History of Gardner, Massachusetts/Roads
Roads.
The town is well supplied with roads, amounting to between fifty and sixty miles in length, of which the following are the principal ones:
The road leading from Brattleborough to Boston, through the south part of the town, is about four miles in length, and was originally a turnpike. In the year 1829, it was abandoned as such, and made free for public travel. It was laid out as a county road by the Commissioners in the year 1833, and re-built by the town, at an expense of between seven and eight thousand dollars.
The county road leading from Westminster to Royalston passes through the center of the Town; length, seven miles.
The roads from the, center of the town, leading to Ashburnham, Winchendon, Jonesville, Templeton, and Hubbardston, are of about an equal length; viz: from four to five miles.
The roads belonging to Gardner are kept in repair at a cost of from fifteen to eighteen hundred dollars annually.
The Vermont and Massachusetts rail-road passes through the town from east to west, at about an equal distance from the center and south village, five or six miles in length.