Thursday, December 29, 2011

December Gathering at the General Montgomery House



The Haverhill Library Association recently held a holiday tea, hosted by the owners of the General Montgomery House. Tea and egg nog, books on tea tables, music and convivial conversation were abundant. Well-loved and carefully preserved, the family lives with the memories of the Montgomerys everyday. They have generously opened their home to the author over the last decade and shared discoveries, such as shoes found in an attic crawl space.

Based on Myra's descriptions of the house, this is most likely her bed chamber with its "snug little fire." From here she frequently wrote to her cousin and finance, Horace Henry Goodman. Goodman was a merchant who traveled the eastern seaboard, eventually hanging his "shingle" on a store on Long Wharf in Boston. He also spent time with the General's detachment, protecting the Portsmouth waterfront during the War of 1812.
If you have thought of me this evening, your imagination should have pictured me by a snug little fire in my bed chamber, with my writing implements before me, and I (until within a few minutes) apparently resolving in  my mind, whether or not it would be best to make use of them.  
--Myra Montgomery to Horace Henry Goodman, Haverhill December 19th 1814. Courtesy, Haverhill Historical Society

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

North Country Trade in the late 18th Century: Haverhill, NH.

Haverhill Residents Settle Their Accounts with General Montgomery


The survival of the Montgomery Store Daybook allows the contemporary scholar and researcher to begin to slowly piece together what every day life was like in this rural town and how the economics of the community worked. A number of elements can be inferred from the evidence as the author becomes ever more familiar with the material and the cast of characters and will look forward to sharing developments with readers over the next few months.  


As 1793 drew to a close, the townspeople settled their accounts at the Montgomery Store - 
sometimes by cash, generally through barter or trade, and occasionally through "written indenture."  Not surprisingly, the last week of December in 1793 sees a rise in those who are paying off their accounts in full or in part.  Many pay in a variety of ways "to cash" "to grain" "to cattle" or even by paying for another's bill or services -- and frequently through payment of grog or especially rum.  One example of particular interest is the clerk's notation of "two written indentures" by Alden Sprague.  In this context, it appears he is hiring himself out for needed services, perhaps as a day laborer or a hand to assist with caring for any number of General Montgomery's teams when they traveled to Concord or Boston.
Mid-way through page, see "Alden Sprague...Orford"
The purchases made as the new year approached are ones we can easily image today as we plan and organize for the coming year: Stephen Lund purchased paper for an almanac on December 28 as do several other residents over the next few days. Several residents, including Moody Bedell, purchase spellers, perhaps with the notion of "self improvement" in mind for the new year or to keep occupied on the bitter winter nights. On December 29, Alden Sprague hired a sleigh from General Montgomery for travel to Orford, some 10 miles distant, returning two days later, perhaps from visit to family or on year end business for himself or the General.


1793 Montgomery Store Daybook. Courtesy, Haverhill Historical Society.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Shoe Files: Shoe of the week, Historic Deerfield



During a recent research trip to Historic Deerfield to study 18th century London shoes, I was thrilled to find another pair of shoes by London cordwainers Ridout and Davis, the subject of my forthcoming book. Although much altered - the heel was drastically cut down altering the proportions of the shoes - they are nonetheless quite valuable for study and as indicators of changing style and taste.  The polychrome brocaded silk shoes are lined with a plain weave linen and boast the maker's label. Reportedly they were worn at the Lafayette Ball in Newport in 1779. Acc. #HD F.464, Gift of Mrs. Helen Geier Flynt.

Thank you to Ned Lazaro, Collections Manager, for his kind and generous assistance with this project.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Research Note: Driving history home, Amesbury Carriage Museum



Looking forward to meeting with Ann Miles, president of the Amesbury Carriage Museum's board of directors, to discuss fundraising and future plans for the museum.  A two-day Amesbury Carriage Festival is planned for 30 June through 1 July 2012.

Below find information related to this significant 19th century Amesbury industry and those associated with its success.

