Thursday, December 24, 2015
Merry Christmas
Ninety-two years ago the Nemaskett Press wished its patrons a Merry Christmas by means of colorful and somewhat idealized image of a Pilgrim hauling a yule log. This year Recollecting Nemasket likewise wishes its readers a Merry Christmas and a happy, safe and healthy New Year.
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Central Baptist Church Fire News Coverage, 1888
The January 22, 1888 fire that gutted the Central Baptist Church was a devastating blow for the community. Middleborough Four Corners was initially developed by a group of Baptist activists who were responsible for establishing a commercial and industrial base there, and they also constructed Middleborough center's first church, the Central Baptist Church in 1828. Sixty years later the Middleboro News documented the disaster, clippings from which still survive.
Monday, December 7, 2015
James A. Leonard House, Then & Now
The James A. Leonard House on Center
Street opposite the present Sacred Heart rectory was built in the early 19th
century and for a century and a half was a landmark in the neighborhood. James
A. Leonard (1800-62) was a prominent shoe manufacturer of mid-19th
century Middleborough. In 1860, Leonard
proposed developing the land to the rear of his house as thirty to forty individual
house lots. The sale of the lots by
auctioneer Sylvanus Hinckley was advertised on September
8, 18 60 , and headed “Rare Chance.” The land was described as being situated “on
the high ground near the House of James A. Leonard, in about equal distance
from the Four Corners and depot.” The Gazette opined: “No person who desires a
building lot in this place on reasonable terms will fail of attending the
auction.”
Following Leonard’s death in 1862, the
house was owned by his son G. H. Leonard until 1876 when it was purchased by C.
D. Kingman and Edson Ellis. That same year Kingman sold his share to Ellis who
operated a marble yard on the property. In 1896, Dr. G. E. Ellis had the brick
wall on Center Street constructed.
Shortly after the house’s demolition in
December 1974, the Middleborough
Antiquarian documented the later history of the home:
“In the memory of most of the older generation, the house recently demolished on Center Street, next to St. Luke’s Hospital, is known as the ‘Dr. Ellis House.’ Dr. George E. Ellis is listed as the owner in the 1884 Middleboro Directory, the earliest one on file at the
“Dr. George E. Ellis came to Middleboro in
1879 and probably purchased the house at that time. After his death in 1933, the property was
owned by Mrs. William W. Wheeler, and to within a year’s time was owned and
occupied by her son George E. Wheeler.
The house was demolished in December, 1974, and there are rumors that a
professional building is to be erected on the site.”
James A. Leonard House, Center Street, Middleborough, photograph, c. 1900
James A. Leonard House site, Center Street, Middleborough, photograph by Michael J. Maddigan, November 30, 2015
James A. Leonard House, Center Street, Middleborough, photograph, 1930s
James A. Leonard House, Center Street, Middleborough, photographic half-tone, 1974
James A. Leonard House, Center Street, Middleborough, photographic half-tone, late 1974
Thursday, December 3, 2015
South Middleborough, 1940s
This photograph dating probably from the late 1940s depicts a gasoline pump and sign at Sisson's Garage at Wareham and Locust Streets in South Middleborough. In the background is the South Middleborough School, now being rehabilitated by the South Middleborough Protective Association. The vacant lot to the left of the school is now occupied by the South Middleborough fire station.
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Solon Robertson House (c. 1893)
The Solon Robertson House at 9 West End Avenue was constructed about 1893 by Solon Robertson on land then being developed by Eugene P. LeBaron as a residential subdivision. While most of the houses eventually built on the West Side were relatively simple homes constructed for the industrial workers that resided in the district, Robertson's house reflected a degree of high Victorian style with its patterned shingles, multi-colored paint scheme and decorative ironwork. Robertson, a worker at the Bay State Straw Works on Courtland Street and later a painter, died in 1915 at which time his widow sold the hose. Since 1942 it has been owned by the Griswold family.
Images:
Solon Robertson House, photograph, c. 1895
The image may be dated to 1894 or later due to the presence of the West Side School which appears visible through the porch.
Solon Robertson House, photographic postcard, 1915
This photographic postcard may be dated with some certainty to spring 1915 as it was mailed by owners Joseph A. and Elsie Adams who acquired the property in February of that year. Though little else is known about the image, it is recorded that the cat's name was Tom.
