Medway, Massachusetts, is a town of approximately 13,500 residents in Norfolk County — one of the most pleasantly community-spirited and most genuinely well-appointed small towns in the Milford-Holliston-Franklin corridor of southwestern Massachusetts, a place whose combination of a beautifully maintained town park, a walkable Main Street village center, and a dining scene that exceeds expectations for its size give it a character that rewards those who take the time to stop rather than pass through on Route 109. Incorporated in 1713 from parts of Medfield, Medway’s history is woven through its relationship with textile manufacturing — the Charles River, which forms the town’s northern boundary, powered mills that shaped 19th-century Medway into a modest but productive industrial community, and the town’s Main Street retains the proportions and architectural scale of that era. The most striking physical legacy of that industrial history is The Medway Mills at 163 Main Street — a converted historic mill complex now housing a variety of small businesses including Molly’s Apothecary, yoga studios, nail salons, lash studios, and creative workshops described as an awesome building with so many different businesses — described as a home for a favorite store by devoted regulars and as a generally nice area that has been thoughtfully repurposed. Choate Park at 0 Oak St is Medway’s most beloved and most comprehensively appointed public space — open from 8 AM with a large pond you can walk around or sit by, trails through the woods, a covered pavilion with picnic tables, a playground designed for both little ones and older kids, impressively clean bathrooms, great fishing spots, an open field for picnics, a water splash area available from 11 AM to 5 PM in season, and a Children’s Peace Garden honoring Medway children gone too soon described as beautiful and sad with each child’s name etched in stone — described as such a gem where they’ve really thought of everything for families, as a place where the Northern Lights were watched with a bunch of extremely friendly strangers, and as a park with everything an ideal park should have where people with their kids are running and enjoying all around. The Medway Historical Society at 223 Main Street rounds out Medway’s cultural picture as the town’s most important custodian of local memory — the keeper of Medway’s colonial, agricultural, and industrial heritage through archives, artifacts, and community programming that help residents and visitors understand how this corner of Norfolk County developed from a farming community into the suburban town it is today.
Medway’s outdoor landscape is defined by the Charles River corridor and a network of town conservation lands that give this modest-sized community a surprisingly rewarding set of outdoor options — Choate Park’s pond and trail network anchoring the town’s recreational life while Oakland Park provides a second beloved green space, and the broader Charles River system offering more expansive paddling and trail opportunities nearby. Oakland Park at 76 Oakland St is Medway’s most warmly family-embraced and most carefully maintained neighborhood park — open from 8 AM with a gated play area so you don’t have to worry about kids running away, two playground units for different ages with soft anti-fatigue flooring, a sandbox and gazebo outside the gate, a basketball court, fields, bathrooms, and shade — described as easily a favorite park in the area, as a nice clean park where the gate around the play area has a latch so children can’t easily run out, and as a place where a quick visit lasted a few hours with the kids. Choate Park Trail Network extending from the park at Oak Street into Medway’s conservation lands is the town’s most peacefully immersive and most varied nature trail destination — open from 8 AM with pond walking, woodland trails, and great backgrounds for photography described as abundant throughout the park and its surrounding conservation area — described as a beautiful park where over an hour of walking goes by quickly, as a hidden gem in Medway with lots of areas making great photography backgrounds, and as a green space for picnic, nature trail, and play that left visitors feeling very good. Medfield Charles River State Reservation in adjacent Medfield is the region’s most ecologically abundant and most historically fascinating outdoor destination accessible from Medway — open Tuesday from 8:30 AM to 7:30 PM, Monday and Wednesday through Thursday from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM, and Friday from 8:30 AM to 1 PM, with a beautiful section of the Charles River where muskrats and beavers have been spotted alongside a myriad of birds, easy paddling because the water is slow, well-marked trails great for dog walking, a kayak put-in with several parking spots, and film history as the location for scenes in both Shutter Island and The New Mutants — described as a beautiful place to walk dogs and as a great place for families with a peaceful and pretty paddle that left visitors wishing they could take pictures forever.
Medway’s dining scene is compact and genuinely satisfying — a Main Street village center that punches well above its weight in character and quality, anchored by a fast-casual Mexican counter with an extraordinary following, a beloved neighborhood breakfast diner, and a reliably excellent American kitchen that has become the town’s go-to special occasion restaurant. Fuego at 98 Main Street Unit 112 is Medway’s most celebrated and most passionately devoted dining destination — open seven days from 11 AM and Sunday until 7 PM with steak described as straight fire, rice bowls and quesadillas described as so good a visitor reports eating there essentially 1,000 times in 30 days, burritos described as the best with generous portions of very fresh and bright flavors and higher quality ingredients than the corporate competition down the street, staff described as super friendly with a care that is arguably better than their great food, and a quick reorder made on the spot without blame when a delivery driver made off with someone’s order — described as a new favorite spot over Chipotle, as a place where food is excellent, high quality, well-prepared, and full of flavor, and as a local small business worth supporting wholeheartedly over corporate alternatives. The Village Griddle at 102 Main Street is Medway’s most warmly personal and most consistently excellent breakfast and lunch destination — open seven days from 7 AM and Sunday until 1 PM with banana foster French toast described as indulgent without being overwhelming, eggs Benedict with eggs over hard described as perfectly executed, a Reuben sandwich described as huge portions with flavorful meat, corned beef hash described as the best had in a long time, a Milky Way iced coffee and fresh fast food described as clearly made with care — described as a place visited two days in a row because the first visit was so good they had to come back, as a place they would give 10 stars if they could where service is fantastic and food comes out fast, and as a restaurant where even the cook comes out to ask if you liked the food. Restaurant 45 at 45 Milford Street rounds out Medway’s dining picture as the town’s most reliably packed and most community-favored dinner destination — open Tuesday through Friday from 11:30 AM and Saturday and Sunday from noon with Chicken Loretta described as a new favorite dish and the portion described as generous, mac and cheese balls described as amazing, salmon Alex described as amazing, carrot cake described as amazing, corn chowder described as soooo good, and server Walter described as amazing keeping a table of six laughing with great service — described as a restaurant that never disappoints across many great meals, as a place worth riding three towns away for, and as a spot where arriving without a reservation still results in being seated within 25 minutes with friendly attentive service that makes the experience completely worthwhile.