Links:

Driving history home

http://www.amesburycity.com/carriagemakers.htm

http://www.newburyportnews.com/local/x941118826/Driving-history-home

http://www.carriagemuseumlibrary.org/download/1128/docs/cm_LeadingCenters.pdf



Excerpt courtesy of the Carriage Museum Library

A MICROCOSMIC HISTORY OF THE CARRIAGE INDUSTRY OF THE UNITED STATES. 
A FEW LEADING CARRIAGE CENTERS. 
Hub October 1897 pages 420-430. 

"A wonderful stream is the River Time,  
As it runs through the realms of Tears,  
With a faultless rhythm, and a musical rhyme,  
And a broader sweep, and a surge sublime  
As it blends with the ocean of Years." 

To write a history, even though brief, of an industry like that of vehicles for pleasure or 
business, covering though it may a short period, is in a measure to write the progress of a people, in 
those walks that lead to a higher degree of civilization and to trace a record of advancement in 
artistic culture, mechanical perfection and individual comfort, but as each such record is written a 
step is taken in the direction of an advanced education. Time flies rapidly, and to look back a quarter 
of a century seems but a few years, and yet in these modern times each quarter is so replete with 
changes that it furnishes material sufficient for a score of pens without a conflicting of interests or 
incidents. It is on this thought that the HUB enters the arena and contributes as much as possible, in 
a limited space, to a review of the past, confining ourselves, however, mainly to the last half century, 
and to carriages only. Few are left of those who were foremost in the carriage industry even a quarter of a century ago, and if we would preserve personal recollections we must gather them from those who 
participated in the events of these and the preceding days. 

Each generation, as it supplants the previous, is disposed to congratulate itself on its 
superiority over the preceding and they, who are now foremost in the carriage industry, do not differ 
from men in other callings in claiming for themselves superiority. It is one thing to found a house 
and carry it from small beginnings to a large and successful business, with an established reputation, 
and another to take up the broken thread, after the master hand has been stilled by death, and 
continue the work and maintain the high reputation already earned. To say this implies no reflection 
upon the successors; on the contrary it does credit to those who have maintained the high reputations 
earned by the founders in these days of active thought and supreme effort. 

When the Carriage Builders' National Association was organized the carriage industry was 
rich in eminent men, men who had made their impress and who placed the industry among the 
foremost in our land. We may be excused if we mention a few who were then leaders who have 
since passed away. No truthful history of the carriage industry of this country could be written 
that did not include the venerable James Gould, of Albany, N.Y.; Jason Clapp, of Pittsfield, 
Massachusetts; Lewis Downing, of Concord, New Hampshire, pioneers; nor is G. C. Miller, of 
Cincinnati, Ohio, to be forgotten. These men were among the first to make the American vehicle 
known throughout the world. Then there was Thomas Goddard, of Boston; James Brewster, of 
New Haven; C. P. Kimball, of Portland, Maine; John R. Lawrence, of New York; James M. 
Quinby, Newark, New Jersey; Wm. D. Rogers, whom everybody loved, of Philadelphia, 
Pennsylvania; the fearless, liberal and energetic John W. Britton, of New York, New York; 
Frederick Wood, of Bridgeport, Connecticut, one of the brightest men ever connected with the 
carriage industry; Wilder H. Pray, the carriage art critic; James Curtis, of Cincinnati, Ohio. They 
are all gone and the few who were contemporaneous with them, who are yet spared, are closely 
approaching the allotted years granted to man, all of whom are sharers in the honor of having 
contributed to an eminent degree to place the industry on a high plane. The work done by these men 
has been continued in many instances by their successors, but in others the names are lost to the 
industry. Younger men have taken the places of those who were active in 1872 and new methods 
have supplanted the old. These, aided by inventions and improvements, have changed the conditions, 
giving a greater variety of styles, but we doubt if the quality of workmanship has been improved. In 
fact, if durability is made the test, the high grade vehicles built twenty five years ago would be the 
peers of those built at the present, excepting in one particular, that of painting; but when those 
conditions are considered that minister to comfort, the vehicle of today is vastly superior. The 
knowledge gained by experience has wrought wonders. 

