Online Encyclopedia

HOPEDALE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 684 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

HOPEDALE  , a township of

Worcester county, Massachusetts, U.S.A.; pop . (19o5; state census) 2048; (-1910) .2188 . It is served by the
See also:
Milford &
See also:
Uxbridge (electric) street railway, and (for freight) by the Grafton & Upton railway . The
See also:
town lies in the " dale " between Milford and Mendon, and is cut from N.W. to S.E. by the Mill
See also:
river, which furnishes good waterpower at its falls . The
See also:
principal manufactures are textiles, boots and shoes, and, of most importance, cotton machinery . The
See also:
great cotton machinery factories here are owned by the Draper
See also:
Company . Hopedale has a public park on the site of the Ballou
See also:
homestead, with a
See also:
bronze statue of Adin Ballou; a memorial church erected by George A. and Eben S . Draper; the Bancroft Memorial Library, given by Joseph B . Bancroft in memory of his wife; and a marble drinking fountain with statuary by Waldo Story, the gift of Susan Preston Draper, General W . F . Draper's wife . The
See also:
village is remarkable for the comfortable cottages of the workers .

The

See also:
history of Hopedale centres round the Rev . Adin Ballou (1803-1890), a distant relative of
See also:
Hosea Ballou;' he
See also:
left, in succession, the
See also:
ministry of the Christian Connexion (1823) and that of the Universalist Church (1831), because of his restorationist views . In 1831 he became pastor of an
See also:
independent church in Mendon . An ardent exponent of
See also:
temperance, the anti-
See also:
slavery
See also:
movement, woman's rights, the peace cause and Christian non-resistance (even through the
See also:
Civil War), and of "
See also:
Practical Christian
See also:
Socialism," it was in the interests of the last cause that he founded Hopedale, or "Fraternal Community No . 1," in Milford, in
See also:
April 1842, the first compact of the community having been
See also:
drawn up in
See also:
January 1841 .
See also:
Thirty persons joined with him, and lived in a single house on a poor
See also:
farm of 258 acres,
See also:
purchased in
See also:
June 1841 . Ballou was for several years the president of the community, which was run on the plan that all should have an equal voice as to the use of
See also:
property, in spite of the fact that there was individual holding of property . The community, however, owned the
See also:
instruments of production, with the single exception of the important patent rights held by Ebenezer D . Draper . The result was bickerings between those who were joint stockholders and those whose only profit came from their
See also:
manual labour . In a short time the control of the community came into the hands of its richest members, E . D .

Draper and his

See also:
brother, George Draper (1817-1887), who owned three-fourths of the joint stock . In 1856 there was a
See also:
total deficit of about $12,000 . The Draper brothers bought up the joint stock of the community at par and paid its debts, and the community soon ceased to exist save as a religious society . After George Draper's
See also:
death the control of the mills passed to his sons .. These included General William Franklin Draper (1842-1910), a Republican representative in Congress in 1892-1897 and U.S. ambassador to Italy in 1897-1900, and Eben Sumner Draper (b . 1858),
See also:
lieutenant-governor of Massachusetts in 1906-1908 and governor in 1909-1911 . In 1867 the community was merged with Hopedale parish, a Unitarian organization . Hopedale was separated from Milford and incorporated as a township in 1886 . See Adin Ballou's History of Milford (Boston, 1882), his History of the Hopedale Community, edited by William S . Heywood (Lowell, 1897), his Biography by the same editor (Lowell, 1896) and his Practical and Christian Socialism (Hopedale, 1854) ; George L . Carey, " Adin Ballou and the Hopedale Community " (in the New
See also:
World, vol. vii., 1898) ; Lewis G . Wilson, " Hopedale and Its Founder " (in The New England
See also:
Magazine, vol. a., 1891) and William F .

Draper, Recollections of a Varied Career (Boston, 1908) .

HOPE-SCOTT, JAMES ROBERT (1812-1873),
See also:
English
See also:
barrister and Tractarian, was born on the 15th of
See also:
July 1812, at Great Marlow, Berkshire, the third son of
See also:
Sir Alexander Hope, and grandson of the second
See also:
earl of Hopetoun . He was educated at
See also:
Eton and Oxford, where he was a contemporary and friend of Gladstone and J . H . Newman, and in 1838 was called to the bar . Between 1840 and 1843 he helped to found Trinity College,
See also:
Glenalmond . He was one of the leaders of the Tractarian movement and entirely in Newman's confidence . In'1851 he was received with Manning into the
See also:
Roman Catholic church . At this time he was making a very large income at the
See also:
Parliamentary bar . He only commenced serious practice in this branch of his profession in 1843, but by the end of 1845 he stood at the head of it and in 184g was made a Queen's Counsel . In 1847 he married
See also:
Miss Lockhart, granddaughter of Sir Walter Scott, and on her coming into possession of
See also:
Abbotsford six years later, Adin Ballou wrote An Elaborate History and Genealogy of the Ballow in
See also:
America (
See also:
Providence, R.I., 1888) . assumed the surname of Hope-Scott .

He retired from the bar established the

See also:
Swedish Academy, he gave Hopken the first in 187o and died on the 29th of April 1873 .

End of Article: HOPEDALE
[back]
THOMAS HOPE (c. 1770-1831)
[next]
HANS VON HOPFEN (1835—1904)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.