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DANVERS , a township of See also: Essex county, on the See also: coast of Massachusetts, U.S.A., about 19 M
.
N. by E. of See also: Boston
.
Pop
.
(1890) 7454; (1900) 8542, of whom 1873 were See also: foreign-See also: born; (1910 census) 9407
.
Danvers includes an See also: area of 14 sq. m. of level country diversified by hills
.
There are several villages or business centres, the largest of which, bearing the same name as the township, is served by the Boston & Maine railway
.
In the township are a See also: state insane See also: asylum, with accommodation for moo patients; St See also: John's Preparatory
See also: College (See also: Roman Catholic), conducted by the Xavierian See also: Brothers; and, in See also: Peabody See also: Park, the Peabody Institute, with a See also: good public library and museum, the gift (1867) of See also: George Peabody
.
The Danvers See also: historical society has a valuable collection
.
Although chiefly a residential See also: town, Danvers has various manufactures, the most important of which are See also: leather, boots and shoes, bricks, boxes and electric lamps
.
The See also: total value of the factory product in 1905 was $2,017,908, of which more than one See also: half was the value of leather
.
Danvers owns its See also: water-See also: works and its electric See also: lighting and power plant
.
A See also: part of what is now Danvers was included in the See also: grant made by the
See also: court of assistants to Governor John See also: Endecott and the Rev
.
See also: Samuel See also: Skelton of the See also: Salem See also: church in 1632
.
Danvers was set off from Salem as a
See also: district in 1752 and was incorporated as a township in 1757, but the See also: act of incorporation was disallowed in 1759 by the privy council on the recommendation of the See also: board of See also: trade, in view of George II.'s disapproval of the incorporation of new townships at that See also: time,—hence the significance of the words on the See also: seal of Danvers, " The See also: King Unwilling "; in 1775 the district was again incorporated
.
Salem
See also: Village, a part of the See also: present township, was the centre of the famous See also: witchcraft delusion in 1692
.
In 1885 See also: South Danvers was set off as a See also: separate township, and in 1868 was named Peabody in honour of George Peabody, who was born and is buried there
.
In 1857 part of See also: Beverly was annexed to Danvers
.
Among distinguished natives of Danvers are Samuel Holton (1738-1816), a member (1778-1780 and 1782–1787) of the See also: Continental Congress and (1793–1795) of the Federal Congress; Israel Putnam; Moses See also: Porter (1755–1822), who served through the War of Independence and the War of 1812; and See also: Grenville Mellen See also: Dodge (b
.
1831), a prominent See also: rail-way engineer, who fought in the Union army in the See also: Civil War, reaching the See also: rank of major-general of See also: volunteers, was a Re-publican member of the See also: national See also: House of Representatives in 1867–1869, and in 1898 president of the commission which investigated the management of the war with See also: Spain
.
See J
.
W
.
Hanson, See also: History of the Town of Danvers (Danvers, 1848) ; See also: Ezra D
.
Hines, Historic Danvers (Danvers, 1894) and Historical Address (Boston, 1907), in celebration of the 150th anniversary of the first incorporation; and A
.
P
.
See also: White, " History of Danvers in History of Essex County, Mass
.
(
See also: Philadelphia, 1888)
.
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