Austin end. She wanted us to move there, but my husband is allergic to Texas. He had a bad experience with Odessa, Texas as a young man.
LikeLike
I understand. I actually think of myself living in Austin, rather than Texas.
LikeLike
I can understand that. And it’s such a very BIG state, you can do that. It’s very different from one place to another, as I understand it. Weather, culture, topography, everything.
LikeLike
You convinced me. I’m sure that many others would react the same way.
LikeLike
You’d be surprised, I think, at how much flak I get at the very idea that maybe there are better ways to deal with some of the town’s issues … like … preservation of historic buildings. They want to knock everything down and sell the land to the highest bidder. They tried to close the library (who reads books anymore said our councilor). Really bad.
LikeLike
A beautiful town, indeed!
LikeLike
Yes, thank you. I hope it remains so!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Me too, Marilyn!
LikeLike
I must agree with Garry on this. So much beauty and the town has overcome many obstacles. Don’t let a few creepy crawlie insects and ignorant councillors or whatever you call them, ruin everything. Is there a way you could get this piece to those who might possibly read it and do something to preserve the town as it was. Love your selection of photos.
LikeLike
I have tried over the years. Garry and I tried seperately and together. We’ve been involved, we’ver written articles, talked, interviewed … you name it. It’s a very entrenched town. They have a 1950s way of looking at things that goes deep. We both reached a point where we gave up fighting. There’s only so much butting of ones head against a stone wall before you get a really bad headache. It’s up to the younger people in town, now. It’s their future at stake. They need to stand up and make noise. If they do, things will change. if they don’t, the town will go downhill. But it won’t be our generation that does it. It will be my granddaughter and her friends. They are the ones who looking at a future here.
LikeLike
Someone would be wise to use this as a postcard to Uxbridge. It is a beautiful town, Marilyn, and a beautiful tribute.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It is beautiful. Even though we’ve lived here a long time, I’m sometimes overwhelmed by its beauty. It’s a gem and it ought to be treasured.
LikeLiked by 3 people
We do live in a beautiful area with terrific history. Maybe you could submit this to one of the local papers with a little more text regards our elected officials. The pictures and backgrounder stuff soften the hard message. Just a suggestion.
And, maybe it’s something I could do as a video. Mebbe.
LikeLike
It’s something to think about. I think, though, the young people in the town need to stand up and show they care. No one listens to us. We’re the “old people.”
LikeLike