Ashfield, Massachusetts

Helpful Resources:
Population (2006): 1,765
Tax Rate (2006): $11.28/1,000

Assessors Office: 413-628-4439
Town Clerk: 413-628-4441
Belding Memorial Library: 413-628-4414
Public Schools: 413-625-0192
Building Inspector – 413-772-2026

Form of Government: Town Meeting
Selectboard meets Mondays, 7 p.m.

Description:
Ashfield is a 40 square mile town in the Berkshire foothills in the southwestern corner of Franklin County. The town was originally named Huntstown in 1736 as a land grant plantation, but was incorporated under its present name in 1765 under the auspices of Lord Thurlow of Ashfield, England.

From about 1812 to 1830, Ashfield was a center of the peppermint industry and by 1825 several hundred acres of peppermint were under cultivation, yielding up to forty pounds of oil per acre at a value of nearly $8 per pound. Other small industries during the 19th century included pottery making (an exhibit of which is at the Smithsonian Institute), production of wooden medical splints, a creamery and several sawmills, gristmills, woodworking mills, tanneries and maple sugaring. Of these, only maple sugaring continued to flourish and Ashfield has become well known for its maple products.

For decades, Ashfield was a quiet farming community with dozens of dairy and apple farms dotting the hillsides and lowlands. In the past 40 years, however, several farms have disappeared and the open fields and pastures have returned to wooded areas. It is only in the last 20 years that more people have been moving to Ashfield than leaving it. Lured by the cool breezes and the scenic vistas, people from all walks of life have moved from the cities. These bankers, attorneys, artisans, craftspeople, writers, artists, tradesmen, technicians and others have turned Ashfield into a cultural center.

Through all the years, the common theme has been that "small is better" and that Ashfield's role in the world is to be a haven from the world.

Western Massachusetts, bordered by Goshen and Cumington on the south and southwest, Plainfield on the west, Hawley on the northwest, Buckland on the north, and Conway on the east. Ashfield is 20 miles southwest of Greenfield, 21 miles north of Northampton, 109 miles west of Boston, and 175 miles from New York City.

Narrative compiled by the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD)..

For more information, check out this Ashfield source, click here

Wanda Mooney, CRS, GRI, SRES
413- 337-8344 • fax 413 337-8304
email : wanda@wandamooney.com
office: 7 Bridge Street, Shelburne Falls, MA 01370
413 625-6366 x 13

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Wanda specializes in properties for sale in the Franklin County area of Pioneer Valley in Western Massachusetts. Including real estate in Western Massachusetts, Shelburne Falls or along the Mohawk Trail consisting of farms, acreage and building lots, new home construction, condominiums, farms, and antique homes.
>Click here to view information on select homes for sale and real estate in: Ashfield, Bernardston, Buckland, Charlemont, Colrain, Conway, Deerfield, Gill, Greenfield, Hawley, Heath, Leverett, Leyden, Montague, Northfield, Rowe, Shelburne, Sunderland, and Whately. This area is known for the several private schools including Stoneleigh Burnham, Northfield Mount Hermon, Deerfield Academy, Eaglebrook School, Bement School and the Academy at Charlemont. Franklin County is also near several colleges including Greenfield Community College, University of Massachusetts, Smith College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke, and Amherst College.
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