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NORTHAMPTON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 768 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NORTHAMPTON  , a

city and the county-seat of Hampshire county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., situated on the
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Connecticut
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river, about 16 m . N. of
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Springfield . Pop . (1910 census) 19,431 . The city has an
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area of 35.3 sq. m . The chief
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village, Northampton, is on the New York, New Haven &
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Hartford; and the Boston & Maine
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railways . It lies on the border of the meadow-
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land, and with its irregular, semi-rural streets, and venerable trees is considered one of the prettiest villages in New England . About 2 m . S.E. of Northampton is Mount
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Holyoke (954 ft.), which may be ascended by
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carriage road and mountain railway, and the
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summit of which commands a magnificent view . The city is the seat of a state hospital for the insane; of the Clarke School for the
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Deaf (1867, founded by John of the county with Leicester, Rutland and Lincoln . The Clarke of Northampton); of Smith College, one of the foremost colleges for
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women in the country; of the Mary A . Burnham School for Girls (1877), a preparatory school chiefly for Smith College, founded by
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Miss Mary A .

Burnham; and of the Miss Capen School (preparatory) for girls . Besides the college library, there are in Northampton two public

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libraries, the Clarke (185o) and the Forbes (1894) . The Forbes library was established with funds
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left by Charles E . Forbes (1795–1881), from 1848 to 1881 a justice of the state supreme court . The
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People's Institute was started as a Home-Culture Clubs
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movement by George W . Cable, who became a
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resident of Northampton in 1886 . The Smith Charities is a
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peculiar institution, endowed by Oliver Smith (1766–1845) of
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Hatfield, who left an estate valued at $370,000, to be administered by a board of three trustees, chosen by electors representing the towns of Northampton, Hadley, Hatfield, Amherst and
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Williamsburg in Hampshire county and
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Greenfield and Whately in Franklin county—the beneficiaries of the will . The will was contested by Smith's heirs, but in 1847 was sustained by the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts . Of the
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total sum, $200,000 was to accumulate until it became $400,000 . Of this $30,000 was to found Smith's Agricultural School at Northampton, which opened for instruction in 1908; an income of $1o,000 was to be paid to the
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American Colonization Society, but this society failed to comply with the restrictions imposed by the will, and the $1o,000 was incorporated with the Agricultural School fund; and $360,000 was devoted to indigent boys and girls, indigent young women and indigent widows . The remainder of Smith's
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property was constituted a contingent fund to defray expenses and keep the
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principal funds intact . Florence, a village on the Mill river in the city limits, is a manufacturing village,
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silk being its principal product, and cutlery and brushes being of minor importance .

The value of the city's factory products increased from $4,706,820 in 'goo to $5,756,381 in 1905, or 22.3% . Northampton was first settled in 16J4, became a township in 1656, and was incorporated as a city in 1883 . In

September 1786, at the time of the Shays
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Rebellion, the New Hampshire
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Gazette (still published; daily edition since 189o) was established here in the
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interest of the state administration . Jonathan Edwards was pastor here from 1727 to 1750 . Caleb Strong (1745–1819), a member of the Federal Constitutional Convention of 1787, and governor of Massachusetts in 1800–1807 and 1812–1816; Joseph Hawley (1723–1788), one of the most prominent patriots of western Massachusetts; Timothy Dwight; Arthur (1786–1865), Benjamin, and Lewis (1788–1873) Tappan, prominent philanthropists and anti-
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slavery men; and William D . Whitney were natives of Northampton . See J . R . Trumbull,
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History of Northampton (2 vols., Northampton, 1898–1902) .

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