The necessity of a spring that would take the place of the elliptic for light carriages brought 
out a long line of carriage springs half elliptic, torsion, etc., and completely changed the methods of 
hanging light bodies, and to a considerable extent such vehicles as rockaways, phaetons, etc. The 
great improvement made in drop forges worked a wondrous change and machine wrought forgings 
took the place of malleable castings and hand forgings. While rubber tires come as a final cure for 
discomfort and noise, these and the hundreds of minor inventions of merit, worked a revolution in 
vehicle construction. The American manufacturer became independent of the foreign steel maker. In 
1872 we doubt if there was a carriage maker who would dare to say that he used springs made of 
other than English steel, while now 95 per cent. of the steel used for springs is made in this country 
and a broken spring, or one that has lost its shape, except from long wear, is comparatively a 
novelty. 

The great advance made in bending timber has made it possible for every manufacturer of vehicles 
to use bent timber whenever he may deem it advantageous. 
Twenty five years ago one of the questions that was agitating the trade was, Can machinery, 
other than for sawing, be used to an advantage in the carriage shop? and the consensus of opinion 
was that it could not, except where the capacity of the factory was such as to require four fires at 
least in the blacksmith shop. It is true that spoke machinery was profitably employed-in wheel 
factories, as was also mortising and primitive boring machines, but since then, as though touched by 
the hand of a magician, the carriage shop has become a vast machine shop, and the iron man seems 
almost imbued with reason. Had the body maker of a quarter of a century ago been told that almost 
every piece of timber entering into the construction of a body would in time be dressed to shape and 
fitted to its place by machinery he would have laughed at the "simpleton" who presumed to make the 
assertion; so, too, in the smith shop and the trimming shop, everywhere machines are in use, 
performing the most delicate, as well as the coarsest, work with an accuracy that is astonishing. The 
few machines of a quarter of a century ago that were thought to be marvels of accuracy are cast into 
the waste heap and new ones have taken their place. There are machine manufacturers who count 
their machines, for carriage makers' use, well up into the hundreds, while some machines are so 
constructed that, by the use of attachments, the one machine can be made to answer nearly all the 
requirements of a moderate sized wood-shop. This introduction of and improvement in machinery 
has completely revolutionized the methods of working, in both wood and iron work. It has rendered 
the brainy, skillful mechanic more than ever a necessity and made it almost impossible for the 
careless and unskilled to work the harm that they did in years past. We can recall the time when the 
mention of machinery in the wood-shop was like waving the proverbial red rag before the bull. We 
recall, too, the time when it was thought a great help to have the timber sawed to shape from the 
plank; then followed the plainer; but neither was in the carriage shop; they were run by outside 
machinists. Then the head knife; for several years there was but one in one of our largest carriage 
manufacturing cities, and every heavy body maker sent his timbers to be dressed up square. This 
machine, however, broke down the barrier and in a few years ingenious men devised machines for 
every imaginable purpose, until now the carriage builder has but to name the work to be done and 
the manufacturer of machinery will produce the device. It is perhaps too much to say that wood 
working machinery is in its infancy, but those who watch events and note the advances of each 
succeeding year, can but feel that the future carriage builder, he of a quarter of a century hence, will 
wonder how the manufacturers of 1897 ever did the work with the machinery then used. The day is 
past when a carriage shop, no matter how small, cannot use machinery to a profit. 
The twenty five years past have worked other revolutions in the carriage industry than those 
of a mechanical nature; they have gone higher and developed artistic skill and brought forth scores 
of scientific designers and draftsmen, who have made the American carriage builder of today 
independent, to a certain extent, as creators of styles, whereas before that time we were dependent 
upon Europe for almost everything in the way of designs for heavy work and borrowed largely for 
our light work. Now we create as well as they, and Europe has become a borrower of styles and 
process of manufacture from us. The two factors which contributed most to this result were the 
technical carriage journals and the Technical School for Carriage Builders. The former paved the 
way and made the school possible, while at the same time they were and are instructors on all 
matters pertinent to the trade, and by their fashion plates, working drawings and general technical 
instructions, are educating the mechanic and stimulate the draftsman to increased efforts. The school 
by special instruction fits ambitious students as designers, draftsmen and constructors, and has sent 
forth a corps of educated draftsmen, and stimulated those who were not of its pupilage, until now 
there is a goodly number of draftsmen and designers who may challenge the best of the old world. 
The HUB has much reason to congratulate itself for its share in the work done. 
Prior to 1872 a very large percentage of our pleasure carriages were built in the eastern and 
middle states. A large carriage industry had developed in Ohio, in Cincinnati in particular, where the 
industry dates back almost to the beginning of the century, but elsewhere in the West the 
manufacture of carriages was confined to a few cities, notably St. Louis. The cheap wagon, that is 
the "three for a hundred" buggies, had not made its appearance, or if it had, it cut no important figure 
in the industry. True, there, were Eastern cities that had the reputation of making "shoddy" vehicles, 
but they were not of the type first mentioned. The first visible impress made upon the market by the 
low grade work was by Cincinnati, Ohio, manufacturers; and a Cincinnati buggy was supposed to 
represent the extreme in cheap work. The builders of medium and fine work looked upon the 
Cincinnati buggy as an interloper, one that was a disgrace to the industry, the quality of which, it 
was predicted, would destroy that particular class in a few years, but the facts proved otherwise. 
 The cheap buggy was sold by the thousands. Agriculturalists, who had been in the habit of 
using their farm wagon for pleasure purposes, bought the cheap carriage, and say what we may of its 
merits, it was the pioneer that opened up the country districts as a carriage market and taught the 
hundreds of thousands to appreciate the advantages of a spring carriage who would never have felt 
that they could pay a hundred or more dollars for a vehicle for pleasure purposes. The lessons taught 
were not lost, and they who had owned one of these bought a better one, if possible, or one of the 
same quality, when the original was worn out. Cincinnati is no longer the monopolizer of cheap 
vehicles. They are now built in scores of places, by the thousands, but, owing to the introduction of 
improved machinery and the great advances made in the manufacture of material, the cheap carriage 
of today is a vastly superior vehicle to the one of twenty five years ago. T o the cheap carriage may 
be attributed the general use of buggies throughout the farming and thinly populated sections of the 
country. To make them machinery was a necessity, and the great improvement in machinery for 
carriage makers' use is due in great measure to them. They also opened the way and created markets 
for hundreds of thousands of vehicles of a better grade. The carriage dealer, other than he of large 
cities, is of their creation, and the cheap carriage of today is as much a necessity to the vehicular 
industry as the felloe is to the wheel. 

