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Links Lowell Machine Shop
Lowell's
machine shop complex was second in importance only to the textile
mills among the city's industries. Incorporated as an independent
company in 1845, the Lowell Machine Shop had its origins as the
machine shop of the Boston Manufacturing Company in Waltham from
1814 to 1824. The Merrimack Company in Lowell then housed the machine
shop, which was taken over by the Proprietors of Locks and Canals
in 1825.
The shop underlay
Lowell's textile industries: fabricating machines that turned cotton into cloth,
building waterwheels, turbines, and steam engines that provided the power, and
making shafts, gears, and pulleys that transferred power within the mill. Its
influence extended beyond Lowell, as it built machine tools and complete sets
of machinery for mills in other cities. The locomotives also produced there helped
transform New England's transportation system.
Some of the city's
best minds headed the machine shop in its early years. Paul Moody, the mechanic
who had helped Francis Cabot Lowell develop the power loom at Waltham, was head
of Waltham's machine shop. Under Moody, the machine shop was creative and versatile.
There the machines for the first mill building in Lowell were built. When the
Waltham machinery was moved to Lowell, Moody followed, becoming head of the machine
shop upon its establishment there in 1824.
George Washington
Whistler directed the building of the shop's first locomotive in 1835. He took
apart an English locomotive imported from the Stephenson works at Newcastle to
learn how it was constructed. From the components, Whistler fabricated patterns
from which the shop manufactured its own locomotive - one of New England's earliest.
Three years later the shop had turned out 32 locomotives.
James B. Francis,
who took charge of the machine shop in 1837, was the major figure in Lowell's
engineering history. He fine-tuned the city's canal system, engineered the Northern
Canal, and oversaw Lowell's transition to turbines. Under Francis direction,
the Lowell Machine Shop became a leader in the fabrication of hydraulic turbines.
The development
of such skills in the textile industry's early machine shops was a crucial step
in the American Industrial Revolution. Previously, Americans relied heavily on
English expertise and machines. It took fine tools to make tools, precise machines
to make other machines. The process was slow, and required patient trial and error
and borrowed technology before Americans learned to make their own. Much of this
learning took place in the Waltham and Lowell shops, where Paul Moody helped train
the first generation of master mechanics. Out of these and others efforts
to emulate British textile technology came the machine tool industry on
which other industries were founded. It was the beginning of America's machine
age.
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Prologue
Seeds of Industry
Lowell's Southern Connection
The Industrial Revolution in
England
Early American Manufacturing
Transportation Canals
Making Textiles
The Waltham-Lowell System
Lowell Machine Shop
Lowell's Canal System
Waterpower in
Lowell
Mill Power Drives
Power Looms
"Mill Girls"
Boarding Houses
Immigrants
Working Conditions
Products of the Mills
Lowell's Other Industries
Decline and Recovery
Rebirth of Lowell
Jack Kerouac
Reading List
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