Masonry Contractor in Hudson, MA

Hudson's Masonry MVPs

Your Hudson property deserves more than just bricks and mortar. It deserves Academy Masonry.

A winding paved driveway leads up to a house, lined with green grass and dandelions. A raised stone garden bed with purple and red flowers sits on the right, surrounded by trees and a blue sky.
A worker wearing yellow gloves uses a mallet to adjust paving stones in a curved pattern, building a pathway. The image captures the precision and care involved in laying the stones, with sunlight illuminating the scene.

Why Settle for Less in Middlesex County?

Academy Masonry Is Your Answer. Here's Why

  • We’ll make your property the envy of the neighborhood, guaranteed.
  • Your business will be booming with our eye-catching masonry.
  • We’ll transform your home into a masterpiece, inside and out.
  • Forget cracks and worries; we build foundations that last.
  • Masonry Mavericks

    Dominating Middlesex County

    At Academy Masonry, we don’t just build; we dominate. Our team is a force of nature, armed with trowels and unmatched expertise. We’ve conquered every masonry challenge imaginable in MA, and we’re ready to take on yours.

    A tiered stone retaining wall with freshly planted greenery in the foreground, set against a clear sky. The stones are uniformly stacked, creating a clean, modern landscaping feature.

    The Masonry Machine

    Your Masonry Rescue, Unleashed

  • Assess: We’ll analyze your property, uncovering hidden flaws and potential disasters.
  • Strategize: We’ll craft a custom plan, no matter how complex.
  • Execute: Our elite masons will bring that plan to life with ruthless efficiency.
  • A modern backyard with a grey stone patio and steps leading to a raised grassy area. A silver planter with greenery sits on the patio. In the background, there's a dark outdoor sofa set on a concrete pad, next to plants and decorative statues.

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    Masonry Repair Hudson

    Why You Need Us, Period.

    Masonry isn’t just about looks; it’s about survival. Neglecting it? That’s a recipe for disaster. Academy Masonry is here to protect your Hudson property from the elements and the test of time. We’re the best in the business, and we don’t take that lightly. Call us at 617-388-5207 and let’s build something legendary.

    Aerial view of a walkway with large rectangular concrete slabs bordered by small grey bricks. On the left, smaller, interlocking grey tiles form a pattern with three green, round bushes placed at intervals.

    Indigenous people lived in what became central Massachusetts for thousands of years prior to European settlement. Indigenous oral histories, archaeological evidence, and European settler documents attest to historic settlements of the Nipmuc people in present-day Hudson and the surrounding area. Nipmuc settlements along the Assabet River intersected with the territories of three other related Algonquian-speaking peoples: the Massachusett, Pennacook, and Wampanoag.

    In 1650, the area that would become Hudson and Marlborough was part of the Ockookangansett Indian Plantation for the Praying Indians. During King Philip’s War, English settlers forcibly evicted the Indians from their plantation, imprisoning and killing many of them; most survivors did not return after the conflict. The first recorded European settlement of the Hudson area occurred in 1698 or 1699 when settler John Barnes was granted 1 acre (0.40 ha) of Indian lands straddling both banks of the Assabet River. Barnes built a gristmill on the Assabet River’s north bank on land that would one day be part of Hudson. In 1699 or 1700 Barnes sold his gristmill to Joseph Howe, who built a sawmill and bridge across the Assabet. Other early settlers include Jeremiah Barstow, who built a house near today’s Wood Square in central Hudson, and Robert Barnard, who purchased the house from Barstow. The area became known as Howe’s Mills, Barnard’s Mills, or simply The Mills throughout the 1700s.

    The settlement was originally part of the town of Marlborough. In June 1743, area residents Samuel Witt, John Hapgood, and others petitioned to break away from Marlborough and become a separate town, claiming the journey to attend Marlborough’s town meeting was “vastly fatiguing.” Their petition was denied by the Massachusetts General Court. Samuel Witt later served on committees of correspondence during the 1760s. At least nine men from the area fought with the Minutemen on April 19, 1775, as they harassed British troops along the route to Boston.

    Learn more about Hudson.