AMESBURY. 
The carriage industry of Amesbury, Massachusetts, for a period of twenty five years, is 
virtually a record of its business interests, which have been the leading power in creating prosperity 
and wealth. The town has grown whenever this trade has prospered. Its inhabitants have suffered 
from the depression incident to unsuccessful seasons equally with the members of the firms engaged 
in the carriage trade. Whenever an era of advance along the carriage lines of trade visited the town, 
prosperity followed in all other departments. 
In 1850 there were twenty six firms manufacturing carriages. In the fall of 1888 the great fire 
occurred on "Carriage hill," which destroyed the business plants of sixteen of these firms. Yet, 
undismayed by this disaster, new and elegant brick establishments replaced those burned. While a 
few were cast down, none were destroyed, and, today, there are as many carriage firms doing 
business as prior to that date. 
The changes in the trade have been no more frequent than in any other largely prosecuted 
industry in its business progress. Individual firm names formerly well known to the trade have 
dropped out to give place to others who are striving to attain success, and are bravely steming the 
tide which has been setting so strongly against all the business developments of the country during 
the last few years. A conservative feeling has governed the trade so far with mutual safety to all, and 
with the promised dawn of better times in the near future, the carriage firms are hoping to obtain 
benefits from the trade winds of commercial business prosperity. 
Having visited nearly all the firms we find the members hopeful. Many of them report a fair 
business season, and with an increasing trade over the previous year. The intervening years from 
1883 to 1892 are considered to have been the most prosperous years for the carriage trade in 
Amesbury. In fact, no period of ten years since the beginning of carriage building in the town in 
1853 has witnessed such continued activity. The tide of prosperity increased until hundreds of 
workmen were employed in all departments, several of the large firms employing as many as fifty 
blacksmiths, running from twenty to thirty forge fires. Wages were at the highest price, the best 
mechanics earning from three dollars to four dollars per day, while the force of skilled workmen 
employed in all departments led to the building of newer styles and better finished work, until 
Amesbury carriage firms began to employ skilled designers to create new and more beautiful forms 
of riding vehicles. 



