HomeBin

 
 

New Lenox, Lenox

switch to other town
Compare to another town

Lenox

Lenox was a prosperous farming and mill town -- the seat of Berkshire County -- that was suddenly "discovered" by famous and wealthy residents of Boston and New York in the mid 1800s.


Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote "The House of Seven Gables" while living in a little red cottage just outside of town (the cottage actually is in Stockbridge, but Hawthorne thought he lived in Lenox because its village center was much closer). Hawthorne's series of children's stories, "Tanglewood Tales," provided the name for a neighboring estate.


A recreation of Hawthorne's cottage, near Tanglewood, is open for tours in the summer.


In 1845, Samuel Gray Ward, the Boston banker who later was to finance the U.S. purchase of Alaska, built a summer home near Hawthorne's cottage. Ward told his friends back in Boston about the beautiful Berkshire countryside and the mild summer weather. Soon, many of them were joining him as summer, or even year-round residents. Among the early "summer people" was Fanny Kemble, one of the most noted Shakespearean actresses of the day.


By the late 1800s, Lenox and Stockbridge were booming as the summer homes of many of the country's elite. The peak building year in Lenox was 1885, when construction began on several of the gigantic mansions these wealthy families whimsically called "cottages."


The most magnificent of them all was Shadowbrook, built for railroad baron Anson Phelps Stokes on 900 acres at the edge of Lenox and Stockbridge. With 100 rooms, it was one of the largest homes in North America. Andrew Carnegie later bought the house, and died there in 1919.


The Guilded Age ended in the early twentieth century, when the income tax and other factors made it impossible for the "cottagers" to maintain their huge summer homes in the Berkshires. Several of the cottages have been converted to hotels or schools.


One of the grandest cottages in Lenox is open for public tours: The Mount, built by novelist Edith Wharton. The Mount is now undergoing a restoration to bring it back to its former grandeur.


A new era for Lenox and the Berkshires began in the 1930s, when music lovers began sponsoring symphonic concerts in the summer months. In 1937, the Boston Symphony Orchestra began offering concerts at its new summer home, the "Tanglewood" estate between Lenox and Stockbridge. A year later, the orchestra inaugurated its huge new concert hall, the "Shed."


In the succeeding six decades, Tanglewood has become famous as one of the world's leading music festivals, attracting more than 300,000 listeners each summer. Other summer arts festivals, featuring theater, music and modern dance, have joined in making the Berkshires the summer cultural capital of the Northeast United States.

School System Info

MCAS Ranking (of 351 towns) in State:

10th Grade Math:

50  

 

10th Grade Eng:

13  

 

8th Grade Math:

65  

 

8th Grade Eng:

29  

 

8th Grade Science:

73  

 

4th Grade Math:

115  

 

4th Grade Eng:

79  

 

Spending/Student:

$10,791

Average SAT scores:

1698

Student/Teacher Ratios:

11.5 to 1

 

 

Community

Population:5,105 Median Income in town: $40,914 Population Density:
(people per square mile)

239

 

 

Crime Rate (per 1000 residents):

Property: 0 / 1,000
Violent: N/A / 1,000

 

Real Estate

Number of active:

Singles/Condos/Multis: 0 / 0 / 0

Median home price this year: N/A Median home price last year:

$140,000

Median home price 5 yrs ago:

$0

% change since last year:

N/A

% change since 5 years ago:

0%

Avg single family tax bill:

$3,674

 

Transportation

Rail info: (T stops, commuter rail stops)

N/A

Subway info:

N/A

Bus lines:

N/A

Miles to Boston:

131

Drive time to Boston (minutes):

132

Rail time to Boston:

N/A

 

 

NO HOUSES SPECIFIED FOR FEATURED LISTING




 

Contact Information

HomeBin.com
Voice: 508-339-5600
Fax: 508-339-5675

Search the MLS - 40,873
Active properties

Advanced MLS Search
 

Top Bargain Listings in

 
BBBOnLine