The
town of Gill in northwestern Massachusetts offers
education, recreation and quiet, peaceful living
opportunities within its 15 square miles. Gill is
7 miles east of Greenfield, 36 miles north of
Springfield and 95 miles northwest of Boston. The
1,620 residents live mostly in single-family
homes, although there is one development of
condominiums. Gill is the home of the presently
co-ed Northfield Mount Hermon School, known in the
last century as the Mount Hermon School for Boys.
There is a nine-hole golf course which holds
several tournaments during the year, horse-riding
facilities along quiet country roads, and in
winters, snowmobiling on the open fields.
Gill, incorporated September 28,
1793, was originally part of Deerfield and was
included in the portion set off from Deerfield
June 9, 1753, as the district of Greenfield, which
became a township that same year. The first
settlers on the land that became Gill, who arrived
before 1753 and lived later that 1793, were
therefore inhabitants of the towns of Deerfield,
Greenfield and Gill, successively, even though
they never moved. Some residents of Northfield
also became inhabitants of Gill when the
"Grass Hill" section of Northfield was
annexed on February 28, 1795.
The land within its boundaries
was settled too late to figure largely in the
hazards of Indian attacks, although one important
incident occurred within its area. On May 19,
1676, Captain William Turner, after whom
neighboring Turners Falls was named, and his
troops attacked Indians camped near the
Connecticut River falls and their victory helped
establish the preeminence of Deerfield and other
settlements in the valley.
Geographically, the town lies in
a wide, irregular bend of the Connecticut River as
it makes an abrupt turn northwestward in its
southern course at the mouth of the Millers River.
Across the river to the east are the towns of
Erving and Northfield, and to the south is
Montague. Fall River separates it from Greenfield,
and Bernardston forms most of the northern border.
The first town meeting was held
December 18, 1793, with Moses Bascom as moderator.
Elected officers were Moses Bascom Jr. as town
clerk and treasurer, Moses Bascom, William Smalley
and Noah Munn as selectmen and assessors and David
Squires as constable.
The town is named in honor of
Moses Gill, a member of Massachusetts' Executive
Council who became lieutenant govenor in 1794 and
acting governor in 1799 when Governor Increase
Sumner died. Gill died in 1800, leaving the state
without a governor and acting governor for the
first and only time in its history.
Gill for many years benefited
from river traffic. The "Grass Hill"
section eventually became home to noted evangelist
Dwight L. Moody's Mount Hermon School in 1881,
which merged with Northfield School for girls to
become Northfield Mount Hermon School more than 20
years ago.
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