Ralph Clarkson made the first perspective drawings of carriages in Amesbury in 1878. This 
gentleman studied art in Paris, and is now a leading artist in Chicago., Illinois. Later F. A. Sands was 
employed in like work. In 1889 Mr. Svanberg came from Germany to the town, and since that date 
has done nearly all the carriage drafting. 
Every variety of vehicle known to the trade is manufactured in Amesbury from the expensive 
brougham to the modest road wagon, from the less expensive "two wheelers," up to all the varied 
grades and styles, including every form and feature of a fancy carriage with its bicycle wheels, or 
common wheels with rubber tires. Each yearly "carriage opening" discloses some new design and 
pleasing style. 
It is claimed that more patents have been obtained by Amesbury carriage mechanics for 
different appliances in rendering ease and convenience to riding vehicles than in any other carriage 
section of the country. These patents not only include various changes by which a two seat vehicle 
can be transformed almost instantly into a stylish single seat, but to patent wheels and springs. In 
fact, much of the machinery by which the manufacturer has been able to enlarge and carry forward 
his business, and its improvement, is the invention of the mechanics here employed. 
The above statements are introduced, not in any sense as "puffs" to an industry which has 
long sustained its reputation and standing, but as true and worthy of mention. 
In the carriage trade, as in all other departments of industry, there come periods when the 
business boom pushes business to its highest point of development. This has been seen in the 
manufacture of cotton and woolen goods in the United States; in the iron trade, and many other 
departments of labor. Then follow years of depression; of losses and failures. Similar results mark 
the course of the carriage industry. Many firms in this country whose standing was considered 
beyond the possibility of financial disaster, have been compelled to suffer great loss. The Amesbury 
manufacturer has suffered in common with the trade, but to such an extent as to involve only a few 
individual firms. Today the condition of the trade will compare most favorably with any carriage in 
the country, as to present and prospective business ventures. The following brief sketch of the 
industry may prove interesting: 
The founder of the carriage industry in Amesbury was Jacob R. Huntington, who begun 
business in 1853. In 1875 he retired from active business with a competency, and now makes his 
home in the town which he did so much to build up. 
The Briggs Carriage Co. was organized in 1859. It has been an important factor in the 
carriage industry under the management of J. W. and Richard Briggs. They built their own plant on 
the margin of Clark's Pond, consisting of one large four story wooden building, and three additional 
brick factories added in later years. So successful was the firm that they cleared a large section of 
land near their works and erected thirty five dwellings for the accommodation of the mechanics 
employed by them. The two brothers have each passed "over the river." James, the elder, died in 
1891. Richard, the active business partner, died in the full tide of prosperity in 1894, loved and 
honored in the trade and in the community. The business established by them remains a lasting 
monument of their skill and financial ability, and is continued by the sons of J. W. Briggs. 
To Richard Briggs is due the added industry in 1889 of the manufacture of electric cars, 
which has been quite successfully prosecuted under the present management of his nephews and his 
namesake, Richard. 




