Easton Historical Society and Museum
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Weekly Update

2/27/2021

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A hearty hello to my fellow lovers of all things historic!  As we slowly make our way to Spring, my thoughts begin to turn to “tourist season” here in Easton.  You might not think about Easton being a tourist attraction, but it is, and the approaching good weather makes that statement true as visitors begin to wander around, and wander in, discovering our corner of the world.  This past week I had two visitors from out of the area who came to look at Easton’s historic architecture, and they were pleased to be welcomed into the Museum for a visit.
 
When I think about tourism, souvenirs come to mind.  Our Museum Store is a great spot to browse for an appropriate Easton souvenir.  If we went back in time more than one hundred years, would a visitor to Easton be able to purchase a souvenir?  The answer is yes!
 
Thinking about this, one can imagine business travelers coming to Easton to do business with the Ames Shovel Works.  Visitors from other towns, and even from overseas, might come to visit their relatives who arrived from Ireland and Sweden to work and live here.  What might they bring back as a reminder of their time here?
 
In our collection are four items that feature a very familiar scene.  The attached files show the four items as well as a detail of the scene that is featured on all of them.  (Apologies for less than perfect images - I am adding a good camera to my wish list!)  From the top left, we have a large wood cylinder that originally had a pin cushion for a top; a small, thimble sized wood piece with a small pin cushion on each end; a wood shield shaped item whose velvet sides would also hold pins; and lastly a wood letter opener.  On each item is a street scene featuring the newly opened Oakes Ames Memorial Hall and the Ames Free Library.  The Richardson buildings and Olmsted landscaping not only began to change the feel of North Easton, they became an immediate attraction for visitors.  Of course, given an opportunity, someone would capitalize on that.  A small item in the Easton Journal, dated January 22, 1886, mentions a David Martin who had a jewelry stand inside the old North Easton Post Office building which stood at the time almost directly across from the Library.  This small, almost overlooked tidbit of news also mentions that he was selling souvenirs!  I do not know how long or how many different styles of these souvenirs Martin sold.  I am hopeful that we might find out more about both him and his business someday.  Who knows? Perhaps more of these items will turn up.  The large pin cushion was donated by the late Earl Nichols, and the shield was donated by Bob Vogel.
 
Until next week, stay well!
Frank​

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Weekly Update

2/20/2021

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​Greetings one and all!  The winter storm that has paralyzed so much of the south and central United States left little more than a mess here in Easton.  Two days of very light snow amounted to not much more than a few inches here, and there is some blue sky above us.  For those of you who choose to spend winter in much warmer climates, I’ve attached a photo taken this morning of Shovel Shop Pond.  The snow on the trees is certainly a pretty sight.  If you look closely, you can see people ice fishing on the snow-covered pond.  During this past week, temps have been cold enough to freeze the ice thick enough for several ice fishermen, and provided skating opportunities for some pond hockey players.
 
Society member and good friend Rich Eastman contacted me following last week’s update, and after he did a little “sleuthing ” was able to track down D. B. White.  Here is what we have found out since.
 
Daniel Billings White (1828-1920) was the 7th child (out of ten children!) born to Colonel Alanson White (1793-1883) and wife Rebecca (Billings) White (1797-1857).  Colonel (in the Easton Militia records, Lt. Colonel) White was born in Easton and lived for many years in a house near the present 104 Turnpike Street / Marisa Drive area.  Unfortunately, his house and surrounding farm no longer survives.  He fought in the War of 1812, and served as a State Representative in 1850.  He served in the Easton Militia Company for many years, and is one of a handful of Easton men to attain a high rank.  Among the couples large family was Guilford White, who had a very successful Boston legal practice, and Daniel, who must have studied medicine, but where and with whom I have not been able to determine.  By the mid 1800’s Daniel was producing or bottling medicine, probably in a room of his father’s house or in a small building on the property.  He met, and married in 1859 Eliza Hatch (1834-1914) and moved to Marshfield, Ma. where his wife was from.  Rich Eastman found a Marshfield census record for August 1865 that lists Daniel, his wife Eliza, and children Danial (6), Lyman (3), both born in Marshfield, and Ella (1) who was born in Abington, Ma.  In the census Daniel is listed as a “dealer in medicine.”  He appears to continue in that line of work until his retirement.  He died in Braintree, Ma and is buried in Hingham, Ma.
 
I have attached a photo of all three of the D. B. White bottles in the Museum’s collection, all from Easton, and with this new research can be dated to the 1850’s.  Two of the bottles have paper labels, and the third bottle features a beautifully done embossing in the glass, and is probably the earliest of the three bottles.  Thanks Rich, for shedding some light on our Eastondale doctor!
 
