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              <text>CHICOPEE&#13;
AS  once a part of Springfield proper, and now so closely allied to &#13;
it  in its  business and  social relations, as  to still  make it substantially  &#13;
a. prominent  branch  of  the  growing family which  cling to "the old &#13;
folks  at home." 	It has,  nevertheless, a name  and fame &#13;
of its  own,  most  worthily won, and  in point  of  industry, enterprise and &#13;
intelligent  thrift,   ranks  among   the  first   New  England manufacturing  &#13;
towns.&#13;
  We append a brief sketch of many of its prominent industries and &#13;
business establishments&#13;
THE DWIGHT MANUFACTURING COMPANY.&#13;
OF the manufacturing interests of Chicopee, the Dwight Company is the most &#13;
important, occupying seven large mills, and furnishing employment, at the present &#13;
time, to 1,500 operatives.   It was organized about 1833, with a capital of $1,200,000 which &#13;
has remained unchanged to the present time.   The first mill was begun July 15, 1833; &#13;
the last one, June 8, 1844.   Originally, there were three separate corporations, but these &#13;
were early combined in one.   The total number of spindles, now in operation, is 110,000, of &#13;
looms, 2,671.  The stock is nearly all owned in Boston, as it has been from the first, and &#13;
the avowed policy of the management is to allow the outside world the least possible &#13;
knowledge of their affairs.   John A. Vernon of Boston, is president, Charles W. &#13;
Freeland of the same city, treasurer,  G. W. Bedlow, agent, and  Minot, Hooper &amp; Co. of &#13;
Boston and New York, are the selling agents.&#13;
THE AMES  MANUFACTURING  COMPANY.&#13;
Second in magnitude of its operations, though first in public interest, is the Ames &#13;
Company, located on the Chicopee River, just above the Dwight Company's mills, and &#13;
close by the Center Depot, on the Chicopee Falls branch.    It was organized in 1842, &#13;
with a capital of $30,000, James T.  Ames and N. P.  Ames, of Chicopee, and J. K. &#13;
Mills, Edmund Dwight, founder of .the Dwight Manufacturing Company, and Ignatius &#13;
Sargent of Boston, being the principal Stockholders.    Mr. Dwight was its first president. Its &#13;
early history shows a steady growth and repeated enlargement of its capital, until &#13;
in 1850, it reached the sum of $250,000, its present figure.   During the war, from 1500 to &#13;
1600 hands were employed, and large supplies of cannon, swords, and &#13;
projectiles were furnished the government.   In 1867, a change in the management &#13;
occurred, Messrs. Emerson Gaylord, T.  W. Carter and E.  0. Carter, of Chicopee, &#13;
securing, with Mr. James T.  Ames, a majority of the stock, and transferring the &#13;
headquarters of the Company from Boston to Chicopee.&#13;
Mr. Ames, who had previously been the Company’s agent, now became its &#13;
president, and held the position until January, 1872, when Emerson Gaylord was &#13;
chosen ashis successor, and  held the  place until last January,  when, a majority of the &#13;
stock having  been  previously  purchased  by  Clifford Arrick,  of  Washington, D. &#13;
C., and Mr. A. C. Woodworth, son-in-law of Mr. .Ames, there was another change in the &#13;
management, and Mr. Arrick was chosen president, Mr. Woodworth agent, A. G. &#13;
Bowles, of Boston, treasurer, and  Messrs. Arrick and  Woodworth, with Nathaniel &#13;
Hooper, of Boston, A. G. Dexter  and James T. Ames, directors, 'with E. 0. Carter &#13;
as clerk.     A short time before his death, Hon. Samuel Hooper, of Boston, &#13;
purchased a large interest, his stock being subsequently bought by Messrs.' Arrick and &#13;
Woodworth.&#13;
The new president will be remembered for his sharp contest with General Dyer, &#13;
two or three years ago, and is· best known in military circles as the owner of the &#13;
Eureka projectile which is now being tested  by the ordnance department  at &#13;
Washington; so far with very satisfactory results.   Should the government approve this projectile, its &#13;
