13,000 years ago
Indigenous people inhabit the present-day Lowell area. The Merrimack River provides a source of diverse plant growth, big game, and water needed to establish settlements of both formal and informal basis.
1700s
Beginning in the late 1600s, Chelmsford farmers settled in much of the present area of Lowell which was in the eastern part of the town. The settlement was primarily agricultural although small industries such as saw, grist, and woolen mills made use of the falls on both the Merrimack and Concord rivers. Investors build the Pawtucket Canal between 1792-96 that allows goods coming down the Merrimack River heading to Newburyport to bypass the Pawtucket Falls. By 1820, the area the area is home to about 200 people living on scattered farms and at the crossings of a few roads.
1820s
Events occurring in nearby Waltham along the Charles River changed the community forever as associates of the late Francis Cabot Lowell arrived, looking for a source of waterpower to expand their successful cotton textile mill operations. Known as the Boston Associates, they included Nathan Appleton, Patrick Tracy Jackson, Abbott Lawrence, Amos Lawrence, and Kirk Boott In 1821, the Merrimack River’s Pawtucket Falls attracted these early 19th century industrialists who proceeded to rapidly transform the area into an industrial city by purchasing the Pawtucket Canal and various farms, including those belonging to the Cheever, Fletcher, and Tyler families. By 1823, the Pawtucket Canal had been expanded and the Merrimack Canal dug off of it, powering the Merrimack Manufacturing Company, the first textile mill to begin operation.
1850s
The city continues to grow and expand. By 1848, the 5.6 mile canal system is completed providing power to ten major textile companies. Within 30 years of its founding, Lowell has become America’s first great industrial city, the largest producer of cotton textiles in the United States, and a center of technological innovation.
1860s
Lowell’s southern connection, a long-time conflict in the city, was broken with the start of the Civil War. Lowell’s textile industry was supported by the cotton of the South which was dependent on slavery, but the moral indignation of slavery caused issues with many mill owners’ wives, local congregations and more supporting the abolitionist movement.
1860s-1870s
While the Irish were essential in the building of the mills and canals of the city, and later as mill workers, the influx of immigrants to the city of Lowell began in the 1860s and continues to this day. During this time, the arrival of French-Canadians from Quebec, the dynamic of the city was evolving. They were followed shortly after by immigrants from Greece, Portugal, Poland, and various other European countries. The immigrants formed strong cultural and spiritual communities. People from places like Columbia, Brazil, Cambodia, Nepal, Burma, Iraq, Ghana, Haiti, and many others call Lowell home today.
1926 & 1936
Lowell celebrates its centennial of becoming both the Town of Lowell and the City of Lowell.
1970s
Lowell citizens began work on the revitalization of the community, including transforming the educational system and stimulation of the local economy, gaining the support of the City Council and the establishment of the Lowell Heritage State Park (1974) and the Lowell National Historical Park (1978). The University of Lowell emerged from the union of the Lowell Technological Institute and Lowell State College in 1978 as well as the founding of some technology companies in the area.
1980s/90s
The community’s revitalization continued to expand with a number of Lowell-unique experiences including the founding of the Lowell Folk Festival, New England Quilt Museum, Tsongas Industrial History Center, Merrimack Repertory Theater, and more continued to make Lowell a tourist destination. Both the Tsongas Arena and LeLacheur Ballpark are constructed.