Until next week,
Frank
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Weekly Update

2/13/2021

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​Hello my fellow history lovers!  Looking back at this weekend in history, we can all remember the great Blizzard of 1978 that covered the area with more snow than I care to see again!  Going back a bit further, another blizzard hit the area in 1940, with snow and near-hurricane force winds.  Eerily similar to the 1978 event, both storms stranded people in their cars, and at Boston Garden too.  Valentine’s Day suffered, for last-minute shoppers were soon snowed out of candy and gift stores for a few days.  Fortunately, we do not see a storm of those proportions bearing down on us this year.
 
This is also flu season, though the pandemic has made it a very quiet one for that illness.  Mask wearing, social distancing, sanitizing and staying close to home has practically stopped the transmission of the flu virus, a welcome side effect of all the precautions we are taking because of Covid.
 
One of the collections at the Museum that receives a lot of interest is our collection of old bottles.  Today we will take a look at three medicine bottles from some years ago. *Note: for historical purposes only - not for medical advice!
 
First, and oldest of the group, is the bottle at the top left in the attached photo.  It contains "Dr. White’s Genuine Essence of Spearmint."  The bottle, which features a pontil on the bottom, dates to the Civil War era (1850 – 1870) and has a paper label.  On the label is the guarantee that the contents are “Made of the best Material” and that it is “Manufactured in the Laboratory of D. B. White & Co., of South Easton, Mass.”  Essence of Spearmint, like other mint oils, was used to treat many symptoms ranging from stomach ills and indigestion, soothing skin irritations, and relieving tension headaches when a few drops were rubbed onto your forehead and temples.  Treatments such as these are still in use and I know a number of people who keep mints in their pocket to soothe an upset stomach.  Mint oils are used in aromatherapy today.  Unfortunately, I have no information on our Dr. White.  I strongly suspect that he lived on Turnpike Street in the area between High and Hill Streets, as the 1855 and 1871 maps show a strong presence of the White family there.  D. B. White (if he was actually a doctor at all) does not show up on these maps, nor does a laboratory or other shop where this could have been produced.  His lab could have been no more than a room in his house.  D. B. White does not appear in any cemetery records that I have, so he remains an enigma.
 
The second bottle is more recent, and appears below the one just mentioned.  This bottle of glycerine was sold by Fred L. Reed, Registered Pharmacist.  His store was located at 55 Main Street, North Easton.  This bottle has a screw on cap made of bakelite, and dates from the early 20th Century.  The paper label does not contain a phone number, a hint of its age.  Glycerine, still widely used today as an ingredient used to keep toothpaste and other topical creams from drying out, is also the main ingredient in nitroglycerine!  Yes, that same nitroglycerine that goes “Bang!” is a drug that is given to many heart patients, which when ingested, opens arteries to relieve angina pain.  In former days, it was used to treat glaucoma, skin irritations, and to relieve constipation.  I could not find out much at all about our friendly pharmacist.  Perhaps one you might know something about him?
 
 
 
Lastly, I call your attention to the large brown bottle on the right.  Ernest L. Spooner (1868-1951) is someone we are more familiar with.  As a young man, he clerked for George G. Withington who ran a pharmacy on Center Street for many years.  When Withington retired, Spooner bought the business.  Similar to Withington, the store supplied medicines for prescriptions, commercially produced home remedies, and sundries (everything from note paper and cards to gifts for all occasions) as do today’s drug stores.  This brown bottle (whose coloring may have protected the contents from the effects of sunlight) has a metal screw cap and dates to the early 20th century.  The paper label reads “Spirit of Turpentine” and “Ernest L. Spooner, Pharmacist, 7 Centre Street, North Easton, Mass.”  It does not contain a telephone number.  Spirit of Turpentine was used as a liniment for burns and other skin issues.  The dosing directions are printed on the label, are as follows: “Five to twenty drops on sugar.  When employed as a liniment, it should be used with care and followed by a soothing application.”  The “drops on sugar” got my attention.  It turns out that the same compound used to thin paint (this particular bottle has white paint on it) was once used to treat everything from mood swings to rheumatism, stomach upset, and chronic fatigue.  Thankfully medicine has come a long way!
 
Stay well (especially after reading this!) and until next week,
Frank
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Weekly Update

2/6/2021

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​Hello!  For all you fans of winter, it looks like there is something to look forward to!  The recent snow and arctic cold snap brought opportunities for sledding, ice skating, and even a little ice fishing today on Shovel Shop Pond.  As I write this, we are getting ready for another storm Sunday.  Get your snowshoes out, we’re going to need them!
 
