The DigitalWorcester Web Project


This site explores politics, business, religion, demography, and culture in Worcester, Massachusetts, during the 19th and 20th centuries through documents, primary sources, photographs and images, maps, oral histories and other resources. The resources posted here are fully text-searchable. Our goals are to provide undergraduate history students at Worcester State College an opportunity to develop a collaborative digital public history resource for the broader community, use local history as a path to explore America's past, and to document one city's past in new and innovative ways.


Worcester is a small, vibrant American city located in central Massachusetts. It is the county seat of Worcester County, MA and is New England's second largest city. The city has a rich history which offers a window onto cultural change in the United States. The Free Soil party began in Worcester, a hotbed of abolitionist sentiment in the antebellum period. The city hosted the first women's suffrage convention in 1850. Although the city lacked natural waterpower, it nonetheless became an important rail transportation hub and industrial center, manufacturing products as diverse as wire, furniture, steam engines, and skates. Factory laborers came first from Ireland, and later from French-speaking Canada, Sweden, Scandinavia, Italy, Lithuania, Poland, Armenia, and Greece.



Recently Added Items

Christ the King Catholic Church

On November 29, 2009 I attended a Sunday Mass at Christ the King, a Catholic church located on Pleasant Street in Worcester. I arrived early and found…see more

Freedom Worship Center

For my site visit, I attended a service at the Freedom Worship Center in West Boylston. I chose this house of worship because I want to explore a…see more

Worcester "Voke"

One of the two buildings of the Worcester "Voke" Vocational High School for Boys, located in Lincoln Square. see more

Worcester Boy's Trade School

The Worcester Boy's Trade School was founded in 1909 by Milton Higgins of the Norton Company. The building itself opened in the year 1910. This trade…see more

Worcester Insane Asylum (Kirkbride Building)

The old Worcester asylum building which had opened in 1833 was the first of its kind in the state of Massachusetts. But by the 1870’s it was no…see more