manufacture will be brought to these works and insure-a material increase of the &#13;
present working force of 350.   At present the Company is manufacturing bronze statuary, &#13;
for which the works are· widely noted, fancy swords of which from 50 to 10_0 per day &#13;
are produced, machinists' tools and special machinery.   The whole history of the &#13;
Company has been a prosperous one, the dividends from January, 1847, to April, &#13;
1871, aggregating 432 per cent.   During the war and immediately after they ranged &#13;
from 20 to&#13;
35 per cent.&#13;
&#13;
THE  GAYLORD  MANUFACTURING  COMPANY.&#13;
  The Gaylord Company, manufacturers of cabinet locks and  malleable iron &#13;
castings, are located just above the works of the  Ames Company. Their corporate &#13;
existence dates back only from 1863, but their business dates back to 1856, when &#13;
Emerson Gay­ lord, who for fifteen years previous had been employed as a workman &#13;
and contractor for the Ames Company, bought out its interest in the manufacture &#13;
of military accoutrements; fire hose and leather belting, and set up for himself, &#13;
employing only three or four hands.  In  July,  1859, he  received the  contract  for  &#13;
the  construction of all the mail bags used by the general government, a contract  renewed  &#13;
in 1863 and again in 1867 and this at once gave a great impetus to his business.  At the opening of the&#13;
War the government called upon him for supplies, a new mill was erected, the working &#13;
force increased to 400, and every nerve strained to meet the demand.  Growing out of &#13;
this  came  the organization of the Company having a capital ·stock of $100,000, with &#13;
Emerson  Gaylord  as  president, Jerome  Wells as  treasurer,  and   Messrs. &#13;
Gaylord, Wells, T. W. Carter, James T. Ames and E. N. Snow as directors.      Like  &#13;
most  institutions of the class they reaped a rich harvest from the war, and after it was &#13;
over were in good shape to undertake  the  manufacture  of  cabinet locks, a  &#13;
difficult and  rarely successful work, but one in which their success was all  that  &#13;
could be wished.   They now make over 2,000,000 locks per year, in 350 styles.    The &#13;
Company has undergone few changes.   Sereno Gaylord, brother of Emerson, &#13;
succeeded Mr. Wells as treasurer in 1864, and was succeeded by A. F. Gaylord, son of &#13;
the president of the Company, in&#13;
1870.  The firm at present employs about 60 hands.   James L. Pease is agent &#13;
of the corporation.&#13;
S. BLAISDELL, JR.  &amp;  CO.&#13;
  A business wonderful in its growth, and remarkable in its prosperity, is that of S. &#13;
Blaisdell, Jr. &amp; Co., whose modest office is close by the Chicopee Junction Depot.    Its origin dates back to 1863, when George Mattoon and Andrew Hubbard engaged in the&#13;
Cotton waste business, at Chicopee Falls.   Mr. Hubbard died not long after, and in 1865&#13;
It was removed to Chicopee, and Mr. Mattoon continued the business alone, untill868, &#13;
when S. Blaisdell, Jr. joined him, the firm name being Mattoon &amp; Blaisdell, and so &#13;
continuing until Mr. Mattoon's retirement in May, 1872. At the time the new co-&#13;
partnership was formed, the firm had a capital of $10,000, and did a yearly business of &#13;
from $30,000 to $50,000.  In less than two years; this was increased over 100 per &#13;
cent, and the two following years saw it again doubled.   Since that time, its growth has &#13;
been even more rapid, and during the twelve montl1s ending April 30,  1875,  the sales aggregated more &#13;
than a  million of dollars, those for the last  three  months of it   reaching  the sum  &#13;
of $350,000.   The capital stock is now $150,000.   The freight bills of the firm for &#13;
the year, were upwards of $37,000; their telegraph bills, 75 per cent of the total business of&#13;
The town.   The cotton waste business has long been one of secondary importance, &#13;
their trade being principally in cotton itself, which they receive direct from the cotton &#13;