Friday, November 27, 2015
The Zombie
The successor restaurant to Finn’s Grill located at East Grove Street on the site now occupied by the Boston Tavern was the Zombie, established in 1941 and likely named for the cocktail invented in 1934 by Donn Beach.
Following 1939, “tiki culture” became popularized through the Golden Gate International Exposition and the New York World’s Fair, and exotic drinks such as zombies, mai tais and scorpions became the rage. The zombie which originally included various rums, fruit juice, cinnamon syrup and other ingredients featured in popular culture, most notably Fats Waller’s “Abercrombie Had a Zombie” (1941) which recounted the effects of the potent drink on a normally law-abiding man.
Abercrombie was so meek and quiet
Abercrombie was the tea room type
Oh you’d never think he’d start a riot
Then Abercrombie had a zombie.
Abercrombie never stole a hansom
Abercrombie never did a bum
Never thought of crawling through a transom
Then Abercrombie had a zombie, yes, yes.
He never passed a stop
He never sassed a cop
He never drove a car into the Astor Bar
He didn’t try to wade in the Aquacade …
But like that other famous sinner
Abercrombie met his Waterloo
He’s the man who never came to dinner
Cause Abercrombie had a zombie
Or was it two or was it three or four or five or six?
In a 1943 film Frances Dee mentioned the drink noting “I tried one once, but there was nothing dead about it.”
The Zombie operated for nearly a decade until fall 1950 when it remade itself into a new restaurant known as the Half-Way House. With the increase of post-war traffic bound for the Cape, the restaurant sought to capitalize on its location mid-way between Boston and the Cape resorts. Following a May 1954 fire, the Half-Way House was sold to Eugene Starvish who established Eugene’s restaurant.
[To prevent competitors from recreating his signature drink, Beach kept the zombie recipe a closely guarded secret with his bartenders mixing from pre-made coded bottles. Because of this, numerous recipes for the drink have since developed. The generally accepted version of the 1934 classic calls for ¾ ounces fresh lime juice, ½ ounce falernum, 1 ½ ounces each of Puerto Rican rum and gold or dark Jamaican rum, 1 ounce 151-proof Lemon Hart Demerara rum, 1 teaspoon of grenadine, 6 drops of Pernod or Herbsaint, a dash of Angostura bitters, ½ ounce of Don’s mix (being 2 parts grapefruit juice and 1 part cinnamon-infused sugar syrup) and 6 ounces of crushed ice.]
Following 1939, “tiki culture” became popularized through the Golden Gate International Exposition and the New York World’s Fair, and exotic drinks such as zombies, mai tais and scorpions became the rage. The zombie which originally included various rums, fruit juice, cinnamon syrup and other ingredients featured in popular culture, most notably Fats Waller’s “Abercrombie Had a Zombie” (1941) which recounted the effects of the potent drink on a normally law-abiding man.
Abercrombie was so meek and quiet
Abercrombie was the tea room type
Oh you’d never think he’d start a riot
Then Abercrombie had a zombie.
Abercrombie never stole a hansom
Abercrombie never did a bum
Never thought of crawling through a transom
Then Abercrombie had a zombie, yes, yes.
He never passed a stop
He never sassed a cop
He never drove a car into the Astor Bar
He didn’t try to wade in the Aquacade …
But like that other famous sinner
Abercrombie met his Waterloo
He’s the man who never came to dinner
Cause Abercrombie had a zombie
Or was it two or was it three or four or five or six?
In a 1943 film Frances Dee mentioned the drink noting “I tried one once, but there was nothing dead about it.”
The Zombie operated for nearly a decade until fall 1950 when it remade itself into a new restaurant known as the Half-Way House. With the increase of post-war traffic bound for the Cape, the restaurant sought to capitalize on its location mid-way between Boston and the Cape resorts. Following a May 1954 fire, the Half-Way House was sold to Eugene Starvish who established Eugene’s restaurant.
