The financial issue is a big one for many families.
One daughter had a friend who was one of the top students in the school (middle school and high school). This friend had divorced parents, and the father had a small business that was struggling. The mother was not capable of holding a job (for reasons that I will not get into). From an academic perspective this friend was capable of getting accepted to very good universities. For financial reasons she started off with two years at community college, while living with the father (who is a great guy, I got to know him at one point). Then she got a full tuition scholarship to U.Mass Lowell for her last two years of university. I just happened to run into her (and a boyfriend) in a store a month or so before she graduated university. She was able to graduate from U.Mass Lowell with very little debt, a very marketable degree, and nearly straight A’s for the entire four years of university (which was following nearly straight A’s for all of middle and high school). I can only imagine how proud her father must have been of what she had accomplished.
Given your strong academics up to this point a very good merit scholarship might be possible at U.Mass Lowell, or at one of the other in-state public universities in Massachusetts such as one of the universities suggested by @AustenNut.