/ HISTORY CITY OF LAWRENCE. BY J. F. C. HAYES LAWRENCE, MASS.: PUBLISHED BY E. D. aKEEN. PRINTED AT T II E "^^ A W R E K C E SEN T f X EL OFFICE. 1868. ADVERTISEMENTS. ^^«0 For Lawrence and Methuen, Ov TVo. 141 Essex Street, LaAvrence. :n^ews agents, statio:n'ees. Picture Frame Manufacturers stationery, School and Miscellaneons, and Blank Books, Photograph, Minette and Tintype Albums, Portfolios, "Writing Desks, Work Boxes, Backgammon Boards, Baskets, Games, Portmonaies, Pocket and Pen Knives, Razors, Scissors, Drawing Paper, Pens, Inks, Slates and Fancy Goods. Magazines Neatly Bound. Blank and Pass Books made to Order. LADIES' TRAVELING BAGS AND RETICULES, GOLD PENS AND P E If C I L S , ENGRAVINGS, LITHOGRAPHS, CHROfflOS AND PRINTS, CONSTANTLY ON HAND. NOTE PAPER AND ENVELOPES, the Best in the market, direct from the Mills, and manufactured for our own special trade. Please examine. Daily and Weekly Papers, Magazines and Periodicals, of every variety, for sale at our Counter, or delivered at regidences of subscribers in Lawrence and Methuen, tcithout extra charge. PICTURE FRANCES MANUFACTURED TO ORDER ! Boquets, Funeral and Wedding Wreaths Preserved in the most perfect manner by no. 141 ESSEX STREET, LAWRENCE, MASS. 4I£g=- Entire satisfaction given to all who may favor us with their patronage. .gS- PREFATORY OBSERVATIONS. The aim of this volurfie is to present to the reader facts and incidents in the history of Lawrence, many of which will appear to the older resident as a thrice told tale. Some portions, however, have never before been published. These have been collated to rescue them from oblivion. To many much of the material here presented may be of little interest. The author deems it a sufficient excuse lor presenting it that it has interested himself. In the statistical portion of the work, Ballardvale, Andover, North Andover and Methuen are included, for the reason that the interests of these places have become, in a great measure, identical with those of Lawrence. More especially are North Andover and Methuen included, because they are very soon to be still more intimately united to us by a horse-railway, and moreover, because they will both undoubtedly come under the municipality of Lawrence in the course of the next decade. In all that has been embodied in these pages, the aim of the author has been to obtain facts in the order of their coming, and to present them, without imbellishment or coloring, for the use of those who may, in coming years, see fit to enlarge upon the themes which he has only touched. In our labors upon this work, our memory, when undecided, has been refreshed by correspondence with those who, like us, were among the pioneers in the grieat enterprise of helping to build up a city. We are also under special obligations to Mr. George R. Rowe, the clerk of our city, and to the clerks of Andover and Methuen. J. F. C. HAYES. ADVERTISEMENTS. QEO. F. TALBOT, g ntgutst and glptkr ar j|, CORNEE OF ESSEX ANT> MILL STS., LAWRENCE, MASS. Where may be found a fine assortment of Drugs, Oliemicals, and Family Medicines. Having excellent facilities, and giving our strict attention to the selection of articles in our line, we feel confident of rendering satisfaction as regards quality of goods. Constantly on hand, a superior collection of SOAPS, f ubms itnmne |pcrfamts mii Scilrf ^ofebtrs, FOREIGN AND AMERICAN COLOGNES, Hair Oils, Hair, Nail and Teeth Brushes, Combs, Sponges, &c. We are Agent for the Celehrated^DAVIDSON'S EXTENSION SYRINGE, and keep a large stock of the various Glass and Metallic patterns. ALL THE LEADING PATENT MEDICINES of the day can be had at our counters, and any medicine not common to this market will be obtained without extra charge. PHYSICIANS' PRESORIPTIOlSrS receive particular attention, and are compounded in an accurate manner. GEO. F. TALBOT, Apothecary, ENTRAIfCE TO "WASHINGTON MILLS, ESSEX ST. ORIGIN OF LAWRENCE. It is now but about fifty-three years since the first poAver loom was set in motion in America, at Waltham.* A bolder step in the interest of humanity had never been taken on this continent, and to Francis C. Lowell, Patrick T. Jackson and Nathan Appleton the industry of the country is most deeply indebted for tliat important enterprise. The loom had been constructed by Mr. Lowell from a description of an English machine, then kept a most profound secret from every one except the operative weaver. The dresser was also con- structed by Mr. Lowell from drawings obtained in England, and in its first application was an improvement upon the English machine, and with only slight alterations both these machines, or rather machines made after their pattern, are still in use in the mills of this country upon the fabrication of all plain goods. At the period to which we allude, common cotton goods were selling in Boston at about thirty-three cents per yard. Mr. Jackson told Mr. Appleton at the time that he would be satisfied with twenty -five cents, but so long as purchasers were willing to pay the additional rate at auction — all domestic goods being then sold at auction — it was not in- cumbent upon the manufacturers to fix a price upon their goods. Gradually the prices of common brown sheetings de- clined as follows: 1816, 30 cents per yard; 1819, 21 cents per yard; 1826, 13 cents per yard; 1829, 8 1-2 cents per yard ; 1843, 6 1-4 cents per yard. *The first cotton factory in America was incorporated February 3, 1789, by the legislature of Massachusetts. It was located in the west parish of Beverly, and owned by Hon. George Cabot and Dr. Joshua Fuller. The corporators named in the act were John Cabot, George Cabot, Deborah Cabot, Andrew Cabot, Moses Brown, Joshua Fisher, Israel Thorndike, James Leonard, Thomas Somers and Isaac Chapman of Beverly, and Henry Higginson of Boston. The charter granted the right to own £10,000 of personal and £80, 000 of real estate. The Salem Register says President "Washington visited this mill October 30, 1789. The work, both of carding and spin- ning, was probably done by hand, as when the concern was sold to Samuel Blanchard of Wenham and George S. Johannot of Salem, they erected a mill on Bass river for spinning by water poioer. A mill with 22 spindles, for spinning cotton, was set in opera ion at Pawtucket in 1792. These spindles were increased in 1805 to 900, making it the largest spinning mill in America. In 1808 no less than 34 cotton factories, with 20j000 spindles, were set in motion in the state of Rhode Island. . ADVERTISEMENTS. ESTABLISHED IN 1856. C. B.FRENCH, 95 ESSEX STREET, LAWRENCE. OISTE PRICE lllL'Jfl^F'C^ Gents' Furnishing Establishment. THE FESTEST QUALITIES AND LATEST STYLES OP Sill Hili Kimmfeitmiii t@ Siliis and fitted to the head by the FRENCH CONFORMATOR, "Warranted in each in- stance and kept in repair WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE. A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF ALL STYLES AND QUALITIES Hats, Caps, Furnisliiiig Goods, Trimks, Umbrellas and Canes, TOGETHER WITH LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S DRESS PURS, AT THE LOWEST CASH PRICES, OLD FURS MADE OVER OR TAKEN IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE, The success of the manufacturing enterprise at Waltham verj soon induced other parties, mainly in Rhode Island and Connecticut, to embark in the same channel of trade, and in 1821 — seven years after the commencement at Waltham — the parties interested at that place purchased the Pawtucket Canal and commenced operations at Lowell. From this time the progress of manufactures was rapid. It needed neither pro- found wisdom nor extraordinary foresight to fortell the rising of towns and cities wherever water-power could be made avail- able. The march of enterprise was that of a giant whose foot-prints marked the water-falls and commanded the rushing waters to stand back for the benefit of advancing humanity. Lowell, Nashua, Dover, Great Falls and Manchester sprang into life as by magic. All along the coast the power of our sti'eams, large and small, was taken up to propel the spindle and the loom ; and where there were no water-falls, the aid of steam, as at Salem, Newburyport and Portsmouth, was called in to supply the deficiency. An occasional lull, — now named a crisis, now a panic, and now again a stagnation — were but the rest of a rushing steed to recover from over-exertion the strength to advance with accelerated speed and augmented power. What was to Mr. Nathan Appleton, in 1814, a doubt- ful venture, into which he deposited five thousand dollars with the assurance that it was done more as an act of kindness to Messrs. Lowell and Jackson, than with a view that it would ever be returned to him from the results of the Waltham en- . terprise, had in 1834, after a lapse of twenty years, become a matter of business which was generally regarded as the most absolutely certain to -make large returns. Many of the old companies were making large dividends, while those not so fortunate seemed afraid or ashamed to admit that from some cause they were receiving none. Hence, when the Hamilton and Appleton, as an illustration, would divide from 18 to 24 per cent, per annum, it was announced all over the country as an unmistakable indication of the general success of manufac- turing enterprises. No wonder then that every available fall upon a considerable stream should have been secured. Its ADVERTISEMENTS. WARREN & ROBmSON, MANUFACTURERS OF CABD €LOTHII&, OF EVERY BESCRIPTION, For Cotton and Woolen Machinery, SET IN LEATHER AND ENGLISH CARD CLOTH. Also, STRIPPER AND NAPPER CARDS, OF ALL KINDS. COR. TURNPIKE AND METHUEN STS., S^SSbT^sS™'! LAWRENCE, MASS. Orders respectfully solicited and promptly executed. Satisfaction guaranteed. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. manifest destiny, in the estimation of the majority of the com- munity, was to run a cotton mill; and to secure such a power was but another name for securing an ample fortune. Immediately after Lowell was founded, the people along the river, from that city to tide-water at Haverhill, began to pre- dict that the various rapids known as Hunt's, Deer Jump, Peters's, Bodwell's, and Mitchell's Falls would soon be taken for manufacturing purposes. The entire fall in this distance was ascertained to be about fifty feet, of which Hunt's Falls comprised sixteen, Deer Jump, Peters's and Bodwell's com- prised twenty-six, and these now afford the power in use at Lawrence. The fall below Lawrence, in two or three rapids, amounts to about eight feet. As early as 1833, Rev. Mr. Perry of Bradford predicted that the time would come when the Mcrrimac Avould be lined with mills from Lowell to Haver- hill. " At about this time the enterprising people of Methuen village conceived the idea of turning the Merrimac into the Spicket, with a view of increasing the power at that village. The survey Avas made by Stephen Barker, Esq., and resulted in ascertaining that the project was not feasible. In the mean- time, Daniel Saunders, Esq., taking hold of the matter in a more practical form, bought out the right to Peters's Falls, thus securing the key to Bodwell's Falls below, and most effectually checkmating any effort on the part of others to use any of the power below Hunt's Falls Avithout his co-operation. This purchase was made in 1837. In 1843, Mr. John Ne- smith, of Lowell, desired to know upon what terms Mr. Saunders Avould admit himself and Mr. Samuel Lawrence to become associate OAvners Avith him. The terms were made and accepted. The associates then purchased half of Hunt's Falls, and thus put themselves effectually in a position to control all the poAver on the river beloAv Lowell. Subsequently, through the influence of Mr. Samuel Lawrence, their interest in Hunt's Falls Avas transferred to the Middlesex Mills in LoAvell, of Avhich Mr. LaAvrence was the agent. This association then admitted Messrs. Daniel Saunders, Jr., of this city, and Thomas Hopkinson, of Lowell, and assumed the name of the 2 10 ADVERTISEMENTS. OKKAME^TAL 1^0. 7 JACKSOISr ST., LAWREISTCE. J. ]nj:e:dina^, Manufacturer of the Improved Invisible or Ventilating Wigs & Toupees, — SUCH AS — BANDS, SWITCHES, BRAIDS, GRECIAN AND SIDE CURLS, PUFFS, CUSHIONS, &C. Ladies' and Childreu's HAIR CUT AND DRESSED in the Latest Styles. Particu- iilar attention paid to Shampooing Ladies' Heads and to Dying the Hair. AGENT FOR VIEIRA'S TOILET SHAMPOOING OLEA^NIISTG THE HAIR WITHOUT SOAP OR WATER, Beautifying and Preserving the Hair and Removing Dan- druff and Eruptions. MONEY REFUNDED IF IT FAILS OF GIVING SATISFACTION. Orders sent by Express will receive prompt attention. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 11 Water Power Association, with Mr. Lawrence as chairman, Daniel Saunders as land agent, and John Nesmith as treas- urer, and agreed to expend fifty thousand dollars in the pur- chase of land along the river. Mr. Saunders entered upon his duty as land agent, purchasing, conditionally, at about twice their value for farming purposes, about one hundred farms of various sizes. The title to many of these estates be- longed to parties at a distance, in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and New York. He secured all the desirable property on the north side of the river, excepting that controlled by Mr. Adolphus Durant, which is still in dispute, and most of that upon the south side of the river ; the lot upon which the Shawsheen House is situated, and that just south of the rail- way bridge, where the brick store of Mr. John B. Howard stands, being the only exceptions. Having thus obtained the title to the land, this company, in 1844, petitioned the legis- lature for an act of incorporation as the Essex Company, and obtained the following CHARTER. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatwes, in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows : Sect. 1. Samuel Lawrence, John Nesmith, Daniel Saunders, and Edmund Bartlett, their associates and successors, are hereby made a corporation, by the name of the Essex Company, for the purpose of constructing a dam across Merrimack river, and constructing one or more locks and canals in connection with said dam, to remove obstruc- tions in said river by falls and rapids, from Hunt's Falls to the mouth of Shawsheen river, and to create a water power to use, or sell, or lease to other persons or corporations, to use for manufacturing and mechan- ical purposes ; and, for these purposes, shall have all the powers and privileges, and be subject to all'the duties, and liabilities, and restric- tions, set forth in the thirty-eighth and forty-fourth chapters of the Re- vised Statutes. Sect. 2. Said corporation may hold real estate not exceeding, ex- clusive of the expenditure for the dam and canals, three hundred thous- and dollars, and the whole capital stock of said corporation shall not exceed one million dollars, and said stock shall be divided into shares not exceeding one hundred dollars each. Sect. 3. The said corporation is herebj^ authorized and empowered to construct and maintain a dam across said river, either at Deer Jump Falls, or BodwelPs Falls, or some point in said river between said falls, and all such canals and locks as may be necessary for the purposes afore- said ; and for the purpose of making said dam, and constructing the main canal for navigation, or transports, may take, occupy, and inclose 12 ADVERTISEMENTS. ICK STORK! BEDELL, FOSTER & CO. PROPRIETORS OF THE 0]SrE FRICE IJ 1 NO. 15 ARMINQTON BLOCK, ESSEX STREET, LAWRENCE, MASS., Have on hand, and are daily receiving from the Manufacturers, every description of Ready-Made Clothing, mmm] \m)i ^@^ TOGETHER WITH Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises, Carpet Bags, Umbrellas, •which are all MAEXED IjST PLAm FIGUKES! at as lew a price as goods of the same quality can he purchased in Boston or elsewhere. No deviation is ever made from the marks on the Goods, and a good suit of Clothing ■will be given to the person who will give information to the Proprietors of any act to tho contrary. , GIVE THE ONE PRICE 8T0RE A TRIAL. BBDKLiLi^ FOSTXZR d^ GO.^ 15 ARMINGTON BLOCK, ESSEX STREET. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 13 any of the lands adjoining said canals and locks, or dam, which may be necessary for building or repairing the same, for towing paths, and other necessary purposes, not exceeding twenty feet on each side of said canal, or locks, and may blow up and remove any rocks in said river, and dig in anv of the lands near to said river, through which it may be necessary to pass said main canal : iwovided, that said corporation shall not ob- struct the passage of rafts, masts, or floats of timber down said river earlier than the first day of June, in building said dam, nor keep the same obstructed for a longer time than five months before the opening of said canal for the passage thereof. Sect. 4. If there shall be occasion, in the prosecution of the powers and purposes aforesaid, to make a canal across any public highway, or if highways shall hereafter be laid out across such canal, it shall be the duty of said corporation to make sufficient bridges across said canal, and to keep them in good repair. Sect. 5. The said corporation shall make and maintain, in the dam so built by them across said river, suitable and reasonable fishways, to be kept open at such seasons as are necessary and usual for the passage of fish. Sect. 6. The said corporation shall erect, and forever maintain snch canal and locks as shall be necessary around any dam constructed by them ; the locks to be not less than twenty feet in width, and ninety feet in length ; and said canal shall be so constructed, that there shall be easy, safe, and convenient access to, and egi-ess from, the same, with fastenings and moorings for the reconstruction of rafts or floats, after the egress ; and shall be free and not subject to any charges whatever for the passage of rafts of wood and lumber, masts, and floats of tim- ber, and be tended by a keeper employed by said coi-poration, and opened at all reasonable times, promptly, for such passage. Sect. 7. The fishways in said dam, and the entrance and exit of said canal, and the moorings and fastenings at the exit, shall be made to the satisfaction of the county commissioners of the county of Essex, who shall, on application to them by said corporation, after due notice, in such manner as they shall deem reasonable, to all persons interested therein, and a hearing of the parties, prescribe the mode of constructing the same ; and any person who shall be dissatisfied with the construction thereof, when the same are completed, may make complaint to said county commissioners, setting forth that the same, or either of them, are not constructed according to the prescription of said commissioners ; and said commissioners, after due notice as aforesaid, shall proceed to examine the same, and shall accept the same, if they shall be of opinion that they are built and made according to such prescriptions ; or, if they shall be of opinion that the same are not made according to the pre- scription, may require the same to be further made and completed, till they shall be satisfied to accept the same ; and the expenses of said com- missioners, in such examination, shall be paid by said corporation. Sect. 8. Any person who shall be damaged in his property by said corporation, in cutting or making canals through his lands, or by flow- ing the same, or in any other way in carrying into effect the powers hereby granted, unless said corporation shall, within thirty days after request in writing, pay or tender to said person a reasonable satisfac- tion therefor, shall have the same remedies as are provided by law, for persons damaged by railroad corporations, in the thirty-ninth chapter of the Revised Statutes. 14 ADVERTISEMENTS. (okseller. Str*' PICTURE FRAME IS^O. 8 ATKi:^srSOK BLOCK, ESSEX ST., LAWRENCE, 31 ASS., DEALER IN AlflgllS EVIPORTBD PICTURES, Has always on hand a large assortment of EUGRAVIITGS, CHUOMOS, LITHOGRAPHS, and COLORED PRINTS, and everything in the Picture Line. /l^\ ill School Books, Blank Books, Pass Books, VASES, STATUES, AND RELIGIOUS ORNAMENTS, of all kinds. NICE NOTE, BILLET, AND LETTER PAPER, of every style and price. All the Daily and Weekly Papers and Magazines. Pictures framed at an hour's notice. Book Binding, Gilding and Marbling done in the best manner. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 15 Sect. 9. For the purpose of reimbursing said corporation in part for the cost and expense of keeping said locks and canals in repair, and in tending the same, and in clearing the passages necessary for the transit of boats and merchandise, and other articles through said canal, the following toll is hereby established and granted to said corporation on all goods, boats and merchandise, except rafts of wood and lumber, masts and tloats of timber passing down said canal, and on all goods carried up through said canal, namely : on salt, lime, plaster, bar iron, pig iron, iron castings, anthracite coal, stone and hay, eight cents per ton of twenty-two hundred and forty pounds ; on bituminous coal, twelve cents per chaldron of thirty-six bushels ; on bricks, sixteen cents per thousand ; on manure, fifty cents per load ; on oak timber, thirty- five cents per ton of forty cubic feet ; on pine plank and boards, thirty cents per thousand, board measure ; on ash and otlier hard stuff, forty cents per thousand, board measure ; on posts and rails, fifteen cents per hundred ; on tree nails, thirty cents per thousand ; on hop poles, twenty cents per thousand ; on hard wood, twenty cents per cord ; on pine wood, sixteen cents per cord ; on bark, twenty cents per cord ; on white oak pipe staves, one dollar per thousand ; on red oak pipe staves, sixty- seven cents per thousand ; on white oak hogshead staves, sixty cents per thousand ; on red oak hogshead staves, forty cents per thousand ; on white oak barrel staves, twenty cents per thousand ; on hogshead hoops, sixteen cents per thousand; on barrel hoops, twelve cents per thousand ; on hogshead hoop poles, thirty cents per thousand ; on bar- rel hoop poles, twenty cents par thousand ; on all articles of merchan- dise not enumerated, ten cents per ton of twenty-two hundred and forty pounds : j^^ovided, that the rates of toll aforesaid shall be subject to the direction of the Legislature. Sect. 10. 'The said dam shall not be built to flow the water in said river higher than the foot of Hunt's Falls, in the ordinary run and amount of water in the river, and a commission of three competent persons, to be appointed, one by the said corporation, and one by the proprietors of the locks and canals on Merrimack river ; and a bird by the two thus appointed, shall, upon the application of either party, fix and determine, by permanent monuments, the point in said river, which is the foot of Hunt's Falls ; and shall also, upon the like appli- cation, fix and determine the height of the dam of this corporation, and of the flash boards to be used thereon, whose award and determination shall be final and binding upon all parties forever. And if either party shall refuse, after request in writing by the other, for the space of thirty days, to name such commissioner, or in case of a vacancy in such com- mission, for any cause, either party may apply to the Governor of this Commonwealth, who is hereby empowered to fill such vacancy. And the said point of the foot of Hunt's Falls shall be fixed within sixty days after such application to the commissioners, and the height of the jier- manent dam shall be fixed and determined within one year after such application. Sect. 11. This act shall take effect from and after its passage. \_A].^voved by the Governor, March 20, IS-IS.] Under the foregoing charter the Essex Company was duly organized on the 16th of April, 1845, by the choice of Abbott Lawrence, Nathan Appleton, Ignatus Sargent, Wm. Sturgis, 16 ADVERTISEMENTS. IHl BlEI COOK SlOf 1 Ifll HABI. FOR COAI. AND WOOD. SIX SIZES. WITH AND WITHOUT EXTENSION TOP. For Economy in Fuel ; For Durability; For Capacity in Baking, Boiling, Broiling and Boasting; For Simplicity of Management; For Cleanliness in Cooking; For Great Power of Heating, Baking and Boasting with a very Small Consumption of Fuel ; For Beauty of Design; For Smoothness of Castings and Elegance of Finish ; ^ THE " PEERLESS " STANDS UNEQUALLED ! .^ The Paris Moniteitr, under date of July 1, says: "We have examined with much care and attention, all the Cooking Stoves of the different nations exhibited on the Champ de Mars, and, in our estimation, none compare favorably with that exhibited by Messrs. Pratt & Wentworth, of Boston, Mass. This Stove is called the ' Peerless ' and very justly too. It is, we believe, the most perfect Cooking Stove at the Exposi- tion. It has an oven of great capacity, baking splendidly, and roasting as well as be- fore an open tire. It has an ample and convenient boiling space, and is furnished with a well arranged hot-water resei-voir and warming closet. It operates equally well for Wood or Coal, and in all the requisites of a Cooking Stove, it is indeed • Peerless.' As a specimen of fine casting and elegant finish we have never seen its equal." ONLY AGENTS IN LAWRENCE, D. N. & C. M. MARTIN, NO. 7 ATKINSON BLOCK, ESSEX STREET. (See next advertising page.) HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 17 and Charles S. Storrow as directors. Mr. Storrow was elected treasurer and agent, and immediately entered upon the dis- charge of his duties. In about two weeks, with a corps of able assistant engineers, he Avas at work laying out the future citj. The labor was of course an arduous and responsible one, re- quiring the exercise of accurate engineering skill and much pradent forecast in setting at work all the varied branches of trade which the advancement of the great enterprise demand- ed. The stone for the dam was to be quarried in New Hamp- shire, the lumber for houses, shops. &c., obtained from Maine. In a little over three months the preliminary arrangements were advanced sufficiently to enable the w^orkmen to begin upon the construction of the dam. The first excavations on this structure were made near the north shore, August 1. and the first stone was laid September 19, this being one of the headers of the front course near the centre of the river. This structure is probably one of the strongest and most substantial in this or any other country. It is of granite, 1629 feet in length, 35 feet thick at the base and 12 1-2 at the top, backed by gravel to within a few feet of the surface. It is built upon, or more properly, bedded into the solid metamorphic rock forming the bed of the river, and is in some places 40 1-2 feet high. The overflow of water is 900 feet wide, and the fall is 26 feet. The granite blocks of which the dam is built were hammered on the bed and build and laid in hydraulic cement. The cost of the dam was ,f;250,000. The canal upon the north side of the river is something over a mile in length, 100 feet wide at the upper, and 60 feet wide at the lower end, and 12 feet deep. Including the locks at the lower end, the canal cost $200,000. Its course is parallel with the river, from which it is 400 feet distant. The mills are located upon this belt of land thus isolated by the canal. The Merrimac affords, on an average, at this place, about 5000 cubic feet of water a second, but the amount sometimes reaches 60,000. The power thus obtained is estimated at 150 mill power. A mill power is calculated to absorb 30 cubic feet of water a second, with a head and fall of 25 18 ADVERTISEMENTS. D. N. & C. M. MAETIN, DEALERS EST Cooking & Heating Stoves, FURNACES AND RANG-ES, of the most approved modern patterns. Plain, Japanned and Planished Tin Ware, Toilet Sets, FINE SILVER PLATED WARE, TABLE CUTLERY, LAMPS, Glass Ware, Wooden, Iron, Enamelled, Tinned and French Wares. A complete line of Kitchen Furnishing Groods^ AT LOWEST CASH PRICES. Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper Work, in all their branches, executed in the best manner, by experienced workmen. D. isr. & o. m:. ]m:a.iitin, 7 Atkinson Bloch^ £Sssex St. (See page 16.) HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 19 feet. This gives a force which is estimated to equal from 60 to 70 horse power — a horse power being defined by Watt at 32,000 pounds avoirdupois lifted to the height of one foot in a minute. The lessons yearly impressing themselves upon the mind by the reserve of the power at Newfound, Squam and Win- nipisawke lakes may sometime be so convincing that the mill owners upon the Merrimac and its tributaries will be induced to avail themselves of the vast power now annually running to waste, by the erection of dams upon the more insignificant sources of supply, and from which all our floods are derived. The river drains a vast extent of country, the lake surface alone being equal to about 350 square miles, something like half of which is already held in reserve for dry weather by adequate dams. The smaller lakes are the most important reservoirs, as their banks are more abrupt than the larger, and may be raised much higher at trifling cost in comparison to the quantity of power reserved. These are yet to be secured, and when this is done in a proper manner the supply of water will be rendered not only continuous, but will flow in vastly increased volume an(!t power. Every additional dam upon the main river or any of its tributaries, however small, will prove an aid in this direction. That the time will come when the minimum of water will be increased at Lawrence to 8000 if not 10,000 cubic feet per second, and the maximum be reduced to 30,000 or, at most, 40,000 feet a second, there is as little room to doubt as there is to doubt that eventually every avail- able power upon these streams will be harnessed to the car of manufacturing industry. The power of the Merrimac and its tributaries is not at the present time taxed with one-third the labor it is capable of performing. The Essex Company dis- pose of the water power to manufacturers upon such terms as are deemed prudent between the parties. At the outset, as for instance, when the Atlantic Mills Corporation made their purchase, the price agreed upon for a mill power was $14,333, of which sum $9333 was paid in cash, the balance of $5000 remaining perpetually at 6 per cent, interest, payable annually 20 ADVERTISEMENTS. H. M. ^VSTHIT^EY mmeccL'i 7 (ESTABLISHED IN 1849,) UNDER BAY STATE NATIONAL RANK, CORNER OF LAWRENCE AND ESSEX STREETS, DEALER IN RELIABLE FAMILY MEDICINES, POPULAR PROPRIETARY REMEDIES, TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES, Trusses, Supporters, Braces, ^c. MANUFACTURER OF WHITNEY'S PULMONARY BALSAM, FOR COUGHS, COLDS, &c. "W hitney's Tonic Bittei's, A valuable and agreeable Appetizer and Invigorator. ALSO, Sole Agent for the Celebrated Eugenie French Wash, FOR REMOVING MOTHS, PIMPLES, TAN, &c. t^S" As in the past, special attention will be given to quality of Goods and Phy- sicians' Prescriptions. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 21 in silver or its equivalent. The Atlantic Company bought twenty mill powers, and consequently pay an annual rent of I56OOO. We are not aware that any variation from this price has been made by the Essex Company, until recently, the price per mill power has been somewhat increased. "Each " mill power is declared to be the right to draw from the near- " e st canal or water course of the grantors so much water as "shall give a power equal to thirty cubic feet of water per "second, when the head and fall is twenty-five feet; and no "more is to be drawn in any one second, nor is the same to "be drawn more than sixteen hours in each day of twenty- " four hours ; and in order to prevent disputes as to the power " of each mill privilege in the variations of the height of water " from changes of the season or other causes, it is understood " and declared that the quantity of water shall be varied in pro- " portion to the variation of the height, one foot being alloAved "and deducted from the height of the actual head and fall, "and also from that with which it is compared before comput- " ing the proportion between them : thus on a head and fall "of thirty feet the quantity of water to be used would be " twenty-four cubic -feet, and 24-29ths of a cubic foot per " second." Something like three-quarters of the power originally owned by the Essex Company has thus far been disposed of to the various corporations and individual enterprises already in ope- ration or in the course of construction. The future will in- crease this power considerably ; but the present generation need borrow largely on the hope of such a consummation during their time. At the time the Essex Company commenced operations here the entire population of the territory now comprised Avithin the limits of Lawrence was probably not over 200. But pop- ulation rapidly folloAved enterprise. The boarding kouso on the Turnpike, next north of the store of Mr. E. W. Pierce, was the first dwelling erected here. The frame was raised September 12, 1845, and on the 4th of the succeeding De- cember the finished house was occupied by Mr.' Timothy Os- 22 ADVERTISEMENTS. ESTABLISHED IN 1©55. LEWIS STRATTON, 122 Sssex Street^ Lainrrence^ DEALER IN SCHOOL A^D MISCELLANEOUS f IN EVERY DEPARTMENT OF LITERATURE. Depository of the Bifcle and Tract Society. We have the best assortment of BIBLES in town. PRAYER BOOKS of all kinds and styles. Account Books & Stationery. A large stock of BLANK BOOKS of my own make constantly on hand. Also, Blank Books of any pattern made to order, in the best manner. STATIONERY OF ALL KINDS, Paper and Envelopes, Pens, Ink, Pencils, Pen Holders, Rubber, Deeds, Leases, Assign- ments, Notes, Receipts, &c. pocket kntves, bazoks and "wallets, &c., &c. Sole Agent in Lawrence for Morton's Gold Pens, the best in the world. A CIRCULATING LIBRARY OF POPULAR books. Magazines & 'Weekly Papers^ for sale singly and subscriptions received at the lowest rates. BOOK BINDING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. PICTURE FRAltES on hand and made to order. HISTORY OP LAWRENCE. 23 good, who not unfrequently lodged all the way from 100 to 200 people beneath its roof. The rush was so immense that no one thought of complaining of the lack of accommodations if he was fortunate enough to gain admittance inside a dwell- ing. For tAVO years the rush for houses continued almost un- abated. As late as October, 1846, the writer traversed the place in every direction for a tenement. All that were finished were full, and all that had been commenced were found to be engaged. He then went to Methuen with like success. Re- turning to the "new city" he saw Mr. Rufus Brown, who owns the block at the westerly corner of Essex and Newbury streets, with four stakes under his arm and an axe in his hand. In answer to the inquiry as to what he was intending to do, he said that he was about to "stake out a dwelling house," which would be finished in two or three weeks — that he had already let one tenement, and if we wanted the other we must speak quick. Fatigued with vain house hunting, we told him Ave would take the other tenement. And it was the same with ofiices. Every finished room was occupied and every unfinish- ed one was engaged. The only spot into which we could move our printing materials was an attic in the building now standing at the corner of Valley and Turnpike streets, and even this we were compelled to engage before it was raised, and actually moved into it before the walls were plastered or the floors laid. This room, while in process of finishing, was at once the work shop of carpenters, masons and printers, and, for a month or more, the sleeping apartment of editor, printers and boys. Some of the laborers in the employ of the Essex Company walked nearly three miles every morning and night for months. The legislature of 1846 granted charters for the Bay State Mills, the Atlantic Cotton Mills, the Union Mills and the Bleaching and Dying Company, with an aggregate capital of .$4,500,000. This was certainly a most formidable dis- play of corporations and capital ; but the Union Mills and the Bleachery were never built, and even the Atlantic Cotton Mills subsequently concluded to expend a million and a half instead of two millions of dollars, and the central mill site 24 ADVERTISEMENTS. Imiffiatioa AND ID 123 ESSEX ST., xchange Office, - - LAWRET^CE, MASS. Persons wishing to purchase Passage Tickets to or from can SAVE MONEY by obtaining them of the undersigned, the Only Authorized Agent for Lawrence for the Splendid Mail Steamers of the Inman Line, and all the Safest and Best Lines of Steamships and I'ackets. We have just completed arrangements with the Railroad Companies which gives us facilities not equalled by any other Agent in New England for booking passengers to any part of the United States. By this arrangement we are enabled to bring passengers from Liverpool, Lon- don, Glasgow, Dublin, Belfast, Derry, Antwerp, Bremen, or Havre to Lawrence, Andover, Ballard Vale, Haverhill, Georgetown, Exeter, or any town or city in the United States. We give through Railroad Tickets to all per- sons purchasing Passage Certificates of us, thus guarding the emigrant against manj' annoyances which they would be subject to. Agent tor the JilAIL AKD OPPOSITION LINES to California. 4cg» Recollect that we do our business direct with the Companies, and uot through other Agents, therefore we can aflford and will sell Tickets as low as they can be pur- chased anywhere. # BILLS OJP EXICH^^IVG^E ^ for any amount, from £1 upwards, always on hand and fbr sale at lower rates than they can be purchased elsewhere. ^g- The highest cash price paid for English and American Gold and Silver, Bank of England, Bank of Ireland, and Rank of Scotland Notes. Mg' We also furnish Railroad Tickets from Lawrence to all parts of the West and South-west. PATRICK MURPHY, Sentinel Office, 123 Essex Street, Lawrence, Mass. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 25 next west of Avliat is now the Washington Mills reverted to the Essex Company. This most desirable property has since gone into the hands of the Pacific Mills Corporation, and their beautiful worsted mill stands upon a portion of it. The Washington Mills were laid out on the 11th of April, 1846, and on the 9th of June following work was commenced on the Atlantic Cotton. Mills. On the 25ih of June the frame of the Essex Company's saw mill was raised. On the 10th of July following work was begun on the Essex Company's foundry. On the 12th of August the first brick block in the city was commenced. This block is now known as boarding house No. 1, on the Atlantic Corporation. It was finished and occupied on the 4th of January, 1847. The race-way to the Essex Company's machine shop (now the Everett Mills) was commenced November 13. These little details are inserted that the reader may have some faint idea of the homogeneous appearance of the place at that time. Beginning at the gneiss ledge, the stone from which composes the river wall and mill foundations, situated nearly two miles south — or at North Andover, three miles east, then the depository of bricks and lumber by railway — or at Pelham, some eight miles west, from whence came the granite for the dam, there was an almost endless string of slow plodding teams loaded to the utmost of their powers, all cen- tering from the dam to Spicket river to deposit their loads. But here was not the only signs of activity. All over the city buildings were rising with most astonishing celerity. For twelve hours a day the heavy teams, here removing hills, there filling valleys, or loaded with building materials, plodded heavily through the sufibcating dust of dry weather, or the almost bottomless mud of the rainy season. For months to- gether the railway company delivered from 100,000 to 200,- 000 bricks per day at North Andover, all destined for this place. We had no idle men, no idle teams. Every one was employed. Masons, carpenters, stone cutters, laborers were all doing their utmost. The ever vigilant engineer and con- tractor, watching the progress and attending to details, were 26 . ADVERTISEMENTS. DEXTER & GARDINER, No. 16 Armington Block, Essex St., LA.AV^RE]N^OE, 1VIA.SS. DEALERS IN CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, ALSO, nir ^ =^ .^^ J HPIP . H an wi WwM, JJLmJIILSJL E a . _ _ _ __ _ jyiL mm. O AN^D NDOW SHADES, EISTA-MELLED CLOTHS OP ALL KINDS. Mats, Picture Frames, Cords, Tassels, AND Chipman's Carpet Lining, which is a great saving to Carpets, ORDERS FOR PAPERIWC ROOMS RECEIVED, and executed promptly and faithfully. NO. 16 ARMINGTON BLOCK, ESSEX STREET. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 27 scattered along the line of works, adding, if possible, addition- al vigor and directness to blows of hammers, or strokes of trowels, or thrusts of spades. In all the region where the citj now stands there was no spot where one could escape the din and dust of busj, bustling industry. On the 7th of September, 1846, a post-office was opened in a little building on the Turnpike, formerly a shoe shop. It Avas about 15 by 15. and one story high. It stood on the next lot north of where the store of ]\Ir. Hugh Rafferty is now located. The coming of this important adjunct of a busy com- munity took many by surprise. The idea of establishing a post-office here originated with Mr. George A. Waldo, of Me.- thuen, whose son, George Albert Waldo, was made the post- master. The business at the seat of government was perform- ed by the personal efforts of Mr. Samuel J. Varney, of Lowell, and at his suggestion the office took the name of Merrimac. Previous to this event, from the commencement of operations here, the place was known by numerous names, such as "New City," "Essex," "Andover Bridge," &c. The name thus given officially to the place was continued until the town of Lawrence was set off from Methuen and Andover by legisla- tive enactment in the winter of 1847. This separation was opposed by residents and authorities of both Andover and Me- thuen; not, perhaps, with the idea that it could be long post- poned, but more upon the plea that it was then altogether unnecessary and premature. Immediately after the project of severing the "new city" from the territory of Andover and Methuen was proposed, letter writers in distant papers began to suggest that the toAvn should take the name of Lawrence, "as a compliment to Hon. Abbott Lawrence, who had done so much for Massachusetts and this place in particular." On the loth of January, 1847, a meeting of a considerable number of residents took place at the office of the Essex Company, Avith a view to an understanding in regard to the name of the new town, to be embodied in a petition to the legislature for a charter. At the suggestion of Mr. Storrow, the name of Lawrence Avas agreed upon, not, as the newspaper Avriters 28 ADVERTISEMENTS. C.'Gr. SJ^'RGr TINT'S FOR Cles^nmg Pibrous Materials^ PATE]SrTED DECEMBER 3, 1861. With 'each Mnchine is furnished a counter shaft and all necessary pullies. The driv- ini? pullies are 14 in. diameter, 6 in. face and require a speed of 400 revolutions per minute. Parties ordering should provide a pulley on their main shaft 12 in. face, and of sufficient size to give the counter shaft 400 revolutions per minute. The machine weighs frem 3000 to 4000 lbs., and is built in the most thorough and workmanlike man- ner. All orders promptly attended to. CHARLES G. SARGENT, Manufacturer of Cotton and "Woolen Macliinery, GRANITEVILLE, MASS., near Lowell, on Stony Brook R. R. (see also pages 80, 32, -34, 36, 38 and 40.) HISTORY OF LAWREXCE. 29 had proposed, as a compliment distinctively to Mr. Abbott Lawrence, but as a token of respect to a family among the most liberal and distinguished in the country. There were then living three members of this family : Amos, Abbott and Samuel. Of these, Abbott and Samuel were among the most energetic business men of New England, and both more ac- tively engaged in the enterprises here than any others not residents among us. In point of investment, the family un- doubtedly then had as great an interest in the new town as, we might almost say, all others combined. There was, there- fore a good if not a sufficient reason why the future city should be christened as it was. That some among us would have preferred that the new town should retain the name applied to it by the post-office department, there is no reason to doubt, but most of these being in favor of a town organization, very readily acquiesced in the change rather than hazard the chances of obtaining a charter by creating a division in regard to a name. For that time they cheerfully admitted that " there is nothing in a name." That it was not the intention to distinguish one over another member of the Lawrence fam- ily in the name of the city, we may refer to the distinct im- pression: " S. Lawrence, A. Lawrence," upon a brick in the south-east corner of our City Hall. We leave the reader to define the question whether Amos or Abbott, or both, were intended to be complimented in the impression: "A. Law- rence." There is no question that Samuel, who was then agent of the Bay State Corporation, as well as of the Middlesex Mills in Lowell, was included in the compliment. On the 28th of April, 1846, the Essex Company sold at auction a considerable quantity of land located in various parts of the city. In the view of many persons, and unfortunately some of them men of influence, the prices paid for these lots were exorbitant, and they began to predict that as a conse- quence the new town would be irretrievably ruined. Nearly twenty-two years have since rolled away, and time, which proves all things, has demonstrated the fact that in but ex- ceptional instances, these sales were below, rather than above. 30 ADVERTISEMENTS. To lUooIen M!aiiufactiii?©i?s.H Gentlemen : Allow me to call your attention to a new INIaeliine for Bui-rinf; Wool, and for cleaning all fibrous materials from dust, burrs, and all loose foreign matter. Tins Machine differs from any other heretofore offered to niariufactur- crs, in many important particulars, among which are the following, viz : The stock in process of cleaning passes through four distinct sub- divisions, and each portion falls Into a separate receptacle, unmixed with any other. The light dust or other light matter is drawn throvgh the Fan, while the heavy dirt and scurf are droi)i)ed into another place. Burrs, stra^v', sticks, etc., are thrown off from the Burr Cylinder into a third distinct and separate receptacle ; while the clean and thoroughly opened wool is delivered forward, as usual, in the oj)en room prepai'ed for it, ready for its next process. By means of these sub-divisions, in a simple, mechanical manner, the IMachine is enabled to perform the Avork more perfectly, and without loss of fibre, as is usually the case. From the mechanical arrangement of the parts, the hwrs, when once separated from the wool, are passed at once out of the nmchine into a separate dep>artment from the fibre. There is no fibre of any value lost under the machine, the foreign matter escaping under the Fickuu/ Cylinder being free from fil)re and only fit for the waste heap. In all other machines for Burring A\'ool and for cleaning fibrous materials, the burrs and other substances when knock- ed or beat out from the wools at the Burr Cylinder, are thrown back into the uiachine, — mixed with the ap})roaching wool — attempt to pass the Burring cylinder, and are repeatedly knocked back again. This repeat- ed process goes on indefinitely, — the burr being tumbled forward and backward, until by Its own weight. It finds an outlet through the rack or (/rating beneath. A serious difliculty, however, often occurs from this repeated tossing of the Burr. The burr being merely a compact coil of vegetable fibre, s|)!rally wound, Is In consequence opened, and In this form 2)asses throni/h the Burring apparatus among the free wool already in the machine, and attaches itself inseparably with some of the fibres, where it is at last found in the finished cloth, with great annoyance and loss to the manu- facturer. Tills defect, pertaining to other machines, Is wholly overcome by the new machine herewith brought to your notice. The burrs being but once operated upon, the result is sure and final. I am also enabled by this ma.'hine to overcome another serious defect incident to all other Burr Picking Machines. Formerly the racks or yra-tes under the picking cylinders were, of necessity, very open, — being made with sufHcIent space to allow the burr to esca})e. Of course? this opening would also allow a large dropping of the wool in process of working, which wool, by being freely mixed with burrs and other foreign matter, becomes comparatively worthless. My present Machine {Continnetl on Page 32.) [see also tages 28, 82, 3i, oG, 38 .vnd 40.] HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 31 the real value of the lots at the time of their sale. To illus-* trate this position -wo will take some of the most eligible lots, as follows : — On the north side of Essex street, between Jack- son and Newburj streets, eighteen lots were sold at prices ranging from 27 1-2 to 70 cents per foot. The highest price paid was for the lot at the corner of Jackson street, where the store of Mr. Smith is located. The next highest price, 58 cents, was paid for the lot at the corner of Newbury street. These lots were immediately covered with buildings, have never ceased to command good occupants at high rents, and woukl probably, to-day, if divested of their buildings and offered at auction, command at least ^2 per square foot. The interme- diate lots would be worth, under the same circumstances, on an average at least three times the amount at which they were sold. So much for the business portion of the city. Now let us see how the lots ranged in another section. • "We will take that section between Lawrence and White streets, on the north side of Haverhill street, for illustration. Here eleven lots were sold at prices ranging from 9 to 13 1-2 cents per foot. To-day, divested of buildings, the lots embraced in this sec- tion, beyond any reasonable doubt, if offered at auction, would command, on an average, from 70 to 90 cents a square foot. In this connection, the writer well remembers havino- been of- fered a house and very eligible lot in this section at what seemed to him a remarkably low price, very soon after the first organization of the town. Seeking the advice of a friend, now gone from among us, in regard to the purchase, we with sadness received the intimation that we were permitting our enthusiasm to run away with our better judgment, and that, in his opinion, the property was not worth the price demanded ; and well do we remember, too, our reply, that if the property was not worth double the price at which it was offered, the town of Lawrence was destined, within ten years, to go, irre- coverably and forever, to utter desolation. jNLany years have since passed away. The enthusiasm which then was thought to have taken control of our judgment has had ample time to cool, and the results of the proposed purchase- can now be 32 ADVERTISEMENTS. iCont'mued feom Page 30.) obviates this completely, by the process of throwing out, at once, the burr into its separate receptacle as before described. No bun'S being under the cylinder, I can keep the racks very tine, leaving only space enough to allow the heavy dirt and filth to pass through, while the free and cleaned wool passes directly out at its proper outlet. The importance of these improvements will, I am sure, be readily api)reciated by manufacturers. By removing all lime dust, loose dye- stuir, bits of straw or hay, and leaf, the machine is rendered peculiai-ly reliable for manufacturers ' of Hosiery or Knitting Yarns. A large saving of waste will be readily made by -having the yarns free from the imperfections caused by such foreign matter. A larger product will also be obtained from the Knitting Machines, and of a more perfect character. Mestizo Wools are very successfully worked through this machine. Wool ivithout burrs is more effectuaWj picked by this machine than by any other. The process being a more gradual combing of the fibres, the length and strength is preserved, and the opening so perfect as to make no other picking necessary. Where desired, a lap cylinder is at- tached, which delivers the wool in an even web or sheet, instead of blowing into a gauze room. Two sizes of this Machine are at present manufactured — 24 and 36 inches wide, occupying on the floor a space of — for the 24 inch Ma- chine, about 8| X 8 feet. For the 36 inch Machine, about 4^ x 9 feet. The 36 inch Machine will pick and burr from 2000 to 4500 lbs. per day. The 24 inch Machine will pick and burr from 1200 to 2500 lbs, per day, varying with the class of wool used. REFERENCES. JOHN GARDNER, ESQ., Treasurer Salisbury Mills, Boston, Mass. GEORGE G. BISHOP, ESQ., Agent Union Co., Norwalk, Conn. T. BARROWS, ESQ., Agent Maverick Woolen Co., Dedham, Mass. JOSEPH CHASE, ESQ., Lowell, Mass. N. V. WHITEHOUSE, Gonic, N. H. O. M. STILLMAN & CO., Westerly, R. I. SAN FRANCISCO PIONEER WOOLEN MILL, San Francisco, Cal. A. J. CAMERON, New Yoric. O. H. PERRY, Lowell, Mass. H. N. BIGELOW, Clinton, Mass. E. HEY & BROTHERS, Philadelphl\, Pa. JOHN M. MITCHELL & CO., Phil^idelpiiia, Pa. MANUFACTURED BY OH^S. Gr. SA.RaEISrT, GHANITEVILLE, 3IASS. [see also pages 28, 30, 34, 36, 38 and 40) HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. prettj accurately summed up about as follows: — We could have paid even more than the price asked for the property, kept the house tenantless, permitting it to rot down or burn up, permitted the ground to grow up to briars and brambles, paid all the taxes, and still have made more than an ordinarily fliir investment of our money. The house to which we allude is now owned and occupied by Dr. Stowe. On the 6th of December, 1855, the Essex Company again oiFered at auction a large amount of land, comprising over six hundred lots, located in almost every part of the city. To men of means, reflective forecast and courage, this was un- doubtedly the best opportunity ever offered in Massachusetts for making a fortune. A considerable amount of the purchase money was made payable in Essex Company's stock at par, by which the purchaser had it in his power to save from 25 to 30 per cent., as this stock was below par and still declinino-. This was a mighty temptation for people to bid high ; but the lots, as a general rule, were sold very low. If none but men prudent enough to comprehend the situation here and else- where had purchased, it would have been a good operation for all concerned. But that very class who had invested in Essex stock, a land and water company, needing at least a quarter of a century to develope it, and were thrusting it prematurely upon the market, rushed headlong to the sale w^ith a view to buy and immediately sell again in a market where land was not very likely to be in demand again for several years. This class of purchasers never reflect upon the fact that sales in public are mainly instituted to make amends for lack of sales in private. They purchased to the extent of their means and immediately posted placards upon their lots, offer- ing them for sale. The more careful and prudent bought for future years, and have or will realize handsomely by the operation, while the timid and impatient have disposed of theirs in many cases at great reductions from cost and expenses. The heavy disasters almost immediately succeeding this sale, by which the business not only of this city but the whole country was long paralyzed, aided materially in giving this 34 ADVERTISEMENTS. Metallic Waste Card. For Yarn and Thread Waste. SOFT FL^ISTNEL. These machines are in principle a carding machine, but made -with strong, sharp steel teeth. The main cylinder is 14 inches in diameter, workers and dofFer same as an ordinary card. The stock is doflfed from the doffer in a sheet same as an ordinary card machine. This machine preserves the staple of the stock, making it nearly as good as the original wool. 4®- For particulars, or machines, apply to the subscriber. Manufacturer of WOOL WASHING MACHINES, COLD AIR WOOL DRYERS, BURR PICKERS, &c, CHARLES G.SARGENT, G-raniteville^ lYEass. ON STONY BROOK RAILROAD, NEAR LOWELL. [see also pages 28, 30, 32, 36, 38 and 40.] HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 35 sale the appearance of an additional misfortune to the city. For a time, a stranger would infer from the placards that the citj was all for sale. But these gradually wore away, until now it is seldom one meets a sign indicating that either a lot or building is " for sale, or to be let." It is proper here to remark that in no citj of this or any other state with which we are acquainted, where the business is as diversified and extend- ed as it is here, are eligible lots for either dwellings, stores or work-shops by any means as cheap as they are in Lawrence. In 1846, and early in 1847, there was a very large ac- cession to the permanent population of the place. Mechanics, merchants, physicians, and lawyers began to center here, and order commenced rising out of chaos. In April, 1846, the first sermon was preached, at boarding-house No. 1. (which stood where the store of Mr. E. W. Pierce now stands,) by a minister of the Free-Will Baptist order. This meeting was followed in June by a Methodist sermon, at boarding-house No. 5. In August, by the Congregationalists, who adopted means for the erection of a vestry. In October, by services in the Episcopal chapel, which was the first place of worship erected in the place. In 1847, the Universalists, the Catho- lics, the Baptists, and the Unitarians formed societies, and all of those found spacious rooms or erected temporary chapels, in which Divine services were thereafter regularly held. Since that day, the Congregational order has erected three substantial churches on the north side, aud a spacious vestry upon the south side of the river. The Methodists, the Baptists, the Episcopalians, and the Catholics have each erected two commodious churches. The Unitarians, the Uni- versalists, the Second Adventists, and the Presbyterians have each one church. In a perusal of the familiar names of twenty years ago, one cannot avoid being afiected by the great in- roads which time has made upon the ranks of the Pioneers. Of twelve physicians practicing here in January, 1847, but one (Dr. Wm. D. Lamb,) now remains as a permanent resident, though Dr. A. D. Blanchard continues to make us occasional visits, his family still remaining in the city. Of about the 36 ADVERTISEMENTS. C LD- AIR Wool Drying Machine In calling the attention of Woolen Manufacturers to this improved Machine, I will but name a few facts. In most machines for this purpose the air is used over and over; in fact nearly the same air Is used to finish the drying that was used at its commence- ment. In this machine the air is only used once. After it passes once through the wool it is passed out and away from the machine. The idea is to always have a large amount of dry air pass through the wool. The more air (if di-y) passed through the wool the quicker it dries. By this means, the enamel of the wool fibre does not be- come bone dry, but is soft and pliable. When wool is over dried, or dried by high heat, this enamel of the fibre is destroyed, and goods manufactured from wools so dried can never have the brilliant face and finish, because this enamel is broken or cracked, and its brilliancy destroyed. Some of our best manufacturers say they can select the goods manufactured from wools dried by these machines from goods manufactured from wools dried by other methods, by the soft and pliable feeling of the goods. These machines are also recommended by all the Insurance Companies. There is no possible danger of fire from them in any way. The fan is completely cased in a strong Cast Iron casing, runs very light, a '2i inch belt being sufficient to drive it. The fan was patented by the subscriber July 4th, 1865. It is constructed so as to exhaust a large amount of air at a slow velocity, and use but little power. These advantages are very apparent in this fan. Ordinary size of machine is 9 x 15 feet, will hold about 300 lbs. of wool at once. Canada Wools suitable for worsted will require an hour to dry one batch; fine wools like Cape and Mestizo wools, which lay close when wet, will of course require a longer time. Of the latter kinds of wool, 1,600 lbs. per day is a fair day's work. The Machine is placed on the fioor and levelled up and made air-tight all around the bottom. The fan is then placed up to the