Timing a Century

Timing a Century
Author: Charles Walden Moore
Publisher:
Total Pages: 436
Release: 1945
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

No detailed description available for "Timing a Century".

Waltham

Waltham
Author: Melissa Mannon
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 132
Release: 1998-06-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780738564821

Join Archivist Melissa Mannon on an exciting journey that begins at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution and travels through the advance of the computer age. Discover Waltham's history in this impressive and unprecedented pictorial collection, with photographs selected from the Waltham Public Library and other Waltham historical institutions. Separated from Watertown in 1738, Waltham shed its agricultural roots and went on to become a world-renowned manufacturing center. Entrepreneurs realized the power that could be harnessed from the Charles River and took full advantage of this natural resource. The Boston Manufacturing Company, founded in 1813 by Francis Cabot Lowell and Patrick T. Jackson, was the first mill in the world to mass-produce cotton cloth from start to finish under one roof. Waltham earned its nickname, "Watch City," from the Waltham Watch Company, the largest manufacturer of watches in the world in the nineteenth century. In 1929, Waltham began a third economic boom with the establishment of Raytheon and the electronics industry. Today, Waltham and its neighboring towns on the belt of Route 128 have become one of the country's largest manufacturing centers for computer and electronics equipment.

Marking Modern Times

Marking Modern Times
Author: Alexis McCrossen
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2013-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 022601486X

In Marking Modern Times, Alexis McCrossen relates how the American preoccupation with time led people from across social classes to acquire watches and clocks, and expands our understanding of the ways we have standardized time and have made timekeepers serve as political, social, and cultural tools in a society that not merely values time, but regards access to it as a natural-born right.