[To prevent competitors from recreating his signature drink, Beach kept the zombie recipe a closely guarded secret with his bartenders mixing from pre-made coded bottles. Because of this, numerous recipes for the drink have since developed. The generally accepted version of the 1934 classic calls for ¾ ounces fresh lime juice, ½ ounce falernum, 1 ½ ounces each of Puerto Rican rum and gold or dark Jamaican rum, 1 ounce 151-proof Lemon Hart Demerara rum, 1 teaspoon of grenadine, 6 drops of Pernod or Herbsaint, a dash of Angostura bitters, ½ ounce of Don’s mix (being 2 parts grapefruit juice and 1 part cinnamon-infused sugar syrup) and 6 ounces of crushed ice.]
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Thanksgiving Turkeys, 1876
Middleborough was once known for a Thanksgiving day meal staple other than the cranberry. In 1876 the Plymouth Old Colony Memorial reported that "the best turkeys in the county market this year were raised about Middleboro."
Source: Old Colony Memorial, "County and Elsewhere", November 30, 1876, page 4.
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Earth Shoe
When the Plymouth Shoe Company ceased operations in Middleborough in 1970 it left 800 local workers unemployed and the former Leonard & Barrows manufactory on Center Street vacant. In summer 1972 the Earth Shoe Company, a subsidiary of Kalsø Systemet, Inc., a Danish company best known for its production of Earth Shoes, acquired the former Leonard & Barrows plant and commenced production a few months later. At the time Raymond Jacobs of the Earth Shoe called Middleborough “a shoe industry ghost town” in reference to the large number of residents that had once been employed in the industry.
Developed in the late 1950s and 1960s by Danish yoga instructor Anne Kalsø, Earth Shoes featured a “negative heel” which shifted the wearer’s weight from the front of their foot to the back, thereby improving both posture and comfort. While on a vacation in Copenhagen in 1969 with his wife, photographer Raymond Jacobs discovered the shoe which he began to sell as the awkwardly-named Kalsø Minus Heel Shoe at a store he opened on East 17th Street in Manhattan on April 1, 1970. That date coincided with the first Earth Day and in a stroke of marketing inspiration, Mrs. Jacobs named the shoe Earth Shoe. The shoe immediately became popular and in 1972 the Middleborough plant was opened as the company’s sole American manufactory.
Demand for the shoe was driven by ads in national magazines and mentions in the Whole Earth Catalogue while television programs such as the Tonight Show, What’s My Line and To Tell the Truth also featured the shoes. By 1975 there were 100 outlets in the United States selling Earth Shoes which were also available through mail order. Celebrities such as Sidney Poitier, Tony Curtis, Peter Fonda and Bob Dylan were all noted to wear the “fan-toed clodhoppers”. So great was the demand that the Middleborough factory could not keep up. Newsweek magazine’s October 14, 1974 edition noted that the Middleborough plant had quadrupled its staff to 200 over the previous year and had similarly quadrupled production to 250,000 pair annually.
The Earth Shoe was a unique product. Judy Wiksten, writing for the Middleboro Gazette in 1972 described the shoe for her readers. “An Earth Shoe, to put it mildly, is an extraordinary object….Although they’re frankly not beautiful, they are marketable dynamite.” Time magazine referred to them as “clumpy footwear that defies most principles of shoemaking.” Even Jacobs acknowledged their apparent lack of fashion appeal. “The basis is not style, but function”, he said. Consumers agreed and lines formed outside stores of customers eager to buy.
Ultimately the failure of the company to meet this demand created issues between Earth Shoe and retailers which in turn led to legal action. Only five years after the Middleborough plant was established, the company was dissolved in 1977. Still the brand survives today.
Images:
Plymouth Shoe Company manufactory, Center Street, Middleborough, MA, photographic half-tone from the Middleboro Gazette, January 8, 1970.
The image accompanied an article concerning rumors of the possible closure of the plant, an action blamed on increased foreign competition. The plant in fact did close later that year. The photograph was taken from near the corner of Pearl Street and shows the Center Street façade.
Earth Shoes
A sample pair of the iconic Earth Shoe.
Earth Shoe advertisements, 1974
Much of Earth Shoe's advertising was geared towards explaining the shoe's concept and benefits. The top ad appeared in newspapers across the country while the bottom was seen in national news and fashion magazines. Due to advertising like this, the demand for Earth Shoes soared and production could not keep up.