sheds, through every port in the South, from Norfolk, Va., to New Orleans and &#13;
Galveston. They make a specialty of supplying extra fine cotton to manufacturers &#13;
of fine under· wear, and deal largely in fine waste, to be mixed with wool for spinning &#13;
purposes.   They do likewise a considerable business in paper stock and paper, and &#13;
anticipate, for the coming year, a trade largely in excess of anything hitherto.    The &#13;
firm at present consists of the three brothers, S. Jar, Charles M. and George A. &#13;
Blaisdell.&#13;
&#13;
CARRIAGE MANUFACTURING. &#13;
 Half a mile west of the Chicopee Junction Depot of the Connecticut River Railroad, &#13;
and in plain view of it, is the extensive carriage manufacturing establishment of &#13;
Edison Clark.   The business was started about twenty years ago, in two  buildings; &#13;
one sixty feet in length, and two stories in height, and the other  sixty-five feet long, &#13;
and a story and a half high.   The works at present occupy four separate buildings, &#13;
two and three stories high, and respectively, one hundred by twenty-five feet, ninety &#13;
by twenty-five, eighty-five by twenty-five, and sixty-five by thirty-five.   About  &#13;
thirty  men are employed, and the business done exceeds that of any other carriage  &#13;
manufactory  in the State,  outside of Boston, amounting  yearly  to  something  more  &#13;
than  $40,000.  All sorts of light work, buggies, carryalls, etc., are built, and nothing &#13;
is allowed to go out which is not in every respect first-class work...   Most of the &#13;
workmen are employed steadily, year in and year out, instead of being discharged at &#13;
the close of the busy sea· son, insuring a reliable force of competent men at all times.&#13;
  In the same line is the establishment ·of W.  H.  Gilmore, at the intersection of &#13;
summer and Cross. Streets, just outside the business section of Chicopee.   A single  &#13;
small building, now used as a wood shop, sufficed for its beginnings in 1842, since which it &#13;
has been three times enlarged, and the two or three hands, at first employed, have been &#13;
in­ creased to from eighteen to :twenty-five, according to the demands of the season.   &#13;
Formerly Mr. Gilmore as engaged largely in building heavy wagons, his goods having &#13;
the very· highest reputation, and being sold largely at the South.    Recently he has &#13;
confined himself principally to lighter work, his sales some years reaching $10,000 or &#13;
more, but has never sacrificed his reputation for perfect maternal and honest work.   &#13;
His goods are mostly marketed in this vicinity, though occasional sales are made at the &#13;
West and South, and some have been sent as far off as California.&#13;
&#13;
BYRT &amp; BULLENS.&#13;
  Byrt &amp; Bullens, tanners and curriers, do business on the bank of the Connecticut &#13;
river, opposite the Chicopee Junction depot, and  have  been so occupied for the  past  &#13;
twelve years, employing from five to ten men and using from 100 to 200 sides of leather  &#13;
weekly, mostly' calfskins, their business being principally in harness and suspender &#13;
leather.&#13;
&#13;
BOBBINS.&#13;
  B. Leavitt is one of the oldest, if  not the oldest  manufacturer  in Chicopee, now &#13;
actively engaged in business, having occupied his present location between the &#13;
establishments of the Ames· and  Gaylord manufacturing companies, for more than &#13;
forty years, his yearly  business varying from $5,000.00 to $20,000.00. He formerly &#13;
made both bobbins and shuttles, but for some years past has confined himself to &#13;
bobbins, supplying the home demand and something beyond it.&#13;
ATTORNEYS.&#13;
At the head of the local bar, is George D. Robinson, for nearly twenty years a &#13;
resident of the town, a practicing lawyer for the past nine years, and for a like number&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Previously, principal of the High School.   Mr. Robinson was a member of the &#13;
