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LYNN , a city and- seaport ofSee also: Essex county, Massachusetts, 9 m
.
N.E. of See also: Boston, on the N. See also: shore of Massachusetts See also: Bay
.
Pop
.
(1900) 68,5x3, of whom 17,742 were See also: foreign-See also: born (6609being See also: English Canadians, 5306 Irish, 1527 English and 128o French Canadians), and 784 were negroes; (1gro census) 89,336
.
It is served by the Boston & Maine and the Boston, See also: Revere See also: Beach & Lynn See also: railways, and by an interurban electric railway, and has an See also: area of 1o•85 sq. m
.
The business See also: part is built near the shore on low, level ground, and the residential sections are on the higher levels
.
Lynn Woods, a beautiful See also: park, covers more than 2000 acres
.
On the shore, which has a See also: fine See also: boulevard, is a See also: state See also: bath See also: house
.
The city has a handsome city See also: hall, a
See also: free public library, founded in 1862, a soldiers' monument and two hospitals
.
Lynn is primarily a manufacturing city
.
The first smelting See also: works in New See also: England were established here in 1643
.
More important and earlier was the manufacture of boots and shoes, an industry introduced in 1636 by See also: Philip Kertland, a
See also: Buckingham See also: man; a corporation of shoemakers existed here in 1651, whose papers were lost in 1765
.
There were many See also: court orders in the seventeenth century to butchers, tanners, bootmakers and cordwainers; and the business was made more important by See also: John
See also: Adam Dagyr (d
.
18o8), a Welshman who came here in 1750 and whose See also: work was equal to the best in England
.
In 1767 the output was 8o,000 pairs; in 1795 about 300,000 pairs of See also: women's shoes were made by 600 journeymen and 200 master workmen
.
The product of women's shoes had become famous in 1764, and about 1783 the use of See also: morocco had been introduced by Ebenezer Breed
.
In 1900 and 1905 Lynn was second only to See also: Brockton among the cities of the See also: United States in the value of boots and shoes manufactured, and out-ranked Brockton in the three allied See also: industries, the manufacture of boots and shoes, of cut stock and of findings
.
In the value of its See also: total manufactured product Lynn ranked second to Boston in the state in 1905, having been fifth in 1900; the total number of factories in 1905 was 431; their capital was $23,139,185; their employees numbered 21,540; and their product was valued at $55,003,023 (as compared with $39,347,493 m 1900)
.
Patent medicines and compounds and the manufacture of electrical machinery are prominent industries
.
The Lynn factories of the General Electric See also: Company had in 1906 an See also: annual product worth between $15,000,000 and $20,000,000
.
The foreign export of manufactured products is estimated at $5,000,000 a See also: year
.
Lynn was founded in 1629 and was called Saugus until 1637, when the See also: present name was adopted, from Lynn Regis, See also: Norfolk, the home of the Rev
.
See also: Samuel See also: Whiting (1597-1679), pastor at Lynn from 1636 until his See also: death
.
From Lynn See also: Reading was separated in 1644, Lynnfield in 1782, Saugus in 1815, and, after the incorporation of the city of Lynn in 185o, Swampscott in 1852, and in 1853 Nahant, S. of Lynn, on a picturesque peninsula and now a fashionable summer resort
.
See See also: James R
.
Newhall,
See also: History of Lynn (Lynn, 1883), and H
.
K
.
See also: Sanderson, Lynn in the Revolution (1910)
.
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