Home > About the 7th District
ABOUT THE 7th DISTRICT
The 7th Congressional District includes the cities of Chelsea, Everett, Randolph, and Somerville, approximately 70% of Boston, about 50% each of Cambridge and Milton. It is an ethnically diverse and geographically compact area. Long time residents share their neighborhoods with newly-arrived immigrants and students.
The district's neighborhoods exude an abundance of charm, and those interested in architecture or history will be impressed with the area's housing stock, which ranges from turn-of-the century apartment buildings, to rambling Victorians, colonials and multi-family dwellings. There is truly something for everyone in this, one of the nation's most diverse congressional districts.
A look at the present geographical boundaries of the District and other maps.
A look of the cities that comprise the District.
View demographics for the 7th District as compiled by the U.S. Census Bureau.
In this historical overview of the 7th District, you'll find brief biographies of District Representatives, a chart illustrating changes in the District's geography and information on Congressional apportionment.
The 7th district is home to many of the world's most profound and original thinkers, gathered in great universities, research institutes, and teaching hospitals. I was pleased, but not surprised, to find that men and women who lived, studied, or worked in the 7th Congressional District have won almost 1 in 5 of the Nobel Prizes ever awarded.
Here you will find some interesting facts about Massachusetts, some about the 7th district and some beyond its borders.