Vaughn Hill

{{short description|Hill in Bolton, Massachusetts, US}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Infobox mountain

| name = Vaughn Hill

| photo = File:Vaughn Hills Bolton MA usa.jpg

| photo_caption = Vaughn Hills entrance on Bare Hill Rd.

| elevation_ft = 637

| elevation_ref = Wallace R. Hansen, Geology and Mineral Resources of the Hudson and Maynard (1956), p. 23Henry Gannett, A Geographic Dictionary of Massachusetts (1894), p. 114

| prominence =

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| location = {{nowrap| Worcester County, Massachusetts }}

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| coordinates = {{Coord|42|27|39|N|71|36|59|W|region:US-MA|display=inline,title}}

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| first_ascent =

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}}

File:Hansen Land Vaughn Hills Bolton MA usa.jpg

Vaughn Hill (also known as Vaughan Hill or the Vaughn Hills) is a {{convert|637|ft|m|adj=on}} hill in northwestern Bolton, Massachusetts,{{cite gnis|611299|Vaughn Hills|March 26, 2024}} and the site of a {{convert|187|acre|ha|adj=on}} wooded conservation area containing hiking trails and wetlands near the border with Harvard, Massachusetts. It is one of the largest parcels of conservation land in the town.

Description

The North Peak of the Vaughn Hills is one of the highest peaks between Boston and Mount Wachusett and the second highest in Bolton after Wattaquadock Hill.https://boltontrails.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/2-Vaughn-Hills-Mar-2023.pdf (accessed 3/12/2024) The South Peak is located on private land. There are many hiking trails near pine forests, streams, and ponds with beaver dams. There are four entrances to the conservation area, and the Woodside Drive and Vaughn Hill Road entrances have parking.[https://www.boltonconservationtrust.org/conservation-land-and-trails/trails/vaughn-hills/ Official website] (accessed 3/12/2024)

History

Nineteenth century historian Henry S. Nourse "believed the name to be of Indian origin" because the hill "was first known to early settlers as Van's or Vahan's hill, and as no white man of that name appears here, or even in the bay towns, as an early settler," the name likely predates the colonial era settlement.Lincoln N. Kinnicutt, Indian Names of Places in Worcester County, Massachusetts (1905), p. 49 (accessible on Google Books)Early Records of Lancaster Massachusetts 1643–1725, edited by Henry S. Nourse (1884), p. 192 (a 1719/20 legal documents references Vans Hill) Prior to 1720 John Houghton and his son, Jonas Houghton (1660–1723) were early residents of Vaughn's Hill, when it was known as Vans Hill.William Richard Cutter, New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial: A Record (2003), p. 693 For at least much of the remaining eighteenth century, it was known as Van's Hill.William Richard Cutter, Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of the State of Massachusetts Volume 1. (1910), p. 78 citing Deed from John Barned to Calvin Sawyer in 1786 listing "Van's hill" In the twentieth century geologists surveyed the hill and named the mineral formations, the Vaughn Hill formation or conglomerate.Wallace R. Hansen, Geology and Mineral Resources of the Hudson and Maynard (1956), p. 23 In 1990 and 2001 the town of Bolton acquired public conservation land on the hill.[https://www.boltonconservationtrust.org/conservation-land-and-trails/trails/vaughn-hills/ Official website] (accessed 3/12/2024)

References

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