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LOWELL , a city and one of the county-seats (Cambridge being the other) of Middlesex county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., situated in the N.E.See also: part of the county at the confluence of the Concord and Merrimack See also: rivers, about 25 M
.
N.W. of See also: Boston
.
Pop
.
(1890) 77,696; (1900) 94,969, of whom 40,974 were See also: foreign-See also: born (14,674 being French See also: Canadian, 12,147 Irish, 4485 See also: English Canadian, 4446 English, 1203 See also: Greek, 1099 Scotch) ; (1910 census), 106,294
.
Lowell is served by the Boston & Maine and the New See also: York, New Haven & See also: Hartford See also: railways, and by interurban electric lines
.
The See also: area of Lowell is 14.1 sq. m., much the larger part of which is S. of the Merrimack
.
The city is irregularly laid out
.
Its centre is Monument Square, in Merrimack Street, where are a granite monument to the first Northerners killed in the See also: Civil War, See also: Luther C
.
See also: Ladd and A
.
O
.
See also: Whitney (both of Lowell), whose regiment was mobbed in Baltimore on the 19th of See also: April 1861 while marching to See also: Washington; and a See also: bronze figure of Victory (after one by Rauch in the Valhalla at Ratisbon), commemorating the See also: Northern See also: triumph in the Civil War
.
The Lowell textile school, opened in 1897, offers courses in See also: cotton manufacturing, wool manufacturing, designing, chemistry and dyeing, and textile See also: engineering; evening See also: drawing See also: schools and See also: manual training in the public schools have contributed to the high degree of technical perfection in the factories
.
The power gained from theSee also: Pawtucket Falls in the Merrimack See also: river has long been found insufficient for these
.
A network of canals supplies from 14,000 to 24,000 h.p.; and a small amount is also furnished by the Concord river, but about 26,000 h.p. is supplied by steam
.
In factory output ($46,879,212 in 1905; $41,202,984 in 1900) Lowell ranked fifth in value in 1905 and See also: fourth in woo among the cities of Massachusetts; more than three-tenths of the See also: total population are factory wage-earners, and nearly 19% of the population are in the cotton mills
.
Formerly Lowell was called the " Spindle City " and the " Manchester of See also: America," but it was long ago surpassed in the manufacture of textiles by Fall River and New See also: Bedford: in 1905 the value of the cotton product of Lowell, $19,340,625, was less than 6o% of the value of cotton goods made at Fall River
.
Woollen goods made in Lowell in 1905 were valued at $2,579,363; See also: hosiery and knitted goods, at $3,816,964; worsted goods, at $1,978,552
.
Carpets and textile machinery are allied manufactures of importance
.
There are other factories for machinery, patent medicines, boots and shoes,
perfumery and cosmetics, hosiery and See also: rubber heels
.
Lowell was the home of the inventor of rubber heels, Humphrey O'See also: Sullivan
.
The founders of Lowell were Patrick Tracy See also: Jackson (178o—1847), Nathan See also: Appleton (1779—1861), See also: Paul Moody (1779—1831) and the business manager chosen by them, See also: Kirk Boott (1790—1837)
.
The opportunity for developing See also: water-power by the See also: purchase of the canal around Pawtucket Falls (chartered for navigation in 1792) led them to choose the adjacent See also: village of See also: East Chelmsford as the site of their projected cotton mills; they bought the Pawtucket canal, and incorporated in 1822 the Merrimack Manufacturing See also: Company; in 1823 the first See also: cloth was actually made, and in 1826 a See also: separate township was formed from part of Chelmsford and was named in honour of See also: Francis Cabot Lowell, who with Jackson had improved See also: Cartwright's power See also: loom, and had planned the mills at See also: Waltham
.
In 1836 Lowell was chartered as a city
.
Lowell annexed parts of Tewksbury in 1834, 1874, 1888 and 1906, and parts of Dracut in 1851, 1874 and 1879
.
Up to 184o the See also: mill hands, with the exception of English dyers and
See also: calico printers, were New See also: England girls
.
The " corporation," as the employers were called, provided from the first for the welfare of their employees, and Lowell has always been notably See also: free from labour disturbances
.
The character of the early employees of the mills, later largely displaced by French Canadians and Irish, and by immigrants from various parts of See also: Europe, is clearly seen in the periodical, The Lowell Offering, written and published by them in 1840-1845
.
This monthly See also: magazine,organized by the Rev
.
See also: Abel See also: Charles
See also: Thomas (1807-188o), pastor of the First Universalist
See also: Church, was from
See also: October 184o to See also: March 1841 made up of articles prepared for some of the many improvement circles or
See also: literary See also: societies; it then became broader in its scope, received more spontaneous contributions, and from October 1842 until See also: December 1845 was edited by Harriot F
.
Curtis (1813—1889), known by her See also: pen name, " See also: Mina See also: Myrtle," and by Harriet Farley (1817—1907), who became manager and proprietor, and published selections from the Offering under the titles Shells from the Strand of the See also: Sea of See also: Genius (1847) and Mind among the Spindles (1849), with an introduction by Charles Knight
.
In 1854 she married See also: John Intaglio Donlevy (d
.
1872)
.
Famous contributors to the Offering were Harriet Hanson (b
.
1825) and
See also: Lucy Larcom (1824-1893)
.
Harriet Hanson wrote Early Factory Labor in New England (1883) and Loom and Spindle (1898), an important contribution to the See also: industrial and social See also: history of Lowell
.
She was prominent in the See also: anti-See also: slavery and woman See also: suffrage agitations in Massachusetts, and wrote Massachusetts in the Woman Suffrage See also: Movement (1881)
.
She married in 1848 See also: William
See also: Stevens See also: Robinson (1818-1876), who wrote in 1856—1876 the See also: political essays signed " See also: Warrington " for the See also: Springfield Republican
.
Lucy Larcom,' born in See also: Beverly, came to Lowell in 1835, where her widowed See also: mother kept a " corporation " boarding-See also: house, and where she became a " doffer," changing bobbins in the mills
.
She wrote much, especially for the Offering; became an ardent abolitionist and (in 1843) the friend of Whittler; See also: left Lowell in 1846, and taught for several years, first in See also: Illinois, and then in Beverly and See also: Norton, Massachusetts
.
An See also: Idyl of See also: Work (1875) describes the See also: life of the mills and A New England Girlhood (1889) is autobiographical; she wrote many stories and poems, of which Hannah Binding Shoes is best known
.
Benjamin F
.
See also: Butler was from boyhood a
See also: resident of Lowell, where he began to practise See also: law in 1841
.
See also: James McNeill
See also: Whistler was born here in 1834, and in 1907 his birthplace in Worthen Street was See also: purchased by the See also: Art Association to be used as its headquarters and as an art museum and gallery; it was dedicated in 1908, and in the same See also: year a replica of See also: Rodin's statue of Whistler was bought for the city
.
See S
.
A
.
Drake, History of Middlesex County, 2, p
.
53 et seq
.
(Boston, 188o) ; Illustrated History of Lowell, Massachusetts (Lowell, 1897) ; the books of Harriet H
.
Robinson and Lucy Larcom already named as bearing on the industrial conditions of the city between 1835 and 185o; and the famous description in the fourth chapter of Dickens'sSee also: American Notes
.
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