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The Cambridge of eighteen hundred and ninety-six: a picture of the city and its industries fifty years after its incorporation (ed. Arthur Gilman) 6 0 Browse Search
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Mr. F. H. Buffum, but the property returned to Mr. Hill in 1891, and he then sold it to the present proprietors, J. W. Bean and C. B. Seagrave, who have since added a job printing establishment to the plant and made it a prosperous business enterprise at 753 Main Street. In April, 1866, Mr. James Cox, a practical printer in Boston, established the Cambridge Press, at first as an independent paper, although the publisher was then identified with the Democratic party. But in 1872, when General Grant was nominated for a second term, the Press fell into the Republican ranks, where it has since remained and seems likely to stay while the present editor is in control of its affairs. The Press has always given close attention to municipal affairs, and was the first Cambridge paper to advocate the no-license policy. Mr. Cox, who established the paper just thirty years ago, is still in possession, although he has passed full threescore and ten years of an honorable and respected life,
ldings, builders' finish, store and office fixtures, drawer-cases, and washstands. A. H. Davenport has a large furniture factory on Bridge Street, East Cambridge, with Boston warerooms on Washington Street. The D. C. Storr furniture Co. is located on Thorndike Street, corner of First. Among other furniture manufacturers are G. F. Ericson, maker of wood mantels, cabinet and interior work, State Street, Cambridgeport; Graves & Phelps, tables; T. B. Wentworth, pulpits; A. M. & D. W. Grant, William W. Robertson, P. A. Pederson, and Lee L. Powers, makers of cabinet work. Miscellaneous manufactures. Boston Woven hose and Rubber Co. the reader is indebted for this interesting description of the Woven hose Co. To Colonel Theodore Ayrault Dodge.—editor. In 1870 Lyman R. Blake, the inventor of the original sole sewing machine, so successfully exploited by Gordon McKay, long a citizen of Cambridge, devised a machine for sewing up strips of rubber-coated canvas into hyd
n Brothers, 358. R. H. Leach, 358. H. F. Sparrow, 357. Corn brooms. F. M. Eaton & Co., 394. Crackers. New York Biscuit Co., 378. Diaries. The Cambridgeport Diary Co., 339-341. Dye-stuffs and chemicals. Jerome Marble & Co., 394. Farming tools. Breed Weeder Co., 395. Feather dusters. A. & E. Burton & Co., 394. Fertilizers. John C. Dow & Co., 394. Furniture. W. H. C. Badger & Co., 365. A. H. Davenport, 366. Ericson. G. F., 366. A. M. & D. W. Grant, 366. Graves & Phelps, 366. Irving & Casson. 365. Keeler & Co., 364. Otis Woodworks, 366. P. A. Pederson, 366. Lee L. Powers, 366. William W. Robertson, 366. Rourke & Kennedy, 366. A. B. & E. L. Shaw, 365. D. C. Storr Furniture Co., 366. T. B. Wentworth, 366. Electric heating. American Electric Heating Corporation, 351. Electric hoists. Walter W. Field, 355. Electric lighting and power. Cambridge Electric Light Co., 373. Electric wires and