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This is just a start. If I've left your town out of the list, please be sure to add it!
The Adamses
The Adamses were from Quincy, which I do not believe is part of the Irish Riviera, despite being on the coast south of Boston. It's too working-class, despite the fact that many from Southie and Dorchester settled there.
If I may offer some original research: people from Boston and the North Shore consider everything south of Boston proper to be the South Shore. People from the towns south of Quincy consider Quincy to be part of Metro Boston, not the South Shore. And people from Quincy don't particularly care, although City Hall seems to prefer the image of "largest city on the South Shore" to "one of many Boston exurbs." Regardless, Quincy publishes the South Shore's newspaper and is considered by at least a few million people to be part of the South Shore, so it's not worth seriously proposing removing it from the article. You're right, though-- I don't think anyone refers to Quincy as "the Irish Riviera." --Fullobeans (talk) 18:13, 3 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Plymouth is not actually part of the South Shore of Massachusetts Bay. It is the West Shore of Cape Cod Bay and its Geography makes it part of Cape Cod. Just a thought.Leftshore14:01, 21 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Parts of Plymouth are definitely considered to be part of Cape Cod - especially Manomet/Cedarville/Ellisville. "West Shore" sounds like some sort of a joke or a prank. --AStanhope03:44, 5 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Geographically, I'd assume he's correct, but that's probably too technical for something that's informally and inexactly used. I might live in the Merrimack Valley so I don't know exactly what I'm talking about, but I've always considered Plymouth to be South Shore. Plymouth geographically must be on Cape Cod Bay (I'd need a current chart I guess to know for sure...), not Mass Bay. In this article, being on Mass Bay is the definition of the South Shore. So, as silly as it sounds, that'd make Plymouth geographically West Shore - Just a term nobody ever gave any meaning to. CSZero22:28, 5 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Absolute bullshit. Plymouth is part of the South Shore, I've lived here all my life and have never heard it referred to otherwise. And if it's on the mainland side of the bridges, it's not the fucking Cape by any stretch of the imagination. Wormwoodpoppies (talk) 02:08, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Kingston and General Geographic Semantics.
I removed Kingston from the list of inland towns "sometimes" considered part of the South Shore because it does have a (very small) coastline. As for Plymouth, I can assure you that the universal consensus among residents is that it too is part of the South Shore and is not by any stretch of the imagination on Cape Cod. I'm going to throw down the gauntlet and demand that some seriously legit sources be cited favoring its exclusion, or else I'm going to do the unthinkable and make an edit backed up only by common sense and twenty four years of firsthand experience. Cheers. Wormwoodpoppies (talk) 19:59, 1 September 2009 (UTC)[reply]