Let's start with the basics:
Winter Hill, Somerville, Massachusetts
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Winter Hill is a neighborhood in Somerville, Massachusetts. Located roughly north of Highland Avenue and west of the McGrath Highway, Winter Hill is home to a mix of restored homes and aluminium-sided fixer-uppers, replete with china gnomes and bath-tub Virgin Marys. Once known as the home base of Irish gangsters Whitey Bulger (currently on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list), James "Buddy" McLean, Howie Winter and the notorious Winter Hill Gang, Winter Hill is now, like much of the rest of Somerville, experiencing gentrification and a resulting rise in property values and rents. Despite these changes, the area continues to hang onto its neighborhood flavor and is home to a large community of Irish, Italians, Brazilians, Portuguese, Cape Verdeans, and other ethnic groups.
The area once had a gang problem with MS13 members attempting to take over the area. On January 30, 2003, several MS13 members raped a young deaf girl. [1]
The Theater Coop, one of the Boston area's few new repertory live theaters, is located between Foss Park and the local supermarket. There is also a community pottery studio called Mudflat in East Somerville, adjacent to Winter Hill, and a collective of stained glass artists called Daniel Maher Stained Glass.
Winter Hill also has many old Somerville favorites such as The Paddock restaurant on Pearl Street, Mama Lisa's, Leone's, and Primo's pizza establishments, the Winter Hill Bakery, and Maria's Italian Cold Cuts. Soccer is a popular pastime, and it is not uncommon to see leagues complete with matching uniforms, as well as many of the new immigrants from Brazil and Latin America in shirts-against-skins games, playing in Foss park next to Interstate 93, at the base of Winter Hill. The park also has a large, colorful mural painted behind the public swimming pool.
A planned extension of the Green Line to the Winter Hill area is possible, specifically with stations at Medford Street (Gilman Square) and Lowell Street, though estimated completion has been pushed back to 2014 and no final path has been agreed upon. [2]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Chabot, Hillary, "MS-13 gang rape victim: I can't stay", Somerville Journal, Massachusetts, Thursday, January 30, 2003.
- ^ MBTA, Beyond Lechmere Planning
[edit] Bibliography
- Haskell, Albert L., Haskell's Historical Guide Book of Somerville, Massachusetts
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