end of the machine, and firmly fastened to the floor. The connection between the fan and dryer is then made air-tight by cement- ing the joint. . The pulleys on the fan are 8 inches diameter, 2 1-2 inches face, and re- quire a speed of seven hundred turns per minute. The operation of the machine is as follows : The wool or other material to be dried, is placed on the wire netting, all of the surface completely covered, (say 300 lbs. of wool.) The fan being an exhaust fan forms a vacuum in the body or frame of machine under the wool and wire screen. The air surrounding the machine in the room rushes down through the wool to fill the vacuum formed by the fan, and in its passage absorbs the moisture from the wool. The room in which the dryer is located, must bQ arranged with some means for heating by steam pipes around the walls, or otherwise. In wet weather, some artificial means must be employed to furnish dry air for the machine. The Machines are built by the subscriber at Graniteville, Mass., on Stony Brook R. R., near Lowell, Mass. For particulars apply to Graniteville, Mass. {For Testimonials see Pages 38 and 40. See also Pages 28, 30, 32, 44, 38 and 40-) HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 37 same number of clergymen, but one, the Rev. Mr. Packard of Grace Church, is still here. We had then nine lawyers and of those four remain, namely: David Saunders, Jr., Perley S. Chase, Ivan Stevens, and Thomas A. Parsons. Of one hundred and forty-seven names then connected with the active business of the place, only twenty-five remain in the city. Some of the remaining individuals have kept on in the same vocations in which they were engaged twenty years ago, while others have changed to other employments. Of the 122 missing links in this chain, some of the best amongst us have been gathered into their eternal home upon' the Avestern hill-side, while others, too eager to be rich, or too anxious for distinction, and unwilling to wait for fortune's or the public's favors to be bestowed upon them here, have moved along to new locations, which may apparently have offered them earlier, if not higher rewards in the highway of life. Were it not that we once became disgusted with the almost unending din of a country politician, about his having been the first child ever in the town, brought thither for many weary miles on horseback by the way of spotted trees, in a silk handkerchief, and therefore that his opinions ought to have greater weight than other peoples'. Were it not for this, Ave should be very much inclined to go back and tell all about the men who first laid a brick, drove a shoe peg, or swallowed an oyster in this city. But Ave remember that that baby of the silken tie was only a man of very ordinary ability and great self-conceit, and that through him we were most thoroughly convinced that the fortune of being the " first upon the docket," is not to be taken as prima facia evidence of merited distinction over subsequent travellers upon the same ground. Still there is one of these first comers to Avhom a brief notice seems to be due. Very early in the spring of 1846, Mr. Amos D. Pillsbury came here to purchase a lot upon which to build a shoe shop. At that time there was no land for sale, none to be let, and none devoted to squatter sovereignty. Here then, was a dilemma. No land, no shoe shop — no shoe shop, no money began to run ceaselessly through 38 • ADVERTISEMENTS. TESTIMONIALS. We, the undersigned, have in use C. G. Sargent's Cold air Wool-Dryer, for drying Wool and other fibrous materials, and find it preferable to all other modes of drying. The wool is left soft, and in such condition as to pass through all the processes of manufacture with less waste and retain its original nature much better than when dried by a high heat, enabling us to put a better finish on our goods. No fire can originate from it, as no steam or other hot pipes are connected with it. The fan is con'structed to handle a Farge amount of air with but little power : a 2 1-2 inch belt drives the machine with ease. We believe it to be the only safe and judicious mode of drying wools, and recommend its use to all Woolen Manufacturers. EDWARD HARRIS, Woonsocket, R. I. GEORCtE G. bishop, Norwalk, Conn. A. H. CHASE, Lowell, Mass. EDWARD BARROWS, Agent Merrimack Woolen Co., Lowell. BL.AOKIXGTON & PHILLIPS, Grove Mills, S. Adams, Mass. JOHN WRIGHT, Agent Suftblk Manufacturing Co., Lowell. (HIARLES F. BATTLES, Agent Treniont Mills, Lowell. JOHN P. PERRY, Agent Everett Mills, Lawrence, Mass. JOSKPH I'. BATTLES, Agent Atlantic Mills, Lawrence, Mass. JAMK8 R. FAULKNER, North Billerica, Mass. WILLIAM HUDSON, Providence, R. I. LOUNSBURY, BISSELL & CO.. Winniepauk, Conn. CRANE & WATERS, Millbury, Mass. HENRY N. BIGELOW, Agent Bigelow Carpet Co., Clinton, Mass S. L. HODGES, Worcester, Mass. C. GLEASON, Agent Mystic Woolen Co., Mystic Bridge. Conn. W. F. & F. C. SAYLES, Pawtucket, R. I. STAR MILLS CO., Middleboro', Mass. RICHARD RHODE, Lowell, Mass. J. D. STURTEVANT, Boston, Mass. ALLAN CAMERON, Agent Abbot Worsted Company, Graniteville, Mass. Mr. C. G. Sargent : Lowell, August 22, 1S65. Dear Sir, — In regard to your inquiry relative to the Cold-Air Wool Dryer we purchased some 18 months since, I would say the machine gives entire satis- faction. It leaves the wool in much softer condition than if dried at a high tempera- ture : it is an economical method of drying and a good one ; and not to mention its heing a safe method would be omitting a good deal, as an item of Insurance, since tlie first class ofllces now class the Dryers with pipes under them as full as bad as wool Pickers and subject to the same rates of insurance. We consider it a great improve- ment, and can recommend it to all woolen manufacturers. Yours truly, L. W. FAULKNER & SON. C. G. Sargent :— Lowell, August, 1866. Dear Sir, — The Hamilton Company have had one of your Cold Air Wool- Dryers in constant operation for the past two years. It gives perfect satisfaction. We dry on the machine from two to three thousand pounds of Worsted Wool per day. The wool is left soft and pliable and in excellent condition for working. The Machine is perfectly safe from originating fire, as there is no Steam or other heated pipes con- nected with it. It takes but little power— a 2i inch belt drives the machine with ease. O. H. MOULTON, Sup't. CiiAS. G.Sargent, Esq. Lowell, Mass., June 23, 1866. Dear Sir, — I have examined with much satisfaction your " Cold- Air Wool Dryer," and believe it to possess all the merits you claim for it, and that it must entirely supersede the use of the "Steam Dryer" which is now so generally regarded by underwriters as dangerous and uninsurable. So far as I know your dryer is regarded by Insurance Companies as safe, and free from the hazards connected with other dryers, and I doubt not you will be able to bring it into general use. Yours very truly, GEORGE RIPLEY, LOCAL Agent ^tna, Hartford, Phoanix, International, and other Insurance Companies. Lippitt Woolen Co., Woonsocket, R. I., August 24, 1866. C. G. Sargent, Esq., Graniteville, Mass. Dear Sir— Your favor of 20th instant is at hand, and will say in reply, we have used two of your Cold- Air Wool Dryers in our niills about one year; they have given us perfect satisfaction, easily preparing the wool in the best manner that we have ever seen, for 12 sets of cards, Yours truly, DAVID BALLOU, Trea.s. Lippitt Woolen Co., per E. Richardson. Manufactured by CHARLES G. SARGENT, Graniteville, Mass. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 39 the mind of the wide awake "Montezuma." For a time he was afflicted with shoe shop on the brain, but soon an idea struck him. The river was free to everj one. If he only had a boat he could build a roof on that and thus attain his aims. Acting on the impulse, he obtained a canal boat 30 or 40 feet long and 10 or 15 feet wide, and propelling or dragging it over the rapids and falls below here, brought it to anchor where the Pacific Mills now stand. It remained in the water until autumn, when it was transferred to the land, and there opened the first shoe store in Lawrence. But this is not the only point in this case. Mr. Pillsburj was alike the first shoe dealer in this city and the first person of whom there is any record who succeeded in navigating the Merrimac above tide water, between here and Haverhill. While touching this point of the navigation of the river, we will say that on the 6th of June, 1848, the steamer Lawrence, Captain Shepard, arrived here from Newburyport, with a large delegation of gentlemen from that and other towns along the river. • She came through from Haverhill in about an hour and a half, landing her passengers not far from the point where the float- ing shoe store had been. The Lawrence had a capacity for about 100 tons of freight and passengers. Since that time a steamer in miniature, but capable of carrying ten or twelve persons at a time, was run back and forth between here and Newburyport in almost all stages of w^ater, with facility and safety. She was owned by Webster and Dustin, the well- known machinists of this city, and we believe, was always run by one or the other of the owners. When the next steamer will arrive is not a matter of certainty. The only absolute certainty in this respect is, that she is cmning. The Pen- tucket Navigation Company have nearly completed their sur- vey of the river. They may possibly clear the obstructions during the coming year, and commence the regular navigation of the river immediately. We say this company rnay do this. From the very high character of the leading men in this im- portant enterprise for foresight, energy, and the means to accomplish ends far more gigantic, we perhaps ought to say 40 ADVERTISEMENTS. TO WOOLEN MANUFACTURERS. Gentlemen, — The woolen manufacturers have long been desirous of obtaining some Mechanital device for cleansing wool by machinery, thereby dispensing with the laborious and most disagreeable of all the work connected with the proper preparation of wool for working. All know (who have tried it) there is no pleasure derived from washing wool by the old method. My new improved Wool Washing Machine is covered by three different Patents: one Patent on the original English Machine, and two Patents for valuable improvements of my own. This makes wool washing simple and easy ; a lad able to feed a common Braker- Card can attend this machine successfully, and wash from 1200 to 6000 lbs. per day, according to the quality of wool. The wool is placed upon the feed apron, which carries it forward and drops it into the tub or bowl back of the tumbler B, (the bowl is first filled with scouring liquor about two thirds full.) This tumbler, with its three projections, passes the wool gently down under the scouringliquor and atthesame time carries it forward to the action of the first rake D, these rakes being hung near the centre to a crank, and there upper cards held by a swivel stand, it gives to the bottom ends of the rake teeth a motion in the form of an elipsis nearly flat or straight, on its bottom side. The first rake passes the wool forward through liquor about three feet and leaves it behind the first stationary rake which is made fast to the side of the bowl with its teeth on an incline of about 45 degrees towards the front of the machine ; these teeth reach within about tliree inches of the strainer or false bottom. Here the 2nd rake D, takes the wool and passes it forward to the second stationary rake, where the 3rd rake takes it and passes it forward to the lifting cylinder F. This cylinder is con- structed with a series of rakes or combs hung on the inside of the cylinder. There are 12 of these rakes or combs. Their teeth are curved so they will rock freely on their centre and pass out and in the cylinders freely and With ease. On the driving ends of this cylinder the shaft is made tight to the head. On the opposite side, the shaft is made tight in the Box or Journal so it cannot revolve round it. On the centre of this sta- tionary shaft in the centre of the cylinder, is an eccentric which is tight to the shaft : this eccentric governs the throwing out and in of the rake or comb teeth. The eccen- tric is so set that its teeth are out to its extent nearly on its bottom side, and as they pass round upwards engage the floating wool presented to them by the third rake and carry it up out of the liquor to the top of said lifting cylinder in a uniform and even sheet; here the teeth run below the surface of said cylinder, leaving the wool to be taken from the surface by the iron apron H. This apron delivers the wool to the squeezing rolls J & K. The rolls are arranged with levers and weights so that a pressure of about nine tons can be put on them. The wool is delivered to the rolls in an even sheet or web. The liquor is squeezed out of the wool, leaving it nearly dry. The wool after passing the squeeze rolls is taken by the beater or fan M, which throws the wool from the machine into a pile in front. Occasionally wool will pass the beater M, and be carried upward by the squeeze roll : to prevent said roll from winding up, I have placed another beater L, which knocks back all such wool and prevents the top wool from winding. CHARLES a, SARG-ENT, 5IANUr.\CTURER OF COTTON and WOOLEN MACHINERY, GRANITEVILLE, MASS. On Stony Brook Railroad. Near Lowell. [SEE ALSO PAGES 28, 30, 32, 34, 36 and 38.] HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 41 iinll do this, and in this expression, we think we should be justified, and we know we should thereby do more ample justice to our hopes and convictions. In October, 1846, the first newspaper was issued under the name of The Merrimack Courier, bj J. F. C. Hajes. This paper was continued under the. editorial management of Mr. -Hajes, John A. Goodwin, Homer A. Cooke, Rev. Henry r. Harrington, and Nathaniel Ambrose, a portion of the time as a tri-weekly, until the year 1862, when it was merged into the Lawrence Daily Journal, and died. In January, 1847. The Weekly Messenger, by Brown & Becket, was trans- ferred to Lawrence from Exeter, N. H. It continued for about two years, when it ceased to exist. Some time in the winter of 1847 or 1848, one or two copies of a paper were issued from the Messenger office, under the title of The Engine, by E. R. Wilkins. In the spring of 1848, a fcAV numbers of a paper, under' the title of The Herald, hj Amos H. Sampson, were issued here. It was to have been a demo- cratic paper, but the democracy, disliking either the paper or its editor, or both, did not come up to the support of the en- terprise, and it was dropped. Connected with this stoppage was an incident which went far to show the attachment of the democracy to the editor of the Herald, and of the editor to this particular locality. Mr. Heaton Bailey came to the Her- ald office, located in the attic of one of the blocks in Mer- chants' Row, and plainly put the question to Sampson, in our presence, "What shall I give you to quit this enterprise and leave this place?" Sampson, throwing his arms across his breast and locking them securely, replied, "What will you give ? " Bailey offered him ten dollars. Turning to us, Sampson enquired, " Well, now, Mr. Hayes, what would you do? '" We replied that were we as big a fool as the editor of the Herald we would take the money and never be seen in Lawrence again. He took the money and, thrusting his old brown cotton umbrella under his arm, made good time on the route to Boston. The next we heard of him he was teaching school in the state of Kentucky. Immediately following the 42 ADVERTISEMENTS. I^I 001J6H B The Best Medicine known for the Speedy and Effectual Cure of Coughs, Whooping Cough and all Lung Diseases. The present proprietors of this medicine, having purchased of the former proprietor the sole and exclusive right to manufacture from the original I'ccipe now in their pos- session, this well known REMEDY FOR COUGHS AND PULMONARY DISEASES of all descriptions, have been induced hy the repeated applications of former residents of this vicinity, now residing in New England, the Middle and Western States and the Canadas, to whom its virtues are so well known, to place it more prominently before the public. They feel warranted, from the many testimonials in their possession, in making the following statements : — That Fisher's Cough Drops, for the permanent cure of Pulmonary Diseases, stands unrivalled. That it will, if taken in season, break up any Cough and prevent Consumption. Tliat it will cure more cases of Cough than any other medicine known. That it will, in very many cases, cure the patient when given up by the physician. That, although the ingredients are costly and entirely dift'erent from other Cough Medicine, it is the cheapest medicine sold, as the dose is very small ; and That for every man, woman or child who has a cough, no matter how troublesome or long standing, or how low the patient, the medicine, taken according to the directions before retiring for the night, Will produce a Sweet and Refreshing Sleep, and all cessation from coughing, with no bad eft'oct following: but in the morning the patient will raise easily all he would have coughed up during the night. Bj' continuing this practice (if not en'tirely beyond the reach of medicine). The Lungs, by being relieved, become strengthened, THE COUGH WILL ABATE, and the health gradually but surely improve until permanently cured. All persons whose profession or employment confines them within doors, ESPECIALLY FACTORY OPERATIVES, will find this medicine particulaaly valuable. Its wonderful effects in all cases are universally known wherever the medicine has been sold, and it has reached a large sale at the present time on its merits alone. NASOIV, SY3i:0]VD!S «fe CO., I'r'oprietors, For sale by KENNEBUNK, MAINE. GEORGE F. TA.LBOT, AND DRUGGISTS GENERALLY, HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 43 Herald came The Vanguard^ bj Fabyan k Douglass. The Yanguard was democratic, and bj whatever test it may be tried, was, in our opinion, bj far the ablest paper ever issued in Lawrence. Mr. Fabjan was a gentleman of ability, and he had the aid of most of the democratic lawyers in the vi- cinity : but he soon run through with his friends, and left the paper to the management of others. The office itself was a joint stock concern, in which the publishers were very little interested. Subsequently the name was changed to The Sen- tinel, and under this title it is still continued by Mr. Abiel Morrison. The Sentinel has been edited, in the course of its existence, by Harrison Douglass, B. F. Watson, George A. Gordon, Benjamin Bordman, John Ryan and John K. Tar- box. In 1856. a weekly paper, under the title of The Home Review, was issued here by J. F. C. Hayes. It was continued until the Courier came back into his hands, when it was merged into that paper. In 1855, The Lawrence American, by Geo. W. Sargent and A. S. Bunker, was commenced here. The office, like that of the Yanguard, was a joint stock affair, owned by- members of the "Know-Nothing" party. Mr. Bunker sold his right to the paper to Mr. Sargent for twenty-five dollars, in a few weeks after its commencement, and the paper was continued for a time by Mr. Sargent alone, when Mr, George S. Merrill was associated with him, and finally suc- ceeded him as sole editor. The American is now published by G. S. Merrill, C. F. Crocker and C. C. Whitney. In 1861 the first daily paper in this city was commenced by Dockham & Place. It was continued for about two years, when it was merged into the American. In the spring of 1867, The Es- sex Eagle, by Merrill & Wadsworth, was commenced. It is a weekly paper, devoted to local and miscellaneous news, and is now published by Mr. H. A. Wadsworth, Mr. Merrill hav- ing retired from the business. On the ITtli of April, 1847, the legislature granted a char- ter to the town of Lawrence on the following conditions: Sec. 1. All the territory now within the towns of Methuen and Andover, in the county of Essex, comprised within the fbjlowing limits — that is to say, by a line beginning at the mouth of Shawsheen River, •44 ADVERTISEMENTS. J. F. FLINT 4& CO., DEALERS IN Ladies' and OM^SiS^^li CMldreu's "^^Rffiss ffwas. NO. 53 ESSEX STREET, LAWRENCE, MASS. "We have constantly on hand a large and splendid assortment of Ladies' and Children's Fur Goods, embracing American Sable, Fitch, Siberian Squirrel, and other fashionable kinds, aimIm of finb qualitiks — AND — 10 SI BISIEIBLI SHlBlSj and of the LATEST STYLES. The Goods having been selected with much care, and giving our attention EXCLUSIVELV TO THE FUR BUSINESS, enables us to buy and sell at the LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. OLD FURS ALTERED AND REPAIRED, OR TAEIEX IX EX- CHANGE FOR NEW. J. F. FLIIVT & CO. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 45 at its easterly bank, thence running southerly by said easterly bank to a stake at the bend in said river, a iiew rods westerly of the bridge, where it is crossed by the Salem Turnpike ; thence in a straight line westerly to a marked stone in the wall at the easterly corner of the intersection of roads, by Jacob Barnard's house; thence northerly in a straight line across Meri-imack River, passing between the house of Asa Barker and that of Ebenezer Barker, on the Tower-Hill Road, leading from Methu- en to Lowell, to a stake about 2150 feet northerly from where the line crosses said road ; thence northeasterly to a monument on the easterly side of Londonderry Turnpike, passing a little northerly of the house of Abiel Stevens ; thence easterly in a straight line to a monument at the intersection of Lawrence street with the old road which runs easterly fron Stevens' factory towards Haverhill ; thence in a straight line east- erly, passing north of William Swan's house through a monument about 400 feet south of the intersection of the roads near said Swan's house, to the line of the town of Andover, in Merrimack River ; thence running by the said line of Andover westerly, to the easterly bank of Shawshcen River, at the point of starting ; — is hereby incorporated into a town by the name of Lawrence : and the said town of Lawrence is hereby invested with all the privileges, powers, rights and immunities, and subject to all the duties and requisitions to which other towns are entitled and subject, by the constitution and laws of this Commonwealth. Sec. 2. The town of Lawrence shall make and maintain all bridges for public highways over the Shavvsheen River, so far as the easterly bank of said river is a boundary of the said town, uicludingthe masonry of said bridges on the easterly bank thereof. Sec. 3. The inhabitants of the said town of Lawrence shall be holden to pay all arrears of taxes which have been legally assessed upon them b}' the towns of Methuen and Andover, respectively ; and all taxes here- tofore assessed and not collected, shall be collected and i)aid to the treasurers of the towns of Methuen and Andover, respectively, in the same manner as if this act had not been passed ; and also their propor- tion of all county and state taxes that may be assessed upon them pre- viously to the next state valuation — that is to say, two-thirds of the state and county taxes that may be assessed upon the town of Methuen, and one-eighth of the state and county taxes that may be assessed on the town of Andover, till the next state valuation. Sec. 4. The parts of the said town of Lawrence now belonging to the towns of Methuen and Andover, respectively, shall remain parts of the said towns of Methuen and Andover for the purpose of electing state officers, senators, representatives to congress, and electors of president and vice jiresident of the United States, until the next decen- nial census shall be taken, in pursuance of the loth article of amend- ment to the constitution ; and the meetings for the choice of such representatives, and the other officers aforesaid, shall be called by the selectmen of the said towns, respectively ; the selectmen of Lawrence shall make a true list of persons belonging to the territory of each of said towns hereby incorporated into the town of Lawrence, qualified to vote at every such election, and the same shall be taken and used by the selectmen of said respective towns for such elections, in the same man- ner as if prepared by themselves. Sect. 5. The said towns of Methuen, Andover and Lawrence shall be respectively liable for the support of all who now do, or shall here- after, stand in need of relief as paupers, whose settlement was gained 46 ADVERTISEMENTS. Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of COOKHSTG, OFFICE, A^B PAKLOK Hot Air Furnaces & Ranges, CHEAR PACKAnC ^CO.ALSAHY.N.Y. ALSO, JOBBERS IN futJiGi.S^i/^jL£A/tn WEOl^Hf IB©M PII'l For Steam, Gas and Water, and Iron and Brass Fittings. Pumps, Lead Pipe, Sheet Lead and Zinc, Copper Gutters and Conductors, PLUMBIN^G A^D GAS FITTIIN^G done by competent workmen. Tin Roofing put on and Warranted. MO. 195 KSSXSX STRKKT^ LAWRENCE, MASS. ROBERT HAUGHTON. JOHN F. BINGHAM. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 47 by, or derived from, a residence within their respective limits ; and the said town of Lawrence shall, within one 3ear from tlie time of its organ- ization under this act, pay to the town of Methnen one thousand dollars as and for their just proportion of the debts of the town of Methuen, owing at the time of the passage ot tliis act, exclusive of the amount of the surplus revenue of the United States in the treasury of the town of Methuen ; and the town of Lawrence shall also pay two-thirds of the amount of said surplus revenue whenever its repayment shall be de- manded by the LTnited States according to law ; and shall also pay to the town of Methuen the amount that said town shall pay for building Haverhill street, so called, Avithin the limits of said town of Lawi-ence, as ordered by the county commissioners for the county of Essex. Sec. 6. Any justice of the peace in the county of Essex is hereby authoi'ized to issue his' warrant directed to any principal inhabitant of the town of Lawrence, requiring him to notify and warn the inhabitants thereof, qualified to vote in town aifairs, to meet at the time and place therein appointed, for the purpose of choosing all such town officers as towns are by law authorized and required to choose at their annual meetings ; and such justice, or, in his absence, such principal inhabitant shall preside till the choice of a moderator in said meeting. Sec. 7. This act shall take effect from and after its passage. In accordance with the provisions of the foregoing charter, Dan Weed, Esq., as justice of the peace, issued a warrant directed to Charles S. Storrow, requiring him to "notify and warn the inhabitants of the town of Lawrence, qualified to vote in town affairs, to assemble in Merrimack Hall,'"' (on the corner of Lawrence and Common streets, then the largest hall in the place,) on Monday, April 26, 1847, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, then and there to choose a moderator and other necessary town officers, and to raise all necessary sums of money to defray the expenses of the- town, to keep the highways in proper repair, to determine what sums of money the town will appropriate to the support of schools, and to do all other necessary business in the way of organizing the new government. At that time our people were comparatively strangers to each other, and it was somewhat difficult to select men according to the usual rule, by party lines. It was there- fore determined to make the best possible selection, irrespec- tive of party. Under this rule, Henry Flanders, Esq., then a lawyer here, but long since a resident of Philadelphia, where he has gained considerable notoriety as a writer on maritime law, was chosen moderator; Dr. E. W. Morse, town clerk; Daniel Saunders, treasurer; James D. Herrick, Dr. 48 ADVERTISEMENTS. GHARLBS GLARKIS^ 91 ESSEX, COE]N"ER OF JACKSO]S^ ST., DEALER IlSr Hf m m 8il€im§B, f AND PERFUMERY, TOILET ARTICLES. &c. Ai^ent for all the MEDICIHES OF THE DAY. A full line of Trusses, Supporters and Shoulder Braces always in store. PHYSICIANS' PRESCRIPTIONS put up at all hours of the day or night, by a COMPETENT PERSON. It is my aim to use in the compounding and sale of Medicines those of a Pure and Unadulterated Character. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 49 William D. Lamb, and Dan Weed, school committee; and William Swan, Charles F. Abbott, Nathan Wells, James Stevens, and L. D. Brown, selectmen. Of the ten constables elected at that meeting, five are yet living in the city, viz. : N. Ambrose, P. M. Gage, Bailey Bartlett, Ephraim C. B.art- lett, and J. N. Gage. The legislature of 1848 empowered the Essex Company to increase their capital stock to the amount of |^500,000, ^'■pro- vided that the said company shall be liable for all damages that shall be occasioned to the owners of fish-rights existing above the company's dam, by the stopping or impeding the passage of the fish up and down Merrimack river by the said dam, such damage to be assessed by the county commissioners in the county in which such fish-rights exist." Also, an act incorporating Charles Stark Newell, Timothy Osgood, Amos Merrill, and their associates, as the Lawrence Fire Insurance Company, on the mutual plan. This company was organized and went immediately into business, but competition from abroad, coupled with considerable losses by fire, rendered it expedient to go into liquidation after a year or two of fruitless struggle for a foothold among this class of corporations. The Lawrence Fire Department was incorporated by the same leg- islature. The same legislature also incorporated John Tenney of Methuen, Alfred Kittredge of Haverhill, Daniel Saunders of Lawrence, and their associates, as the Lawrence Aqueduct Company, with a capital of $50,000, empowering them to draw tne water from Racket's pond, in Andover, and convey the same for distribution and sale in Lawrence. This com- pany was never fully organized, though a survey of the pond and route Avas made by Asa Freeman, Esq., an engineer from Dover, N. H. The pond itself is not far from eighty feet above the top of the Essex Company's dam. The estimated cost of this enterprise was found to largely exceed the amount included in the charter of the company, and no serious effort was ever afterward made to efiect the object aimed at by these corporators, and the people of this city still continue to draw their supply of water for domestic purposes from wells and 50 ADVERTISEMENTS. Something of Importance to Every One! ECONOMY IS A\^EA^LTH. THE G-H.E.