Wednesday, January 22, 2020

How Well Do You Know Dorchester's History?


How well do you know your Dorchester history?

The Times is here to help you brush up on your knowledge of Dorchester's earliest days, so you can impress friends, enlighten family members, and win your next game of Dorchester Trivial Pursuit.

Did you know the following facts?

  • On July 4, 1871, the railroad reached Dorchester.
  • Incorporated in 1881, Dorchester's population grew from 200 to 500 by 1882.
  • In 1882, Dorchester had 90 buildings, 35 of which were businesses or public facilities. Brick buildings lined both sides of Washington Avenue for two blocks.
  • Dorchester's longest-running newspaper was The Dorchester Star, which was published until 1950.
  • By 1889, Dorchester's population reached 800, while the town housed an opera house, a two-story brick schoolhouse with a bell tower, and four churches.
  • By the 1910s, Dorchester had electricity, a water tower and a fire department.
  • Dorchester's main arteries, Highways 6 and 33, were graveled in the 1940s.
  • Dorchester's first irrigation well was drilled on Chris Weber's farm and rural electrification was finished following World War II.

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