Legislature of 1874, and was last fall a candidate for a second term, when he ran &#13;
largely ahead of his ticket, but failed of an election.   His office is in Cabot Hall block.&#13;
In the same block is the office of Luther White, for the past five or six years a &#13;
successful practitioner.   He is a young man yet, and has held no public office except &#13;
that of school committee.&#13;
  L. E. Hitchcock, who has his office in Kendall’s block on Market Square, was &#13;
admitted to the bar about a year ago.           &#13;
Jonathan Allen, a graduate of the office of E.  B. Maynard, of Springfield, has been in &#13;
practice in Chicopee about eighteen months.   He has just opened an office in Burke's new &#13;
block on lower Exchange Street.&#13;
H. L. Sherman is also a late comer.   His office is with Mr. Robinson.&#13;
BAKERY.&#13;
  Chicopee's only bakery is that of W. C. Wedge &amp; Co., who have been in business &#13;
for the past fourteen years on Center street.   As patentees and manufacturers of Wedge's &#13;
rotary oven, the firm has a reputation far beyond its local limits.&#13;
BANKS.&#13;
  The First National, formerly the Cabot Bank, has a capital of $150,000.00, with &#13;
a large surplus.   The following are its officers:   President, Jerome Wells; cashier, &#13;
F. B. Doten; directors, Jerome Wells, T. W. Carter, Emerson Gaylord, Erastus &#13;
Stebbins, and E. 0. Carter.    The Cabot Bank was instituted March 1, 1845, John &#13;
Chase being its first president.                                                                                                  &#13;
&#13;
  The Chicopee Savings Bank was organized in 1854 with Jerome Wells as president and &#13;
Henry H. Harris as treasurer.    The latter has held his office ever since.   Mr. Wells &#13;
retired at the close of last year.    The present official board is constituted as &#13;
follows: President, George D. Robinson; vice-presidents, E. 0. Carter, A. G. Parker,  &#13;
Emerson Gaylord, G. H. Chapman;  secretary, George V. Wheelock;  treasurer,  &#13;
Henry B. Harris;  trustees, Benning Leavitt, J. A. Dennison, George S. Taylor, N. &#13;
Cutler, John B. Wood, C. M Kendall, E. Stebbins, Lewis M. Ferry, John Dixon, George &#13;
V. Wheelock,. A.S. Hunter, A. F. Gaylord. 	The present location is in Kendall's &#13;
new block, opposite the Town Hall, to which it removed in December last, having &#13;
previously been kept in the same building with the First National Bank.   It has at &#13;
present 1,250 depositors with an aggregate of $4:43,266 deposits.&#13;
BOOKS, NEWS AND STATIONERY.&#13;
  E. M. Alden, Merchants' row, is proprietor of the only bookstore in Chicopee, &#13;
combined with which is an extensive circulating library, and large stationery and &#13;
newspaper department.   Mr. Alden has been engaged in his present business, which &#13;
he has built up with much energy, since 1870.    He is, and has been for many years, &#13;
the local agent of the American Express Company.&#13;
 J. Stackpole, an old and esteemed resident of the town, opened about a year ago a· &#13;
news and variety store on Center street.   .Mr. Stackpole makes the sale and repairing &#13;
of clocks something of a specialty.   He l1as lately taken a partner, the firm at present &#13;
being J. Stackpole &amp; Co.&#13;
BARBER SHOPS.&#13;
Three barbers do the legitimate shaving for Chicopee people, Charles H. Blackmer,&#13;
who has prominent and attractive quarters in Temple’s block, R. A. Page and &#13;
T Cronin?&#13;
 BOOTS AND SHOES.&#13;
  Prominent in his line is Mr. W. L. Blackmer, who came to Chicopee in 1861, and &#13;
after four years' service in the employ of the Gaylord Manufacturing Company opened &#13;
a fancy goods store on the site of the Masonic Hall block.   This he sold· in 1869, &#13;
and entered upon his present business on Exchange street.   Mr. Blackmer does a large &#13;
custom business in men's fine work.&#13;
445&#13;
Farther down Exchange street J. O'Donnell is doing a considerable business in &#13;
boots and shoes.&#13;
Other prominent dealers are Chapman &amp; Folsom, S. W. Parshley and W. P. &#13;