^T UNITED STATES TEA CO. OF NEW YORK, Offer through their SOLE AGENCY for Lawrence, all of the different grades of d Coj of their own importation, at the same prices at which they can be purchased at their counters. THESE ARTICLES ARE STRICTLY PURE ! of the nicest and most palatable flavor, and Cheaper than the Boston Wholesale Prices. This firm is among, if not the largest Importers in the country, and they take par- ticular care that their goods shall be fresh to their Agent, at least once each week. It is impossible for any dealer to compete with them, for importing as they do such im- mense quantities, it will be readily comprehended that they have a perfect control of the market. These Teas and Coffees are in one pound packages, on which are printed the price of each quality, and the name of the firm. We would call especial attention to their Choice Black and Green Teas, the finest Teas of China, and such as are used by the high State Officers in that distant hind The Great Tea Company import these in the original one pound Chinese package, which are completely air tight, retaining their strength and flavor unchanged for years. ( )rders also by the Chest, from Boarding House Keepers and others, respectfully solicited. We invite all to examine these goods and prices. DRUGGIST AKD APOTHECARY, Comer of Essex and Mill Streets, (ENTRANCE TO WASHINGTON MILLS,) SOLE AGENT FOR LAWRENCE AND VICINITY. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 51 cisterns. It was supposed at the outset of the survey that the pond was suflScientlj elevated to be drawn across the ridge of land intervening between it and Lawrence. But on investi- gation, a very heavy cut through a long range of ledge pre- cluded the idea of using this route, and the only alternative left was to follow the course of the outlet of the pond nearly down to the Merrimac, thus running some three or four miles out of the line of Lawrence. This long line, with the very uncertain supply of water in seasons of extreme drought, con- vinced the engineer, and probably those who employed him, that the enterprise would not pay the cost of construction. The same legislature also incorporated the Franklin Library Association on the 14th of June, and on the 5th of July, Capt. Charles H. Bigelow, who had been chosen president of the association, received from Hon. Abbott Lawrence a dona- tion of one thousand dollars, to be expended in ''such scien- tific and other works as will tend to make good mechanics, good christians and good patriots." The election for town officers for the year 1848 was one of the most animated ever held in this vicinity. Party lines had been drawn as concisely as though the welfare of the nation depended on the resiilt. So evenly were parties balanced that it required four ballottings to effect a choice of selectmen. William D. Joplin was elected moderator; E. W. Morse, town clerk; Charles F. Abbott, John M. Smith, William D. Jop- lin, David J. Clark, and Levi Sprague, selectmen. Nathaniel White was elected treasurer, and George Packard, H. F. Har- rington, Lyman Whiting, James D. Herrick, and Nathan W. Harmon, school committee. The constabulary force, compris- ing four discreet persons, were elected from nearly twenty candidates. The meeting at which these officers were elected was a tur- bulent one. Party lines were drawn with as inuch precision as though governors were to be chosen instead of selectmen, and the vote was close. Ballot after ballot, without effecting a choice of officers, consumed the day, and the business which was to be acted upon was not half finished when- night com- 52 ADVERTISEMENTS, Comer Common and Jackson Streets, LAWRENCE, MASS., DEALER INT Cook, Parlor & Office Stoves RAKGES, FURNACES, CASTINGS, &c., S,c. Agent in Lawrence for the '^BARSTOW NEW COOK STOVE" ABMIRALi OOOK STOITK^ AND Stewart's Celebrated Parlor Stove, FOR WOOD OR COAL. These Stoves are the latest and best, with all modern improvements, and for style, beauty of finish, economy in fuel, and working capacity, are not approached by any other Cook Stove in use. Call and ezamine them at Cor. Common and Jackson Sts., Lawrence, Mass. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 53 pelled an adjournment. The location of the town hail and Oliver school house was among the business laid over. These "articles in the warrant" came up at the adjourned meeting. No one seemed inclined to interfere with the arrangement in regard to the school house, but when the location of the hall came in order to be acted upon, there was a noisy opposition to every proposition for location, with no definite aim at recon- ciliation. The lot first named by Mr. Storrow as suitable for the location was that on Jackson, between Orchard and Gar- den streets. This was rejected. It was then voted to locate it ivest of Appleton street, but the proposition to define that location on the corner of Appleton and Common streets, where the hall now stands, was voted down by seven majority, and it was then voted, by ten majority, to locate it on the corner of Common and Lawrence streets. Subsequently this vote was reconsidered, and the proposition to locate west of Appleton street prevailed. The hall was built, at a cost of about $40,- 000, under the direction of Messrs. H. Plummer, I. M. Stone, Charles H. Bigelow, and others. It was dedicated the same year with ceremonies deemed appropriate to the occasion. Among the notable sayings at this dedication was that of a clergyman, who annovinced with jerky vehemence, in a mixed multitude of natives and foreigners, that "they have no town halls in Europe, but they have their star-chambers," &c. This announcement was equalled by another from his own pulpit. The church steeple had been struck by lightning, which fol- lowed the spire to the bell-deck. This deck being covered with a metallic substance, dissipated the electric spark, car- rying it harmlessly away. It was a streak of luck in behalf of the church, and the preacher conceived that it must be used to impress the hearer, and on the next Sabbath he gravely an- nounced that the Almighty had sent his thunder bolts upon his chosen edifice to demonstrate His power in averting the de- struction of the building. And all this was said just as though the speaker knew all about it ! In April, 1848, Mr. Josiah Crosby, now of North Andover, was perhaps the heaviest dealer in groceries in the town. His 54 ADVERTISEMENTS. nyCTJSIG STOI^E. ro o SOI DEALERS IN Musical Instruments, VIOLIN STRINGS, SHEET MUSIC, INSTRUCTION BOOKS, SONGS, BALLADS, and every description of MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. FANCV GOODS AND TOYS, BETJCUUS, Portmonnaies, Traveling Baskets, Combs, Brushes, Fans, Albums, etc. PICTTJUE FR^JVIES, Oval and Square, in stock, or made to order, and put up in style. Chxomos, Engravings, Photographs, and Colored Prints in great variety. Pier, Mantel, Oval Mirrors, and Common Looking Glasses. Stereoscopic Views and all kinds of Stationery. Agents for the Celebrated WEED SEWING MACHINE. Agents tor Chickering & Sons' and .J. W. Bracket's Piano Fortes, and Mason & Ham- lin's Cabinet Organs. All kinds of Musical Instruments Tuned, Repaired and Let. Umbrellas and Parasols Made and Repaired. IVo. liiO Essex Street, La^vrence. 8. A. ELLIS. LELAND SNOW. WILLARD SNOW. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 55 "Pioneer" store was the same now occupied bj Messrs. J. Shattuck, Jr., & Co., on the south side of the river. At the time to Avhich we allude he advertised good flour at ,^7 to $7.50 per barrel, butter at 22 to 24 cents per pound, molasses at 22 cents per gallon, good New York cheese at 7 1-4 to 8 1-2 cents, brown sugar at 7, crushed 9 3-4, souchong tea 20. young hjson 33 to 75, lamp oil 55, salt pork 7, mackerel 5, and cod- fish 4 cents. At a somewhat earlier day, Mr. P. Ryan, then lar"-elv eno-ao-ed in the boot and shoe business, advertised "men's thick boots at |1,62 to $2,50; men's long legged, double soled, water 'proof boots, $2,50 to $3,25; calf boots $1,50 to $3,00; ladies' polka boots $1,33 to 1,50; ladies' rubbers, 75 cents to $1,50." We italicise the "long legged boots." At that time the principal object with every pedes- trian was to find a boot as long in the leg as possible, to avoid the danger of going over the tops in the general abyss of mud. In all the town, away from the Turnpike, there was no foot- walks, and the carriage-ways were often almost impassible. Hence, a "long legged, double soled, water proof boot" was about the only one in demand. While touching upon prices we will cite one more variety of merchandise. The school committee gave notice that the following books could be obtained at any of the bookstores at the prices annexed : — Russell's American School Reader, .75 ; Introduction to American Reader, .42 ; Sequel to American Reader, .33; Primer, .12: Emerson's National Spelling Book, .17: Greenlief's National Arithmetic, .75; Mitchell's Geog- raphy, $1.00; Olmstead's School Philosophy, $1.00. This must suffice for the prices twenty years ago, before " war's alarms " and taxation began to affect alike the food for the body and the mind, as well as the raiment of the multitude. Early in 1848, the importance of securing and laying out a place for the repose of the dead began to receive more merited attention than had before been bestowed upon it. The original lot designated for this purpose embraced but about three acres, and the arrangement of this ground was put under the direction of Mr. John Smith. Subsequently; this sacred 56 ADVERTISEMENTS. BLiS^N^K BOOKS, STATIONERY & FANCY GOODS, AT 3 KSSHX STRBUT^ LAWREN^CE, MASS. Avon Mills Writing Papers, Noted for their fineness of quality and smoothness of surface, with ENVELOPES TO MATCH, at a small advance from Manufacturers' Prices. BL^NK BOOKS. Particular attention given to the manufacturing of Blank Books, employing the best and most experienced workmen, with all the tools and machinery for doing the nicest of work — being the only place where Blank Rooks are made without the extra expense and delay of sending part of the work to Boston. Orders filled at the shortest notice and lowest prices. STEREOSCOPES AND VIEWS. The largest and most complete assortment that can be found. Work Baskets, Traveling Baskets and Bags. Wax Figures and Flowers, Parlor Cro- quet, Portfolios, Pocket and Pen Knives, Tintype Albums, Gold Pens, Morocco Wal- lets, Games and Toys. Useful and Elegant Articles especially adapted for Presenta- tion, at prices varying from 25 cents to S7,'). Writing Desks and Work Boxes, — orna- mented and Inlaid with Silver, Pearl and Ivory, with and without the Secret Drawer; Perfumed Glove and Handkerchief Boxes of every description ; Glove, Handkerchief, and Jewel Boxes Combined : Toilet Sets, Vases, Bibles and Prayer Books, Elegantly Bound Gift Books, Toy Books, &c. We respectfully invite an inspection of the above varied and extensive stock, feeling assured that the great annoyance and loss of time generally experienced in the selec- tion of suitable articles for presents at moderate prices will be entirely obviated. And wo wish it distinctly understood that instructions are given our assistants not to press the sale of any article which does not quite please the taste of the purchaser. .\ny article purchased, if not fully .approved of, will be exchanged without the slighest hesi- tation, it being deemed of the greatest importance that every customer should be so satisfied as not only to Insure their future patronage, but also their recommendation. EACH ARTICLE MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. I. A.. WHIT COMB, BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, 93 Essex Street, - - - Lawrence. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 57 inclosure was enlarged to its present still too limited dimen- sions. The Catholics early consecrated the ground upon the summit of Currant's Hill. Subsequently, Father O'Donnell secured the tract for the second Catholic cemetery on the west of the old ferry road, and since his death his successors have secured a still larger tract, extending from the north line of the second to the south line of the first Catholic burying- ground. In the early days of Lawrence, the tract of land embraced in this last purchase was sold to Hon. Mr. Trask, of Salem, for upwards of $20,000, and at the time of his death it had cost him, in original outlay, interest and taxes, proba- bly .$50,000, or more. In 1848 there were less than one hundred persons in the town paying a tax of $10. Of these, sixteen paid over $20 and less than $30, eight paid from $30 to $50, four paid from $50 to $100 ; T. J. Coburn. now of Lowell, paid $127,- 50, Abial Stevens $160, and Charles S. Storrow $165.25. The Essex Company paid $4,950.96, the Bay State, now Washington Mills, $3,028.20, the Atlantic Mills $2,100. Fifteen persons owning property here, but then residing in other towns, and taxed $10 or more as non-residents, subse- quently became residents of Lawrence. Thirty-seven of the resident tax payers of the class named are known to have since left the town to reside elsewhere, while twenty-one have died, and eight of the non-resident tax payers who subsequently became residents of the town have since either died or changed their residence. We speak, of course, only of those whose names and faces were familiar. Many more, with whom we had no acquaintance, may have gone in one or the other of these avenues of exit without our knowledge. The Boston and Maine railway having changed its location from Andover to North Andover, constructed, between April, 1845, and March, 1848, the five miles of road between those places by way of this city, together with the bridges across the 'rivers and canal, and on the 28th of February, run their pas- senger cars across the bridge for the first time to the station on the north side of the river. 58 ADVERTISEMENTS. LOTV^ELL Wmx ^€m pip Morh. H. R. BARKER & CO., Manufacturers and "Wholesale Dealers in WROUGHT AND GALVANIZED iitt@ir wswm. OF EVEUY.SIZE, Brass and Iron Fittings, steam Valves of aU sizes, Steam "Whistles & Gauges, Force Pumps, &c, HEATERS AND STEAM CONDENSERS, And all Fixtures connected with We would respeotfnlly invite the public to call and examine our large and splendid assortment of Chandeliers, Brackets, Pendants, and Drop Lights, Glass and Paper Shades, of the most desirable patterns. All of the above articles we offer at as Low Rates as they can be furnished by any House in the country. We also hold ourselves in readiness at all times, to contract, for Heating with Steam or Lighting with Gas, Houses, Factories, Stores, Churches, Public BuildirTgs, Hospitals, &c. All work done by the above is warranted to give entire satisfaction. Store, - - - No. 8 Central Street. Manufactory, 82 & 84 Middle Street, LOWELL, MASS., HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 59 On the 2d of July, 1848, the Lowell railway being com- pleted, five trains were run between Lawrence and Lowell, conveying passengers free. Over 8000 people were carried over the road during the day. It seemed as though all Law- rence was going to Lowell, and all Lowell coming to Law- rence. The Essex railway, from Lawrence to Salem, was opened for travel on the 4th of September, 1848. It brought through a load of the most quiet and orderly "solid men" of Salem, which contrasted very favorably with the multitude of turbu- lent men and boys who patronized the free ride from Lowell to which we have alluded. The Manchester and Lawrence railway was opened for travel in October, 1849. An incident in connection with this line is worthy of note. The company having been duly chartered and organized, opened its books for subscriptions. In two days more stock was subscribed for than was required to build and equip the line. And yet the books were kept open until in the space of thirty days, nearly three millions of dollars had been subscribed! Then commenced a scramble for the stock, and a quarrel among subscribers and officers, which con- tinued for a considerable time, but the matter was finally com- promised. Since its construction, this line has been almost constantly "in hot water,'" from one cause or another. Quarrels among directors, war upon conductors, and difficul- ties with connecting lines, have marred its existence almost continually. The turbulence of the town meetings at which the location of the town hall was to be determined upon was annually re- peated until the town had grown into the city, in 1853. Parties were about equally balanced, and the contestants threw into the choice of town officers all the importance usually at- taching to gubernatorial and presidential elections. Generally, in these contests, the whigs succeeded by small majorities. Thus, in 1849, they elected as selectmen, I^evi Sprague, Charles F. Abbott and Isaac Fletcher. In 1850, Artemas Parker, Jr., William R. Page and William Gile. In 1851, 60 ADVERTISEMENTS. JKfllMlMlATfl G. BRIGHAM^p A)^ w S!HI K W ?>&'.& m ^ f AND DEALER IN PAUCY AND TOILET ARTICLES, PERFUMERY AND OOEOGMSTES, French Soaps, English Soajis, American Soaps, HAIR BRUSHES, TOOTH BRUSHES, CLOTHES BRUSHES, Am MM CHEMICALS, ALCOHOL, COSMETICS, BA.Y hum:, &c. SHAKER HERBS AND BOTANIC MEDICINES. Special attention given to compounding Physicians' FRESCRIPTIOISrS. A choice assortment of Selected with reference to the wants of the sick. BEST IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC CIGARS. INSTRUMENTS FOB THE AFFLICTED. TRUSSES AND SHOULDER BRACES, RUBBER SYRINGES. Agent for Perkins, Stern & Go's California Wines, Pickens' Whiskey, Marzetti's Porter, Scotch Ales, &c. IV O. 130 ESSEX: STI^EET, LAWRENCE, MASS. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 61 William R. Page, Levi Sprague and Joseph Norris; and again, in 1852, the same parties were continued in office. No pub- lic meeting ever assembled in this city equalled this last meet- ing of the electors of the town. Mr. B. F. Watson led the democratic hosts. Early in the day, Mr. Watson made some motion intended to give advantage to his party, and was de- clared out of order. Exasperated at his failure, he planted himself in the way to the polls, and in a loud voice announced that '"there shall be no voting here to-day," and called upon his friends to block the passage to the polls. The hall was filled with excited men who rushed to the point where Watson was standing. A party fight, on an extended scale, seemed almost unavoidable, when, above the din of angry tumult, the clear, calm voice of William R. Page, chairman of the select- men, echoed through the hall: "Gentlemen will bring in their votes.'' Instantly Gen. Oliver, agent of the Atlantic Mills, started for the ballot box, and, after a struggle of great severity, finally arrived at the object of his aim, minus his coat tail. This incident operated like magic in allaying the disturbance. All parties regarded it as a joke worth laughing at; and as the two emotions, laughter and anger, cannot exist together, order was far more easily restored than the coat tail. The general himself enjoyed the fun as much as any one. Probably not a man in Lawrence, who esteemed order as a law of heaven, felt any regret that a town organization, which drew together in one hall all the voters of the place, was to give way to a division of these voters into wards under a city organization. In September, 1848, the Essex Company made an offer to the town of 17 1-2 acres of land, now known as "The Com- mon," on the liberal conditions that for the period of twenty years consecutively it should maintain a substantial fence around it, and annually expend not less than f 300 in orna- menting it, which sum must be laid out under the joint direc- tion of the agents of the Essex, Bay State and Atlantic com- panies and the chairman of the board of selectmen or mayor of the city. At a town meeting held September 23, it was' 62 ADVERTISEMENTS. L. B. Richardson & Co., OFFICE, NO. 108 CENTRAL ST., (CORNER OF HURD,) Money to Loan on Gold & Silver Watches, JEWELRY, DRY GOODS, PIANO FORTES, Boots, Shoes, Carriages, Harnesses, &g., &c. An endless variety of Unredeemed Property, consisting of READY-MADE CLOTHING, CLOTHS, SUSPENDERS, CUTLERY, STATIONERY, ALBUMS, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, and, In fact, every thing which can accumulate in a Brokers' Office, FOR S^LE CHE^P. Watches and Jewelry neatly Repaired and Warranted, eastern", "western and canada money bought. An examination of our Stock will well reward any person wishing to purchase goods of ANY DESCBIPTION. L. B. RICHARDSON. F. L. RICHARDSON. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 63 voted, by two majority, not to accejit the gift ! On the 7th of October following, another meeting AVas held, at which the people indignantly wiped out the action by which this beauti- ful breathing place of a busy community Avas rejected. Dr. Marsh, who voted to reject at the first meeting, moved the reconsideration, and his motion prevailed by an almost unani- mous vote. The main question was then carried with great unanimity, and thus that question was settled. Consequently, on the 7th of October, 1868, the common becomes the proper- ty of the city, free from all control of the agents of any of the manufacturing corporations in the city. During the summer of 1849, a sort of mania for town meetings pervaded the people. Parties were as nearly equally balanced as during the previous year, and if at one meeting either had secured an advantage over the other, there were never wanting men to sign petitions for another meeting, with the hope of reversing the action of the previous one. These meetings were usually very thinly attended, but they never- theless aiforded to several persons, who, like the ass in the fable, were deeply enamored of the sound of their own voice, an opportunity to be "seen and heard of men," in harangues as wasteful of time as they were lacking in both sense and coherence. The city charter was passed March 21, 1853, and was ac- cepted by the people on the 29th of the same month, by 659 yeas to 143 nays. The first election under the charter was held on the 18th of April following, and the city government was duly organized on the 18th of May. This charter, with the rules and orders of the city government, and the general laws pertaining to the same, it is not necessary that we should' insert here, for the reason that no less than fifteen editions have been issued, at a cost of thousands of dollars, by authority of the city, since 1853, for gratuitous circulation, and all without a thought of the propriety of stereotyping, as in other standard works. At the first election under the city charter, Charles S. Storrow was chosen mayor. Mr. Storrow was succeeded by 64 ADVERTISEMENTS. (?) The Most Wonderful Discovery of the 19th Centui'y. SCIETfCE HAS FrNALLY TKIUMPHED ! No more Sulphur, no more Sugar'of Lead, no more Lime, Iron and other Injurious Ingredients, hut Entirely free from SedimentM IF YOU WANT A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR, USE HA. YES' B0NA.L0:N^D. It is warranted to Change Grey Hair to its Oriyinal Color and Jtestore it on Said Beads- Take the Remedy and Avoid the Disease! A GREAT BLESSING TO THE HUMAN FAMILY. It cures Cholera. It cures Diarrhea. It cures Dysentery. It cures Summer Complaints of Children. It cures Cholera Morbus. It cures Cramp in the Stomach. It cures Painters' Colic. It cures Colic and Internal Pains. It corrects the Stomach and regulates the Bowels. Every bottle wiSEA(SE>s 'riiA.'r lx:a.i> to it, — SUCH AS — Coughs, Neglected Colds, Pain in the Chest, and all Diseases of the Lungs. This Balsam is introduced to the auffcrinsr public after its merits for the positive cure of Kuch diseaseB have bten lully tented. 'I lie formula from which it is prepared is referred to by the leading medical journals as being equal to an}' prescrip- tion that can be made up, for such diseases, by the medical faculty. The Balsam is, consequently, recommended by physicians who have become acquainted with its great success. AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL. \Ve copy the following interesting letter from Dr. Harris to the Middlebury, Vt., Register : Mn. Editor : It is only to subserve the interests of humanity that I request a short space in your valuable paper to inform the public what .Mien's Lung Balsam is sure to do. Two years ago I was attacked with a severe cold ;' it settled in my throat which so affected the organs of speech that I could not speak aloud for nearly six weeks. I got through the winter, coughing nights almost incessantly, with cold night-sweats, with increased irritation which extended into the bronchial tubes and which kept me coughing all summer. I was at Shoreham on a professional visit the past October when the " good Samaritan " came along, introducing .Mien's Lung Balsam into New England. I procured a bottle and took it according to directions, and found immediate relief. I have now taken two bottles, which has entirely cured me. For the last two years, or during the time of my affliction, I was in a state of constipation, which the U.tlsam has most efTectn.ally regulated. No family should be without this valuable medicine. I see t)y the Western papers that the physicians of Cincinnati, where the medicine is manufactured, are introducing it into their practice, and I have no doubt it will soon become a classical remedial agent for the cure of all diseases of the Throat, Bronchial Tubes, and the Lungs. N.VTH. HARRIS, M. D., Dentist. Dr. Harris has for over twenty years been a respected resident of Middlebury, Vt. HARniETTSviLr.E, O., Oct. 15, 186fi. Sirs — I take great pleasure in bearing testimony to the good qualities of .Mien's Lung Balsam, and would earnestly recommend It to all who may be afflicted with coughs, colds, or any dis use tending to consumption. In the winter of 186;i, after severe ex- p.jsure in the ar;ny of Western Virginia, I was seized with a terrible cough, which continued for smne four months. I used several of the medicines so highly recom- mended throni-'Ii the country, but all to no avail. I then consulted my physician, and obtained no relief, hut grew worse. I despaired of recovery, and arranged my busi- ness, feeling that my case was beyond the reach of medical aid, and that I must die. With other medicines, I received a box of Allen's Lung Balsam, and by a friend was induced to try it in my own case. I used only two-thirds of a bottle, when I w;is entire- ly cured and have not h.ad a cough since. I have no hesitation in stating that it is owing to the use of your excellent Lung Balsam that I am now alive and etijoying health. I retnaiii respectfully and gratefully vours, CH.VS. LLOYD, Druggist. SOLD BY ALL DRUQQISTS. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 71 Metliuen in the choice of representatives until the year 1850. Since that time they have been represented by Morris Knowles, George D. Lund, Thomas Wright. Charles S. Newell. Josiah Osgood, E. B. Currier, Enoch Bartlett, David Wentworth, Enoch Pratt, Amasa Bryant, T. A. Parsons, John A. Good- win, T. V. Coburn. Benjamin Harding, John Gale, J. R. Johnson, T. W. Floyd, W. Flanders, W. Hardy, N. W. Har- mon, J. C. Hoadley. A. J. French, H. D. Clement. John J. Doland, Lemuel A. Bishop, Henry Barton, E. J. Sherman. William H. P. Wright, H. M. Mclntire, Albert Blood, and John K. Tarbox. In the constitutional convention, Charles S. Storrow, Henry K. Oliver, and Thomas A. Parsons repre- sented the people of Lawrence. The schools of Lawrence are the just pride of the people. They are divided into primary, middle, grammar, and high schools. The high school building now being made ready for dedication is one of the most beautiful structures in the state. It is located on the north side of the common, near the Oliver school house. There are two grammar schools, one on the south and one on the north side of the river. The primary and middle schools are located in such parts of the city as best accommodate the greatest number of pupils. The primary schools contain pupils of five years of age and upwards, in which they are taught in the simplest elements, occupying a course of two years or more. When duly prepared, these primary scholars are transferred to the middle schools, where they remain usually about three years, and are then trans- ferred to the grammar schools. The course of study in the grammar schools occupies about five years. The scholars are here taught reading, grammar, composition, arithmetic, book- keeping, geography, history. &c. The high school course oc- cupies three years, and '"includes a thorough and practical classical and scientific education for both sexes, with full pre- paration for those who desire a collegiate course. The insti- tution has a deservedly high reputation. These four grades of schools are subjected to vigorous classification and super- vision in order that they may form a harmonious' whole. In 72 ADVERTISEMENTS. OlFICK ESTABLISHED 1837. DRS. A. & G. W. LAWRENCE, (Graduates of the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery.} No. 9 Jolm Street, LOWEUt MASS. We were the first in the city to use XITIIOUS OXYD in Extracting Teeth,— have the best jipp:ir;itus for geiieratiMsr the ?as— :ire quite f;imiliar with its constituentR, pro- perties and use, and liave therefore, the fullest confidence in its safety and effectiveness ill securing ABSOLUTE FREEDOM FROM PAIN in such operations as we are called upon to perform. Ether or Chloroform administer- ed, if preferred. leetl of tit Teiy lest maramftflmie supplied at short notice— mounted on Gold, Platinum with continuous gums. Silver, Rubber, &c. Also, TEETH PROPERLY FILLED, and all operations necessary for their health, beauty and preservation attended to. DH. G. Vr. L. WAS AWARDED THE SILVER MEDAL AND DIPLOMA at the late Fair of the Middlesex Mechanics' Association in this city, for " The BEST Specimens ot Dentistry," consisting of Plate Work and Filling. DR. A. L. was trwarded a Diploma by the same .Association in 18o7, for •SUPERIOR DENTAL FILLING.'" Our foes are not exorbitant, and we endeavor to oper.ite with a full understanding th.it our patients are. in common with the rest of the world, possessed of feelings, and with hearts to appreciate honest endeavors to sei-ve them. For further partfcniars call at the ofHce. Remember the names and locality, A. LA"WTlEIfCI?, M.D., D.D.S. G. "W. liA^WRENCE'p D.D.S. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE, 73 them any child residing in the city may receive a full and en- tirely free education; if parents are unable to furnish the necessary books the expense is borne by the city under the direction of the superintendent." The school houses arc of the best possible construction, an ornament to the city and re- flecting generally much credit upon the wisdom and disern- ment of the school committee. The most palpable error was in the determination to build but one grammar school house upon the north side of the river. The territory of the city is something like three miles long, from east to west, consequent- ly children living upon the borders of the town are subjected to great hardships in attending this school. Two school houses, costing each less than one-third the sum expended upon this stupendous pile, would have been far more safe and convenient of access. The most prudent underwriters in the country re- fuse, most absolutely, to insure steam mills against damage by fire, for the reason that, sooner or later, they are certain to be destroyed by that element. We do not predicate a like result to this edifice, but there is danger of it: and should such an event occur during school hours, the loss to life and limb is frightful to contemplate. Humanity to the young demands a change in this respect, as a means of convenience as well as a measure of safety. There is one other reform in the school system of Lawrence which deserves consideration. The law demands that children under a certain age, who are employed in the mills, shall annually attend school for a specified time. Of course their old school companions who have kept on at school while these mill boys and girls have been at work, are far advanced in their studies, while the mill hands have fallen back even from the low position to which they had attained when they left school to go to work. They go back to their old positions among a strange set, younger than themselves. They do not feel happy, but become restless and uneasy — the school becomes irksome to them, and they stay away on shal- low pretexts or play truant, and are not long in obtaining bad characters. By another system they might maintain good reputations and make good improvement.. The system we 74 ADVERTISEMENTS. Imu bkach & so 1* A ^ya LA^WRENCE, MASS. MANUFACTURERS OF SCOOT-IIG 411 ITOIIIG mM8, For Woolen Mills, Hat Manufacturers, &c. iartr Jotip, ^anbks, fdloto, Utids Soot @il, |cr. ^ ^ '^ ^ Our House having been established upwards of twenty years, with facilities to com- mand the best Stock in the market, and a Manufactory perfect in every detail, under our constant supervision, purchasers can rely on finding the quality of all our goods as represented. Factory, Corner of Laivrence and 3Iaple Streets. EDMUND DAVIS & SON, EH I f ftiiini vy yi4i, LAAVRE:^rCE, MASS. ALL KINDS OF Furnislied to order and ^vith. despatch. OEDEBS BESPECTFULLY SOLICITED. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 75 would inaugurate for this class would be the establishment of a school, centrally located, to be devoted specially to them and no one else. The streets of Lawrence are gradually becoming very toler- able thoroughfares. Their great extent, the loose materials of which they were originally constructed, together with the usually imperfect grade at which they were left by the Essex Company, have conspired to make the cost of repairs very ex- cessive. But they are now pretty fully developed in their proportions, and under the careful supervision of an efficient commissioner, we hear little complaint of imperfections. The recent introduction of the admirable concrete walk, as hard as granite and as smooth as a floor, so extensively laid down within a few years, adds vastly to the comfort of pedestrians and greatly diminishes complaints respecting the streets. Re- cently the same material has been adopted in street crossings, first with edge stones, but more recently, and with visible im- provement, without. The result astonishes the unbelievers in its utility for such a purpose", and gratifies those who could see no reason why the best possible system of building roads (McAdams'), should be liable to fail when applied in connec- tion with a substance that can but operate to cement it into a solid mass. An ordinary crossing costs the city from one to two hundred dollars. A concrete crossing can scarcely exceed half this cost. It is now being urged upon the city authori- ties to lay in the concrete from the south side of Essex to the north side of Common street, along the entire width of Law- rence street, for the purpose of testing its utility as a pave- ment. The result cannot be doubtful in the minds of intelli- gent men. A more imperfect material operates admirably in Europe, and this cannot fail so to operate here. The wisdom of Solomon, it is now admitted, was not displayed by our city government in the purchase of stone crushers, adapted only to places having no gravel, but plenty of ledges to be operated. Here we have almost exhaustless quantities of gravel and few ledges. The cost of every load of crushed stone put upon our streets has been computed at not less than three dollars. 76 ADVERTISEMENTS. #^;^";*°th"1^''^^'^ ^oJJ'eaj^StKmslfS) BOSTOBT. V. O. BALCOM. LA.^v\^REiSrCE HOTEL, Transient and Perjytanejtt Boarders accoimnodated on thfe most reasonable terms. Good Stable accommoda- f:ons fur Horses and Carriages. 255 and 257 OAK STREET, LAWRENCE, MASS. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 77 independent of the cost of machines, which are almost as lia- ble to break as the stones which pass through them. The crusher was intended to inaugurate the McAdams system of road building in this city, but it failed most utterly in not as- sorting the stones into proper sizes, according to the McAdams system. But in the presence of the boulder road, built at enormous expense from the Turnpike to Hampshire street, several years ago — a road which was but a burlesque upon every principle of McAdamizing — in the presence of such a road, that made from the stone passed through the crusher was highly commendable. The streets of the city have never been properly controlled by the commissioner. The commis- sioner himself is under the control of a committee who either do not know how to build a good road or do not care to trouble themselves with the details of the business, and consequently the commissioner is often censured for the sins of omission and commission of this committee. With the mayor to constantly advise him in doubtful cases, the present commissioner would do more for the city than could be done with the aid of the whole city government at his heels. It is most plainly a case where there are too many cooks employed at a single skillet of broth. The streets of Lawrence are fifty feet Avide, with the exception of Essex, which is eighty — Turnpike, which is sixty-six — Canal, Jackson, Appleton, Common, and Haverhill from the Turnpike to Spring street, which are sixty feet, and Mechanic street, which is only forty feet. The highest eleva- tion between the Turnpike and Spicket river is at the corner of Cross and Franklin streets, which is seventy-five feet above the Essex Company's base line. At the corner of Essex and Lawrence streets it is only thirty-eight feet above that line, and but four feet higher than the crest of the dam. The bridges across the Shawsheen and the Spicket, coming within the limits of the city, are kept in repair by the city. They are some eight or ten in number. Those across the canal are the property of the corporations, by whom they are built and kept in order. The two bridges across the Merrimac, knoAvn as the Andover and Lawrence bridges, are the property 78 • ADVERTISEMENTS. MR. RENNE, of Pittsfield, Mass., In experimenting with cases of Rheumatism, has discovered that a certain combination of Oils, with the juices of Plants, forms a medical compound, the use ol which CURES ALU PAtN AND tRIFLAMMATtON ! as water quenches fire 1 Tie has now in his possession a large number of certificates from people ^^ right at home," in Pittsfield, and other towns showing the great value of his atic ilii and the more they use it, and become acquainted with its virtues " the better they like it." They all say ^^Tt Wo3?ks like a. Charin.^^ READER ! — Renne's Pain-KIlIIng Magic Oil cures Headache ! Renne's Pain-Killing Magic Oil cures Toothache ! ! Renne's Pain-Killing Magic Oil cures Neuralgia ! ! ! Renne's Pain-Killing Magic Oil cures Cholera Morbus ! ! ! ! Renne's Pain-Killing Magic Oil cures Rheumatism ! ! ! ! I Renne's Pain-Killing Magic Oil cures Lameness ! ! ! Renne's Pain-Killing Magic Oil cures Skin Diseases ! ! MARK TniSl — This Magic Oil does not " set broken bones," or replace simple or compound fractures produced by external violence; but after your skillful surgeon hns reduced the dislocation, or replaced the broken bones, its use helps the healing and renewing process, gives the absorbents activity, subdues inflammation and furthers a cure wonderfully ! Some folks seem to be proud of telling how "lame their shoulders are" — of " ray crick'in the back" — or "I have got the Sciatica" — and delight in bragging that " nothing can cure me!" — but when we get such " awful folks" to use Kenne's Pain- Killing Magic Oil, faithfully, we not only cure their lameness, and charm away their pains, but we actuallj- take all that kind of " brag out of them !" and they frankly own up, and say, " It works like a charm 1" Why then let " pains and aches " your temper spoil. Your beauty lose for want Kenne's Magic Oil ? "Why swallow "humbugs" as young birds do food. When something's offered, " that is just as good ?" Call on your druggist or merchant, where you trade, for Renne's Pain-Killing Magic Oil. and it he has not got it in store, he will send for it at yonr request, and sell it to you .at the manufacturer's lowest price at retail. It is put up in three sizes, known as " Trial Size Bottles" and " Large Family Size Bottles." Sold by all Wholesale Druggists, and by Retail Dealers in Medicine throughout the country. Sold Wholesale and Retail, at the manufacturer's lowest prices, by QEO. F. TALBOT, Apothecary, Corner of Essex and Mill Streets, WM. RENNE, Sole Prop'r and Manuf'r, Pittsfield, Mass. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 79 of two distinct corporations. Andover bridge was incorporated in March, 1793, and the bridge was completed in the Novem- ber following, at a cost of about $15,000. As originally con- structed it was 40 feet wide and 600 feet long, resting on abutments and piers of wood. The opening of the bridge to public travel was a great event in the estimation of the imme- diate community. A grand demonstration was made on the occasion. Captain Stephen Barker's company of cavalry was called out in "all the pomp and circumstance of war," and stationed as a guard at either end of the bridge to prevent people from crossing. A boy, named Flint, attempted to run past the guard and was struck with a sword, or other warlike implement, and killed, or so badly wounded that he died short- ly after. This structure, located first below the present bridge, stood about seven years. Abbott's History of Ando- ver informs us that "in 1801 a solid arch of boards was made across the main channel of the river, 110 feet long, which fell immediately." The present bridge, or that upon which the present bridge is based with stone abutments and piers, was built in 1806 and 1807. It has, of course, been several times rebuilt since that time. In connection with this bridge, we remember of having read in the Methuen Gazette^ some thirty or more years ago, a notice signed by Mr. Zadoc Bodwell, the father of Mr. Asa M. Bodwell, who now lives on the farm then owned by his father, announcing that he had just com- pleted the thorough repair of this bridge — that it was done with a plentiful supply of "New England oats," and that during the entire labor not an accident of any kind had oc- curred. At that time there was as much "beating of the air " upon the subject of temperance as there is at the present day, and if we remember right, the law forbade the sale of "New England oats," and other fancy drinks, in less quantities than fifteen gallons, except by certain persons or in particular cases. From that day to this the same abortive attempts to control the human taste by legislative enactments have been persist- ently forced upon the community without effecting the desired object. Honest but simple minded men still insist that the 80 ADVERTISEMENTS. AIS Tl^@St FOR THE RENOVATION OF THE HAIR. The Great Desideratum of the Age A dressing which is at- ouee agreeable, healthy, and eflfectual for preseri'iiig the hair Faded or Gray Hair is soon Restored to its Original Color and the Gloss and - Freshness of Youth. Thin hair is thickened, falling hair checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair when the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. But such as remain can be saved for usefulness by this application. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sediment, it will k^ p It ( U in and vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from turn- ing gray or ft \lling off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free from these deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and injurious to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a IIA.IIi DUESSIISTG, uothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts longer on the hair, giving it a RIOI-I G-LOSSY LUSTRE AND A GRATEFUL PERFUME. PREP.\RED BY BR. J. C AYHR ^ CO.^ PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMISTS, LOWELL. MASS. PEICE, $1.00 SOLO BV H. M. WHlTNEVt LAWRENCE, and by all I>puggists and Dealers in Medicines everywhere. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 81 power to stop the use of these liquors rests with the majority, while they would indignantly deny the right of the majority to enact a law making it the imperative duty of every man to drink a gill or pint of li(|Uor per day. And yet it would be difficult to determine which proposition was the most ab- surd and useless, or which really possessed the most solid claim upon the public respect or observance. The Lawrence bridge was chartered in 1854, and opened to public travel on the 8th of November, 1855, the proprietors celebrating the event by a dinner at the Franklin House. Both the Andover and Law- rence bridges are kept in the most thorough repair, and proba- bly pay good dividends to the stockholders. A movement is noAv on foot to make them both free by purchase. The propo- sition, as we understand it, is, that the county comnissioners shall apportion to the towns most interested the amount which each shall pay towards this object. If their decision is ap-* proved by the people of these towns, then the bridges are to become forever free. The object is a desirable one, and we presume that no one, here or elsewhere, will interpose the slightest objection to an equitable arrangement to this end. During the hard times of 1857, an invention of incalculable importance to the moral and physical world was brought out in this city by two of the employes of the "late lamented" Law- rence Machine Shop. We allude to the stemn fire engine. The inventors were Mr. Thomas Scott, now superintendent of the McKay Sewing Machine Works, in this city, and Mr. N. S. Bean, now at the Araoskeag Machine Shop, in ISLanchester, N. H., where these steamers are constructed. It is due here that we should say. respecting the steam fire engine, that the invention of Messrs. Scott & Bean was by no means the only one brought out at that precise period. The stagnation in business had cast many excellent mechanics, all over the coun- try, out of employment, and, singularly enough, we find evi- dences of their skill in the production of steam fire engines in several places at the same time. So nearly were those ma- chines alike that, when viewed separately, it was hard to de- termine which merited the public patronage; and it was only 82 ADVERTISEMENTS. LIVERY, HACK, AND Cor. Essex and Jackson Streets, LAWRENCE, MASS. FUNERALS AND WEDDING PARTIES supplied with Hacks and careful drivers at a moment's notice. Our facilities for supplying the riding public cannot be excelled. Terms as low as the lowest. fi®~ Board by the Day or Week on reasonable terms. VISTHRIMARY SHRdl HIGH STREET SQUARE, LOWELL, MASS., Treats all diseases of Horses, Tattle, and the lower animals; performs surgical opera- tions; cures all curable cases of spavin, ringbone, curb, splents and the like. Orders promptly answered. Address by mail or telegraph as above directed. Refers to all well-known horsemen in New England. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 83 when they were brought together in a test of capacity at drafting and discharging water that the palm was awarded to the Lawrence machine. The first one built here Avas called the Lawrence, and this Avas purchased by the city of Boston, after the severest tests which could be conceived by critical engineers, had been put upon it. At the time this machine came out, men of reflection and discernment looked upon the organization of the firemen in the large cities as one to be feared, and yet one that must not only be endured, but petted and supported with as much care as any in the country. It was an indispensable evil, which was growing daily worse and worse. The advent of the steamer was therefore looked upon by all good citizens as a blessing to property owners and un- derwriters and a powerful advocate in the cause of morality and order. But its construction was one thing, its introduc- tion into use another. While the firemen may have admired it as a novelty, they were slow to confess that it could do as much as the "Niagaras" and "Cataracts" and "Torrents" with which they ran and/o/* which they howled and yelled so vociferously. Trial after trial- took place, the steamer pump- ing into the hand engines and the hand engines discharging the water. These trials were usually stipulated to continue fifteen minutes, thus indicating that the engineers were satis- fied that the hand machines stood no chance in a longer con- test. If by herculean efibrts the firemen succeeded in dis- charging the water without being "washed,'" even though working through open buts, no engineer ever suggested to "Mose" either the impropriety or folly of howling at his victory over tireless steam and impassive iron. Even after the great trial on Boston Common, where the little "Law- rence" competed with four other machines of heavier con- struction and far more elaborate finish, and achieved a signal triumph, the city authorities of Boston feared to purchase her. They had previously purchased the "Miles Greenwood," a cumbersome machine of more than doubtful utility, and had expended vast sums to put her in working order, without suc- cess, and they were fearful that they might be bitten again if 84 ADVERTISEMENTS. Passenger and Exchange Agent, :N^0. 5 APPLETOX STEEET, Manufacturers of all kinds of M ti FOR BRAIDS OF VARIOUS KINDS, CORDS AND TASSELS, FLOSS, KEPT, ZEPHYR, GENAP, LASTINGS, &c., Mill on Spicket Lower Falls, foot of Garden St., LAWREllSrCE, MASS. B. F. HALiLi^S Oyster and Dining Saloon, KG. 51 ESSEX STREET, LA WBEXCE, 3IASS. All kinds of Confectionery, &c, Cakes of all kinds, Ice Creams, Jellies and Fruits. ;KS- Parties and Families snpplied to order, with despatch. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 85 they purchased the Liuvrenee, and it was only after Mr. Scott offered to sell her at a given price, and man and run her for a year, making all needed repairs at his own expense, that they concluded to close the bargain. Soon the Amoskeag Company purchased the invention and entered upon the manufacture of fire engines after the pattern of the Lawrence. Thus dawned the age of steam, and the bright beams of unobstructed sun- light were not long in dispelling all the illusions and prejudices respecting steam fire engines. One by one the old machines were sold to poor country villages, at a discount from ordinary second hand wares of that kind, and in their place came the tireless laborer, whose power can exhaust one element in sub- duing another. The past fifty years have brought out many important and useful inventions, but among them all it would be difficult to name one whose silent influences are more wor- thy of world-wide thanksgiving than this one of the steam fire engine. The fire department of Lawrence is undoubtedly one of the most complete to be found in any city of the country. Early in the commencement of their enterprises here, the Essex Company purchased, at their own expense, a fire engine, which was called the '"Essex." This Avas manned by workmen in the employ of the company, Mr. Henry Goodell, under whose supervision the boarding houses on the turnpike were built, beinor foreman. The first fire to which this machine was called was on "the Plains," whither the Essex went bounding along through the sand as rapidly as possible. She was "just in season to be too late," the fire having been extinguished before her arrival. Most, if not all the firemen, were new hands at managing engines, and Captain Goodell was not an exception. He carried his speaking trumpet, and evidently supposing that it was a part of his duty to give his orders to his men through that lungless instrument, made a most ludi- crous display of his ability in that direction, to the infinite amusement of those who had aided in working engines in other places, and others who had seen and "knew the ropes." The Essex was soon followed by other engines of larger capacity, 86 ADVERTISEMENTS. SALEM, LYN'N, AND m^ wg^^m^ OFFICES For Boston and Lynn, twice Daily. For Salem, three times Daily. J XO. 2 AI'PLF/PON STREET, .... LAWREXOE- NO. 5 OOXaUKSS 8QIT.\KK. .... BOSTOX- X^O. HI WAsniXGTON STllEET, NO. 2 CEXTKAL SQUARE, SALEM. LYXX. J^. y^. GOODRICH. Hifaliliias -WmA 155 ELM STREET, LAWRENCE, MASS. Has manufactured Coffins in Lawrence over twenty years. He keeps the best assortment of Coffins, Caskets, Shrouds Plates, and Coffin Trimmings, (both gold and silver plated,) to be found ill this city or vicinity, and sells at very low prices. Also two good Hearses and Carriages fiir- nislied if desired, .\ttends to any duty connected with his business day or niarlit if necessary. Coffuis deii-ered within five miles free of expense. Shop and Residence, 155 ELM STREET, LAWRENCE, MASS. V'- ■ Wholesale and Retnil Dealer in Foreign and Domestic m .^v.^;^. fmiiiB '■r«^/^^>>Fj^^ Pickles, Preserves, Condiments, f ;*^-:,\r%',^M confp:ctionery, cigars, &c, 109 Central St.. Lowell, Mass. V' 4^'^ HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. and by hose and hook and ladder companies, until, at the in- troduction of the steam fire engines, the fire department of the city numbered some three hundred men. The steam fire engine being a creation of the mechanical skill of the city, and having been tried here time and again, experimentally, alone and in connection with the hand engines, before a sale was ef- fected of the first machine in Boston, not only those connected with the fire department, but the citizens generally, had be- come familiar with the power and endurance of this machine, and every right thinking man had early learned justly to ap- preciate its efficiency. Hence it was not long after the com- mencement of their manufacture at Manchester before one was ordered for this city. This was followed by another, and pretty soon all the hand engines were displaced, and the city now has four steamers of the best construction of their class. The money invested in land, buildings, engines, reservoirs, etc., connected with the fire department of Lawrence at the close of the municipal year 1866, was .^71,873. The fire ap- paratus comprises 4 engines, with over 6000 feet of hose at- tached to their accompanying hose carriages — 1 hose carriage under the charge of a distinct company, with 3700 feet of hose — 1 hook and ladder carriage — 56 hydrants, covering, with the aid of the vast length of leading hose, almost the entire compact part of the city — 13 reservoirs, located at the most accessible points of the city for efiiciency, in sections not ac- cessible to the hydrants. Besides these public conveniences for subduing fires, there are connected with all the mills a still more efficient apparatus — more efficient because more ac- cessible and readily brought into action in case of need. That the public may know something of the vast outlay in this line, we will take for example the Pacific Mills. Here we find 7540 feet of hose, 33 double and 110 single hydrants, distributed in the various parts of the works, both inside and outside the walls of the mills, 88 barrels and over 1600 pails constantly full of water, in different parts of the mill, for instant use in case of fire — 2 hose carriages, capable of carrying 700 feet of hose each — one ladder carriage, with 320 feet of ladders — ADVERTISEMENTS. J. W. QEORQE & CO., Metimen, Lawrence, bostojN" express. OFFICES: Railrond Exohango, 32 Court Square, Boston; No. 3 Lawrence Street, Lawrence; John Low's Store. Methnen. Leaves Metliuen at 7 and 11 a. m. Lawrence, 7.15 A. M., and 12 m. Leaves Boston, 11.30 a. m. and 4.30 p. m. J. W. GEORGE. JOHN F. COGSWELL. r Wliolesale and Retail Dealer in Has constantly on hand THE BEST BRANDS OF FLOUR, MEAL, CORN. OATS, RYE. BARLEY, BUCKWHEAT, SCREENINGS, SHORTS, F. FEED, GRASS SEED, MIDDLINGS, BONE MEAL. RICE MEAL. OIL MEAL. B. W. FLOUR. RYE FLOUR. RYE MEAL. GRAHAM MEAL OAT MEAL, Hay and Plaster. LAWRENCE, MASS. Hl. PEXJMMER & CO., Whok'snlo and Retail Dealers in all kinds of Long Rumber, Clapboards, Shingles, LATHS, FENCE POSTS, PICKETS, &c. Dimension Lumher furnished at short notice. Office, Corner of Essex and Turnpike Streets, near the Passenger Depot, Lawrence, Mass. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 89 9316 feet of pipe, from 2 to 8 inch, and 17,974 feet of pipe from 1 1-4 to 2 inch, the smaller being "sprinkler pipe," to- gether with steam and other pumps capable of discharging 2817 gallons of water per minute. In all the large fires near the mills the mill apparatus has thus far been found an essen- tial aid to the fire department of the city. Since the city was organized there have been a considerable number of very heavy fires, by which a large amount of property has been destroyed, and it Avas our hope to be able to get at not only tlie number of fires and the amount of property destroyed, but the amount of insurance, from the commencement to the present time, from the records of the fire department: but these accounts, in the early days of the city, were so loosely kept, if indeed they were kept at all, that no reliable approximation can be made to this end. It is but recently that anything approach- ing to order or system has been observed in this department. Previous to the year 1854, we can find no record whatever. From 1854 to 1858, we find a record of the number of alarms and an estimate of the loss. From 185^ to 1863, we find only the number of alarms: but from 1863 to the present time, there has been more method observed in this important par- ticular. From 1854 to 1863, there were 168 alarms. From 1854 to 1858, about .^40,000 worth of property was destroy- ed. From 1863 to 1867, there were 66 alarms, a loss of $461,309 worth of property, and an insurance of ,$-322,279. We are under obligations to Mr. Benjamin Booth, chief engi- neer, not only for the main and most reliable items in this line, but as a citizen, for the more careful preservation of facts connected with his department of the administration of the city government, which may some day be of very great inter- est to the community. One of the most disastrous fires that has ever occurred in the city broke out on the 15th of August, 1859, in what was then known as the "United States Hotel," which was located where the store of Mr. Sharpe now stands, on Essex, between Appleton and Jackson streets. That struc- ture soon went down, killing in its fall two very worthy and promising young men. From this the fire spread east, de- 90 ADVERTISEMENTS. CO OFBR^ S Boston and Lawrence TWO TRIPS DAILY EACH WAY. OFFICES: No. 10 Court Square, Boston. No. 5 Appleton Street, Lawrence. 219. 219. ROBERT BOTHER, liM And Dealer in PERIODICALS AND STATIONERY, 219 ESSEX STKEET, 219 LAWRENCE. DR. CUTTER'S Chest Expanding Suspenders and Shoulder Braces, Improved and Patented by Geo. W. Walker, January 31, 1865. The Original Eureka Suspenders which are the best in the market. Dr. Cutter's Abdominal Supporters for female weakneeg. MANUFACTURED ONLY BT CUTTER & WALKER, 48 Central St., Lowell, Mass. Orders by mail or express punctually attended to. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 91 stroying one or two stores, and west to Appleton street, de- stroying what was then known as "Church Block," embracing the Second Congregational church, with the stores under the same, and thence, traversing north, it carried down the court house. The Unitarian church was set on fire by the sparks and cinders, and was very badly damaged. The day was op- pressively hot and the firemen suffered intensely. — Twice, since they were first erected, the repair shops of the Boston, and Maine Railroad Company, on the south side of the river, have gone down by fire, involving the company in heavy loss. Both of these fires are attributed to spontaneous combustion. The first occurred in the evening, the last on Sunday, at about 2 o'clock in the afternoon. The buildings in the "Essex Com- pany's lumber yard" have been burned out several times, in- volving heavy loss in the aggregate, but so divided among individuals and carefully covered by insurance, as not to have seriously affected the business of the city. The burning of the steam mill of Wilson & Allen was probably the cause of more consternation than any fire that has occurred in the city, except that of Church Block, and the appalling fire among the ruins of Pemberton Mills, detailed more fully in its appropriate place. The weather at the time was very dry, and everything combustible was like tinder. The wind was about north-east, and blowing fresh. The mill, formerly the meeting house, which stood on the hill near the farm of Mr. Fairfield White, in Methuen, was a large building, two stories high, and filled, from base to attic, with combustible materials. The brisk wind carried the burning coals high into the air, and scattered them all along in the track and upon the roofs of buildings, to Tower Hill. The hills on either side of Lowell street, as far west as the lot where Mr. George W. Horn is now erecting his dwelling house, were soon all ablaze, and there was scarcely a roof between this point and the fire that did not need constant watching and Avetting to prevent increased destruction. Fortunately ladders and water were plenty, and every building west of the railway was saved. Several wooden workshops between the mill and the railway 92 ADVERTISEMENTS. ^Boston and Lawrence E 2s: :f I?. E s s - TWO TJ^II^S DAILY EACH WAY. OI^JPICEH: 36 Court Square, Boston. 