Today’s historical item has to do with building a road.  Roads in Easton, like many other towns, came by way of necessity.  The early maps of Easton show the early roads (there are not many) and a close look reveals roads that are no longer in use, or roads whose paths changed over time.
 
Our case in point today is Depot Street.  Running from the Five Corners easterly to Turnpike Street, it was built up in sections as it was needed.  The earliest part of Depot Street was in existence by 1703, running from South Easton Green (where Depot Street intersects Washington Street) east to about where Pine Street begins today.  That makes sense, as that area was the first part of town settled, and would run by the homestead of our first settler Clement Briggs.  As a matter of fact, it probably began as a cart path from the Briggs home near Pine Street to the early mills at the former Dean Pond.  By 1716, the road was extended west to the area of Easton Center where it would intersect with Center Street.  The section of road from the Five Corners as far east as Black Brook was in place by 1752, and by 1838 a connecting cart path completed Depot Street, making it possible to travel a more direct route from Easton Furnace Village, past the Town Hall near Center Street, crossing Washington Street at the Green, and finally ending at Pine Street.
 
By the 1840’s a small mill and a few small shoe shops were built near the Shoddy Mill site on Turnpike Street.  That, coupled with a need to get to North Bridgewater (now Brockton) for business purposes, brought the immediate neighborhood together to try and get a road built that would connect between Pine Street and Turnpike Street.  In 1847 a number of residents began the process of petitioning for the extension of Depot Street to Turnpike Street.  A hand written paper was sent to the Bristol County Commissioners, requesting a hearing on the possible extension of the road.  A newspaper posting was made, as well as a notice of the petition being posted in town, and County Commissioners came to Easton to view the land over which the road would run.  More than likely, there was already a cart path along the same general direction where the new road would run.  Once approved by the County Commissioners, who would also oversee any surveying and laying out of the road way, the Town would be asked to approve the road at Town Meeting and fund its construction.  The new road was completed in 1848, and what we know today as Depot Street was finished.  I do not know the cost to build the road, and the earliest example I could find in a Town Report referred to building part of Williams Street from Main Street to about Reynolds Street at a cost of $500 in 1871.
 
Attached is a scan of the handwritten document to the County Commissioners, as well as the original printed notice.  Note that there were no street names in those days, and the description of the roadway refers to places where the road would run from, go to, and where it would pass by.  This can be pretty confusing to follow!  A list of the signers is included below.  Also attached is a scan of two maps.  The 1825 map details the area around Washington Street and Turnpike Street, showing that Depot Street ended where Pine Street begins today.  Residents would be required to take a more circuitous route to get to Brockton.  The 1855 map details the same area with the addition of the new extension to Depot Street, providing a more direct route to the Turnpike.
 
I hope you all stay well and safe as we prepare for more stormy weather.
 
Until next week, all the best,
Frank
 
Signers:
Barzillai Dean, William Reed, Jacob Williams, Thomas H. Dean, Samuel Simpson, Daniel Randall, Solomon Stone, Silas Phillips, Napoleon B. Dawes(?), James Guild, Samuel Guild, Edwin A. Randall, Lucius Howard, Rotheus Reed, Joshua Littlefield, Abijah Read, Bernard Alger, Cyrus Alger, Nahun Pratt, Leander Ripley, Edward Dean, John Pool, S. W. Morse, B. F. Johnson, Alanson White, Caleb Lothrop, Albert Lothrop, Joseph Lothrop, Caleb S. Lothrop, John B. Lothrop, Martin Guild, Lincoln Drake, Thomas F. Davidson, H. W. Wrightman, Daniel Edson.
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    Anne Wooster Drury

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  • Home
    • Our Story
    • Membership
    • Events and News
    • Curator's Corner
    • Tours
  • Discover
  • Gallery
    • Richardson Buildings
    • Records
    • Maps
    • Ames Mansions
    • Event Photos
  • Research
    • Anne C. Ames Cookbook
    • Cemetery Records Collection
    • Crimes and Disasters Collection
    • Easton Churches Collection
    • Easton Ledger Collection
    • Easton's Neighborhoods
    • Folklore Collection
    • Frank Seymour Hersey Papers
    • George Warren Andrews Collection
    • Hayward Family Collection
    • Morse Family Collection
    • Randall Genealogical Papers
    • TECCOE Collection
    • Unity Church Collection
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    • PDF Newsletters
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    • Books
    • Novelty Items
    • Prints and Maps
  • Donation Policy
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