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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) 14 0 Browse Search
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many, while others have been rebuilt and better adapted to the needs of trade. The extension of Main Street (now called Massachusetts Avenue), through Front Street to the Harvard bridge, and the diversion of the larger part of the passenger travel over this route, has contributed to the centralization of trade, and the section of Main Street still retaining the name seems unlikely to present equal attractions for the more valuable store purposes. The business blocks recently built by F. A. Kennedy, A. P. Morse, G. K. Southwick, C. B. Moller, and H. Fitzgerald on Massachusetts Avenue are a credit to the city, and are doubtless only the forerunners of others of like character in this neighborhood. In Harvard Square, another business centre, fewer recent improvements have been made, but the widening of Harvard Street at this point in 1894, and the further contemplated widening the present year between Dunster and Boylston Streets,—of the latter street its entire length,—will stimu
ichardson and Henry B. Davis. The present board of directors is composed of Edwin Dresser, Frank A. Kennedy, George W. Gale, James W. Hazen, and Henry B. Davis. The capital of the bank is $100,000. Troy, and New York. Their Boston office and showrooms are at 150 Boylston Street. Rourke & Kennedy. Rourke & Kennedy, 682 Massachusetts Avenue, are the successors of Phillips Brothers & Co., Kennedy, 682 Massachusetts Avenue, are the successors of Phillips Brothers & Co., manufacturers of furniture. The firm do a large business throughout New England in desks, bookcases, plumbers' supplies, Phillips's folding-beds, and general cabinet work. Their factory is well equurned out daily. He continued to increase his trade up to 1861, in which year he died, and Frank A. Kennedy, his only son, succeeded to the business. From that time the business increased very rapid In 1882 the F. A. Kennedy Co. was incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts, to succeed F. A. Kennedy, which corporation continued to exist until the business was sold out to the New York Biscui
. 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 cables. Simplex Electrical Co., 351. Engineering, mechanical. E. D. Leavitt, 356. Expanded Metal work. Eastern Expanded Metal Co., 351. Foundry. Broadway Iron Foundry Co., 3