Among the early established firms continuing to push its business is the "Hume Carriage 
Co." The foundation of this firm dates from the purchase in 1857 by James Hume, of the business of 
J. R. Huntington, the pioneer manufacturer of the town. Under Mr. Hume's management the firm 
became known all over the country for the style and variety of its work. In 1884 Mr. Hume retired 
from active labor, and during the last ten years the business has been continued by William H. 
Hume, a brother of John, and George Walker. 
In justice to Mr. Hume it may be said there is no one in the trade today who is more 
interested in the success of the carriage industry he labored to establish. His capital to the extent of 
thousands of dollars has been loaned at common rates of interest to aid and help others in the line of 
trade which made fortunes for him. 
From Mr. Charles F. Robinson, the financial agent, we learn that the business of the present 
year has been much more encouraging than the preceding year, and the outlook for the immediate 
future is good. 
The Biddle, Smart Carriage Co. dates its organized capital in 1878. Up to within two years 
it was the largest firm in number of carriages manufactured. During its busiest years it kept in 
operation thirty forge fires, manufacturing its own wheels and wood work. At the present writing  
this extensive business plant is comparatively idle. The firm has ample capital and ready means at 
command to recommence business at any moment when changing prospects warrant, or the 
conservative members of the firm consider it wise so to do. 
The firm was composed of William E. Biddle, William W. Smart, M. D. F. Steeve. William 
W. Smart's connection with the firm was dissolved by his death in November, 1895. Mr. Smart had 
been educated in all the mechanical details of the trade, and his death was a great loss to the 
company and the community. In 1876-7, Mr. Smart was established in business for himself and sold 
out to become a member of the larger firm. 
George W. Osgood commenced business in 1870, at Amesbury Ferry, in a small plant, 
studying the best methods for continued success. Finding it inconvenient to increase his trade away 
from the carriage center, he erected quite an extensive plant on Powow-st., and removed his works 
thereto, which has been several times enlarged. In 1882 he purchased the old buildings of F. A. 
Babcock, on Carriage Hill, and fitted them up as carriage repositories, with an office, where his sons 
receive the customers of the firm. 





