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Harding-Winter Street Manufacturing District

Historic districts in Worcester, MassachusettsHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in MassachusettsNRHP infobox with nocatNational Register of Historic Places in Worcester, Massachusetts
WorcesterMA 28 48 WaterStreet
WorcesterMA 28 48 WaterStreet

The Harding-Winter Street Manufacturing District encompasses a surviving fragment of the 19th century industrial history of Worcester, Massachusetts. The district includes seven brick factory buildings which were built between 1870 and 1898. They are a remnant of a once-extensive manufacturing district that extended further along Franklin and Grafton Streets, but has become fragmented by urban redevelopment and the construction of nearby Interstate 290. The district is bounded on the south by Pond Street, on the west by Harding Street, on the east by Water Street, and on the north by the rear property lines of Winter Street properties. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.Harding Street was created in the 1850s by filling in a portion of the Blackstone Canal, and this area developed as a center of Worcester's footwear industry. Three of the buildings, all built in 1870, were built for the Walker Shoe Company, founded in 1862 by two brothers. The company manufactured heavy boots, and was one of the city's first major footwear makers, serving as a training ground for later shoemakers. Another was built in 1890 for the Hill Envelope Company, founded in 1848 by the inventor of an envelope folding machine. It later became part of US Envelope, which was still operating on the premises in 1980. Other buildings in the district were built for another bootmaker, an underwear manufacturer, and a maker of stained glass windows

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Harding-Winter Street Manufacturing District (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Harding-Winter Street Manufacturing District
Harding Street, Worcester

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N 42.258333333333 ° E -71.795 °
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The Worcester Railers Rail Shop

Harding Street 112
01604 Worcester
Massachusetts, United States
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WorcesterMA 28 48 WaterStreet
WorcesterMA 28 48 WaterStreet
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Crompton Loom Works
Crompton Loom Works

The Crompton Loom Works is an historic industrial complex of the Crompton Corporation at 132-142 Green Street in Worcester, Massachusetts. The factory manufactured looms for textile factories. With its original portion dating to 1860, the complex is one of the oldest surviving industrial sites in the city. The facility was established by George Crompton, whose father William had invented the first power loom for weaving fancy fabrics. The younger Crompton's business would become of the most significant employers in the city, and his innovative looms would revolutionize the textile industry. Crompton and his successors would operate the loom manufacturing works at Green Street well into the 1960s. The manufacturing capabilities on the site were applied to producing can packaging machines and bowling pinsetters. Capabilities at the Green Street facility included machining, drop hammer forging, a cast iron foundry (which also produced ductile and malleable iron castings), wood working . and pattern making, along with a materials testing lab.. The building has subsequently been adapted to other uses. The complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, and included as part of the Blackstone Canal Historic District in 1995.The Crompton Loom Works is located south of downtown Worcester, at the junction Green and Harrison Streets. It is a complex of connected brick buildings, ranging in height from one to three stories. The building's style is industrial Italianate, with quoined building corners and corbelling on the eave of the main tower. Most windows are rectangular, but there are several in an older section that are set in round-arch openings. When first built, the main building was only two stories tall, and was altered several times, with the tower and third floor added in the 1880s.

Greater Worcester Land Trust

Founded in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1987, the Greater Worcester Land Trust is a non-profit land conservation organization dedicated to the protection of important lands in Worcester and the surrounding towns (the two concentric rings around the City of Worcester). As a conservation land trust the trust's properties are managed simultaneously for wildlife habitat and passive recreation (hiking trails, walking, cross-country skiing, snow-shoeing, birdwatching, etc.) GWLT is primarily a volunteer based organization with a volunteer Board of Directors, Volunteer Conservation Ranger's who monitor the Trust's holdings, and GWLT Volunteers who blaze trails, install signs and waterbars, and redress illegal activities like dumping or erosion due to motorized vehicles. The Trust manages 1,271 acres (5.14 km2) of land and monitors 950 acres (3.8 km2) of Conservation Restrictions (called Conservation Easements outside the Commonwealth of Massachusetts) in Worcester, Leicester, Spencer, Paxton, Holden, Boylston, West Boylston, Auburn, Grafton, and Charlton. The Trust has also been responsible for the preservation and transfer to state ownership of 380 acres (1.5 km2) of conservation land, and to the City of Worcester Reservoir division of 110 acres (0.45 km2). In 2009 the Greater Worcester Land Trust and the West Boylston Land Trust merged their conservation holdings and membership. In 2019 the Greater Worcester Land Trust and the Paxton Land Trust merged their conservation holdings and membership. The Trust's headquarters are on the first floor of 4 Ash Street, Worcester, Massachusetts 01608. Area partners and sister trusts: Charlton Heritage Preservation Trust Clinton Greenway Conservation Trust Dudley Conservation Land Trust East Quabbin Land Trust Grafton Land Trust Metacomet Land Trust Opacum Land Trust Princeton Land Trust Rutland Land Conservancy Sterling Land Trust Sudbury Valley Trustees White Oak Land Conservation Society