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Mount Ward (Massachusetts)

Marlborough, MassachusettsMiddlesex County, Massachusetts geography stubsMountains of MassachusettsMountains of Middlesex County, Massachusetts

Mount Ward is a small summit in Marlboro, Massachusetts. The summit is located in Marlboro State Forest and the top can be reached via the Mount Ward Trail, a 1.2 mile loop accessible year round. Mount Ward is 410 feet (120 meters) elevation, with a prominence of 154 feet (47 meters).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mount Ward (Massachusetts) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Mount Ward (Massachusetts)
Northeast Sewer Trunk Line, Marlborough

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Phone number Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.3558 ° E -71.4972 °
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Address

Easterly Wastewater Treatment Plant

Northeast Sewer Trunk Line
01772 Marlborough
Massachusetts, United States
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Phone number

call+15086246920

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WBPX-TV

WBPX-TV (channel 68) is a television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, airing programming from the Ion Television network. It is owned by the Ion Media subsidiary of the E. W. Scripps Company, which also owns Woburn-licensed Grit station WDPX-TV (channel 58); the two channels share the same TV spectrum. WBPX-TV and WDPX-TV are broadcast from a tower shared with WUNI and WWJE-DT on Parmenter Road in Hudson, Massachusetts. WBPX-TV's programming is duplicated on WPXG-TV (channel 21) in Concord, New Hampshire, which shares its channel with Lowell, Massachusetts–licensed Daystar station WYDN (channel 48) and broadcasts from Fort Mountain near Epsom, New Hampshire. WBPX-TV began broadcasting as WQTV in 1979 and originally broadcast subscription television programming to paying customers, which ended in 1983, with the station operating as a full-time commercial independent station until succumbing to financial troubles and paring back its programming. After being sold to The Christian Science Monitor in 1986, WQTV became the nucleus of a major production operation, which in 1991 spawned a cable television channel, the Monitor Channel. After $325 million in losses, this service shut down in 1992, and the Monitor sold WQTV to Boston University, which operated it for six years as commercial independent WABU. Boston University also bought the Concord station, which had been silent since it failed as CBS affiliate WNHT in 1989, and turned it into a satellite of WABU in 1995. Both stations were sold in 1999 to become outlets of the Pax network, which changed its name to i in 2005 before becoming known as Ion in 2007.