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TAUNTON

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 454 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TAUNTON  , a

city and one of the county-seats of Bristol county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., at the head of ocean navigation on the Taunton
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river, 17 M. above its mouth, about 35 M . S. of Boston, and about 14 M . N. of Fall River . Pop . (189o) 25,448; (1900) 31,036, of whom 9140 were
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foreign-born, 2844 being Irish, 2366 French-Canadians, 1144
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English, and 8o1 English-Canadians; (191o, U.S. census) 34,259 . Taunton is served by the New York, New Haven &
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Hartford railroad (Old Colony Branch) and by interurban electric
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railways connecting with Fall River, New
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Bedford,
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Providence and Boston . The channel of the Taunton river has been deepened and widened by the Federal government, and in 1910 vessels of 11 ft. draft could reach the city at high
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water (mean range of tide at Taunton, 3.4 ft.) . Within the corporate limits of the city, which has a
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land
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area of 44.25 sq. m., there are six villages—Hopewell, Britanniaville,
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Oakland, Whittenton, East Taunton and the Weir . Taunton Green, a rectangular stretch of land fringed with lofty elms, the "
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common " of the New England
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town, about which is the business portion of the
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modern city, is 1 m. from the Weir, the
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port of the city . The city contains interesting specimens of colonial or early 19th-century architecture . Among the modern public buildings are the handsome granite County Court House (1895), facing the Green, the Public Library
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building (given by Andrew Carnegie), the registry building, the county
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gaol, the city hall, the
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post office, an old ladies' home, an emergency hospital, the Morton Hospital, occupying the
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fine old residence of Governor
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Marcus Morton, and the Y.M.C.A. building . The Bristol County Law Library and Old Colony
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Historical Society (incorporated in 1853 and organized in 1854) possess valuable collections of books, and the latter has a collection of portraits and antiquities .

Bristol

Academy (1792; non-sectarian) is a well-known preparatory school, and there is also a commercial school—the Bristol County Business College . At Norton (pop. in, 191o, 2544), directly N. of Taunton, and formerly within its boundaries, is Wheaton Seminary (1834) for girls . Among social clubs are the Winthrop Club, the Bristol Club, the Taunton Boat Club, the Yacht Club, and the Country Club . A good water-supply, owned by the city, is obtained from neighbouring lakes and ponds, along the shores of which are many summer cottages . Taunton was one of the first cities in the
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United States to own and operate its own electric
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lighting plant, which it acquired from a private corporation in 1897 . Its
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industrial importance began with the establishment of ironworks in 1656; the plant then opened continued in active operation for about 225 years . Brick-making and
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shipbuilding were two of the early
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industries; the latter, formerly very important, has now been abandoned . The manufactures to-day are extensive and varied . The aggregate value of the factory product in 1905 was $13,644,586, an increase of 18.2 per cent. over that of 1900 . Of this amount the value of the cotton manufactured was $6,141,598, or 45 per cent. of the whole . Herring
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fisheries give occupation during a
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part of the
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year to a considerable number of workers . Taunton has a prosperous jobbing trade, and large
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shipping interests, the coastwise trade being particularly important .

Taunton was founded in 1638, when the territory was

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purchased from Massasoit by settlers from the Massachusetts
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Bay Colony, and became the frontier town of Plymouth Colony . Myles Standish was engaged on the
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original survey . But there had been earlier settlers in the region—at " Tecticutt " (Titicut), which later became part of Taunton . The settlement at Taunton was at first known as Cohannet, but the
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present name—from Taunton, Somerset, England, the home of many of the settlers—was soon adopted . The town was incorporated in 1639 . In 1671 it was the scene of a meeting between Gov . Thomas Prince and King Philip, at which a treaty was
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drawn up . During King Philip's War, Taunton was a
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base of operations for Plymouth Colony troops under Gov . Josiah Winslow . In 1686 Taunton was one of the towns which refused to comply with
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Sir Edmund Andros's demands for a tax levy . For some years Thomas Coram, the philanthropist and founder of the
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London Foundling Hospital, was engaged in the shipbuilding industry here . In 1774, after the passage of the Boston Port
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Bill, the
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people of Taunton showed their sympathy for Boston by raising on the Green a red flag on which were inscribed the words " Liberty and Union." The leader of the patriotic party at this time was Robert Treat Paine, to whose memory a
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bronze statue has been erected .

During

Shays's
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rebellion the Taunton court-house was twice besieged by insurgents, who were each time dispersed through the resolute
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action and firmness of Gen . David Cobb, one of the judges . The event is commemorated by a tablet on Taunton Green . In Berkley, which until 1735 was a part of Dighton (Taunton South
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Purchase, separated from Taunton in 1712), is the famous Dighton Rock, with inscriptions long erroneously supposed to have been made by Norse discoverers of
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America, but now known to be the
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work of Indians . Taunton was chartered as a city in 1864 . In 1909 a new city charter was adopted, under which the mayor and nine councilmen (elected at large) were the only city
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officers elected at any city election; candidates for these offices are nominated by petition; the mayor appoints, subject to the approval of the council, a chief of police and a city
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solicitor . See S . H . Emery,
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History of Taunton from its Settlement to the Present Time (Syracuse, N.Y., 1893) ; D . H . Hurd, History of Bristol County (
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Philadelphia, 1883) ; Quarter Millennial Celebration (Taunton, 1889) .

End of Article: TAUNTON
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BARON HENRY LABOUCHERE TAUNTON (1798–1869)

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