Friday, September 18, 2015
"Recollecting Nemasket" Inspires Dutch Singer-Songwriter
“Guess you never expected a Dutch
singer/songwriter to write and record an album based on stories from
Middleborough”. Frankly I would have said no to such a suggestion, but that was
precisely the line that greeted me in last Friday morning’s email. Inspired by
articles about Middleborough history posted on Recollecting Nemasket, Dutch independent
singer-songwriter Wouter Broekman has released two songs, “101 in the Shade”
and “Cranberry Swamp”, as a double A-side single and is currently at work
completing a fourth album based upon historical Middleborough material.
While the international appeal of
Middleborough history seems at first remarkable, that Broekman has chosen to
draw upon Middleborough history is unsurprising in the final analysis. Both
historians and songwriters share a common desire to tell stories. And while
local history is often perceived as narrow and very specific in regard to
geographical location, like history in general it is about documenting and
understanding the human condition over time. Localization of history simply
makes the themes it explores more accessible, immediate and relatable to local
audiences who can understand them better because they know the people and
places involved. In the end these themes remain universal and transcend
locality, having a potential appeal to a global community as demonstrated by
Broekman.
“101 in the Shade” draws its inspiration
from a Recollecting Nemasket post regarding the summer of 1911 when one of the
worst heatwaves and extended droughts in Middleborough’s history was recorded.
The song’s title is taken from an item in the Middleboro Gazette that reported July 3 as the hottest day for many
years with the temperature hitting “101 in the shade at the postoffice at
noon.”
In it Broekman writes:
Cause it’s
close to 101 in the shade
The rising heat sets fire to the fallen hay
101 in the shade
Get off the land, this ain’t no workin’ day
The rising heat sets fire to the fallen hay
101 in the shade
Get off the land, this ain’t no workin’ day
The second track on the single, “Cranberry Swamp” takes it lyrics from a poem simply entitled "Cranberry" that was originally published in the mid-19th century at a time when commercial cranberrying was in its infancy. It was republished by Recollecting Nemasket in 2009 where Broekman discovered it. As alluded to in the poem by the unknown author, children were involved in harvesting the berry and some local schools like that at South Middleborough were closed in September in order to free the children to work on the bogs or, as they were known in mid-19th century parlance, "swamps".
In Autumn, when weather is cool,
We'll join in a holiday romp;
Away from the school we will hie,
Away to the Cranberry swamp.
The Strawberry, Raspberry too,
And Blackberry, quickly gone;
The Blueberry cannot endure
When frost and the snow come on.
But Cranberries where they are grown,
Or put into family store,
Care nothing how cold it may be,
And last till the winter is o'er.
They last till the Strawberries spring
All lonely and ripe from the sod,
And berries thus circle the year
With proofs of the goodness of God.
To accompany
the poem, Broekman has written a distinctly American-feeling folk tune that is
beautiful in its simplicity and ideally suited to the lyric.
Both songs are part of Broekman’s current
project, “A Life in Song”, a CD of American folk-style songs drawn from
Middleborough history. Broekman explained the origins of his lyrical
inspiration in an email to me: “Some
time ago I stumbled upon the story of 6-year old Wallace Spooner, who died
after jumping out of a window of Ocean House on the banks of the mill pond on
Wareham Street - as featured on your blog. The story inspired me so much that I
am currently writing and recording an Americana-style CD around this fact. The
songs of the album tell the -partly fictitious/partly true- story of the
Spooner family. I am incorporating several historic events from Middleborough,
such as the burning down of the Alden shoe factory, the hottest day in years, the
Cranberry Poem and more. I have written a song about the demolition of Ocean
House as well.”
The Ocean House was a ramshackle building
located on the west shore of the mill pond at Wareham Street, its name a
possibly satiric barb aimed at luxury hotels which were then in vogue at the
seaside. For local Middleborough children without means, this was their ocean-side
alternative. The Ocean House proved popular with neighborhood children who
would dive from its open windows into the mill pond below. This activity ended,
however, following the tragic 1905 death of six year old Wallace Spooner who
while engaged in diving from the building struck his head upon a stone wall,
fell into the river and drowned. Nothing, however, was done with the property until
1908 when the Middleborough Board of Health condemned the structure which was
demolished two years later in spring of 1910.Broekman currently performs regularly in the Netherlands and always includes both “101 in the Shade” and “Cranberry Swamp” in his set, along with others he has written but yet to record. He describes his songs as having "clear influences of folk, country and Americana with a contemporary singer/songwriter sauce.... The acoustic guitar is my main support."