14 Atkinson Block, Lawrence. WHEELER & CHURCHILL, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in tllJLJiJ ^m eiyiy ga FEED, OATS AND Cor. Common and Turnpike Streets, LAWRENCE, MASS. FRANK E. WHEELER. J. E. CHURCHILL. FEAHIMI H©lil, OPPOSITE PASSENGER DEPOT. T. W. HUSE, Proprietor. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 93 went down, and the large carriage manufactory of Gen. Gale was saved only bj the most untiring exertions. The calamities of Lawrence, independent of those which be- fall all the world in the form of financial revulsions and the ravages of fire, though not numerous, have been perhaps more appalling than any by which the nerves of an American com- munity have ever been shocked. The first of these, worthy of special note, was the accident at the dam on tiie 12th of October, 1847. At the time this accident occurred, about 300 feet of the dam on the south side, and 100 feet on the north side of the river, had been finished, the water mean- while running over the part unfinished. It now became neces- sary to shut out the water from the unfinished part by means of a coifer dam, in order that the unfinished portion could be carried up to a level with the two wings. The unfinished space was about 500 feet long. The timbers of the coffer dam were all in position, and braced, as was supposed, securely, and workmen were engaged in putting down flash boards, by which the water was to be raised to a sufiicient bight to flow over the finished portion, leaving its old bed dry. Mr. L. M. Wright had charge of the wood work on the dam, under the immediate supervision of Captain Bigelow, the chief engineer. Both were present at the time, aiding in all confidence as to the strength of their structure in putting down plank after plank, until the accumulating waters had nearly reached the elevation desired, when, in an instant, that portion of the structure upon which they were engaged rose upon the sur- face of the water, and fifteen men were swept, amid the broken timbers, by the rush of the fearful flood, upon the rocks some twenty-five feet below. At the time of this accident every nerve was exerted to its utmost to raise the water to the proper level to supply power to the Bay State mills, then nearly completed, and ready in some parts for the machinery. Every person in town was looking forward to this desirable consum- mation with high hopes of future business. The accident was therefore felt as a personal as much as a public calamity. The fact that it had occurred flew over the town as by an electric 94 ADVERTISEMENTS. ?i :4®wi< LIFE, FIRE AND ACCIDENT For the following first-class Companies : SECURITY, • New York. - - (Assets) PHCEXIX, Harlford, Ct., HOME, New Haven, Ct., HOWARD, Boston, SUFFOLK, Boston, COMMERCE, Albany, N. Y., NORWICH, Norwich, Ct., NORTH AMERICA, New York, NORTH AMERICA, Hartford, Ct., NARRAGANSETT, Providence, R. I. QUINCY MUTVAL, cash assets, CONN. MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., accumulated capital, 50 per cent, dividends paid annually 'f)i $1,430,000 1,061,000 1,179,000 273,000 247.000 581,000 406,000 727,000' 382,000 596,000 200,000 12,000,000 142 Essex Street, Lawrence, Mass. MANUFACTURER OF IMPROVED ® _ Ef 1 1 11 1 mm f FOR Loom Harnesses and Rotary Sewing Machines. BANDING FOR SPINNING OF VARIOUS SIZES. of every description for Cotton and Woolen. Also, MANUFACTURERS' SUPPLIES, FURNISHED TO ORDER. NO. 96 MIDDLE STREET, LOWELL, MASS. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 95 spark, and all classes rushed anxiously to the scene, with an interest as eager as though friends and fortunes were involved in it. When the coflFer dam gave way, Captain Bigelow, Mr. AVright, and several others, were in a scow, in which they made the frightful plunge. The scow swayed round in the current and passed over end foremost. Just as she was making the plunge, two men leaped out and saved themselves upon that portion of the coffer dam which remained firm. Another man leaped fi'om the stern of the boat directly into the falling cur- rent and came out safe. The end of the scow plunged with terrible force upon the bed rock, sending its freight of men and tools with great velocity into the river. Two men were killed, two were very seriously and three slightly injured. Captain Bigelow came very near losing his life. He was so badly injured as to be unable to assist himself, and was only saved by the utmost exertions of Mr. Wright. In half an hour after the first break, and at a point where some thirty men were engaged when the first break occurred, another section of the coffer dam gave way. Had this section given way at the same time of the other, the loss of life would undoubtedly have been fearful, as the men were at work upon the frame work below the crest of the coffer dam. This circumstance was re- garded as a special providence by many people. But there Avas a still more marked interposition of providence in the minds of many in the result of this accident. At the time it occurred -a long continued rain, extending over a wide expanse of country, had just ceased, and the river was then about three feet above its ordinary pitch, and rising rapidly. By the next morning the freshet was very heavy, and swept with most ma- jestic power through thfe gap it had made for itself the day be- fore. Persons competent to form a correct judgment in such matters estimated that the finished portion of the dam, over which it was designed to throw this torrent, would have been wholly inadequate to discharge it, and that the wing walls of the dam would have been buried to the depth of about three feet in the surging flood, and all the lower portion of the town been swept out in the dead of night. Frightful as the acci- 96 ADVERTISEMENTS. standard Medical Preparations. M|ltEWEl^ i-PlMiS: '^MEWEljAj;; l^a(3HREM^ HUNNEWELL'S UNIVERSAL COUGH REMEDY. By advortisinsf it is expected to jjain a notorietj', than ■which, no form is better, but it is on Trtie Character alone that sales must rely. It is presumed that the contrast of this splendid preparation, its simplicity, and the freedom with which it may be used ■whenever there is the least tickline or irritation in the throat, in contrast with old forms, in wliicli components are sucli, that doses are restrained to two or three times a day, is perfectly apparent, and is as truly x'ess Mlaliiiig and Mlaclilne Stitcliiiig. Particular attention paid to orders for Mourning. Our goods are all purchased from some of the leading houses in Boston. We have none of last season's goods to pass olT upon our customers, but everything is new and fresh. Satisfaction to all. Please give us a call and do not feel that you are troubling us if you do not purchase. MRS. J. H. REYNOLDS, 155 ELM STREET, CORNER OF SHORT. MRS. L. W. GRAHAM'S f A10¥ ©OOBi Sf 0S1, 14,4, ESSEX STREET, LA^VREISTOE. Ladies will find here every article they may desire iu the Fancy Goods line, together with TOILET ARTICLES, BUTTONS, TOYS, &c., &c. Residents of contigious towns will please take notice, jg®" No trouble to show goods. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 107 of January and the 1st of May. From May to the succeed- ing January, !^'9,468.27 had been disbursed to relieve the suf- fering; $514,000 had been paid to the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company for annuities in trust, and the bal- ance, ^361.68, was paid to George P. Wilson, city missionary, to be applied where most needed, and the account was closed. In regard to the amount paid for annuities, Mr. Storrow, in his final report, says : — "It was suggested in the report of May last, that we might find it necess^ary to make permanent j^rovision for some extreme cases of in- curable injury. This has been done in two instances by the purchase of annuities. After full consultation, and with the approval of every mem- ber of the committee, a deposit of $14,000 dollars was made with the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company, of Boston, in two separate sums of G.500 and 7500 dollars, to create two annuities in trust, of about 350 and 400 dollars a year respectively, to be paid in quarterly payments to the annuitants for the remainder of their lives. " For persons in the enjoyment of ordinary health, the purchase of an annuity is a very simple matter. The tables of mortality show with suf- ficient accuracy their chance of life, according to their age, and the payment, once for all, of a certain sum, purchases for them an annuity of a stipulated amount, to be paid to them for life. But what human sagacity could calculate the chance of life of these two young persons in our charge ? Would it be one year, or fifty ° How could Ave balance on the one hand the eifect of wounded limbs, of consequent disease, of long-continued suffering, and, on the other, the restoring power of youth, of patience, and of comfortable homes? It was evidently impossible to purchase outright these annuities, because it was evidently impossible to estimate their duration, or calculate their value. The only mode to provide for these pei'sons, therefore, Avas by annuities in trust : that is, by deposits, the income of which should be paid to them as long as they live. " But a difficulty here arose. Upon the death of an annuitant in trust, the sum deposited reverts to the person who placed it originally, or to such persons as he may direct in the deed of trust. This event may not happen for fifty years, and where Avill the connnittee be then ? The poor patients may outlive us all. To provide for tliis contingency, it Avas determined tliat ujwn the decease of either of the two annuitants, the principal sum should be paid to the members of the committee, " or the survivors or survivor of them, or to the executors or administrators of the last survivor, and by them to be appropriated to such charitable purpose or purposes as shall be appointed in Avriting by the actuary of the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company, the mayor of the City of LaAvrence, and the president of the Essex Savings Bank, now established at LaAvrence, for the time being, or an)' two of them, in such manner as they shall deem most conformable to the original charity for Avhich the moneys Avere contributed." " By this arrangement we secure to our annuitants Avhat is necessary for their comfort as long as they live, Avithout paying at the outset an exorbitant price. AVe provide that, ujjon their ^lecease, the amount, no 108 ADVERTISEMENTS. F. P. GOGGEiSHAIjiI., On hand at all times, a good assortment of AMERICAN, FRENCH AND ENGLISH PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS, PORTFOLIOS, POCKET BOOKS and FANCY GOODS. Persons wishing Paper and Envelopes can have them Emhossed with Name or Initial without extra charge. Blank Books made to order in the best manner. Also a large assortment on hand. No. 51 Merrimack St., Lowell, Mass. KILEY BROTHERS, Pemberton Bank Building, LAWRENCE, MASS. A choice selection of Austrian, German, French, English and American Fabrics con- stantly on hand. James kilet. DANIEL F. KILEY. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 109 longer needed for their benefit, shall again be applied to the charitable purposes for which it was intended, and that this shall be done under the direction of three persons, who must all be in existence, whatever may be the uncertainty of human life, two of whom, from the offices they hold, must inevitably be persons especially fit to discharge tlie duties of a trust, and the third of whom is the principal representative of the City whose people were the objects of the original charity. Beyond all this, the Supreme Judicial Court has power to regulate and enforce the exe- cution of this trust, if it should ever hereafter become necessary to do so." A temporary hospital, known as the Pemberton Home, was supported for some time, at an expense of $820, out of funds mainly contributed by Mr. James M. Barnard. This sum would swell the benevolent contributions to 1,66.634.67. The committee distributed these contributions through the hands of a sub-committee, located in the various wards of the city, to the wounded, and also to those who had been rendered des- titute by the calamity, in sums ranging from $1 to $857.61. About six hundred people were the recipients of this bounty, eighty-seven of whom died of their injuries, and about fifty, more or less severely injured, ultimately recovered. An inquest was called by Coroner William D. Lamb. The jury commenced an investigation into the cause of the disaster on the 12th of January, and after a labor of two weeks, dur- ing which time nearly forty large octavo pages of closely printed evidence were taken down, a verdict was rendered. The only conclusion to be drawn from all this evidence was that the primary cause of the calamity was the use of cast iron pillars too weak to sustain the weight of the floors, roof, machinery, shafting, &c. The jury censured, with much severity, the chief engineer under whose general direction the work was performed. That gentleman is now gone to give an account before a higher, andj it may be, a more impartial tribunal. To review at length the evidence upon which the verdict was made up would be to exclude other topics which we design to touch, in the limits to which we are confined by the nature of this publication. On this one point — a brokeii pillar — hinged the whole matter, so far as the jury ascertained. In regard to this, the facts are simply these: — The mill was built by the Essex Company for the 110 ADVERTISEMENTS. MAMMOTH Fiiriiitiire Establislimeiit. CD CO o Nos. 181 & 182 ESSEX STREET, AND NOS. 1, 3 & 5 AMESBTJBY ST., Dealers in and Manufacturers of all the various kinds of Cll$TOM-MAOS FIHST CLASS FllBHITUREt AND HOXTSEHOLD OOODS. OXJH FITtfSiT CLA-J^S 13E:i»AnT3IET>fT ■will ever be found full and complete in assortment of splendid Drawing Room and Par- lor Suits, in Velvet, Repts, Hair Cloth and Terry. BEAUTIFUL CHAMBER SETS, high cost and medium. Marhle-top Tables, in great variety; Book Cases, Office Desks and Tables; Lounges, CJiairs, Beds and Bedding; Mirrors for the Parlor, Counting Room, Hall or .Store. CO]\t]>XO]V F'TJI^^IVITXJI^.E, a large and varied stock. LIVE GEESE FEATHERS AWD PURE CURLED HORSE HAIR. Extension Tables, Stuffed Chairs and Rockers, Bureaus and Bedsteads, of beautiful patterns, sold separate from sets; iside Boards and Ettegercs, Hat Trees, Whatnots and Library Tables. UPHOLSTERING- done in all its branches by trusty and experienced workmen. All orders promptly attended to, and personal attention given to our own business. "VV. R. PEDRICK. C. C. CLOSSON. HISTOKY OP LAWKENCE. Ill Pemberton Company, from plans furnished bj the Pemberton. The work was done under the general supervision of Captain Charles H. Bigelow, under whose management the dam and canal, and most of the other mills in the citj, had been con- structed. Mr. I. J). Putnam, agent of the Pemberton Com- pany, testified before the jui-y that Captain Bigelow "intended to put in wooden pillars, such as were put into the Pacific mills," but Mr. Putnam says he "thought iron would be stronger — thought he could get them for two and a half cents per pound. Captain Bigelow told him to enquire about it. and he would enquire at the Lawrence Avorks." Mr. Putnam then says, "I found a place to get them cheapo- than he could at Lawrence." Captain Bigelow furnished a draft for columns, but it does not appear that he assumed any control in the mat- ter over Mr. Putnam after surrendering his convictions that wood was preferable to iron for the purpose. But he furnished a draft. That draft called for columns of the following dimen- sions and thickness, as appears by his own and other evidence : Lower story, six inches diameter and five-eighths of an inch thick; second story, five and three quarter inches diameter and half an inch thick; third story, five inches diameter and half an inch thick; fourth story, four and three-quarter inches di- ameter and half an inch thick ; fifth story, three inches diam- eter, solid. Mr. Putnam, as may be supposed, felt a deep interest in the stability of the property for which he Avas agent, and in order "to make assurance doubly sure," he went to Lowell and solicited the opinion of Mr. James B. Francis, the eminent engineer, under whose supervision more mill work has probably been done than under that of any other man in America. Mr. Francis, not trusting to verbal directions, wrote Mr. Putnam a letter, in which he says: — "Assuming the weight on the lower columns is the same as that on the cor- responding columns of the Prescott Spinning Mill, a column of seven inches diameter and half an inch thick Avould give ample strength, provided it could be properly cast. / should think it would be better to make it six inches in diameter outside and three-quarters of an inch thick, u-hich gives an abun- 112 ADVERTISEMENTS. ^ TEACHER OF 1 t/ an ^rffai. AND DEALER IN PIANO FORTISS, ORGANS AND MELODEONS, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, MOStG STOOLS AND PIANO FOUTE COVERS, Sheet Music and Instruction Books, No. 1 Appleton Street, Opposite Post Office, LAWRENCE, MASS. a large assortment of Piano Fortes, Organs and Melodeons constantly on hand, ■which will be Sold at the Manufacturers' Lowest Prices, and delivered free of charge. The latest Vocal and Instrumental Sheet Music, and the largest stock in this city, may be found at his rooms. Tuning and Repairing done Promptly and Faithflt^ly. Music Lessons given at his Rooms at all hours of the day and evening. J. C. OAULOUTT, Appleton Street, Opposite Post Office, Lawrence, Mass, HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 113 dant mar(jin for all contingencies. Of course, any column Avhich has manifest imperfections should be rejected; but my calculation is intended to cover all ordinary imperfections. The columns in the upper stories may be gradually diminished in size and thickness."* Here it will be seen Mr. Francis sug- gests the precise size, and, within an eighth of an inch, thick- ness which Mr. Putnam had ordered of the iron founder. In his testimony before the jury, Mr. Francis says the "weight upon each column upon the lower floor was between one- ninth and one-tenth of the estimated breakino- weight of the columns, and providing the columns were made as nearly per- fect as they are usually made, this would be safe, though not as large a margin as I should recommend."' These columns having broken, their imperfections were apparant to every one who examined them. Mr. Francis also observed that "as the columns turn out. he considered them unsafe." To arfirue that they were safe after such an event would have been an * Extract.? from the Evidence of J. B. Francls before the Coroner's Jury. — "The year before this mill was built, I was asked by Mr. Putnam, who was at the time treasurer of the Boott Cotton Mills at Lowell, In relation to the pillars of a mill he was then intending to erect at Lawrence; what was said I cannot now recollect, but I subsequently wrote him the following letter." [The letter here alluded to is quoted above.] "A diagram in the margin of the letter indicates that a five story mill, eighty feet wide, was contemplated. " As now informed, the area of floor supported by each column in the Peinberton Mill is fully double that supported by each corresponding column of the Troscott Spin- ning Mill ; and, consequently, each column has to support double the weight at the Pcraberton as at the Prescott. This, of course, is assuming that the weight per square foot of floor is as great at the Pemberton as at the Prescott, of which I suppose there can be no doubt. " At the Prescott Mill, the beams are eight feet apart, these are ten feet apart; the space from column to column at the Prescott Mill is sixteen feet, here nearly twenty- seven feet. The product of 8 by 16 equals 128 square feet; that multiplied by the num. ber of stories (four), equals 512 square feet of floor which is supported by each column in the lower story of the Prescott. In the Pemberton Mill, 26 feet 10 inches, by 10 y^ 4, equals 1073 square feet which is supported by each column in the lower story ; the roof being also supported in addition at the Pemberton. The roof when loaded with snow might be equal to one-third or one-half another floor. When I have made an estimate of the strength of columns, it has been based on what weight they would have to sup- port. I always made an estimate, or have been furnished with one, for each particular case, when called on to calculate the strength of columns. As I recollect now, it has been my rule to make the columns of that size which would require a weight twelve or fifteen times greater than they will be required to support, to crush them. When I say it would take twelve or fifteen times the weight to crush a column, I mean a column made and set as perfectly as the columns from which the rules are deduced." 15 114 ADVERTISEMENTS. ASAHEL DAVIS, MANUFACTURER OF A. DAVIS' IMPROVED Magneto-Electric Machine. WARRANTED TO GIVE BETTER SATISFACTION than any similar Machine in the market. BEPAIRING OF ALL KINDS AT SHORT NOTICE. With increased facilities for manufacturing, AND IMPOBTANT IMPROVEMENTS IN THE MACHINE, already well and favorably known, your orders are solicited. J8®" Magneto-Electricity is now more in favor among intelligent Physicians than ever before, and this machine is its own best testimonial of merits. Address HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 115 absurdity. But, for their imperfections, who was responsible? The founder was doubtless careful to forward no columns with imperfections which he had reason to believe would be mani- fest upon the outside. He may have known, and probably did know, that they were not honestly cast; and it may be true that Captain Bigelow should have critically examined them. But Mr. Putnam contracted for them, and he had even a deeper interest in them than Captain Bigelow. The fault, in our view, in this whole matter, falls upon the iron founder. Mr. Putnam, relying upon his honesty, did not deem it expe- dient to apply unusual tests to the work of his hands, and coming, as they did, through a party so deeply interested in the safety of the building as Mr. Putnam, neither Captain Bigelow nor any one under him deemed it a duty to go bcr yond Mr. Putnam in the condemnation of materials to be used in the construction of his mill. In all the evidence before the jury in regard to the fall of the mill, only two or three persons could give any but the most vague and uncertain account of it. Among all the wit- nesses examined, the clearest views were given by Mr. Howe, one of the owners, and Mr. Chase, the agent. Mr. Howe had arrived here from Boston in the afternoon mail train, and as was his custom once a week, was passing through the mill in company with Mr. Chase. They had gone through the weav- ing room on the lower floor and the carding room, and were on their way through the spinning room in the third story. They entered the room at the north end, and as they passed the mules Mr. Howe remarked to Mr. Chase that he thought they were running remarkably well. On reaching the last pair, he again remarked that ' ' this pair of mules seem not to be working so well." Waiting long enough for Mr. Chase to explain that this was caused by being employed on slacken twisted yarn, a period estimated at fifteen seconds alone pre- vented their being at the very point where the fall commenced. Mr. Chase says they heard a noise and simultaneously the mules stopped. He exclaimed "What is that?" On looking in the direction of the noise towards the. southerly end, about 116 ADVERTISEMENTS. % L» ..go c2S JQ0< o o C3 C Px| re o o o= 3 o BH. ^ c re 5^ re 2 o "! ** o re si. lit • re V- thus Whereby each person advertises for himself and all the others, making it a Mutual Advertisement. 23,000 copies of this card have been printed on envelopes for the advertisers on it. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 121 other hole through the floor. The poor girl was pinned to the floor by the heavj machinery, which it was impossible to re- move before the fire reached her, and she perished in the flames. The wife of Mr. Thomas Nice perished in the flames, and her remains were recognized by Mr. N. by a ring which he had presented her on their wedding day. Mr. James Bar- rett recognized the remains of a beautiful daughter simply by a portion of the dress which remained from the desolation of the fire, — the sorrowing mother had brought to the dead house the miniature of her daughter, and when she identified the dress she cast one look upon the picture and then upon the blackened and shapeless mass and instantly fainted and was carried away from the terrible scene by those in attendance. Other scenes quite as heart-rending occurred, but our limits forbid their recital. Several poor creatures were seen among the ruins and conversed with by working parties, but the flames reached them before they could be rescued. The body of Mr. Lafayette F. Branch, overseer of the dressing room in the fourth story, was found beneath the fallen walls upon the south-east corner of the building. It is supposed that he leaped from the window at the approach of danger and was overtaken by the walls. His watch had stopped at 13 minutes to five, and this is supposed to have been the precise time of the catastrophe. Several persons were rescued who reported themselves unhurt, but it was soon discovered that one had a broken arm ; another, Mr. Thomas A. Watson, had three ribs broken, his lower jaw broken in three places and several se- vere flesh wounds. During the night succeeding the accident the weather changed and became piercing cold, so that many of the unfor- tunate victims to the ravages of the fire would doubtless have perished by the severity of the weather before they could have been rescued, had not the terrible conflagration put so tragic and awful an end to their anguish. Strict justice to the dead and the living, but more particu- larly to one of the most sincere, earnest and high minded men who has ever been connected with the enterprises of this city, 122 ADVERTISEMENTS. D^VIS' MUTUAL ADVERTISmO CAUD OR ENVELOPE, ^s §1 o 3 Patent applied for. A. Davis, Publisher. •r O g ^3 o Whereby each person advertises for himself and all the others, thus making it a Mutual Advertisement. Forty thousand envelopes of this cut have been printed. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE, 123 demands from us an earnest though feeble tribute of exonera- tion from censure. That Capt. Bigelow felt the blow inflicted upon his reputation as an engineer in the fall of the Pember- ton, with terrible force, there can be no doubt. No heart beat more in sympathy with those who were perishing from the effects of this calamity than his own, and yet in all his long examination, nothing that might, by any possible construc- tion, be made to weigh against either his judgment as a man, or his attainments as an able and trustworthy engineer, was withheld on his part to shield himself from the odium of hav- ing caused it all. His evidence was calmly and most suc- cintly given. He attempted no evasion of responsibility, even when such an evasion would have been, not only by implica- tion, but upon every principle of honor and equity, fully jus- tifiable. He stood before that jury with a heart crushed with sorrow, but yet in the full stature of a sincere, honest, manly MAN, who preferred to bear upon his OAvn devoted head the full measure of censure rather than even seem to cast that cen- sure upon others, though to others it might legitimately belong. We have said that the primary cause of this calamity was the use of pillars too weak to support the immense weight placed upon them. In view of the evidence before the cor- oner's jury this conclusion is justifiable. At this late day, and in the absence of more direct and positive evidence to the contrary, it would be as well, perhaps, that this conclusion should remain undisturbed. But there are, nevertheless, men of intelligence, some of whom went down with the mill, who believe that the primary cause of the calamity was the break- ing of a gear. No evidence before the coroner went to show that there was a single revolution of any part of the machinery after the fall commenced, but on the contrary, the evidence of Mr. Chase, the agent, if published as it was understood at the time by several hearers, would have been that he and Mr. Howe were in the center of the spinning room, going south, when all at once the machinery stopped, and the mill began to fall. Mr. Howe says: "We heard a noise, and I think sim- 124 ADVERTISEMENTS. HUGH RAFFERTY, DEALER nr Choice Family Groceries, TEA, COFFEE, &c., or THE BEST QUALITY. "Wholesale and Betail Dealers in ^i-«««^"* ^\mm ALSO AGENT FOR Amber and Pale Ales and Porter, 37 TURNPIKE STREET, HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 125 ultaneously the mules stopped. On looking towards the south- erly end we saw the columns falling towards us." This result is precisely what might have been expected by the breaking of the gear, to wit, a stoppage of the machinery, followed by the fall. If the commencement of the fall had preceded the stoppage, the conclusions to be drawn would have been pre- cisely»with those of the jury. But this conclusion is not jus- tified by the evidence, and it is to be regretted that less atten- tion had not been given to proving what had become a self- evident and most palpable fact in the mind of every one, that the pillars were insufficient to support the weight put upon them under certain contingencies, than to the contingencies which caused their destruction. Masons and carpenters, at home and abroad, were summoned to prove just what the jury had had abundant ocular demonstration was the fact, and that was that the mill was not strong enough. This needed no proof. But it had stood for six years, and reliable evidence went to show that the floors had been»loaded much heavier than they were at the time of the fall. There was therefore some unusual contingency which brought them down. What could that have been, and why did the jury neglect to investi- gate it? Would it have exonerated Captain Bigelow from any measure of blame? Possibly it might, and justly. The tenor of the evidence would indicate more that the Essex Company was on trial for fraud upon the Pemberton Com- pany, in palming upon them insecure foundations, bad bricks, worthless lime, and cheap trash generally, than that the jury were deliberating calmly and impartially upon the real cause of a certain effect. It was more an investigation into what appeared to be than what really was. Subsequent investiga- tions proved that the foundations were as firm as a rock — the bricks rough, but hard — the mortar excellent, as was demon- strated when the bricks were cleaned for rebuilding the mill. The timbers were of about the usual size for such work, and in addition were trussed with iron to render them rigid, and firmly anchored in the walls. But the mill was down. An idiot could have correctly concluded that it fell because it was 126 ADVERTISEMENTS. A« BAVIS" PATBMT MITHE itaillm Are intended for First-class work, such as Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines, &c. No. 1 machine dovetails from three inches to sixteen inches long, and from 1-4 to 5-8 inch thick, and costs $200.00. No. 2 machine dovetails from five inches to twenty-sis inches long, and from 5-8 inch to 1 inch thick, or, if necessary it will cut any length, one end at a time, and costs $.350. No 3 machine is the same as No. 2, but will do wider stock, and thirty-six inches long, both ends at a time and costs $400.00. No. 4 is for M'ork 60 inches long and 24 Inches wide and works from 1-2 to 1 1-2 inches thick. This machine does not let down so as to do longer work. Price, $600.00. By the improvements made in 1863, we can dovetail boards of any length by doing one end at a time. It is applied to Nos. 2 and 3. By simply turning one set of cutters down,-— (they are fixed to turn on a hinge, so that they will return to the same place every time,) — we can dovetail one end at a time and thereby save the room and expense of a larger machine ; but if a very large proportion of the work is too long for the machine proper, it is best to have a longer machine, so as to save time, and also to In- sure perfection in the length of the work. The subjoined is an extract from the Report of the Judges at the late Exhibition of the Middlesex Mechanics' Association: " This is a double headed machine, and a very good article for mitre dovetailing. It cuts the board to a suitable length, and bevels and dovetails both ends at once. It per- forms its work with rapidity and accuracy, and is well worth the attention of cabinet makers and others requiring such a machine. Mr. Davis also exhibits a Tenoning Ma- chine. The working parts of both machines can be adapted to one frame, thereby effecting a saving of expense and room. These are valuable machines. For dovetailing machine,— SILVER MEDAL." K E P E B E IJ- C E S . J. C. Hoadley, Lawrence ; D. Mussey, Nashua; L. A. Cutler, Lowell; C. Q-. Sar- gent, tJraniteville; James Lawton, Lowell; D. A. G.Warner, Nashua; Isaac Place, Lowell; 8. D. & H, W. Smith, Boston; D. N. Butterfield, New Boston. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 127 not strong enough to stand. But what caused the fall is as much a mystery to-day as it was on the day when that jury commenced its laborious, long continued, and utterly fruitless investigation. We say fruitless; we mistake. After twelve days' labor, it aided materially in adding one more, if not the noblest of them all, to the already frightful catalogue of vic- tims of the terrible disaster. Captain Bigelow did not long survive the blow. The labor devolving upon the finance committee and their subordinates, but more especially upon the mayor, in conse- quence of the Pemberton calamity, was very arduous: but it was discharged with the utmost faithfulness. Mayor Saunders was perhaps the most active of all: laboring even beyond the . limits of prudent care of the preservation of his own health in ministering to the necessities of the unfortunate sufferers. As a slight token of their appreciation of his untiring exer- tions in the cause of humanity, his fellow citizens bestowed upon him a valuable testimonial. Lawrence is probably better supplied with useful and enter- taining libraries than any city of its population in New Eng- land. There are in the city no less than seven distinct collec- tions, embracing, in the aggregate, about 20.000 volumes. Nearly 8000 volumes are contained in the libraries of the At- lantic and Pacific Mills, the circulation of which is confined to persons employed on these two corporations. Probably the most elaborate, arrangement for the dissemination of knowledge among the working people to be found on any manufacturing corporation in the world, is at the Pacific Mills in this city. It is not with books alone that the Pacific operatives are sup- plied. They have also access to a reading room, where an ample supply of papers and periodicals are neatly arranged and constantly accessible to all whose duties will permit them to avail themselves of their perusal. The Franklin Library, to which Mr. Abbott Lawrence so liberally and so wisely con- tributed, contains 3800 volumes. John C. Dow's library contains about 2800, Lewis Stratton's about 800, and I. A. Whitcomb's about 700 volumes. There is also a Farmers' 128 ADVERTISEMENTS. ID-A.'VI This machine is intended for Surface Planing, for shops where the work is cut for use before planing, or for smoothing after other planers, such as door panels, &c. It will plane from l-8th to 4 inches thick, and are 14, 17, and 19 inches wide, respectively, and is warranted to give better satisfaction than any other machine, for such work, in this market. The 19 inch machine has feed and pressure rolls, independent of each other. The 14 and 17 inch machines have feed and pressure rolls, and are dependent and work entirely upon the upper surface of the hoard. These machines wore designed more particularly to accompany the Dovetailer for box-work and light shop-work. In the 14 and 17 inch planers, the bed rises and falls by one screw in the centre. The 19 inch planer bed-piece rests upon two screws, and is raised and loM'cred by a right and left hand screw, worked by worm gears. This planer is anew pattern, and possesses many improved and useful points, not attained in any other planer known. I also make a 24 inch Planer, the platin or bed-piece raised and lowered by four screws. This is for common heavy work and planes from 1-4 inch to .5 inches thick. It is fed by a belt from the cylinder, and will feed from 8 to 40 feet per minute by simply tightening the feed belt, which is operated by a convenient lever on the friction pulley. This machine weighs about 1,800 pounds, and is compact and reliable. Price of 14 Inch Planer, it If) it « it 24 " ** $150.00 180.00 200.00 350.00 of all sizes, of an improved make— (self-oiling and self-sustaining,)— always on hand, or made to order. Also, SAW-GUIDES for Splitting or Cut-off Saws, of the most convenient patterns, on hand. Also, ALL KINDS OF BOX MACHINERY made to order. For further particulars, address ASAHEL DAVIS, - Lowell, Mass. HISTORY OP LAWRENCE. 129 library, of about 500 volumes. Eventually, it is to be hoped, some, if not all, of these libraries may be united into one collection, to be freely used by all our people, under proper regulations. An effort to this end was made a year or two ago, but it was abandoned after making some little excitement among the reading community. The proposition was to unite several of these collections, either by gift or purchase, under the management of the board of trustees having charge of the proceeds of the benevolent and munificent gift of Plon. Daniel A. White, by which our people are indebted for the valuable course of evening entertainments known as the " White Fund Lectures." When the funds accruing from this gift to the people shall have accumulated sufficiently, it is designed to erect a hall for a lecture room upon a portion of the ground from which these funds have been derived ; and when this is done there is little room for doubt that the free library will in some way hi provided. The charitable societies and institutions in Lawrence are very steadily growing in strength and usefulness. First in the scale of unostentatious and true christian benevolence we class the Masonic order, which respects no man simply for his worldly wealth or honors, and knows no distinction of calling or nationality. The good deeds constantly being bestowed upon the needy by this institution, as well individually as collectively, none but the recipients themselves can estimate. Of this fraternity there are two lodges of Master Masons, one encampment of Knight Templars, and one Royal Arch Chap- ter. The oldest is Grecian Lodge, which was formed in 1825, at Methuen, where it continued its good works until 1848, when the location of its temple was changed to Lawrence. It now numbers over two hundred active members. Tuscan Lodge was formed in 1864, and now numbers about one hun- dred and thirty members. Mount Sinai Royal Arch Chapter, numbering about one hundred and thirty members, and Beth- any Encampment of Knight Templars, numbering about eighty members, were both organized in 1864. The Odd Fellows, an institution based upon very nearly the 130 ADVERTISEMENTS. GALE! <£ AMSS^ anat© aim ««™«^e. J I mWmw M^IsrUFA.CTXJRERS, Lowell Street, Lawrence, Mass., Patentees and Manufacturers of THE JUMP SEATED SUNDOWN, For two or four persons, au entirely new, beautiful and convenient pleasure carriage. JOBBINa OF ALL KINDS done with neatness and despatch. ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTEND'ED TO. OFFICE, 181 & 182 ESSEX STKEET, LAWRENCE, MASS. PEDRICK & CLOSSOISr, Real Estate Agents and Appraisers. PER^SOlSrAL ATTENTION given to all Sales and Appraisals. <®- SALES ATTENDED TO IN ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTY. -fijr Sale at Office every Saturday Afternoon, where generally may be found an endless variety of all kinds of Goods. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 131 same system of benevolence as the Masons, but of more re- cent origin and less extended means and influence, have now two lodges. United Brothers' Lodge was organized in 1848, and numbers about one hundred and twenty members. Mon- adnock Lodge was organized in 1867, and now numbers about fifty members. Probably the benevolent acts of no organization in the city are more widely and generally felt than those coming through the hands of Rev. George P. Wilson, the city missionary. The contributions thus dispensed come from no particular or- der, nation or sect. All who are able contribute something, either of money, clothing, or other necessaries. Nothing goes amiss. These contributions are distributed to needy ap- plicants according to the disci'etion of the city missionary. That much good is done by this mode of benevolence, and a great amount of annoying street begging avoided, there is no room to doubt, nor can it be doubted that very much impo- sition on the part of professional beggars is also avoided ; and those who. by sickness or accident, are reduced to a condition of need, as a general rule, know where to find relief from pinching want without exposing themselves to the odium of begging from door to door. At the head of White street is an imposing structure, the first ever erected in Lawrence for purely benevolent purposes, which is known as the Catholic Orphan Asylum and Home for Invalids. It has been erected at a cost of upwards of $28,000 by Rev. J. H. D. TaaflFe, presillent of the Catholic Friends' Society, an association now numbering one thousand members ; $10,058.00 has been expended by this society since its organization, 1856, for the relief of the poor and the sup- port and education of orphan children. No salaries are paid any of its officers, notwithstanding the most arduous labors often devolve upon them, in the line of their duty as ministers to the necessities of the poor. The building is three stories high, with a basement, of brick, and most thoroughly built. In the basement, which contains the furnaces for heating the entire structure, coal depositories, a kitchen, dining and a 132 ADVERTISEMENTS. C. W. BROWN'S C XT ^ T O ]\X m —IS AT— 146 BSSESX ^STRKIIT^ LAWRENCE. Boots, Shoes, Overshoes and Slippers, — FOR — MEN, YOUTHS AND BOYS. Also, a fine asgjirtment of every kind always on hand for lAiiis, Miseii All eiiii. FOR SALE, AS EVER, ^^T THE LOA\^EST r^IMCES. 146 ESSEX STREET, LAWRENCE, MASS. N. B.^I ■will Bell Boots and Shoes cheaper than any other man in Lawrence. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 133 recreation room for boys. The first floor is devoted to recep- tion, sitting, industrial and school rooms, a chapel, &c. The second floor is used as a sleeping apartment, the boys occupy- ing the right wing, the girls the left, and the Sisters of Char- ity the centre. The upper story is devoted exclusively to the purposes of a hospital. The foregoing charities have reference more to the temporal than the spiritual well being of community. It is proper, therefore, that we should here introduce what is rapidly be- coming an important charity, aiming solely to the moral and intellectual or spiritual welfare of the city. When-the Essex Company purchased the land now embraced within the limits of the city, a considerable tract lying on the easterly side of Haverhill, between Franklin and White streets, was reserved by Hon. Daniel A. White, of ^Salem, under restrictions which precluded him from disposing of it to any one outside the Es- sex Company. This land contained the graves of Mr. White's ancestors, and a proper regard fov their remains it is supposed precluded him from using it. But the graves of his family filled but a very small space, which has been surrounded by a substantial fence, at present the only mark by which one would suspect that it was the place of repose of a human form. It was not until 1852 that it became known to any one here what disposition Mr. White designed to make of this land. He then proposed to Mr. Storrow. agent of the Essex Company, to join him in a conveyance to the parties and for the pur- poses set forth, as follows : — " By an indenture, dated Aug. 23d, 1852, by and between Daniel Appleton White, of Salem, Mass., of the first part; the Essex Com- pany, of the second part; and Charles S. Storrow, Nathaniel G. White and Henry K. Oliver, all of Lawrence, Mass., on the third part, it appears that the said Daniel Appleton White "having at heart the welfare of his native place, the same being now a part of the town of Lawrence, and earnestly desiring to do something to promote the im- provement and prosperity of its now numerous population, had, by his will, devised all his right, title and interest in and to certain parcels of land, to certain trustees, to accomplish his purposes concerning the same:" but subsequently became "desirous that his intentions should be carried into effect during his lifetime, and that the said lands should now be conveyed to and vested in trustees, for the purposes aforesaid." He therefore proposed to the Essex Company, who possessed such 134 ADVERTISEMENTS. DA. VIS & FURBER, North Andover, Mass., near Lawrence, Mass., Manufacturers of Wool . Machinery, M ^^^^mmtTfm » ir«"i!J',i Mia ^IB'jBiiBniiBniitiiBl hliB^!lL„;; 1 It Tin; n B (»!uy!«ililii|«!!PViiipill ■■"■■■ ^-^.M^^f -- 'iiiiffli Card Clotliing, HMill Slaafting, Carding Machine, with Patent Seven or Nine Roll Rubber or Tube Condenser, Card Grinders, Spinning Jacks, Pickers, Dusters, Reels, Beaniers, Dressers, Spoolers, Broad and Narrow Common Looms, Drop Box Looms, and Fancy Looms, Broad and Narrow Gigs, Stocking Yarn Keels, Skein Spoolers, Bob- bin Winders, Fulling Mills, Banding Machines, aud Castings of every description. All the above Machinery made with new and Improved Iron Frames, or, if preferred with Wood Frames. Also Manufacturers of Pendegrass & Kirk''s Self -Oilers for Wool Can G. L. DAVIS. J. A. WILEY. J. M. STONE. HISTORY 01 LAWRENCE. 13' rights upon these lands that without their consent and concurrence they coukl be made of no pecuniary value whatever, to join him in a convey- ance of all their interest, together with his, to trustees, who should be authorized to sell the lands, thus rendered free of incumbrance and valuable, and Avho, after allowing the proceeds to accumulate, should apply the income of the fund so created to certain public purposes, specified as follows : — " First, that they shall apjjly and appropriate so much of the said income as may be necessary lor the establishment and support of a course of lectures, to be delivered annually, with a special design to enlighten the minds and elevate the character of the young of both sexes, by impai'ting to them a full knowledge of their true interests, with a deep conviction of the importance of eai"ly cultivating those vir- tues, habits, and principles which constitute excellent character, and furnish the most reliable resoui'ces for their advancement and success in life. The said lectures to be not less than sLx in number, to be delivered annually, by such persons as may be from time to time appointed by the said trustees, in the town of Lawrence, on the following subjects : On the importance of a good character to success in life : On the unsurpassable value of the riches of character to the young of both sexes : On their ability to possess such riches, if they will, and with them to attain all that is needful of the less durable riches, and all that is most desirable of human enjoyment: On the virtues, habits, and principles most essential to good character : On the wisdom of giving an early and earnest attention to the cultivation and practice of these, and generally on the best means of intellectual, moral and christian improvement. And I direct that the said lectures shall be free to all of the indus- trial classes, and more especially to the young, but in respect to others, subject to such regulations as the trustees may see fit to prescribe. Second, in case the whole of said income shall not be needed for the support of the said lectures, that the said trustees shall appropriate a further portion, not exceeding one-half part of the whole net annual income, to the purchase of books for the establishment and increase of a public library. Such library to he open and free of access to all the inhabitants of the town of Lawrence, subject only to such restrictions and regulations as the said trustees may see fit to impose, touching the vise and preservation of the books. The said trustees in the purchase of books for the said library, to select those of sound moral tendency, and to have especial reference to the wants of the young and of the indus- trial classes. Third, in case there shall be any surplus of the said net annual income, that the said trustees shall at any time, and from time to time, suffer the same to accumulate, if in their opinion necessary, and such surplus, together with s\ich accumulation, shall add to the trust fund, or shall apply and appropriate in such manner as they, in the exercise of a sound judgment and discretion, shall consider best adapted to promote the moral, intellectual, and christian advancement and instruction of the inhabitants of the town of Lawrence — earnestly requesting the said trustees constantly to bear in mind, that the great object intended to be promoted and accomplished is the education and training up of the young in habits of industry, morality, and piety, and in the exercise of christian principles both in thought and action." The Essex Company cordially assented to the proposition of Judge 136 ADVERTISEMENTS. Indian Pnlmouic Balsam, PULMONIC Is a speedy and Certain Remedy for (Coiiglis, Colcls.( HOARSEXESS. pulMsnig Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Catarrh, In- fluenza, Hooping Congh, Asthma, AND THE VARIOUS AFFECTIOXS of the LUXGS axd CHEST. ■WThile most diseases are not obscure in their development, and short in duration that of the lungs is insidious, deceitful, and often uncertain in its real nature, till it has reached an advanced and hopeless stage. But if seasonably and properly attended to, its progress may be effectually arrested in the great minority of cases. This fact occurs frequently within general observation and experience. To arrest the existing irritation of the air passages and lungs, speedily and effectually, the seat and cause of cough, is an important step gained toward relie'f and cure in the first stages of the dis- ease. But while the remedy confers this benefit, it must possess another principle equally indispensable to com'plete the cure. It must at the same time exert and impart nourishing, healing and strengthening infiuence throughout the whole system. Lung disease poisons the circulation, weakens the fluids of organism, and rapidly undermines the constitution. It thus requires a restorative of extraordinary efficacy "to reach and relieve the advanced stages of consumption. MASTAS IXDIAX PULMONIC BALSA3I possesses this rare combination. While it promptly and effectually arrests irritation of the air passages and the lungs, and rapi.lly relieves cough, it renders them further assistance by promoting a free discharge of their accumulated mucous, and at the same time imparts health and vigor to the whole system. Those suffering with Cough and Disease of the Lungs, will find in this valuable pre- paration prompt and speedy relief. Even those whose condition is beyond recovery, will derive from its use great benefit as well as comfort. For the class of diseases it "is designed to relieve, tlie general commendation it has received has proved its great efficacy beyond a question. Por the past twelve years THOUSANDS have been SPEEDILY and EFFECTUALLY CURED by its use while suffering from the various forms of lung disease. It is prepared from vegetable balsams and the native medicinal properties of roots and herbs, and contains no minerals or poisonous acids. Simple and sajfe in the materials used, it can be taken at all times when the condition of the lungs and chest needs a remedy. For eighteen years previous to offering the balsam to the public, the manufacturer has used it in an extensive practice with extraordinary good success, in which he made the study and treatment of Lung Disease almost exclusively a speciality. During that time its con- stant use and triafin all forms of the disease' pointed out many important changes and improvements in its preparation. A long and protracted test of its efficacy having fully satisfied him of its usefulness as a remedy for the first stages of pulmonic' disease, he offered his medicine to the public, with the assurance that its merits will constitute its chief certificate to pubUc favor. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS IN LAWRENCE. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. " 137 White, .and joined in the conveyances necessary to carry his intentions into eti'ect ; and the three gentlemen above named accepted the trust, in accordance with the provisions of the indenture establishing tlie same." * From the proceeds of the sale of this land our people are indebted for the course of "White Fund Lectures" now an- nuallj given gratuitously at Citj Hall. In the course of time a building will be erected upon a part of the ground, probably opposite the new Catholic Church, sufficiently large to accommodate a library, and afford room for lectures. In his letter detailing the rise and progress of manufactur- ing enterprises in Lowell. ("Introduction of the Power Loom and origin of Lowell,") Mr. Nathan Appleton saj^s: — " One thing is certain, manufactures cannot be carried on to any great extent in this country in any other manner than by joint stock companies. A large capital is necessary to success. Individuals possessing sufficient capital will not give them- selves up to this pursuit. It is contrary to the genius of the country." Only ten years ago, — 1858 — the sentiments of * An explanation in regard to this deed of trust is due to other parties who survive Jndtre White. The facts respecting this tract of land, amounting to six acres, are that Mr. White deeded it to Samuel Lawrence, March 2Sth, 1845, before the Essex Company was organized. He subsequently discovered that there was in the deed from which he derived his title a clause reserving a part (or the whqle) as a place of burial for the White family. In the meantime Mr. Lawrence had transferred the property to the Essex Company. On the 8th of March, 1848, at the solicitation of .Judge White, the E.«sex Company restored the land to him, but with the reservation of the right to use any part of it for streets, &c., and also binding Mr. White forever to keep the land as a prfvate or public burial place, excluding the erection of all buildinss except such as might bo required for the purposes of a cemetery — without the written consent of the Essex Company. We think a stone shed was once put upon the land by consent of Mr. White and removed by order of the Essex Company. The land w.as centrally lo- cated, .and the assessors put its valuation pretty high. Mr. White demurred- from pay- ing taxes upon it because it was a burying ground, but the assessors Insisted that the ground thus occupied was not a fiftieth part of the whole. The p,roperty in this con- dition was valueless to every one but the town, and only v.aluable to it so far as it con- tributed to the public funds. To .ludge White it was no better than an elephant to whose voracity he must contribute but from whose labor he was excluded. Whether at the time the Essex Company transferred the land to Judge White he. contemplated its application to the object to which he ultimately devoted it, Is not for us to say. The Essex Company's deed to liim indicates that they had no knowledge of the kind, or the provisions forbidding its use for other purposes than a cemetery, which they very well knew the public authorities would not allow, would have been changed to a form indicating in some degree its future destiny, and doing away with the necessity of the joint deed from .Judge White and the Essex Company. As the public records now stand, one would be at a loss to decide whether it was .Judge White or the Essex Com- pany to whom the public are indebted fbr this liberal bequest in their behalf. 138 ADVERTISEMENTS. GEO. W. HARRIS, Proprietor and Manufacturer of HARRIS'S PA-TEISTT ■MOli HAEHISB 111 A6, .jyLV® Also, Manufacturer of all kinds of LOOM HARNESSES. REEDS FURNISHED TO ORDER ljawff©a@t) ©®fg®ffatl®a, LOAVELL, ]Vt^S8. Orders Solicited and Promptly Attended to, AND ALI^ ITirORK ITITARRAZ^TKB. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 139 Mr. Appleton were undoubtedly the sentiments of a majority of the people of this country. But a change has been gradu- ally working its way upon the public mind. A colossal enter- prise like the Pacific, or Washington, or Atlantic, with all their varied interests, must either be controlled by a mind equally colossal, or they will not be a very marked success. These minds are not manufactured to order. They rise only at long intervals in periods of time. It is easy for a joint stock company to build a gigantic factory, fill it with costly machinery, and say to themselves, we will make this, and we will make that, and above all we will make money. But are they sure of that? Does the history of the large corpora- tions of Lawrence not show most conclusively that these calculations have been illusive? The Pacific has been a brilliant success to be sure, but how wisely have the directors selected the managers of this enterprise, and even with these how little of faith or hope remained when the stock of this corporation, now selling at ,f 1800, was depressed to less than $100 per share, and the company claimed and obtained* an extension upon their notes. Men who were esteemed as of more than ordinary financial acuteness then dropped their Pacific stock in utter dismay, in anticipation that the fate of the Bay State Mills was to fall upon the Pacific. But the managers of the Pacific were equal to the great emergency. At a future day it may be proper to speak with adequate full- ness of this crisis, and of the specific acts which saved these mills from disaster. It is enough to say here that there are probably very few men in this country who could have carried these mills along as did Mr. J. Wiley Edmunds, the treasurer, and Mr. William C. Chapin, the agent. It is possible that they have their pecuniary reward in the confidence they re- posed in the declining stock, and their ability to carry the property through to a brighter day, and we hope they have. They deserve it. They won it at a time when not one man in ten thousand would have ventured a dollar in the stock to save the mills, and when fewer still anticipated that such an invest- ment would result in a fortune. 140 ADVERTISEMENTS. J A AXD A DELIGHTFUL AND PLEASANT REMEDY IN Catarrh, Headaclie, Bad Breath, Hoarseness, Asthma, Bronchitis, Coughs, Deafness, &c., &c., and all Diseat;es resulting from COLDS in Head, Throat, and Vocal Organs. This Remedy does not " DRY UP " a Catarrh but LOOSENS it ; frees the head of all offensive matter, quicklj' removing Bad Breath and Headache ; Allays and Soothes the Burning Heat in Catarrh ; is so MILD and AGREEABLE in its efl'ccts that it positively As a TROCHE POWDER, it is p;easant to the taste, and never nauseates; when swallowed instantly gives to the Throat and Vocal Organs a Delicious Sensation of Coolness and Comfort. . IS THE BEST VOICE TONIC IN THE WORLD ! TRY IT! SAFE, RELIABLE, AND ONLY 35 CTS. Sold by Druggists and the trade everywhere, or mailed free: address, COOPER, WILSON k CO., Prop'rs, Philadelphia. Sold in Lawrence by CORNER ESSEX AND MILL STS. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 141 The history of the Atlantic Mills, with a capital of |!l,500,- 000, has not been brilliant, though its home management has been controlled with care and guided by intelligence. It is every way a splendid property, a model of neatness and order internally and externally, yet it cannot be justly ranked among the successful enterprises of the past twenty years. Nor is the history of the Everett in any marked degree more successful, notwithstanding the mills and grounds were pur- chased at not more than forty per cent, of their intrinsic value. The Bay State and the Pemberton Mills it is well known were a most disastrous failure. These are the very class of mills of which Mr. Appleton speaks. Only one in five has really been what may be termed a perfect success, and even the fifth must inevitably have failed but for the herculean power which was developed in the treasurer iquor. Oil Vitriol, Muriatic Acid, Muriate Iron, Muriate Tin, Nitric Acid, Nitrate Iron, do Copper, Plumb Spirits, Preparing Salts, Red Liquors, Redwood Spirits, Scarlet Spirits, Tin Crystals, Yellow Spirits. "We have constantly on hand, in Store, in addition to above : Alum, Brimstone, Bleaching Powders, Cochineal, Cudbear, Copperas, Cutch, Flavine, Glue, Gambier, Gum Arabic, Indigo, Lace Leather, Madder, Oil Vitriol, Oils, Potash Bichrome, Potash Pruss, Potash, Pickers, Picker Leather, Reeds, Shuttles, Sal Soda, Soda Ash, Soda Soap, Sumac, Sugar Lead, Twines and Tapes, Tin, And all articles generally used by Manufacturers. "With our increasing facilities and long experience, we do not hesitate saying to dealers and manufacturers, that quality and price shall be satisfactory. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 149 either woman or child maj be more comfortably dressed in this fabric than in cotton. And it is a source of no little sat- isfaction that this fabric, in some form, is so rapidly supplant- ing cotton in domestic use. For fifty years the varied forms into Avhich cotton has been wrought have given to these fabrics an almost unlimited use in New England. Their track is marked by enfeebled and consumptive families. Our grave- yards are filled with the remains of men and women whose duration of life has fallen sadly short of that of an ancestry whose clothing was fabricated solely from wool, around the domestic hearth-stone. The substitution of fabrics of wool for those of cotton, as articles of dress, indicates an increased skill in manufactures in which no American can fail to take a deep interest. They inspire the hope that the time will soon come when they will drive out from among us the bulk of our cotton manufactures, as only fit to be used by the people inhabiting the regions which produce the raw material. For years gone by it has been claimed that "cotton is king," and during all the time it might as truly have been said that it was a joint partner of the "king of terrors." Its pathway is little better than a desolation, and now that a fabric, neater, more durable, healthier, and ultimately cheaper, has arisen to take its place, no one who prizes the happiness and pros- perity of the country will fail to greet it with most hearty satisfaction. We have before said that the consumption of combing wool in this city amounted to 500,000 pounds. This estimate is based upon the business of 1865 and 1866. From careful enquiries among the manufacturers of Lawrence, we find that the machinery already set up, or now being set up, will re- quire in the aggregate no less than 1,200,000 pounds of combing wool. Present appearances indicate that the valley of our noble river is destined to be the seat of the worsted trade of the United States. No mills exclusively for the manufacture of cotton have been erected in this vicinity for many years. On the other hand, we have had no less than five mills erected for woolen and worsted fabrics exclusively. 150 ADVERTISEMENTS. American Water Wheel Company, MAmJFACTURERS OF "^7«r j^ n. rt E5 INT » js ni. Iiflii© Water Wliil For Cotton and Woolen Factories, Grist Mills, Saw ISIills, »&c. ; ALSO, Mill G-earing, Shafting and Pulleys OF EVERY description:. i]vif»rove:d regmjl^tors, (the best in use.) GRIST MILLS AND SAW MILLS built by contract, at short notice, and in the most thorough manner. All orders promptly executed. Water Wheel Worlds, 387 Federal St. Business Office, 31 Exchange St., BOSTON,, MASS. AIjOM-ZO "WAKKEN, Agent. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 151 and two, the Everett and Peraberton, have each a woolen de- partment. All the most recently erected mills are run alone on woolen or worsted fabrics. In the line of braids there is probably more doing here than in any other location in America. The machines upon which these braids are manufactured are of American inven- tion, less complicated, lighter and cheaper than the machines for the same purpose used in England. It is also claimed that they do more and better work, and that, as a consequence, the importation of braids from Europe must shortly cease for want of a market, or becau.se home competition will so cheapen this article that the products of Europe will cease to find the American market remunerative. The first person to enter upon this line of trade was Mr. George C. Moore, who com- menced with only a few machines. His success soon induced the formation of the. Wright Manufacturing Company, who set in motion 186 machines. This company was followed by Wade & Walworth, Avho, in addition to the manufacture of braids, also comb their own wools and spin the yarn used upon their braids. They run 125 braid machines. Messrs. King, under the name of the Lawrence Braid Company, run 16 machines. The Atlantic Cotton Mills, in addition to the legitimate objects embraced in their charter, have erected a large and handsome mill for the manufacture of worsted yarns and braids. They have 30 spinning machines and 213 braid machines, but no part of this mill is now in operation. For the present, we believe all the other braid machines are kept at work to their full capacity. Were all the above machines in full operation they would every year turn out a length of braid sufficient to reach from London to San Francisco, across the American continent. Messrs. Stedman & Doland have 7 Jacquard looms, embracing 118 shuttles, 48 of which are for fancy work, which they will soon start up on bindings and trimmings of a class altogether superior to any ever before manufactured in this country, and equal in every respect to the best importations. There are eighteen distiftct corporate and individual enter- 152 ADVERTISEMETS. S . G . ]V1 ^ C K , 123 MARKKT STRHEST, LOW^ELL, MASS. ■i/ Manufactures and Puts TJp i,flU' .M GUTTERS. WINDOW CAPS, BRACKETS, &c. ALSO MAJSrUPACTURERS OF Iron Pesiicess^iBalliistrades^ STORE FRONTS, STAIRS, AND HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 153 prises in this city, Methuen, Andover and North Andover de- voted to the manufacture of textile goods, independent of the braid works which do not manufacture their own yarn. Of these, ten are devoted entirely to woolen goods, one to flax, two to cotton alone, and five to manufactures both of cotton and wool. In two of the last named establishments wool is the predominating fabric, and in three cotton predominates. If in full operation, these mills would consume not less than 4000 tons of the different qualities of combing and carding wool per year. The woolen goods embrace almost every grade of American manufactures, from flannels to the best cassi- meres, dress goods and shawls. It is a source of pride to this community that two prizes should have been awarded upon the goods sent from this city to the World's Fair at Paris, and es- pecially that one of these should have been the first premium on textile fabrics. This prize, of the value of nearly $2000, was awarded to Mr. William C. Chapin, in behalf of the Pa- cific Mills. A silver medal was awarded to Mr. John L. Hayes, secretary of the National Association of Wool Growers and Wool Manufacturers, in behalf of the Washington Mills in this city. We embody the woolen business in the foregoing form that the reader may the more readily comprehend its vast magni- tude and rapidly increasing importance in this vicinity. The "little" mills of Andover and North Andover have wrouirht out fortunes for their owners in their patient industry for many a year; the mills in Lawrence and Methuen are of more re- cent origin, but we trust they are all surely making their way to like success. In the quality of fabrics, it is undoubtedly true that very few mills in Europe equal those of this region, and it is to be regretted that such fabrics should, on any con- sideration, bear any other than their true character when sent to market. It is high time that our best fabrics should be put upon the mavket for what they really are — American manu- factures — without being debased by fictitious labels, indicautiuI^SS., MANUFACTURERS OF AND WOOD WORKING MACHINERY, Including all kinds of Machinerj- for Bedstead and Chair 'Work. All our Machinery is warranted to give perfect satisfaction. ADJUSTABLE HA:NrGEES axd SHAFTI^^G. Our Improved Adjustable Hanger, with Self-oiling Box, was awarded the AT THE LATE MIDDLESEX MECHANICS FAIR, IN THIS CITY. For Cuts and Circulars, address as above. ^"^^MPililMillilllflilffl Particular attention, paid to Engravings and Display Cards for Color Printing. Ticws of all Manufac- tured Articles Photographed directly on TTood, ensuring Correct Hepresentations. 15 Congress Street, Boston. care to tell precisely the aroount of capital thej employ; and even some of the corporations, whose merited good fortune has appeared in the enlargement of works and purchase of valuable property, instead of being made more widely mani- fest in extra dividends, are inclined to refer to the amount of money covered by their charters, rather than state the amount actually employed. A disregard of the amenities of respect- ful intercourse may be becoming in an assessor of taxes, while one in search of facts designed for publication might not be justified in such a departure from his sense of propriety. Our three largest corporations, the Pacific, Washington and At- lantic, are incorporated with an aggregate capital of |55.650,- 000, nearly half of which (.$2,500,000) belongs to the Pa- cific. Probably the entire capital now employed in the cir- cuit we have named may be equal to about $1,000,000 to every 1000 operatives, or about .$14,000,000. No one branch of business has contributed more to the per- manent and healthy growth of Lawrence than that of paper making. The mills are mostly owned by residents of the city, and their sales are made, as a general rule, without the aid of commission houses. There are now in operation eight large mills, and still another is going up on the south side of the river. The mills already in operation give constant employ- ment to some 300 or 400 hands, and manufacture from 5000 to 6000 tons of paper annually. Of the mills in operation, the Russell Paper Company own two, which are run on fine book, cap and white envelope, of which they make not far from 7000 pounds per day on an average. This company em- ploys 113 hands. William Russell & Sons run two mills on Manillti, manufacturing about 5000 pounds per day, and giving employment to 37 hands. S. W. Wilder runs one mill on book and newspaper, of which he manufactures about 600 tons annually, giving employment to about 50 hands. J. A. Bacon runs one mill on book paper, producing from 500 to 600 tons annually, and employing about 40 hands. The six mills above enumerated consume annually over 3000 tons of coal and about 250 tons of bleaching powders. James S. 158 ADVERTISEMENTS. A. S. BUNKER, Having lately refitted his Shop and stocked it with one of the best assortments of ^^ WrTr^ m^m m AM WIWM in Essex County; now offers the above for sale, At Prices that Must Suit All ! in want of such goods. He also attends to Fitting New and Repairing Old Pumps and Pipes, in the best manner and warrants it to be done as well as can be done anywhere, and at prices as low as can be afforded. He is also prepared to manufacture all kinds of Copper, Tin, Sheet Iron Ware, and Stove Pipe, to order, and keeps it for sale. All of the latest styles of Kerosene Burners and Chimneys in the market. Lantern Globes, Ale Pumps and Faucets, Liquor Faucets, (Jesspools, House Bells, and in fact most any article needed in house or store can be found at ^. S. BUISTKER'S., m BUNKER'S NEW BLOCK, 288 Common St., Lawrence, Mass. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 159 Monroe, of Boston, runs one mill, employing 16 hands, in the production of roofing or sheathing paper, of which nearly 800 tons is made annually. W. B. Hayden & Co. employ 15 or 20 hands in a manufacture which is as much entitled to be classed with the manufacture of paper (the process of manu- facturing being nearly identical) as the one last named. This manufacture is known as leather board^ of which this mill turns out from 500 to 600 tons annually. In the line of machinery and factory supplies there are numerous shops. The oldest machine shop is that of Albert Blood. He employs 12 hands on mill shafting and general job work. Williams & Wilson employ 6 or 8 hands on general job work. The McKay Sewing Machine Works give employ- ment to about 50 hands in the manufacture of sewing ma- chines, adapted to sewing boots and shoes. J. C. Hoadley & Co. employ about 80 hands in the manufacture of portable engines and saw mill gearing.. McCabe & Co. have recently commenced the manufacture of steam boilers. They employ 10 hands. — The Lawrence Flyer and Spindle Works is a grow- ing institution. They have gone into a corporate existence with ^50,000 capital, and now employ 45 hands. — Webster, Dustin & Co. employ 75 hands in the manufacture of woolen machinery of every description — L. Sprague & Co. employ about 40 hands in the manufacture of spools and bobbins of every description. There are two manufactories of card clothing in Lawrence. That of Warren & Robinson employs 10 hands, and use about 100 sides of leather per week. They curry all the leather they use — Stedman & Fuller are also engaged in the manu- facture of card clothing, the leather for which is curried at their factory. These two establishments employ about 100 card setting machines. Davis & Furbur, of North Andover, run 110 card machines and employ 250 men in the manufacture of woolen machinery. In the last decade they have been the means of building up, through the employment afforded in their business, one of the most flourishing and intelligent villages in the state. 160 ADVERTISEMETS. A. SHAEPE & CO., H W W P5 Eh m M m 00 o o Q m "WTiolesale and Betail Dealers in FOREIG^N AND DOMESTIC T i.# o e? f Cloak and Mantilla Mannfacturers. i>i2r*AnT3i:i:ivTS. Dress Goods. I Silks, Black and Fancy. Cloakings and Cloths. | Men's Furnishing Goods Linen Goods. I "White Goods. Yankee Notions. | Hosiery and Gloves. Kibbons. Cloaks. Domestics. Flannels. Embroideries & Laces. AGENTS FOR ESSEX DYE HOUSE All Goods and Orders left here. A. SHARPE. J. C. STUART. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 161 In the line of wool hats there are about a dozen manufac- tories in Methuen and LaAvrence. They employ, in the ag- gregate, not far from 500 hands. The shoe business has long maintained a large community in Methuen, and the recent introduction of new processes of manufacture by the aid of machinery is extending the busi- ness to this city, where power is more easily and cheaply ob- tained than at Methuen. During the dull times in 1856 a great effort was made to introduce this business into Lawrence. To this end the building now known as Ordway Block was built by the contributions of puTjlic spirited citizens, the Essex Company giving the land, and offered on terms deemed ad- vantageous to those engaged in the trade. But no one would take it, and after remaining idle for several years it went into the hands of its present owner, who purchased the land in order that the building might be diverted to other purposes. There are some things better not done than done imperfect- ly ; and time, space and fitness of talent are all wanting with us, else the sacred duty of rendering to the "boys in blue," who went forth from our midst, all to privation and daring, and many, alas ! to death, their meed of honor for noble sacri- fice in upholding a nation's life, might be attempted. The youthful vigor of our population loaned liberally of its strength to the imperilled nation in the hour of its need, and, before the more sluggish impulses of older communities were stirred to action, two companies of the gallant "Old Sixth" regiment, civilians of yesterday, were breasting the fury of a rebel mob in the streets of Baltimore, and the martyr Needham had fallen, the first sacrifice upon the altar of union. There is no need that we, at this day, should attempt a written record of the deeds of our soldiers through the san- guinary struggle; the hardships of campaigning are fresh in the minds of survivors and vivid in the memories of the be- reaved and the sufferings and sacrifices of those wlio endured a soldier's fortunes and found a soldier's grave. 21 162 ADVERTISEMENTS. GEORGE AV. HORN, ONLY AGENT FOR Warren's Improved Fire and Water- Proof Roofing, Office, Common St., near Depot, Lawrence, Mass. WILLIAM E. LIYINQSTON, DEALER IN » LI]\IE, CEIVIEIVT, Plaster, Bricks, Hair, Laths, HAY, GKAD^, FLOUK, &C., no. 9 THORE7DIKI: ST.^ LO^VELL, MASS. GHARLSS S. MOSHESR^ RECEIVER AND WHOLESALE DEALER IN W ^ ® V & . Store near Depot, Lawrence, Mass. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 163 The names of all such will live in the future; the choicest oiferings of genius will be laid upon the graves of the fallen, and historians and poets of coming centuries will make im- mortal in record and in song the heroes of to-day. It is enough for us therefore to say that every demand upon our city during the war, through the excitement and heat of sudden calls for troops, of necessity for public expenditure en- tirely unprecedented, and calls upon private charity without limit, was fully met with a promptness indicative alike of un- questioned loyalty and an activity and enterprise not to be excelled. Statistics show that this city furnished 2617 volunteers and drafted men; paid in local bounties $83,675; $45,099,35 in ex- penses incurred by reason of the war; and more than |>200,000 have been paid under state laws and by municipal liberality for the relief of soldiers, sailors and their families. The service rendered by a brave soldier can never be rewarded by pay- ment of money, but there is no surer test of a high civilization and an active christian sentiment in a community than its care for those impoverished in a struggle for the preservation of those characteristics in our form of government which gives us pre-eminence. Much was done in Lawrence by private charities towards alleviating the sufferings of the sick and wounded upon the field and in the hospitals. On the 7th of April, 1862, the Ladies' Soldiers' Aid Society was formed. During the war this association sent to the Sanitary Com- mission $3,500, and $500 to the Christian Commission, and gave .$1,795 to Rev. George P. Wilson, city missionary, to be used at his discretion for the relief of such families of volunteers as might be in needy circumstances. In addition to this, a very large quantity of hospital stores and clothing for invalids was fabricated and forwarded to the hospitals near Washington. The operations of the Sanitary and Christian Commissions became, during the war, truly gigantic, giving to American warfare a distinguishing feature. The deeds of one Florence Nightingale were repeated by the sacrifices of hundreds of 164 ADVERTISEMENTS. ^ CO.^ 1^1^ IIlISHll Manufacturers of and Dealers In FOR STEAM, GAS AND WATER. A general assortment of these goods, as Globe and Angle Valves, Steam, Gas and Water Cocks, Cast and 3Ialleable Iron FittlnrfS, Boiler Feeding Pumps, <&c., constantly on hand and made to order. The patronage of consumers and dealers in Lawrence and vicinity is resijectfuUy solicited. RKPAIRS SPECIALLY INVITED. "We are permitted to refer to Russell Paper Company. BARKER & CO., RUSSELL'S PAPER MILLS, FOOT OF CA.IVAIL., GILMAN BARKER. JAS. H. WILKINSON. • THE ESSEX EAGLE im r filing ESTABLISHMENT, 153 ESSEX STREET, LAWEEKCE. ESTABLISHED 18G5. THE ESSEX EAGLE Is a Weekly Family Newspaper, published every Saturday Morning, at $L50 por an- num. It is' the only independent paper in the city, and lias earned for itself an impor- tant position as a first-class news journal, and from its large amount of reading matter and low rates, it is the most desirable paper in the city. The Office is supplied with a large amount of New Material for executing all kinds of JOB FRUSTTIlSrG^. All work done with neatness and despatch, and warranted to give satisfaction. H. A. WADSWORTH, Proprietor. HISTORY OF LAWRENCE. 165 American women who alleviated the sufferings of the wound- ed and ministered to the dying in army hospitals — the record of these charities and ministrations is the silver lining of the war-cloud so recently dispelled. That Lawrence, in the days when the rehellion had its inception, and in those dark days when victory hung in the balance, never wavered in its ad- herence to the calise, never failed to respond to all claims upon private charity and public action, is a source of pride to every citizen, and an item of record we could ill afford to spare from the History of Lawrence. It was not far from the^/-5^ of April, 1863, that Mr. A. J. Perkins conceived the idea of building a horse railway from Methuen, through Lawrence, to North Andover and Andover. He presented, through Mr. John Doland, then in the legisla- ture, a petition for an act of incorporation, together with a draft of such a charter as he desired. By some means, never satisfactorily explained to Mr. P., the charter was issued, but with the names of Geo. D. Cabot, W. H. P. Wright and Wm. R. Spalding as corporators. This charter was renewed in 1866, and during the autumn of 1867 the track was laid from Me- thuen to the paper mills in Lawrence. It is a public conve- nience and a great success. In the list of newspapers published in Lawrence we omitted to mention that Homer A. Cooke issued several copies of a newspaper from the office of the Sentinel, under the title of Lawrence Republican. In 1849, Messrs. I. W. & D. F. Ayer issued a few numbers of a literary paper, entitled The Juvenile Traveler and Scholars' Literary Magazine. This paper was printed at the Courier office. Robert M. Bailey published a paper in aid of a health insurance enterprise, in which he was engaged in 1850. It continued only during the existence of the enterprise it was started to build up. In January, 1868, Mr. Charles C. Whitney issued a paper, a model of neatness, and withal a very judiciously edited sheet, under the name of The Holiday Guide. It is intended to publish it annually, and deserves a handsome support from this community. 106 ADVERTISEMENTS. g4EDT M4CHmE C0,j PROFraETons axd manufacturers of C . HARDY'S IMPROVED Traverse Cylinder Card Grinders, &c. m This cut represents Grinder as seen Grindinar Doffer and Main Cylinder. Patented March 3, 185", Oct. 6. lSo7. and Feb . 5, 1S61, Dec. 19, 1S66, April 16, 1S67. This Machine is now almost unirersally used in all Mills where cotton, wool or silk fabrics are manufactured or wherever carding engines are used. The mechanical con- struction is such that the operation of the Grinder on the card teeth commends itselt at once to every mechanic and manufacturer. .And everyone who has had any experience in cardins: niust .at once see the many advantages of this machine over the long or fancy, or any other grinder now known : as the grinding cylinder or wheel is narrow, and traverses on a shaft or arbor made perfectly true, its "entire width over and beyond the range of the card teeth at either end. thus grinding all the teeth alike, and leaves a true and even surface, with all the card teeth ground with a needle-like point, tree from wire-edge, and in the best possible condition for carding. ■^Vhile, on the other hand the long or Fancy Grinder vibrates but one or two inchel, it may be positive — whether so or not, it makes no dilierenee: they depend upon cov- ering the grinder true and even to get the card true and even. This is impossible — so say over tive hundred carders — for some wave or unevenness will naturally exist on the grinder, and of course will grind the card and leave the same wave or tinevenness, both on the dotier and maiti cylinder, just the width of the vibration. This is seen verv plainly when you put a long grinder on a newly clothed card, or any card that is perfectly true, as it shows streaks or stripes, as it would of course. The highest ker- nels of emerv must strike the card teeth first, and if first, then as the grinder is put down till all 'the surface of the card is being ground, the same largest or highest kernels of emerv grind the deepest, hence the unevenness must be there, and there is no way that this" grinder can take it out; besides, it leaves a wire edge th.at requires strapping to get it off. and takes longer to grind a card. Clothing of card will uot last more than two-thirds as long: costs donble'to do the work, in time, emery, twine, glue, &c.; re- quires a stricklen thus more help to take care of the cards. With the Hardy Grinder you obviate all the above difficulties, that serious one of nnevenness, wire' edge, strickling, breaking of teeth, and loss of time by cards being stopped, will grind doffer and cylinder at same time, and the card cylinders do not need stripping one quarter so often. " .\nd to substantiate the above facts, we would refer you to those that are using them. We have most 3000 of them in constant use. grind- ing over 40,000 cards in tfafs country besides a great many ia England and France. The Hardy Grinder has been awarded the First Premium in all the Mechanical Fairs where it has been put on exhibition, ^whioh is five tiraes\ The Hardy Grinder is now no experiment, for it has been in use over six years, and where they "have used them the longest time, we have assurance that the above state- meTits are "true. What better recommendation can we have I We build Machines to Grind Top-Flats, T.ickerings, Workers and Strippers, on the same improved plan, also Machines to true Presser Rolls. ;this makes a great saving,) Machines to grind Cloth Shears, both Fly Blade and Ledger, Machines to true Callen- der Rolls without removing from the Frame : also. Woodman's Portable Ratchet and Gear-Driller combined, alfof which are acknowledged to be labor and money saving machines. Orders or inquiries relative to the above Machinery, or for cuts or circulars, address. HARDY MACHINE CO., CHARLES HARDY, Agent, Biddeford, Maine. INDEX TO ADVERTISERS. 167 Ayer, J. C. & Co., 80 American Water Wheel Co., 150 Bedell, Foster & Co., 12 Bishop, L. A., 52 Barker, H. R. & Co., 58 Barker & Co., 164 Brigham, William C, 60 Beach, L. & Son, 74 Banfield, II. N., . 82 Billings, Samuel D., 86 Bower, Robert, 90 Brazer, William P., 104 Buck Brothers, 104 Brown, C. W., 132 Bunker, A. S., 158 Clarke, Charles, 48 Cooper's Express, 90 Cutter & Walker, 90 Chadwick, A. C, 94 Clark, Jeremiah, 94 Coggeshall, F. P., 108 Caulcutt, J. C, 112 Cooper, Wilson & Co., 140 Carter, E. B.. ■ 154 Carey & Harris, 156 Crane, John E., 4 of cover Dexter & Gardiner, 26 Davis, Perry & Son, 68, 70 Davis, Edmund & Son, 74 Dearborn, C, C, 76 Dike, E. R., 84 Davis, Asahel, 114, 126, 128 Davis' Sect'l Maps of Lowell, 118 120, 122 Davis & Furbur, 134 Ellis, Snow & Son, 54 Evans, C. M., 2 of cover French, C. B., 6 FUnt, J. F., 44 Goodrich, A. W., 86 George, J. W. & Co., 88 Graham, JVIrs. L. W., 106 Gale & Ames, 130 Haughton & Bingham, 46 Hayes, J. R., 64 Hayden, W. B. & Co., 76 Hall, B. F., 84 Hardy's Express, 92 Huse, T. W., 92 Hunnewell, John L., 96 Hill, Mrs. Mary J., 106 Harris, George W., 138 Hedge, F., 156 Horn, George W., 162 Hardy Machine Company, 166 'Kiley Brothers, 108 Lawrence, A. & G. W., 72 Livingston, William E., 162 Marston & Prince, 2 Medina, J., 10, 100 Martin, D. N. & C. M., 16, 18 Murphy, Patrick, ' 24 Melven, Kimball & Co., 104 Masta, J. A., 136 Mack, S. G., 152 Merrill. G. S. & Co., 3 of cover Mosher, Charles E., 162 Nason, Symonds & Co., 42 Nash, J. W. & Co., 102 O'Gara, Thomas F., 14 O'Reily, Thomas, 144 Prince, Henry B., 88 Pedrick & Closson, 110, 130 Pillsbury, J. Jr., 144 Plummer, fl. & Co., 144 Peirce, John N., 146 Richardson, L. B. & Co., 62 Renne, William, 78 Robinson, Samuel & Co., 84 Reynolds, Mrs. J. II., 106 Ratferty. Hugh, 124 Stratton, Lewis, 22 Sargent, Charles G., 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 Saunders' Express, 86 Swain Turbine Co., 142 Sargent, George W., 154 Sharpe, A. & Co., 160 Stone & Huse. 168 Talbot, George F., 4, 50 Tapley, A. C, 66 Talbot, C. P. & Co., 148 Warren & Robinson, 8 Whitney, H. M., 20 Whitcomb, I. A., 56 Wood, Robert, 82 Wheeler & ChurchiU, 92 Weil, Louis & Co., 98 WeirN. J. &C«., 116 Wads worth, H. A., 164 168 ADVERTISEMENTS. ♦'THE ART PRESERVATIVE." ][SrEA^rSPA.P]ER, BOOK ^M^ 21 CET^TRAL STREET, - - LOWELL. The Largest Frinting Establishment in Eastern Massachusetts. The Proprietors have lately supplied their office with every material necessary for the prompt, neat and economical execution of LKTTBU-PRESS PRINTING. Having an establishment with all the most MODERISr TYPES AND FINESSES in use, they feel assured that they can compete successfully with any other establish- ment in the prompt and neat execution of all work entusted to them, and at as LOW PRICES as can be offered anywhere. Special attention given to Printing for Cotton and Woolen Manufac- turing Establishments, Mercantile, Banking and Railroad Companies, in short, all kinds of Job Printing, Plain or in Colors. ALL KINDS OF COPPER-PLATE PRINTING. Marriage and Visiting Cards and Circulars, of the latest styles. J.