Beals.&#13;
COAL.&#13;
 Carlos Allen, the popular coal dealer, has his office in Temple's block and does a &#13;
large business.    A. B. Abbey, R. W. Bemis and Jolt Dixon are also engaged in it.&#13;
CONCRETE PAVING.&#13;
  Messrs. Mead &amp; Richards  are engaged  in  the business  of putting down  the  &#13;
popular concrete paving, and  will respond  promptly  to orders from any  part of &#13;
the country.&#13;
CUSTOM AND READY-MADE CLOTHING.&#13;
In the line of custom  clothing,  Chicopee bas  something to  be  proud or in the &#13;
establishment  of J. P. Buckingham, who has  been  engaged   in  the  business there  &#13;
over  20 years, sometimes,  as  at  present, alone,  though more  frequently with  a  &#13;
partner.    He formerly kept a line of ready-made clothing, but now limits &#13;
himself to custom work and furnishings.   Mr. Buckingham usually employs &#13;
from twelve to fifteen hands.&#13;
J. M. Lane and B. Moffit are engaged in the same business. Hitchcock &#13;
&amp; Hosley is the only American house engaged in the ready-made clothing&#13;
 business.    The senior partner, Harvey Hitchcock, started the business about &#13;
twelve&#13;
years ago at the stand now occupied by the firm, and in May, 1866, were joined &#13;
by Mr. James E. Hosley.     They  deal  to some  extent in  boots  and  shoes, and  &#13;
are  located  in Bullens' block on Exchange street.&#13;
DRUG STORES.&#13;
  Chicopee's  three  drug  stores   are  all  of long  standing, but  the  honor   of &#13;
seniority among the present  dealers  belongs  to W. W. Johnson, who  has  been  &#13;
engaged  _in   the business  in  Cabot Hall  block, on Market  square  since  August, 1861.     &#13;
Mr. Johnson has been a resident of the town for 40 years, and was postmaster during &#13;
the administrations of Presidents Pierce and Buchanan.	&#13;
  Warren Smith has occupied his present stand on Exchange street   for the &#13;
past ten. years.    He has been a resident of Chicopee most of the time since 1853. 	&#13;
Hooker &amp; Co. are later comers, occupying the Exchange street store where Dr. &#13;
Rou­&#13;
Roudiez was previously &#13;
located.&#13;
DRY GOODS.&#13;
  The  house of  Warren S. Bragg &amp; Co., the  Company  consisting of Jerome Wells &#13;
and F. B. Doten,  cashier  of the  First   National  Bank,  is confessedly the leading &#13;
one in the dry goods trade  in Chicopee.    Located  on  the  corner  of Exchange &#13;
street  and  Market square, on  the  site  where  it was first established by Mr. Wells &#13;
nearly  forty  years  ago, it occupies three large and commodious stores  in Cabot  &#13;
Hall  block, one  being  devoted to dry goods, the second  to the carpet  trade,  and  &#13;
the  third   to  the  hardware business. From a  yearly   business  of $40,000  in  1865, &#13;
the firm showed  one of $110,000 in 1873, and now count safely  upon one of &#13;
$100,000 or more yearly.&#13;
  A. J. Jenks was formerly  with  Bragg  &amp;  Co., but  went into  business for himself  &#13;
on the opposite side of Exchange street, about  three  years  ago.    Later he bought &#13;
out Hale&#13;
&amp; Oakes and removed to the stand in Bullens' block on the same street, formerly &#13;
occupied by them,  where he is now carrying on a large  and  prosperous  business.  &#13;
  John B. Wood, whose dry  goods establishment is located  on the corner  of &#13;
Exchange and Center  streets, is one of the old  business men of Chicopee,    He &#13;
came here in 1850 from  Holyoke,  having  served  his apprenticeship in  a  country &#13;
variety store in Ireland Parish, and  was for thirteen years  engaged  in the grocery  &#13;
business, after  which he entered upon his present  line of  trade.     In both  he  has  &#13;
been  very  prosperous.    For the past ten years  Mr. Wood has filled the office of &#13;
tax collector.&#13;
C. H..Merrick on Exchange street, is the only other dealer  of note.&#13;
57&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
446	CHICOPEE DIRECTORY.&#13;
&#13;