Both songs may be heard on Bandcamp and Broekman's own site.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
South Main Street Snow, Easter 1915
South Main Street looking southwestward from Nickerson Avenue (right) and Webster Street (left). The street is virtually impassable save for the street railway tracks.
Another View from Easter 1915
The intrepid photographer that ventured out to capture the scene of Center Street covered by snow on Easter Sunday (April 4), 1915, also took this photograph of Peirce Academy with the Central Baptist Church in the background. (Thatcher's Row is just out of the image to the left). The Middleborough Post Office now occupies the site of the Academy building which at the time housed the district court for Middleborough.
Labels:
Center Street,
Central Baptist Church,
Peirce Academy,
snow
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Easter Sunday, 1915
One of the more historically notable snowstorms in Middleborough's past was the blizzard of Easter Sunday 1915. Described by the Middleboro Gazette as one of the worst in years, the storm in early April dumped a considerable quantity of snow on the town leaving church-goers on April 4 to confront the remarkably un-spring-like scene in the photograph above. The view depicts Center Street taken from in front of what is now Santander Bank. Recognizable is the Glidden Building at the right of the view. Though little plowing has been done, the street railway has managed to clear its tracks and the owners of the T. W. Pierce hardware store (the building at the immediate right with the sign marked "SHOES") have shovelled the sidewalk in front of their building, now the site of Benny's. The image below shows nearly the same view without snow.
Monday, February 9, 2015
A Horse Founders in Snow, 1886
Prior to the arrival of the automobile, the arrival of winter snow meant the substitution of sleighs for carriages and the replacement of wheels with runners, with runnered vehicles gliding easily on hard-packed snow. Deep snows however were another matter and were sometimes difficult for horses to negotiate. In certain circumstances the snow could be downright dangerous. Following a storm in February 1883, the Middleboro Gazette recounted one story - part ghost tale, part animal rescue - that spoke to the dangers heavy snow could present horses.
Two young men came over from East Taunton, in a sleigh, last Sunday, and left the team standing on Benton street, near Cornelius Murphy's residence. The horse became restive, and finally went off on his own account. It was between nine and ten o'clock that night, when John Driscoll's boys were going to bed., on looking from the window over the meadow between the house and the river they saw some dark object moving, and having read about a 'ghost on School street,' were affrighted, and called for the father. The father advised them to go to bed, and not watch the dogs any longer. But they protested, and said they knew it was not dogs, until finally Mr. Driscoll went out, with stout stick in hand, to drive off the dogs, when behold he found a horse lying upon his side in a snow-bank tangled up in the harness. He sent for help, and the horse and sleigh that belonged to the Taunton boys was rescued from a position in which the horse would have soon died. He ran through Lincoln avenue, and up by Mr. Churchill's residence, and over an embankment of five feet depth, overturning the wall, breaking the sleigh, and tearing off his skin in several places. The only wonder is that he was discovered at all.
Illustration:
Old Sturbridge Village Sleigh Rally by Marcy Reed, 2013
http://www.centralmass.org/media-center/releases/old-fashioned-horse-drawn-sleigh-rally-old-sturbridge-village-feb-2
Source:
The Middleboro Gazette, "Middleboro", February 13, 1886, page 4.
Two young men came over from East Taunton, in a sleigh, last Sunday, and left the team standing on Benton street, near Cornelius Murphy's residence. The horse became restive, and finally went off on his own account. It was between nine and ten o'clock that night, when John Driscoll's boys were going to bed., on looking from the window over the meadow between the house and the river they saw some dark object moving, and having read about a 'ghost on School street,' were affrighted, and called for the father. The father advised them to go to bed, and not watch the dogs any longer. But they protested, and said they knew it was not dogs, until finally Mr. Driscoll went out, with stout stick in hand, to drive off the dogs, when behold he found a horse lying upon his side in a snow-bank tangled up in the harness. He sent for help, and the horse and sleigh that belonged to the Taunton boys was rescued from a position in which the horse would have soon died. He ran through Lincoln avenue, and up by Mr. Churchill's residence, and over an embankment of five feet depth, overturning the wall, breaking the sleigh, and tearing off his skin in several places. The only wonder is that he was discovered at all.
