icon for Home page
icon for Kid's Home page
icon for Digital Collection
icon for Activities
icon for Turns Exhibit
icon for In the Classroom
icon for Chronologies
icon for My Collection

Things To Do
Dress Up | 1st Person | African American Map | Now Read This | Magic Lens | In the Round | Tool Videos | Architecture | e-Postcards | Chronologies | Turns Activities

Send an E-Postcard of:
"Erving & Wendell"

document
(c) Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, Deerfield MA. All rights reserved.
Contact us for information about using this image.

In 1871 Erving, Massachusetts, was just beginning to experience the population growth caused by the growth of Millers Falls on its western edge, where the majority of the early factories of that village were located. The remainder of the town was quite rural, with logging, wood products, and agriculture the major industries. Prominent on this map is the "Erving Castle or Hermit's Cave." There, an imposing cliff formed a natural cave that was inhabited in the late 1860s by John Smith, a Scotsman, who became something of a celebrity for his rugged lifestyle. Local fashionable ladies came to visit him on summer days. He lived there for more than twenty years before being taken into a Montague home, where he died in 1900. <BR>In 1871 the population of the town of Wendell, Massachusetts, was widely dispersed. Dependent on logging or agriculture, there were few other industries. In 1871, more intensive logging was beginning that by the 1890s would almost entirely strip the hills of their trees. Ten years after this map, the village of Farley would be located across from the Erving home of A.R. Albee on the Millers Falls River and the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad.

 

top of page

Share this image with a friend.
Simply enter their e-mail address below and we'll send them this image in an e-mail greeting, along with a link to see the image on our site.

To E-Mail Address *
From E-Mail Address *
From Name
Message

* = Required


button for Side by Side Viewingbutton for Glossarybutton for Printing Helpbutton for How to Read Old Documents

 

Home | Online Collection | Things To Do | Turns Exhibit | Classroom | Chronologies | My Collection
About This Site | Site Index | Site Search | Feedback