FUR ITURE.&#13;
  The furniture business in Chicopee is limited to the spacious warerooms of Lafayette Temple in &#13;
Temple's block on Center Street.     YEars ago the business was carried on by Josiah &#13;
Whitney, and afterwards passed into the hands of Hosley &amp; Co., Mr. Temple &#13;
being the junior. member of the firm for nine years, and for the past four months &#13;
sole proprietor.     He carries a stock valued at from $12,000 to $13,000, and does &#13;
large undertakers’ and picture frame business.    The establishment has always &#13;
done a safe and fairly remunerative trade.&#13;
GROCERIES.&#13;
  The Bullens family was the pioneers in the grocery business of Chicopee, and is identified &#13;
more than any others with its mercantile   history.   As far back as 1838, the &#13;
business was established   by the four brothers, E. A. I, I. M., on the site now &#13;
occupied by Isaac Bullens &amp; Sons, on the corner Of   Exchange and Cabot streets.    &#13;
Their business was  immense  for  those  times, amounting to $100,000 a year, and  &#13;
they were reckoned  the largest  retail  grocers in  the State  outside of  Boston.    &#13;
Later the brothers separated, each taking   a separate line of the business.    The  &#13;
junior  members of the present firm of I. Bullens &amp; Sons, are I. Newton  Bullens, who &#13;
has been associated  with his father for some twenty-three years, nod Lewis C., &#13;
who was a1lmittell to partnership about four years ago.·   All the American  grocers &#13;
in Chicopee  were trained  in this store. Dullens &amp; Sons do a large business, and &#13;
carry a considerable line of crockery.&#13;
C. A. Bullens, representing- another branch of the family, also conducts a large &#13;
grocery business nearby, and is proprietor of Exchange Hall, which has a seating capacity&#13;
of about 400. 	&#13;
  Carter  &amp; Spaulding  at present do the largest  grocery  business in Chicopee, their &#13;
location on Market square being  one  of the  best  in  the  town,  and  their   business  &#13;
having increased  every  year  since  they  first  opened.    The present firm dates &#13;
back ten years&#13;
Mr. Carter having been in the business alone for three years preceding.&#13;
  Other prominent dealers in this branch are P.  Rourke, corner of West and Emerald &#13;
streets, and Lankton &amp; Pond, on Exchange street.&#13;
&#13;
HOTELS.&#13;
  The  Cabot House, kept for the past eleven  years  by W. H. Dickinson, is &#13;
located on Front street  opposite  the Town  Hall, and  close  by the  Center  depot.    &#13;
1t is well kept, and has a good feeding stable connected with it.&#13;
The Chicopee House, kept by Merrick Abbe, is near the Junction depot.&#13;
&#13;
JEWELRY.&#13;
  C. F. Kent, near the head of Exchange street, carries a well selected $10,000.00 &#13;
stock of watches and Jewelry.   Previous to entering on his present business, Mr. &#13;
Kent kept a drug store for fifteen or twenty years.&#13;
E. A. Gallupe occupies a portion of E. M. Alden's store on Market Square, and &#13;
carries on a watch repairing and general jewelry business.&#13;
&#13;
LIVERY STABLES.&#13;
  W. E. Wheeler has carried on a large livery business at his Exchange street &#13;
stand for the past ten years, and for a year past has combined with it a &#13;
considerable trade in harness and trunks.   He also supplies brass foundries &#13;
largely with sand for cores, his tra1le in this line reaching from Montreal to &#13;
Philadelphia.&#13;
  ,V,  II. Dickinson's stable, near Mr. Wheeler's, is also an old  and  prosperous  &#13;
stand as are  those of R  Corey in the same vicinity, and  Merrick Abbe  who is &#13;
located  at  the Chicopee House near  the Junction depot.&#13;
&#13;
MEAT AND FISH.&#13;
  The oldest meat market is that of J. A. Denison &amp; Co. on Cabot street, where it has &#13;
been established for thirty years or more.    Mr.  Denison himself &#13;
withdrew from the business in 1873, leaving the firm name to the present proprietors John D. White, &#13;
W.P. Ferry and A. E. Jones. 	&#13;
