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Catalog entry

inv. 562
Middlesex Mills, Lowell, Mass.
c. 1843
Lithograph on paper
8 9/16 x 12 1/4 in. (21.8 x 31.1 cm) Sheet: 9 15/16 x 14 1/16 in. (25.2 x 35.7 cm.)
Inscribed across bottom: Printed under image left to right: F. H. Lane del., Printed by J. Sharp
Collections:

Commentary

Lane drew this lithograph; it was printed by James Sharp, a Boston lithographer who had a firm in his own name between about 1842-1854.

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Subject Types:   Building Portrait »
Massachusetts Locales:   Lowell »
Building Types:   Commercial Building »   //   Mill »

Historical Materials
Below is historical information related to the Lane work above. To see complete information on a subject on the Historical Materials page, click on the subject name (in bold and underlined).

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Lane's prints of Lowell show the city at a period of rapid growth. The textile manufacting industry had been established in Lowell with the first mill (which later became the Middlesex Mill) in 1813. In 1826 the city had 2,500 inhabitants, by 1836 there were 17,633, and by 1845 nearly 30,000. In response to this population growth, the first regular stagecoach route was established in 1822, and the Boston-Lowell Railroad line was completed in 1835. In 1842 Charles Dickens stopped in Lowell on his American tour and wrote about it in his "American Notes." By 1843 there were 33 mills in Lowell, employing 6295 women, 2345 men, and producing 1,425,800 yards of cotton cloth per week.

The American Antiquarian Society has an excellent online exhibition about the mill girls and their representation in nineteenth-century print.

References:

Arthur L. Eno, Cotton Was King: A History of Lowell, Massachusetts (Somersworth, NH: New Hampshire Publishing Co., 1976), see Appendix B.

Rev. Henry A. Miles, Lowell: As it Was, and As It Is (Lowell, MA: Powers and Bagley, 1845).

PDF
view ]
publication
"Factory Life" from "American Notes" by Charles Dickens
Charles Dickens
First published in 1842, reprinted in The Oxford Illustrated Dickens,
Oxford University Press, 1989, pp. 66–70.

Dickens describes a visit to the textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts, in 1842.

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artwork
View of Lowell, Mass.
Elliza Ann Farrar
1834
Lithograph
Printed by Pendleton's
14 1/8 x 23 5/8 in.
Boston Athenaeum
Image: Boston Athenaeum
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The Middlesex Mill was the first mill erected in Lowell in 1813, and was located at the junction of the Concord River and Pawtucket Canal. In 1830 Samuel Lawrence, William W. Stone, and others were incorporated as the Middlesex Company and took control of the property.  Samuel Lawrence was the treasurer from 1840–51.

The company included three mills, and also dye-houses, and was unusual among the mills of Lowell for the fact that it manufactured cashmeres (known as cassimeres) and woolens, rather than the cotton cloth usually manufactured in Lowell. (In fact, it was the only woolen mill in Lowell in 1845).

In 1845, Rev. Henry A. Miles wrote in his account that the mill used the wool which was the produce of 400,000 sheep in Vermont, New York, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Missouri. He wrote that there was one large mill in 1845 that was seven stories high, 158 feet long, and 46 feet wide, and that another of nearly the same size was about to be erected. 

According to Miles: "This company has two mills, one of which is very large, and two dye-houses. It manufactures broadcloths and cassimeres. It runs seven thousand two hundred spindles, forty-five looms for broadcloth, one hundred and thirty-two for cassimeres. It employs five hundred and fifty females, and two hundred and fifty males. It makes twelve thousand yards of cassimere per week, and two thousand two hundred yards of broadcloth. It works up one million pounds of wool per year, and three million teasles. It consumes annually six hundred tons of coal, one thousand five hundred cords of wood, fifteen thousand gallons of oil for oiling wool, and six thousand gallons of sperm oil."

References:

Rev. Henry A. Miles, Lowell: As it Was, and As It Is (Lowell, MA: Powers and Bagley, 1845).

Mary H. Blewett, ed., Diary of a Lowell Mill Girl: Susan Brown of Epsom, New Hampshire (Lowell, MA: Lowell Museum, 1984), descriptions of the experience of a mill girl at the Middlesex Mills during these years.

letter
1846 Letter to Charles S. Storrow 1.14.1846
Samuel Lawrence
American Textile History Museum (0022.69.1)
Image: American Textile History Museum
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letter
1847 Letter to James Bell 3.27.1847
Samuel Lawrence
American Textile History Museum (0022.512)
Image: American Textile History Museum
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artwork
Middlesex Company Woolen Mill, Lowell, Mass.
unknown
oil on canvas
American Textile History Museum
73 x 57 cm. (inside frame)
0000.254
Image: American Textile History Museum
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James Clement Sharp (1818–97) was an active Boston lithographer from 1841–45. He began his career in a partnership with distant relative, William Sharp, at W. & J. C. Sharp at 17 Tremont Row in 1842, though, the firm may have been established in 1841 based on early prints bearing the shop's copyright. After 1842, J. C. Sharp worked under his own name at two locations, 16 and 24 Franklin Street, before leaving lithography to become a natural science teacher. J. C. Sharp is known to have printed portraits, sheet music covers, views, and advertisements.

This information has been summarized from Boston Lithography 1825–1880 by Sally Pierce and Catharina Slautterback.

artwork
"Britannia" in the Ice
A. de Vaudricourt
Tinted lithograph with color by Bouvé & Sharp, drawn on stone by A. de Vaudricourt from a sketch by John C. King
17 1/4 x 24 7/8 in.
American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass.
Image: American Antiquarian Society
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artwork
Meeting House Hill Dorchester 1847
1847
Lithograph
25 3/4 x 19 5/8 in.
Boston Athenaeum
Image: Boston Athenaeum
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Provenance (Information known to date; research ongoing.)

See IMPRESSIONS tab for provenance.

Exhibition History

2017–18 Cape Ann Museum: Cape Ann Museum, Gloucester, Massachusetts, Drawn From Nature & on Stone: The Lithographs of Fitz Henry Lane [Impression: Lowell Historical Society (inv. 683)].

Published References

Cape Ann Museum 2017: Drawn from Nature & on Stone: the Lithographs of Fitz Henry Lane, fig. 52, text, p. 26, Middlesex Mills, Lowell, Mass. [Impression: Lowell Historical Society (inv. 683)]. ⇒ includes text

Impression information

Boston Athenaeum (inv. 428)

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Photo: Boston Athenaeum (inv. 428)
Inscribed across bottom: Printed under image left to right: F. H. Lane del., Printed by J. Sharp.
Boston Athenaeum (2011.14)

Lowell Historical Society (inv. 683)

no image available
Inscribed across bottom: Printed under image left to right: F. H. Lane del., Printed by J. Sharp.
Lowell Historical Society, Mass.

Related historical materials

Other Locales
Lithography
Citation: "Middlesex Mills, Lowell, Mass., c. 1843 (inv. 562)." Fitz Henry Lane Online. Cape Ann Museum. http://fitzhenrylaneonline.org/catalog/entry.php?id=562 (accessed September 7, 2024).
Record last updated January 12, 2018. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
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