Article ID: CBB571734857

The Weave Sheds of New Bedford and their Place in American Industrial Architecture (2014)

unapi

Charles A. Parrott (Author)


IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology
Volume: 40
Issue: 1/2
Pages: 137-154


Publication Date: 2014
Edition Details: Theme Issue: New Bedford
Language: English

In Massachusetts, New Bedford's primary development as a textile mill town was late for New England. Before 1880, only two large textile firms had been built, but for the next thirty years, with only a short hiatus in the late 1890s, a new textile concern was established almost every year. After 1895 this concentrated late development was to exhibit a building-type pairing that differed from the norm throughout the rest of the textile industry in New England. Although this distinctive architectural duality had its parallel beginnings in a dispersed fashion in other mill towns of the region, in New Bedford it came to dominate the industrial landscape. There, this architectural effort was channeled into two distinct building forms: the spinning mill and the weave shed. It is the unique concentration of the New Bedford weave sheds, built mostly between 1896 and 1910, that gives the city another historically significant place in American industrial architecture.

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Article Randall May Heath; Kingston Wm Heath (2014) Foreword. IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology (pp. 4-6). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB571734857/

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Authors & Contributors
Gross, Laurence F.
Roberta Wingerson
Mary Rose Boswell
Richard M. Candee
John Mayer
David B. Landon
Journals
IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology
Concepts
Industrial archaeology
Textile Mills
Buildings, Industrial
Architecture
Factories
Material culture
People
Albert Kahn
Allen, Zachariah
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
Places
United States
New Bedford, Mass
Rhode Island (U.S.)
New Hampshire (U.S.)
Manchester, NH
Boott Mills, Lowell, MA
Institutions
Amoskeag Manufacturing Company
Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corporation
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