Lambert Hollander commenced business in 1886, building general light work, which he 
sold on the road. In 1888 commenced to build as a specialty the "Hollander Rockaway." In this line 
of work has been very successful. He is the owner of a valuable brick carriage plant on 
Carriage-ave., bought of A. N. Parry. Mr. Hollander was among the firms burned out in 1888. From 
this disaster he has fully recovered, and reports trade prosperous. The carriage business in Amesbury 
he believes to be in a more favorable condition to take advantage of the promised increasing trade 
than for many months, notwithstanding the general depression throughout the country. 
The firm of Hassett & Hodge is composed of James and John Hassett, brothers, and George 
C. Hodge. Mr. James Hassett, senior member, embraked in the carriage business in 1887. In 1890 
associated George E. Hodge as a partner. In 1893 John Hassett was admitted to the firm. They 
manufacture a varied line of pleasure carriages, and notwithstanding the great depression in the 
business world, during the last four years, report a continual yearly increase of sales. 
From the present business outlook this firm anticipates a large increase in their business for 
1898. 
The Currier, Cameron Co. commenced its business on Friend-st., in shops owned by F. D. 
Parry, in 1880, for the purpose of manufacturing carriage bodies and gears. It employed eighteen 
hands and the firm was made up of Colin D. Cameron and Daniel Trefetheren. In 1881 James 
Drummond bought out the interest of Trefetheren and the firm changed to Cameron & Drummond
In 1882 Charles Goss and John Currier were admitted to the firm and the name changed to Goss, 
Drummond & Co. The business was moved to the Colchester Mill building on Elm-st. In 1887 the 
firm name was again changed by the retirement of Goss and Drummond, H. J. Batchelder, of 
Merrimac, connecting himself with the business. The firm continued under the name of Currier, 
Cameron & Co. until 1895, when C. D. Cameron, originator of the business, retired, leaving the 
present members, John Currier and Horace J. Batchelder, sole owners and managers. The firm 
occupy a large business plan, and have all the improved facilities for the prosecution of their trade, 
employing in busy times eighty five mechanics. 
Among the early manufacturers who aided in building up the industry, and whose sign 
continues to swing in the breeze, is E. S. Feltch. He entered business in 1859 and pushed his way to 
financial success until 1883, when F. W. Nelson, a son in law, who served as Treasurer of the Board 
of Trade, was admitted as a member in the firm. Charles F. Stone and B. F. Sargent, sons in law, 
were associated in the trade at one time. The firm is doing but a small business at present as 
compared to more prosperous years. The business plant, which covers nearly an acre, of ground on 
Market-st., commenced to curtail operations several years ago, and is waiting for a better business 
outlook for a renewal of its former activity. 
The firm known as the Connor Carriage Co. was organized in 1887. The firm reports its 
business as quite prosperous during the last year. Its special work is depot wagons, traps, carts, 
victoria standard. 
Herbert F. Chase commenced business in 1888. He makes a general line of carriage work of 
light and medium weights. Mr. Chase reports trade better the present year than the preceding one. 
Sales in July 40 per cent. better than in the corresponding month of 1896. 
The firm of Folger & Drummond dates from 1887. It was organized by David J. Folger 
several years prior to this date. The new firm erected a spacious brick factory, 175 by 55, five 
stories, with an annex 45 by 67 feet, and, three stories. Mr. Folger was financially successful before 
the new firm was instituted. Mr. Drummond had been connected with the firm of Goss, Drummond 
& Co., and therefore brought a good mechanical experience to the partnership. About one year ago 
Mr. Folger sold his interest to Mr. James Drummond, who continues the business, only waiting trade 
developments to again push business with old time vigor. 
Eben M. Currier is the senior member of the firm of the Currier Carriage Co., organized in 
1888, as Eben M. & J. Woodbury Currier. They erected a convenient brick block on Carriage Hill 
and commenced business. In 1890 J. W. Currier retired from the firm, since which time it has been 
successfully conducted by E. M. Currier. 
T. W. Lane entered business for himself as a carriage manufacturer in 1874. In 1890 his 
business had proved so far successful that from a tenant occupant of a small factory on Elm-st., he 
became the owner of a fine business plant on Chestnut-st., containing twenty five thousand feet of 
floor space, with a large carriage repository in the rear of his dwelling on Elm-st. His two sons, Fred 
W. and F.. Lewis Lane, attend to all the details of the trade. 
John H. Clark & Co. was organized as a carriage firm in 1884 and has so continued. In the 
great fire of 1888 their business plant was entirely destroyed, but replaced by one of the finest 
carriage factories in the town. The firm, though cast down for a time, was not destroyed, and by a 
conservative business management has continued to prosper in the manufacture of a fine grade of 
general light work as a specialty. 
N. J. Folger, who learned his trade as a carriage maker in Merrimac, came to Amesbury at 
the time that industry was starting into more active life, and engaged in business in 1880. His plant 
was among those destroyed by the great fire in 1888, but a new business plant was erected for his 
accommodation by James Hume, on the line of the B. &. M. R. R. His business was quite 
successfully prosecuted until the depression of three years ago, and only awaits the promised return 
of better times to again push onward. 
