Online Encyclopedia

FALL RIVER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 156 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FALL

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RIVER  , a city of Bristol county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., situated on Mount Hope
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Bay, at the mouth of the Taunton
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river, 49 M . S. of Boston . Pop . (r8go) 74,398; (1900)104,863; (estimated, 1906) 105,942;1 (1910 census) 119,295 . It is the third city in
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size of the
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commonwealth . Of the population in 'goo, 50,042, or 47.7%, were
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foreign-born, 90,244 were of foreign parentage (i.e. either one or both parents were foreign), and of these 81,721 had both foreign
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father and foreign
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mother . Of the foreign-born, 20,172 were French Canadians, 2329 were
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English Canadians, 12,268 were from England, 1045 were from Scotland, 7317 were from Ireland, 2805 were from
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Portugal, and 1095 were from Russia, various other countries being represented by smaller The small increase between 1900 and 1906 was due in large
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part to the emigration of many of the inhabitants during the
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great strike of 1904-1905 . numbers . Fall River is served by the New York, New Haven &
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Hartford railway, and has good steamer connexions with
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Providence,
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Newport and New York, notably by the " Fall River
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Line," which is much used, in connexion with the N.Y., N.H.& H. railway, by travellers between New York and Boston . The harbour is large, deep and easy of access . The city lies on a plateau and on slopes that rise rather steeply from the river, and is irregularly laid out . Granite underlying the city furnishes excellent
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building material; among the
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principal buildings are the state armoury, the county court house, the B.M.C .

Durfee high school, the

custom house, Notre Dame College, the church of Notre Dame, the church of St Anne, the Central Congregational church and the public library . The
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common-
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wealth
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aids in maintaining a textile school (the Bradford Durfee textile school), opened in 1904 . The city library contained in 1908 about 78,500 volumes . There is considerable commerce, but it is as a manufacturing centre that Fall River is best known . Above the city, on the plateau, about 2 M. from the bay, are the Watuppa Lakes; 7 m. long and on an
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average three-fourths of a mile wide, and from them runs the Fall (Quequechan) river, with a constant flow and descending near its mouth through 127 ft. in less than
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half a mile . The conjunction of
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water transportation and water power is thus remarkable, and accounts in great part for the city's rapid growth . The waters of the North Watuppa Lake (which is fed by springs and drains out a very small
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area) are also exceptionally pure and furnish an excellent water-supply . The Fall river runs directly through the city (passing beneath the city hall), and along its banks are long rows of cotton mills; formerly many of these were run by water power, and their wheels were placed directly in the stream bed, but steam power is now used almost exclusively . According to the
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special census of manufactures of 1905, the value of all factory products for the
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calendar
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year 1904 was $43,473,105, of which amount $35,442,581, or 81.5%, consisted of cotton goods and dyeing and
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finishing, making Fall River the largest producer of cotton goods among
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American cities.' A large
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hat manufactory (the Marshall Brothers' factory) furnishes the
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United States army with hats . Until forced by the competition of mills in the
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Southern states to
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direct attention to finer
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pro-ducts, the cotton manufacturers of Fall River devoted themselves almost exclusively to the making of
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print
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cloth, in which respect the city was long distinguished from Lawrence and Lowell, whose products were more varied and of higher grade . The number of spindles increased from 265,328 in 1865 to 1,269,043 in 1875, 3,000,000 in 1900, and to about 3,500,000 in 1906 . Excellent drainage and
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sewerage systems contribute to the city's
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health .

The

birth-
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rate was in 1900 the highest (38.75) of any city in the country of above 30,000 inhabitants (three of the four next highest being Massachusetts towns) . The social conditions and labour problems of Fall River have long been exceptional . The mills supplement the public
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schools in the mingling of races and the
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work for Americanization, and labour disturbances, for which Fall River was once conspicuous, have become less frequent and less bitter, the great strike of 1904–1905—perhaps the greatest in the
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history of the textile industry in the United States—being marked by little or no violence . Fall River has become a " city of homes," and tenements are giving way to dwellings for one or two families . The lists of the city's corporation stockholders show more than ro,000 names . The municipal police is controlled (as nowhere else in the state save in Boston) by a state board; this arrangement is generally regarded as having worked for better order . Lowell was about three times as large as Fall River in 185o, and Lawrence was larger until after 1870 . Fall River was originally a part of
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Freetown; it was incorporated as a township in 1803 (being known as " Troy " in 1804–1834.), and was chartered as a city in 1854 . In 1861 it was increased by certain territory secured from Rhode Island, ' The above figures do not show adequately the full importance of Fall River as a cotton manufacturing centre, for during six months of the census year the great strike was in progress; this strike, caused by a reduction in wages, lasted from the 25th of
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July 1904 to the 18th of
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January 1905.the city having spread across the state boundary and become subject to a divided jurisdiction . In 1902 the city received a new charter . Its manufactures amounted to little before the War of 1812 . A disastrous fire occurred in 1843 (loss above $500,000) .

In 1904 Fail River became the see of the

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Roman Catholic diocese of that name . See H . H .
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Earl, Centennial History of Fall River . . . 1656-1876 (New York, 1877) ; and the report of Carroll D . Wright on Fall River, Lowell and Lawrence, in 13th
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annual report of the Massachusetts Bureau of
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Statistics of Labor (1882), which, however, was regarded as unjust and partial by the manufacturers of Fall River .

End of Article: FALL RIVER
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