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Non-Stop Direct: Driver is immediately dispatched for pick up and proceeds directly without additional stops to your delivery point.
Rush:
Pick up and delivery within 2 hours or less within 495.
Economy:
Pickup and delivery within 4 hours for orders placed by 1pm.
Same Day Rush Trucking: Hot shots as well as scheduled and routed deliveries.
Scheduled and Routed: Dedicated driver makes all stops for your daily scheduled pick ups and routes.
Thank you for visiting Cambridge, MA US Courier and Delivery Service online.
From a document to a truckload, when it comes to Same Day Service throughout Massachusetts and beyond, US Courier and Delivery Service will handle your shipment flawlessly. Please call Cambridge, MA's premier courier service for an immediate response to your shipping needs.
Cambridge, MA US Courier and Delivery Service provides these delivery services over the largest “local” area you’ll find. Our regular territory for Direct, Rush, and Regular Services stretches over twenty metropolitan areas, from Marlborough to Boston, and east to the Atlantic Ocean.
Cambridge, MA Details:
East Cambridge was opened for development in 1809, when the Canal Bridge, adjacent to the present Museum of Science, was completed. The area was the city's major industrial center until the 1880s. Furniture and glass factories were among the industries attracted to East Cambridge by cheap land, water transportation, and close proximity to Boston. Andrew Craigie, a leading Cambridge speculator, lured the Middlesex County courthouse and jail to East Cambridge by offering to donate new buildings in 1813. In 1841, social activist Dorothea Dix was outraged by conditions in the jail and began her pioneering work in prison reform.
The devastating potato blight that struck Ireland in 1845 caused many of that country's rural population to flee. Thousands landed in Boston and Cambridge, destitute and without resources. Many Irish immigrants worked in the clay pits and brickyards of North Cambridge, housed in crowded workers' cottages. The majority of the city's Irish lived in East Cambridge, laboring at unskilled jobs in the glass works and furniture factories. They developed a close-knit community, centered on and supported by the Catholic church. By 1855, twenty-two percent of the adults in East Cambridge were Irish-born.
Around the turn of the twentieth century, immigrants from Italy, Poland, and Portugal began to arrive in the city, settling primarily in Cambridgeport and East Cambridge. French Canadians and Russian Jews came at this time, as well, settling in North Cambridge and Cambridgeport, respectively.
A small population of African Americans had lived in Cambridge from the earliest Colonial days, and in the early nineteenth century Cambridge's integrated schools attracted many families from Boston. Harriet Jacobs, born a slave in North Carolina, ran a boarding house in Cambridge in the 1870s. She had lived in hiding for 7 years before escaping to the North and later wrote an account of her years in bondage, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Educator Maria Baldwin, a native Cantabrigian, held home study classes for Harvard's black students, including W.E.B. DuBois. In 1889, she was appointed headmaster of the Agassiz School, the first African American to hold such a position in the North. Twenty markers commemorating prominent Cambridge African Americans have been erected throughout the city. (For more information on the Cambridge African American Heritage Trail, click here).
Today, Cambridge is home to a culturally diverse population of over 95,000. Over fifty languages may be heard on the streets of the city, including Spanish, Creole, Portuguese, Chinese, Amharic, and Korean. Children from 82 different countries of origin attend the public schools. College students from around the world study at Harvard, Radcliffe, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Lesley College. The heavy industries of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries have been replaced by technology-based enterprises, including electronics, self-developing film and cameras, software and biotechnology research.
--Cambridge Historical Commission
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All Locations
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General Manager: |
John
Kane |
Account Executive: |
Amber
Gest |
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6 Merchant St. |
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Sharon, MA 02067 |
Tel: |
888-888-0001 |
Fax: |
888-877-0001 |
Toll Free: |
888-866-0001 |
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