After a war between the Indian-supported English and the colonists, the Nipmuck fled to Canada. In 1673 the Nipmuck Indians welcomed white settlers to the Worcester area. Development in the downtown area, including the building of Worcester Center, has helped to offset movement to the suburbs. The Worcester Music Festival, which began in 1858, is the oldest such festival in the United States. Higgins Armory displays an outstanding collection of medieval armor, and the Worcester Science Center houses workshops and museums on 50 acres (20 hectares) of land. The American Antiquarian Society, founded in 1812, has the world’s largest collection of early American publications. The Worcester Art Museum draws 144,000 visitors yearly, and many also visit the Worcester Historical Society Museum. Clark University, the College of the Holy Cross, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, and four other four-year colleges join the University of Massachusetts Medical School to make Worcester a center of higher education. Worcester’s cultural and educational institutions serve greater Boston and the New England area in general. These include metals, textiles, electrical machinery, furniture, paper, and stone, clay, and glass production.
The city’s location in central New England and its accessibility by rail, highway, and air have helped its varied industries. On the Blackstone River midway between Boston and Springfield, Worcester is the seat of Worcester County.
It has long been a center of American industriousness, the home of many well-known inventors. Located in central Massachusetts, Worcester is the second largest city in the state.