Blackinton Historic District

Blackinton Historic District

Blackinton Mill (2010)
Location North Adams, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°41′26″N 73°6′8″W / 42.69056°N 73.10222°W / 42.69056; -73.10222Coordinates: 42°41′26″N 73°6′8″W / 42.69056°N 73.10222°W / 42.69056; -73.10222
Architect various
Architectural style Mid-19th Century Revival, Late Victorian
MPS North Adams MRA
NRHP Reference # 85003384[1]
Added to NRHP October 25, 1985

The Blackinton Historic District is a historic district in the western part of North Adams, Massachusetts, roughly along Massachusetts Avenue between Ashton and Doanes Avenues and Church Hill and the Boston & Maine Railroad. The district, which encompasses North Adams' best preserved mill village,[2] was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.

The neighborhood

The neighborhood in which the historic district is located grew up around the mills of the Blackinton Company, founded on the north bank of the Hoosic River in 1821 by Sanford Blackinton, Rufus Wells and J.L White.[3] It would become one of the largest manufacturers of woolen goods in Western Massachusetts. By the early 1900s the neighborhood was a self-contained community, with its own school, jail, stores, post office, library and fire department, and the people there considered themselves be residents of "Blackinton", not North Adams. The community which historically had been disputed between North Adams and Williamstown had a station on the Boston & Maine, as well as bus service to North Adams. The mill closed in 1950.[4]

See also

References

Notes

  1. National Park Service (2008-04-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. "NRHP nomination for Blackinton Historic District". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
  3. "Sanford Blackinton"
  4. Oehler, Kay; Sheppard, Stephen C.; Benjamin, Blair and Li, Lily. "Shifting Sands in Changing Communities: The Neighborhoods, Social Services, and Cultural Organizations of North Adams, Massachusetts" North Adams: Center for Creative Community Development, 2006. p.5

External links



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