Whitman
By David Hickey
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About this ebook
David Hickey
Baseball historians Kerry Keene, David Hickey, and Raymond Sinibaldi collaborate once again to tell the riveting story of the Yankees in the Hall of Fame. They also collaborated on Images of Baseball: Dodgers in the Hall of Fame, Images of America: Fenway Park, and The Babe in Red Stockings.
Read more from David Hickey
Fenway Park Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Red Sox in the Hall of Fame Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsYankees in the Hall of Fame Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Whitman - David Hickey
Street.
INTRODUCTION
Acquired during what is known as the Bridgewater Purchase of 1649–1650, the land that makes up today’s Whitman has enjoyed a storied history. The town’s history began as early as the late 1600s with what was known as the Little Comfort section of Bridgewater.
In 1693, John Gurney and John Porter, two of the town’s prominent early residents, settled here to start a mill on the Schumatuscacant River. The mill marked the beginning of some of the earliest industry in the area.
Throughout the 1700s, many events began to shape and define the area. In 1711, Daniel Axtell, a tanner, moved here and built his tan vats on the Chard Place, which was located just southeast of the present junction of Washington and Walnut Streets. His contract with a local shoemaker was the beginning of the town’s later and very prosperous shoe industry.
In 1712, about two-thirds of the current Whitman was incorporated as part of the new township of Abington. It would not be for another 163 years until Whitman, known then as South Abington, would stand on its own.
The year 1729 saw the birth of Col. Aaron Hobart, who played a significant role in both the town’s and the country’s rich history. By 1769, Hobart was casting church bells and advertising them in Boston newspapers, as he became the country’s first regular bell caster. In July 1776, when bells rang to celebrate the signing of the Declaration of Independence, most of the bells heard were Hobart bells. When Paul Revere obtained contracts to cast church bells in Boston, he came to Hobart to learn and master the craft. In 1775 and 1776, Hobart received a contract from the government to supply cannons to the troops in preparation for the Revolutionary War. After many failed attempts to successfully cast the cannon, Hobart finally mastered the process in time to fulfill his government contract. Hobart went on to serve in the state legislature for 14 years and took part in the creation of the frigate USS Constitution, more affectionately known as Old Ironsides. After a lack of proper white oak trees halted the production of the ship, it was at Hobart’s mill that the 40-foot-long, 7-inch-thick wale planks were cut from native trees, thus allowing for the completion of the famed vessel.
During this time, the town also had the distinction of having the oldest and youngest soldiers in the Revolution, as well as a participant in the Boston Tea Party. In 1775, 69-year-old David Porter joined the ranks and marched to Roxbury. In 1777, seven-year-old Samuel Gurney signed on as a fifer. Dressed as a Native American, Benjamin Gardner Jr. of Beech Hill was involved in the world’s most famous tea party.
Postwar industries were slow to develop beyond local markets. Only after many locals developed machinery and methods for their use did industry began to flourish. Residents started to set up more permanent institutions, such as churches and schools, that began to define a more localized community.
As the machine age was ushered in, old industries like tack manufacturing became much more profitable as a machine invented by Jesse Reed could cut and head tacks in a single operation. Although there were as many as six different companies making tacks, only the D.B. Gurney Tack Factory on Washington Street, which opened in 1825, is still in full operation today, over 175 years later.
In 1858, Lyman Blake revolutionized the shoe industry with his invention of the shoe sole sewing machine. In addition to saving thousands of hours in manpower while increasing shoe production, this machine, which was financed and marketed by Gordon McKay, proved invaluable to the Union, as the north was able to keep the soldiers properly shoed during the Civil War.
After Fort Sumter in South Carolina fell to the Confederacy in April 1861, Pres. Abraham Lincoln issued a call across the Union for volunteer militias. Under the command of Capt. Charles F. Allen of 113 Temple Street, the Company E 4th Regiment of the Massachusetts Volunteer Militia assembled on April 16, 1861, at their Washington Street armory. In a blowing nor’easter, the company marched to the east end train depot and boarded a train for Boston. Although the orders were to meet at the Boston Common, Captain Allen marched his men through the storm all the way to the state capitol and signed in there at 8:15 a.m., becoming the first company of the Union Army to report for duty in the Civil War.
As the early industries began to die out, more industrialized ones flourished, and a prosperous shoe industry dominated. Many famous makers, including the Commonwealth Shoe and Leather Company, who manufactured the famous Bostonian shoe line, remained in operation well into the 1970s.
On March 4, 1875, the southerly part of Abington and