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Springfield, Massachusetts company history timeline

1805

Springfield’s first bridge over the Connecticut River was built in 1805.

1812

Springfield, city, seat (1812) of Hampden county, southwestern Massachusetts, United States, on the Connecticut River.

1819

Thomas Blanchard in 1819 patented his “Blanchard Lathe” that cut out irregular shapes, musket stocks in this case, and paved the way for mass production and the industrial revolution.

1820

By 1820 the town had evolved from its agrarian beginnings into a manufacturing town, which included the U. S. Armory.

1826

Blanchard, in 1826, built the first automobile in America, a 2,000-pound steam powered giant that he drove through the streets of Springfield.

1828

An address, delivered at the opening of the town-hall in Springfield, March 24, 1828. (Springfield, Tannatt & co., 1828), by George Bliss (page images at HathiTrust)

1831

By a friend of youth. (Boston, Munroe & Francis, 1831), by Mary Clark (page images at HathiTrust)

1835

Possessing abundant waterpower and connected by railroad to Boston in 1835, Springfield soon became an industrial town, producing (in addition to arms) paper, railroad coaches, locomotives, and ice skates.

1840

A town had to have a population of at least 10,000 to become a city, a point Springfield reached in the 1840 census with 10,985.

1843

Familiar address delivered at the Social Meeting of the members of the Liberal Society : on the evening of March 16th, 1843 / (Springfield : C.E. White, printer, 1843), by William Bourn Oliver Peabody (page images at HathiTrust)

1845

In 1845, just a few years after the railroad arrived, Thomas Wason began making cars for the new trains.

1847

Merriam-Webster, Incorporated (formerly G. & C. Merriam Co.), publisher of Merriam-Webster dictionaries since 1847, has its headquarters there.

1852

Springfield officially became a city in May of 1852.

1853

The 1853 City Directory contains 50 pages on businesses and manufacturing firms doing business in the city.

1859

Stearns, Charles. “Memoir of William Pynchon”. New England Historical and Genealogical Review 13 (October, 1859) 287.

1861

When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Springfield became a boom town.

1862

Declaration of independence by the colony of Massachusetts Bay, ([New York, 1862]), by Henry Barton Dawson (page images at HathiTrust)

1866

Book of worship : being selections, chiefly from the psalms, for alternate reading by minister and people / (Boston : Ticknor and Fields, 1866), by Samuel Johnson, Samuel Longfellow, and Mass.) Third Congregational Society (Springfield (page images at HathiTrust)

1869

Robert C. Winthrop. (Boston, 1869), by Robert C. Winthrop (page images at HathiTrust)

1879

By Nathaniel Hawthorne. (Boston, Houghton, Osgood, and Co., 1879), by Nathaniel Hawthorne (page images at HathiTrust)

1882

The fortieth anniversary of the South Congregational Church of Springfield, Sunday, March 26, 1882 / (Springfield, Mass. : M.C. Stebbins, 1882), by Springfield South Congregational Church, Samuel Giles Buckingham, and Noah Porter (page images at HathiTrust)

1884

King's handbook of Springfield, Massachusetts; (Springfield, Mass., J.D. Gill, 1884), by Moses King (page images at HathiTrust)

1885

1, 1885. (Springfield, Mass. : [Springfield printing company], 1885), by Theo W. Ellis (page images at HathiTrust)

1889

Springfield, Mass. ([Springfield] Springfield printing and binding co., 1889), by Stanley Johnson (page images at HathiTrust)

1891

In 1891, James Naismith invented the game of basketball at the Springfield YMCA. The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame is located in Springfield.

1893

Other highlights of Springfield’s history in manufacturing include the development in 1893 of the first commercially produced gasoline-powered automobile by the Duryea Brothers: Charles and Frank.

1894

Annual report of the Springfield Young Women's Christian Association. (Springfield, Mass : Barrett & Leonard, printers, 1894), by Mass.) Young Women's Christian Association (Springfield (page images at HathiTrust)

1895

Official souvenir of the twenty-eighth annual encampment of the Dep't of Massachusetts Grand army of the republic, and the sixteenth annual convention of the Department of Massachusetts Woman's relief corps. ([Springfield, Mass., Homestead job print, 1895]), by Grand army of the republic.

1896

The Puritan in England and New England (Boston: Roberts Bros., 1896), by Ezra Hoyt Byington, contrib. by Alexander McKenzie multiple formats at archive.org page images at HathiTrust

1900

The Puritan in England and New England (fourth edition, with a chapter on witchcraft in New England; Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1900), by Ezra Hoyt Byington (page images at HathiTrust)

Do you believe that this Architectural structure was redesigned and rebuilt in the early 1900's because of a monkey? Apparently the little creature overturned a kerosene lamp at a City Hall fair, resulting in a fire that destroyed the building.

The library offers access to Springfield newspapers on microfilm from 1900 to the present at the Central Library.

1901

In 1901, the Indian Manufacturing Company was founded in Springfield and produced the first brand of motorcycle in America.

1905

Springfield Present and Prospective, etc.. (Springfield, Mass.: Pond & Campbell Publishers, 1905). Section entitled “The Story of Springfield” by Alfred M. Copeland and Edwin Dwight.

1906

Soldiers in King Philip’s War – Soldiers In King Philip's War From 1620-1677, by George Madison Bodge, 1906.

1911

Programme, 1636, 1911; 275th anniversary of the founding of Springfield, Mass. ([Springfield, Mass., Press of Loring-Axtell company, 1911]), by Mass Springfield (page images at HathiTrust)

1912

First Church of Christ in text and picture : 1637-1912. (Springfield, Mass. : The Two Hundred and Seventy-fifth Anniversary Printing Committee, 1912), by Mass.) First Church of Christ (Springfield (page images at HathiTrust)

1921

The Founding of New England (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1921). Regarding the Charter of the Massachusetts Bay Company, see: Chapter 15: “The Loss of the Massachusetts Charter”; and Chapter 17: “The New Order”. See specifically pg.

Barrows, Charles H. The History of Springfield in Massachusetts for the young: being also in some part the history of other towns and cities in the county of Hampden (Springfield, Mass.: Connecticut Valley Historical Society, 1921).

1936

Following disastrous floods in 1936, a federal project involving 20 dams and reservoirs was begun.

1954

The Dwight-Barnard House, Deerfield, Massachusetts / ([Deerfield, Mass., Privately printed, 1954]), by Henry Flynt, Helen Flynt, and Heritage Foundation (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)

1961

The Pynchons of Springfield: Founders and Colonizers, 1636-1702 (Springfield, Mass.: Connecticut Valley Historical Museum, 1961).

1965

It never approached Springfield’s magnitude during the Civil War, but in 1965, when the unthinkable happened, and the Armory was closed, its operations were moved to Rock Island.

1968

The armory continued to produce Springfield rifles for the United States Army until it was closed in 1968.

1988

Access to the Springfield Republican text-only database from 1988 to present is available.

2002

The Doctor Seuss National Memorial (2002) commemorates the renowned children’s writer Theodor Seuss Geisel, who was born in Springfield.

2007

And what it boils down to now, in 2007, is this: Springfield, Massachusetts, is one of 16 cities of that name vying for the Premier of the Simpson’s Movie!

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Springfield, Massachusetts may also be known as or be related to City of Springfield Massachusetts and Springfield, Massachusetts.