• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Reads Poems

Reads Poems

  • About me

Hancock, MA

Hancock, MA Town Hall, October 2009; photo by John Phelan

The town of Hancock in the Berkshires, was re-named for John Hancock in 1776, the year of its incorporation, from Plantation of Jericho, as it was called by the original settlers in 1762. Hancock Shaker Village was established there in 1790, becoming a thriving Shaker community before the movement’s mid-19th century demise. In 1960, the Hancock community was closed by the Shaker Central Ministry, and the next year Hancock Shaker Village, a non-profit museum was opened; it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1968.

Points of interest in Hancock include: Hancock Shaker Village, Jiminy Peak, the state’s largest ski area, time-share mecca Vacation Village At Berkshires, a barn museum, a campground, a nudist camp, and twenty-four known and catalogued cemeteries.

Hancock, MA facts and map:

  • Phone: (413) 738-5225
  • Population: 721
  • Settled/Inc’d: 1767/1776
  • Named for: John Hancock
  • Elevation: 1020′

[mappress mapid=”61″]

<< Previous Post in CategoryNext Post in Category >>

Primary Sidebar

Poems

  • Ars poetica
  • Oswego Suite
  • Polemic
  • Weather retorts

Prose

  • Essays & commentary
  • Here’s Waldo
  • Sampling Moby-Dick
  • Bob Dylan matter
  • Berkshire luminaries

Berkshire luminaries

  • William Cullen Bryant
  • William Jay Smith
  • Amy Clampitt
  • Edith Wharton
  • Fanny Kemble
  • Herman Melville
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • Oliver Wendell Holmes
  • W.E.B. DuBois
  • William Cullen Bryant
  • William Jay Smith
  • Richard Wilbur

Copyright © 2026 ยท Dave Read; WordPress by ReadWebco - Profile at Poets & Writers.

  • Prose
  • Poems
  • About me