The Mile of Manufactories on the Merrimack at Manchester (Zoom)

The Mile of Manufactories on the Merrimack at Manchester (Zoom)

Spring (9 - 13 hours) | Registration closed 5/6/2024

Online Lebanon, NH 03766 United States

Online Meeting

5/9/2024-6/13/2024

3:30 PM-5:30 PM EDT on Th

$70.00

To assist you in preparing for this class, we have provided a link to the setup / test pages from the conference provider. If you have never used this conference service before please click on the link below so that your PC or device will be ready to participate in this class.

This is the Zoom registration option for this HyFlex course.

The course charts the growth of the textile industry in Manchester, NH, from a single, wooden, cotton mill on the west bank of the Merrimack River at Amoskeag Falls to the magnificent red brick canyons of the mile-long Millyard on the east bank below the falls. It’s the story of how the original vision of one man—Samuel Blodgett of Derryfield, NH (Manchester, NH, since 1810)—was realized.

Inspired by the canals, cotton mills and other industries he saw in Manchester, England, Blodgett returned home in 1787 and declared “For as the country increases in population, we must have manufactories, and here at my canal will be a manufacturing town, the Manchester of America!” Blodgett died in 1807, long before that manufacturing town transpired, and even he might have been astonished by what the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company (AMC), and the other textile corporations swallowed whole by the AMC, created in “… the Manchester of America!”

The course also addresses the collapse of the AMC, how Manchester business and industry adapted to that near catastrophe, and how the historic Millyard changed as a result of 1960s zeal for urban renewal and the vision of modern entrepreneurs. The course will combine lectures with class discussion.

Picture: The bell tower of the former Manchester Mill No. 2 (completed 1850) framed by tenement blocks built in 1847-49 by the Manchester Mills Corporation for its workers. Photograph taken by Martin Jeffries, November 2023.


Jeffries, Martin

A polar scientist and resident of the Upper Valley since 2018, Martin has developed an interest in the history of the New England textile industry. Perhaps this was inevitable, as his childhood home was in Manchester, (Old) England, once known as “Cottonopolis” when it dominated the global cotton textile industry in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. He has delivered Osher courses about the Arctic; “Cottonopolis” – First Industrial City; and Liverpool, England – “Metropolis of Slavery”.