The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts is a
state
located in the
New England
region of the
northeastern
United
States. Most of its population
of 6.4 million live in the
Boston metropolitan area. The
eastern half of this relatively
small state is mostly
urban and
suburban. Massachusetts is the
most populous of the six New England
states and ranks third in overall
population density and fourth by
GDP per capita.
Massachusetts
has been significant throughout
American history.
Plymouth was the second
permanent English settlement in
North America. Colonists from
England founded many towns and
villages in the present-day
territory of Massachusetts very
early in the nation's history in the
1620s and 1630s. The Boston area
became known as the "Cradle of
Liberty" for the ferment there which
led to the
American Revolution and the
independence
of the
United States from
Great Britain. Massachusetts was
the first U.S. state to abolish
slavery and
was a center of the
temperance movement and
abolitionist activity in the
years leading to the
American Civil War. The state
has contributed many prominent
politicians to national service,
including the
Adams family and, more recently,
the
Kennedy family.
Originally
dependent on agriculture and trade
with Europe, Massachusetts was
transformed into a manufacturing
center during the
Industrial Revolution. Migration
of factories to the lower-wage
Southern states caused economic
stagnation during the first half of
the 20th century. The economy of
Massachusetts was revived after
World War II,
and today is prominent in
higher
education,
health care,
and
high technology.