Charles N. Dennett engaged in business in 1873, and has been a successful manufacturer, 
having invented several patent specialties, among them "Dennett's Jump Seat." His was among the 
unfortunate factories destroyed by fire in 1888. Mr. D. did not rebuild, but entered into business with 
Seth Clark, Jr., with whom he continued until the firm dissolved by mutual consent. Mr. D. then 
leased a business plant and took his sons into partnership. 
J. T. Clarkson & Co. started in the carriage business for themselves in 1891, although both 
had been connected with it for ten years prior to this date. They put upon the market several new and 
improved designs in one and two seated (interchangeable seats) carriages, which were novel in 
construction and taking in style, and with the improvements yearly made continue to be quite 
popular. They have also made essential changes in two wheels. Several of their patented novelties 
are built in other localities. 
S. R. Bailey, of S. R. Bailey & Co., was well known to the carriage trade as early as 1866, 
being connected with firms in Bath, Maine, and in Boston in 1878. In 1882 he came to Amesbury 
and established his business, and in 1887 admitted his son, E.  W. M. Bailey, to partnership. For 
several years they made a specialty of carriage poles and high grade sleighs. A few years ago they 
added carriages of special make and design, and were the first to introduce the bicycle wheels. Their 
factory contains 30,000 feet of floor room, and is filled with machinery largely invented by Mr. 
Bailey for the prosecution of his varied work. 
The business of S. Rowell & Son was established on Pond-st., in 1873. In 1890 the senior 
member died and the junior partner became sole proprietor. In 1880 a large storehouse and factory 
was built near the depot of the B. & M. R. R. Three years ago Edward Rowell, was admitted to the 
firm. The establishment is one of the largest in the town. 
Charles Rowell & Son have manufactured carriages on Friend-st., Amesbury, for many 
years. Charles Rowell, the senior member, retired from the business twelve years ago, and built for 
himself a fine mansion on the banks of the Merrimac River at Pleasant Valley, and is the owner of a 
large farm adjoining. His son Jacob continues the business under the firm name and has been very 
successful. 
The firm of Rand & Co., dates from 1870. Several changes have taken place. A few years 
after commencing business, Rand left the firm and went on the road selling carriages. The firm 
changed to Batchelder & Cowan. In 1890, to Brout & Co., for two years. Since this date the firm 
has been known as Rand & Batchelder --W. H. Rand and Herbert Batchelder. 
C. W. Long entered the business in 1872, and erected a plant on Clark-st., where he 
continued for thirteen years. The remainder of the time he has conducted his trade near the railroad 
station. 
The firm of J. H. Shiels & Co., six years ago, give place to new members, J. Woodbury 
Currier and George Collins becoming the active managers. 
Among the older and successful carriage firms is that of Osgood Morrill. In 1870 he 
commenced the trimming of carriages as a distinct branch of employment on Elm-st. In 1878 entered 
into partnership with Dudley E. Gale and did business in Front-st. This firm was dissolved in 1893, 
and the business continued by Osgood Morrill, who erected extensive wooden buildings on 
Morrill-st. In 1891 H. P. Wills, an inventor of several carriage specialities, became associated with 
him. 
Neal & Bolser entered the trade in 1890, and have pushed their business quite successfully 
in the manufacture of fine pleasure carts of new and novel designs. 
Of the thirty firms doing business in the town twenty five years ago, fourteen have either 
gone out of business entirely or sold out their plants to others, as follows: Seth Clark, Jr., William S. 
Eaton, F. C. Boardman, J. F. Easton, Dudley E. Gale, G. W. Marden, John Francis, F. D. Parry & 
Son, B. F. Lewis, Locke & Jewell, Amesbury Carriage Co., R. Drummond & Son., D. J. Folger, A. 
M. Huntington, Huntington & Ellis, Edwin Morrill.  
The firm of Miller Bros. is composed of John Miller, Jr., Thomas C. Miller, Robert Miller, 
William Miller. They commenced the business of making carriages in the wood and iron, in 1889, 
on Market-st. In 1895 removed to more extensive and convenient quarters on Carriage Hill, 
furnished them by Poyen & Co., where they gave employment to fifty mechanics. The business 
depression reduced the force to twenty hands, and during the last few months but little work has 
been turned out. They are making ready to forward their work and expect, with the turning tide of 
fortune, to ring out the anvil chorus with renewed vigor. 
The death of William G. Ellis, of the firm of Ellis & Son, was a great loss to the trade. For 
eight years prior to 1875 he was a member of the firm of Huntington & Ellis, when it dissolved. In 
1875 be commenced business on his own account, and erected an extensive plant near his residence 
on Friend-st. In 1888, his two sons, David and William, were made members of the firm. William 
died in 1890, and James took his place and the business was mainly under their management. Mr. 
Ellis, senior, in January 1889, introduced into the town a new branch of industry--the manufacture of 
electric cars. For several years he was quite successful, employing eighty first class mechanics. In 
1895 the plant was destroyed by fire and such loss ensued that the business was abandoned. Mr. Ellis 
was born in Elgin, Scotland, in 1832. Come to Amesbury in 1863 as a common laborer, but with all 
the vigor, determination, and native skill of a true born Scotchman, he pushed his way up 
ward and onward as a successful business man. He was stricken down in the strength of manhood by 
disease, and in his death the business he planted remains silent.