Undertaker and Home Furnishings Dealer Account Book, 1881
1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
Owner of business (identity unknown) who served in the vicinity of Wrentham, Massachusetts, as a purveyor of home decorating supplies and furnishings and as an undertaker. The account book includes records of goods for sale and services provided (repairing and upholstering furniture, packing bodies in ice, carrying to tomb, grave digging, etc.); forms of payment (cash, exchange of goods such as soap, eggs, tables, and chairs, and exchange of services); and lists of customers, including City Mills Felting Company, A.H. Morse, J.A. Guild, Joseph Hutchinson, Charles Scott, and Foster Smith.
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Subjects- Undertakers and undertaking--Massachusetts--Wrentham
- Wrentham (Mass.)--History
Types of material
Call no.: MS 171 bd
View related collections: Business & industry, Massachusetts (East) : : No Comments
Urbana Wine Company Records, 1881-1911
6 boxes (9 linear feet).
Founded by John W. Davis, H.H. Cook, A.J. Startzer and others in 1865, the Urbana Wine Company was among the earliest and most successful wineries in the Finger Lakes region of New York. Organized in Hammondsport, N.Y., the center of the eastern wine industry, Urbana’s claim to fame was its widely popular Gold Seal Champagne and other sparkling wines and along with Walter Taylor, they dominated regional wine production during the Gilded Age. The winery survived passage of Prohibition in 1919 , both World Wars operating under the Gold Seal label, but was closed by its parent company, Seagrams, in 1984.
The Urbana Records are concentrated in the period 1881-1885, as the company was growing rapidly. Among other materials, the collection includes a range of correspondence, receipts, some financial records, and tallies of grapes. Additional material on the company is located in Cornell University’s Eastern Wine and Grape Archive.
Subjects- Grapes
- Viticulture
- Wine industry--New York
Contributors
Call no.: MS 660
View related collections: Business & industry, Farming & rural life, Horticulture & botany : : No Comments
J.M. Van Dusen Ledgers, 1865-1910
5 vols. (0.25 linear feet).
Tinsmith and plumber from Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Mentions items he repaired and cleaned (stoves, furnaces, pots, pans, tinware, glassware, and crockery), goods sold (lamps, wash basins, kitchen utensils, shovels, fuel, and furnaces), occasional mention of payment with goods, lists of suppliers, and lists of customers, many of whom were prominent people in the community.
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Subjects- Business enterprises--Massachusetts--Stockbridge--History--19th century
- Heating--Equipment and supplies--History
- House furnishings--Massachusetts--Stockbridge--History
- Plumbers--Massachusetts--Stockbridge--Economic conditions--19th century
- Plumbing--Equipment and supplies--History
- Stockbridge (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- Tinsmiths--Massachusetts--Stockbridge--Economic conditions--19th century
Contributors- J.M. Van Dusen Plumbing and Heating Co.
- Van Dusen, J. M.
Types of material
Call no.: MS 188 bd
View related collections: Massachusetts (West), Mercantile : : No Comments
Dana F. Ward Diaries, 1897-1982 (Bulk: 1904-1951)
(2 linear feet).
Born in Chelsea, Mass., in 1874, and a long-time resident of Somerville, Dana F. Ward enjoyed a prominent career in the fisheries industry in Massachusetts. Entering the wholesale fish business in 1900 when he organized the firm of Whitman, Ward, and Lee, Ward became Director and Advertising Manager of the Boston Fish Market Corporation (builder and operator of the Fish Pier) and an investor. Before the U.S. entry into the First World War, Ward was employed by the state to lecture on the benefits of frozen fish as a food source. An active member in both the Congregational Church and local Masonic lodge, he married Katherine B. Symonds (d. 1948) in Leominster in October 1899.
Personal in nature, the Ward diaries provide a chronicle of the daily life of a relatively well to do fish wholesaler from 1897 through 1951, with some gaps. Generally small in size, the diaries are densely written and are laid in with letters, various sorts of documents, stamps, newsclippings, and other ephemera that help define the contours of Ward’s life. The collection is particularly rich for the years during the Second World War and it includes three diaries (1967, 1977, 1982) from later family members.
Subjects- Fisheries--Massachusetts
- Somerville (Mass.)--History
ContributorsTypes of material
Call no.: MS 577
View related collections: Massachusetts (East), Mercantile : : No Comments
Watchmaker's Account Book, 1882-1883
1 vol. (0.1 linear feet).
The mid-century success of the Waltham Watch Company set the stage for a period of innovation and corporate ferment in the manufacture and distribution of watches in the United States. As watchmakers and technologies spread and new companies sprouted and split at a rapid pace, Springfield emerged as a center for the production of high quality, mass produced watches. Perhaps best known among the large local corporations, the Hampden Watch Company was established in 1877 from the New York Watch Company and was bought out in turn by the Dueber Watch Company and relocated a decade later.
The unidentified owner of this slender account book maintained itemized records of income and expenses for a relatively small watchmaking concern in Springfield between May 1882 and September 1883. Most of the trade consisted of sales of accoutrements and repair work.