 J. U. McClench is also one of the veteran   marketmen of the town, having been &#13;
for many years on Center street, and lately in his new block on Exchange street&#13;
W. S. Wood has lately started the business on Center street, where he is &#13;
building up&#13;
a prosperous trade.&#13;
Stoddard &amp; Stedman have been in the same line for five or six years.&#13;
  The fish and oyster business is carried on by Quimby &amp; Beckwith who, not long &#13;
since, bought  out George Barrett's old stand  on  Exchange  street, and  by N. &#13;
Cleveland   who opened last September on Center street, near the head of Exchange.&#13;
MILLINERY.&#13;
  Misses A. &amp; A. McQuade have not been long in the millinery  business,  but are &#13;
building  up a large  and  prosperous  trade  at  their  establishment in  Dixon's &#13;
block  on the corner of  Exchange  and  Dwight  streets.&#13;
Other millinery houses are those of Mrs. A. B. Bagg, Miss A. J. Fuller, John &#13;
Colby,&#13;
Mrs. I. F. Connor and J. &amp; M. Follis.&#13;
&#13;
PAINTERS.&#13;
  W  D. Manchester &amp; Co., Center street, do all kinds of painting and decorative &#13;
paper hanging.    Mr. Manchester   has been engaged in the business for eight &#13;
years, most of the time without a partner, and has prospered.&#13;
Frank 0. Dayton has opened a shop this Spring on Exchange street.   He was, for&#13;
about two years with Mr. Manchester and pursues the same general line of &#13;
business.&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHER.&#13;
The only established picture gallery in Chicopee, is that of W. S. Butler, on the&#13;
corner of Exchange and Cabot streets, an old and prosperous stand.&#13;
&#13;
PLASTERER.&#13;
  Few  men of any station  in life, are more highly  esteemed than  the  veteran, &#13;
Michael McDermot,  who resides on Spruce  street,  and is responsible for a great  &#13;
many firs t class jobs performed during  the past ten or fifteen years.&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING.&#13;
G. V. Wheelock, the only job printer in Chicopee, is located in Cabot Hall block, &#13;
does good work, and keeps two men steadily employed. 	&#13;
&#13;
RESTAURANT.&#13;
  The need of an up-town  restaurant has  been met by Mr. C. N. Manchester, who &#13;
has just opened on Center  street, nearly opposite  Temple   Block,  the most finely &#13;
fitted  up dining-rooms  the  town has yet known.&#13;
&#13;
STOVES AD TINWARE.&#13;
  H.  Cogswell  has been for the past  six  years located at the old  stand,  on  &#13;
Exchange street,  where William G. Bliss, for a quarter of a century previous,  carried  &#13;
on the stove and tinware  business.    .Mr. Cogswell  came  originally from  Keene, &#13;
N. H.,  and  before going to Chicopee, had charge  of the work  department of  D. &#13;
B. Montague's  Establishment at  Springfield.    He manufactures tinware &#13;
extensively, and does a large business otherwise.&#13;
  A.  M. Moore, successor  to Southworth &amp;  Moore,  is located, in a  handsome &#13;
brick block, on the north side of Exchange  street, and divides  the stove  trade with  &#13;
Mr. Cogswell.  This establishment, like that of the latter, dates  back a number  of &#13;
years, though it has passed through several  changes,  Mr. Simon  G. Southworth &#13;
retiring from the firm about a year ago.&#13;
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            <elementText elementTextId="58415">
              <text>Clark W. Bryan and Co.</text>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="58416">
              <text>No known copyright restrictions</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="43">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <text>CCD-1875-6.441-447</text>
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          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="58418">
              <text>Chicopee, MA</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="58419">
              <text>1875</text>
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