Thursday, August 4, 2011
Massachusetts 351 Project Update
Added 8 new towns this past to my Massachusetts 351 Project. A quest to photograph each of the 351 cities and towns in the Bay State. On Saturday (July 30), I visited North Brookfield, Oakham (new), New Braintree (new), Ware and Hardwick. On Sunday (July 31) I went to six new towns including Andover, North Andover, Boxford, Middleton, North Reading and Wilmington.
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Fall River Iron Works
1883 Fall River Atlas - View of the American Printing Company and the Fall River Iron Works. By the late 1880s the Iron Works complex was demolished for the expansion of the American Printing Company. The new mills produced the cotton cloth for the print works, along with dozens of other mills in Fall River, and became known as the "Iron Works Division" of the APC, a tribute to the importance of the Iron Works in the early history of Fall River. This site is now occupied by Boremco.
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
CO-435
1954 Hurricane Booklet
Friday, July 8, 2011
1938 Hurricane Booklet
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
1915 Fire Booklet
A February 1915 fire destroyed several blocks of downtown businesses in Fall River. This commerative booklet shows before and after shots of some of the buildings.
Labels:
Book,
Ephemera,
Fall River,
fire,
History
Saturday, July 2, 2011
King Philip Mills
A cancelled $500 First Mortgage Bond for the King Philip Mills, Fall River, Massachusetts. From 1900. Issued by the BMC Durfee Safe Deposit and Trust Company. It was due March 1, 1930. That same year the company was acquired by Berkshire Fine Spinning Associates (a company that forms part of the origin of Berkshire-Hathaway).
Friday, July 1, 2011
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Ball-o-thread
An antique ball of thread from the American Thread Company, Fall River, Massachusetts. The Kerr Mills became part of ATCO in 1899, and the Fall River plant closed in 1953. The entire complex was destroyed by a massive fire in January 1987. I remember seeing the flames just starting in the first mill on my way to school that morning, but missed the fire because I had to get to school. I picked up this entire original box of old crochet thread on ebay a few months back. Cool piece of local textile history.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Old Narragansetts
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Lowell Shuttle
Monday, June 27, 2011
1917 Official American Textile Directory.
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Clyde Cream Ale
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Fall River's First "Drive-in" Teller
Truman Was Wrong!
Fall River Herald News clipping, January 1, 1950.
"President Truman envisions the average annual family income at $12,000 in the year 2000!... Republicans will be no more!"
... Perhaps he was talking about 2008., when the Democrats took over and family incomes plunged - thanks to the Republicans, of course!
"President Truman envisions the average annual family income at $12,000 in the year 2000!... Republicans will be no more!"
... Perhaps he was talking about 2008., when the Democrats took over and family incomes plunged - thanks to the Republicans, of course!
City of Taunton
The Wreck of the City of Taunton, Somerset side of Mount Hope Bay. The remains of a Fall River Line freight steamer. Grounded in the 1930s and abandoned. A most ironic ship name for me, since I now live in the "City of Taunton".
Friday, June 24, 2011
Old Colony and Fall River Railroad Company
Old Colony and Fall River Railroad Company.
Stock certificate signed on September 20, 1854 by Alexander Holmes, company president. The Old Colony and Fall River Railroad was formed as a meger between the Old Colony Railroad and the Fall River Railroad, and provided rail service from Boston to either Plymouth or Fall River. The railroad would expand greatly in the late 1800s, first to Newport, Rhode Island, later to Cape Cod, and also to Central Massachusetts and New Bedford also. This stock certificate was for six shares bought by Mr. Elijah Hale of Rockbottom, Massachusetts (which later became the village of Gleasondale, in what now is the Town of Stow).
Stock certificate signed on September 20, 1854 by Alexander Holmes, company president. The Old Colony and Fall River Railroad was formed as a meger between the Old Colony Railroad and the Fall River Railroad, and provided rail service from Boston to either Plymouth or Fall River. The railroad would expand greatly in the late 1800s, first to Newport, Rhode Island, later to Cape Cod, and also to Central Massachusetts and New Bedford also. This stock certificate was for six shares bought by Mr. Elijah Hale of Rockbottom, Massachusetts (which later became the village of Gleasondale, in what now is the Town of Stow).
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Barnaby Zephyrs
"Do not choose your wash fabrics for 1910 until you have seen... Barnaby's fabric of quality." Sample of fine Scotch Gingham. The Barnaby Manufacturing Company was established in Fall River in 1892 on Quequechan Street. Later, until the late 1970s the site was used by Frito-Lay. In the 1980s it became the Quality Outlets which included factory outlet stores for Levi's, Dockers and a very good book store I used to go to often to get cheap books. Most recently it was occupied by Mill Stores and Cardi Furniture. The factory was demolished in 2010 for a shopping center that has not yet been built.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Firestone Fire 1941
Firestone Fire, Fall River, Massachusetts, October 11, 1941. What was originally the American Print Works mill went up in a huge inferno. Millions of dollars of U.S. Government rubber was lost, just several weeks before Pearl Harbor and the U.S. entry into WWII. Firestone had only occupied the building for about three years, but would remain in the rest of the complex into the 1960s. The company made gas masks and other rubber items for the war effort.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Cook Borden Lumber Yard
Hargraves Soap Works
An idyllic scene. Eastern Fall River in 1883. The Hargraves Soap company was located at what is now Stafford Square, along Quarry Street. The Quequechan River is in the distance, with the New Bedford to Fall River Railroad passing through the "mill pond". The Chace Mill is on the other side of the river. The horse pasture really strikes me, as this is now a dense area of housing. The Hargraves Mill was built on this spot a few years later in 1888.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Welcome!
I have been wanting to create a website or blog for some time now to combine and expand upon my various interests, which include photography and history. Bogle Hill is the name of the neighborhood I grew up in Fall River, Massachusetts. A city still near and dear to my heart.
Stay tuned!
Stay tuned!
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