Illustration:
Old Sturbridge Village Sleigh Rally by Marcy Reed, 2013
http://www.centralmass.org/media-center/releases/old-fashioned-horse-drawn-sleigh-rally-old-sturbridge-village-feb-2
Source:
The Middleboro Gazette, "Middleboro", February 13, 1886, page 4.
Sunday, January 11, 2015
Vandalous Pigs That Swim, 1895
Sadly Middleborough's cemeteries, like those elsewhere, are periodically the objects of vandalism. In the early autumn of 1895, the Nemasket Hill Cemetery saw its grounds vandalized by unlikely perpetrators - pigs - who swam along the river. The incident was recorded in the Middleboro Gazette of October 10, 1895.
A number of pigs created sad havoc in the Hill cemetery last week. They evidently swam the river, and several lots, some of the best, were badly torn up and considerable expense has been required to put them in proper condition again.
No record is given of either the pigs' owner or the fate of the transgressors.
Source:
Middleboro Gazette, "Middleboro", October 10, 1895, page 4.
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Lactart, 1880s
Who wants a big glass of Lactart?
Lactart (acid of milk) was a popular beverage flavoring produced by the Avery Lactate Company of Boston beginning in the early 1880s and was available in Middleborough at local grocers like Lucas & Bliss. It could also be found on draft at B. F. Tripp's candy store. Made from the lactic acid in milk, Lactart had a sour or acidic taste and was used as a natural drink flavoring in place of lemons or limes. As a product derived from milk, it was considered an ideal flavoring for dairy-based drinks. Alternatively, Lactart could also be drunk simply with water and sugar in place of lemonade.
Lactart was also sold by druggists since the Avery Company touted it as a “healthful, invigorating, delicious” remedy and marketed it as a digestive aid “especially useful in dyspepsia, biliousness, nervous depression, wakefulness, headache, and all ills arising from a disordered stomach”. Lactart was also claimed to both prevent and relieve cholera, sunstroke, fevers, cold, coughs or croup, urinary difficulties and seasickness.
Although Lactart may sound unappealing today, it is in fact experiencing somewhat of a revival, being used in vintage drinks and sodas.
Illustrations:
Lactart Trade Card, Avery Lactate Company, Boston, MA, c. 1885
Lactart advertisement, Lucas & Bliss, Middleboro News, December 17, 1886.
Lactart advertisement, B. F. Tripp, Middleboro News, December 17, 1886.
Lactart (acid of milk) was a popular beverage flavoring produced by the Avery Lactate Company of Boston beginning in the early 1880s and was available in Middleborough at local grocers like Lucas & Bliss. It could also be found on draft at B. F. Tripp's candy store. Made from the lactic acid in milk, Lactart had a sour or acidic taste and was used as a natural drink flavoring in place of lemons or limes. As a product derived from milk, it was considered an ideal flavoring for dairy-based drinks. Alternatively, Lactart could also be drunk simply with water and sugar in place of lemonade.
Lactart was also sold by druggists since the Avery Company touted it as a “healthful, invigorating, delicious” remedy and marketed it as a digestive aid “especially useful in dyspepsia, biliousness, nervous depression, wakefulness, headache, and all ills arising from a disordered stomach”. Lactart was also claimed to both prevent and relieve cholera, sunstroke, fevers, cold, coughs or croup, urinary difficulties and seasickness.
Although Lactart may sound unappealing today, it is in fact experiencing somewhat of a revival, being used in vintage drinks and sodas.
Illustrations:
Lactart Trade Card, Avery Lactate Company, Boston, MA, c. 1885
Lactart advertisement, Lucas & Bliss, Middleboro News, December 17, 1886.
Lactart advertisement, B. F. Tripp, Middleboro News, December 17, 1886.
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