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Subjects- Springfield (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- Watchmakers--Massachusetts--Springfield
Types of material
Call no.: MS 623 bd
View related collections: Massachusetts (West), Trades : : No Comments
William Weatherby Account Book, 1835-1837
1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
Transient worker for Seth Porter and Co., a cotton mill in Cummington, Massachusetts and for Wells, Blackinton, and White, manufacturer of fine textiles in North Adams, Massachusetts. Includes accounts of his employers, debits, credits (a running account with a general store for the purchase of clothing and foodstuffs), and notations of providing room and board for other workers.
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Subjects- Cummington (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- General stores--Massachusetts
- North Adams (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- Seth Porter and Co. (Firm)
- Textile industry--Massachusetts--19th century
- Textile workers--Massachusetts--Economic conditions--19th century
- Wells, Blackinton, and White
ContributorsTypes of material
Call no.: MS 179 bd
View related collections: Massachusetts (West), Personal finance : : No Comments
Truman Wheeler Account Book, 1764-1772
1 vol. (0.1 linear feet).
One of twelve children of Obadiah and Agnes (Tuttle) Wheeler, Truman Wheeler was born in Southbury, Conn., on Nov. 26, 1741. After completing his education, reportedly at Yale, Wheeler moved north to Great Barrington, Mass., in the spring of 1764. Acquiring property about a mile south of the center of town, he soon established himself as a general merchant trading in silk, fabrics, and a variety of domestic goods.
The Wheeler account book represents the initial years of a thriving, late colonial mercantile business in far western Massachusetts. Beginning in June 1764, not long after Wheeler set up shop in Great Barrington, the account book includes meticulous records of sales of domestic goods ranging from cloth (linen, silks, and osnabrig) to buttons, ribbons, and pins, snuff boxes, a “small bible,” “jews harps,” and tobacco. Among the prominent names that appear as clients are members of the Burghardt and Sedgwick families.
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Subjects- Great Barrington (Mass.)--Economic conditions--18th century
- Merchants--Massachusetts--Great Barrington
Contributors- Wheeler, Truman, 1741-1815
Types of material
Call no.: MS 618 bd
View related collections: Massachusetts (West), Mercantile : : No Comments
Association for Gravestone Studies Collection
Elizabeth W. Whitaker Collection, 1802-1989
1 box (0.5 linear feet).
Gravestone, No. Guilford, Conn.
A physical education teacher from Rome, New York, Elizabeth W. Whitaker became an avid recorder of gravestone inscriptions in the 1940s. She died in 1992 at the age of 93.
The core of the Whitaker collection consists of 25 receipts and accounts relating to the early marble industry in western Massachusetts. The key figures in this series are Rufus Willson and his father-in-law, John Burghardt, who quarried stone near West Stockbridge, Mass., conveying it to Hudson, N.Y. The collection also includes a selection of photographs and postcards of gravestones, mostly in New England and New York; two folders of typed transcriptions and newspaper clippings of epitaphs from the same region, ranging in date from the early colonial period to the mid-19th century; and a price list of Barre granite from Wetmore and Morse Granite Co., 1934.
Subjects- Marble industry and trade--Massachusetts
- Sepulchral monuments--Massachusetts
Contributors- Association for Gravestone Studies
- Burghardt, John
- Whitaker, Elizabeth W
- Willson, Rufus
Types of material- Photographs
- Receipts (Financial records)
Call no.: MS 682
View related collections: Business & industry, Gravestones, Massachusetts (West), Photographs : : No Comments
Cyrus White Daybook, 1823-1829
1 vol. (0.1 linear feet).
Cyrus White, a cooper in South Hadley, Massachusetts, made tubs and barrels of all varieties: soap tubs, leach tubs, oil barrels and casks, cheese presses, butter churns, and buckets. In his daybook, White lists and his customers including Springfield Cotton Manufacturing Co., Whitney and Wells, Byant and Bird, and Medad Clapp Lumber, as well as his family genealogy.
Subjects- Coopers and cooperage--Massachusetts
ContributorsTypes of material
Call no.: MS 085a
View related collections: Massachusetts (West), Mercantile : : No Comments
Amos Whittemore Daybook, 1817-1819
1 vol. (0.1 linear feet).
Wagonwright and celebrated inventor of a machine that made cotton and wool cards from West Cambridge (now Arlington), Massachusetts. Includes records of services provided, such as repairing, cleaning, painting and varnishing chaises; providing wheels, springs, waterhooks, whippletrees, bellybands, and carpet; and mending reins and harnesses. Also contains lists of customers (including many prominent families from the town) and records of cash transactions.
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Subjects- Arlington (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- Arlington (Mass.)--History--19th century
- Carriage and wagon making--Massachusetts--Arlington--History--19th century
- Carriage manufacturers and dealers--Massachusetts --Arlington--History--19th century
- Harness making and trade--Massachusetts--Arlington--History--19th century
Contributors- Whittemore, Amos, 1759-1828
Types of material
Call no.: MS 153 bd
View related collections: Business & industry, Massachusetts (East) : : No Comments