Mystic River Reservation


The Mystic River Reservation is a publicly owned nature preserve with recreational features located along the Mystic River in the towns of Winchester, Arlington, Medford, Somerville, Everett, and Chelsea in eastern Massachusetts. The reserve is part of the nearly Mystic River watershed. It is managed by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation.

History

The reservation was established in 1893 by the newly formed Metropolitan Parks Commission, making it one of the first official nature preserves in Massachusetts, and one of five designed by the commission in that year. Of these five, three were planned as woodland river reservations: the Mystic River Reservation, Charles River Reservation, and Neponset River Reservation. The Mystic River Reservation originally comprised a little over of land. By the early 20th century, most of the land along the Mystic River in Medford, Arlington, and Somerville had become public land.
In 2010, the DCR unveiled a plan for restoring and preserving the reservation, called the Mystic River Master Plan. Proposed projects included a partnership between the DCR and the City of Medford to restore the Condon Shell ; restoration of the Amelia Earhart Dam basin parklands; and a $3.6 million federally funded link between the reservation, the Minuteman Bikeway, and the Alewife "T" Station. The lower parkland is being redeveloped as part of Assembly Square construction.
In 2019, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts funded a feasibility study for linking the southern end of the bicycle and pedestrian paths in the reservation to the Somerville Community Path, for connections to the Charles River Bicycle Path and downtown Boston.

Activities and amenities

Facilities for field sports, picnicking, cycling, and sailing are found at four riverside parks: Draw Seven Park in Somerville, Torbert MacDonald Park in Medford, the Mystic Lakes in Winchester, Arlington, and Medford, and Mary O'Malley Waterfront Park in Chelsea.