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Boating History in Medford, Mass
 
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Pitch, Tar, and Tallow

The shipyards were a lively schoolyard for Medford boys and girls in the nineteenth century. The streets of the town were filled with excitement. Long tandem teams of horses flew past loaded with timber that had come down from the north over the Middlesex Canal or the railroad. They were something to see and remember.

In the nineteenth century Medford was famous for two things: making wonderful rum and building fast-sailing ships.

The yards themselves were filled with smells and wonderful noises. Broadaxes swung, mauls sent home spikes, bolts and trunnels, one man called to another: "Hot plank here." There were melting kettles of pitch and tar and tallow. The tar was like chewing-gum and anyone could help themselves to it. And if one had a good sense of smell he could recognize a yellow pine from a white oak.

One could watch a vessel laid from keel to frame, could see the ship-joiners mark out the cabins and state rooms. And when the ship was complete, when it was ready to be launched into the sweet Mystic River, and the day was very lucky and the school gave a half holiday, a boy could watch it all. James Hervey remembered such a day when the 828 ton St. Petersburg was launched in 1839:

How beautiful the brightly painted ship, with her graceful outlines, appeared to me, and with what a thrill I saw the last block knocked away, and the slowly increasing movement of the mighty mass! I can still see the hundred stalwart men on the shore manning the great hawsers, checking and guiding the vessel as she swings into the stream on her way to the wharves of Boston.

Magoun Picture here Thatcher_Magoon.jpgThatcher Magoon

No wonder Thatcher Magoun chose the shore of Medford and the Mystic River to build his ships. He recognized the fact that the Mystic was a natural place to build ships. And with the opening of Middlesex Canal it was possible to bring to the town at very low cost timber for shipbuilding.

Magoun saw in the Mystic River and Medford where he lived an opportunity. It had favorable tides, there was a good depth to the river at high tide, and the shore and the bed of the river were free of obstructions.

Magoun was born in Pembroke, Massachusetts on June 17, 1775, the very day of the battle of Bunker Hill. When he was old enough, he became a ship carpenter and worked for Enos Briggs in his Salem yard for five years. Then he moved on to Charlestown and Mr. Baker's yard (the old Navy Yard). He stayed for two years. Here he made a model of his first ship (the Mt. Aetna) and here he decided to go into the shipbuilding business for himself.

He saw in the Mystic River and Medford where he lived an opportunity. It had favorable tides, there was a good depth to the river at high tide, and the shore and the bed of the river were free of obstructions. "Twice a day the tide surged in from the ocean, mingling its odor of brine with the pungent smell of molasses from the distilleries, and overflowed onto the whispering marshes, making at full tide enough depth of water to float an empty ship of twenty-five hundred tons." Nearby were good oak groves, the Middlesex Canal made it possible to get timber from the upper Merrimac area (there was a tide lock which could be used by rafts to bring the timber into the Mystic). Also important to the new businessman, the land was cheap, and the men were available to build the ships.

 

Caroline Picture here

 

 

Caroline. Ocean-going vessel built in 1851 by J. T. Foster for James Wellsman, Charlston, South Carolina. Yard: Foster's Court. Tonnage: 740.

Painted by F. Tudgay.

 

So Magoun established the first shipyard in Medford. It was on Riverside Ave. (then called Ship Street) opposite the end of Park Street. In 1803 he laid the keel of his first vessel, the Mt. Aetna, the model of which he had made a few years before. He built ships here until 1836 and eventually his yard was to be the only one in Medford with a shiphouse. He built 84 vessels, and they made him a rich man.

Magoun "specialized" in big ships and brigs, 250 tons and larger, built for the China trade. His reputation according to the maritime historian. Admiral Samuel Eliot Morison was "second to none among American shipbuilders." He first lived in a house on Park Street, but with the money he made he was able to build a grand mansion on High Street which eventually became the town library. He was remembered in his later years as "portly and dignified."

If Magoun was the first shipbuilder, others soon followed, and they made Medford and Medford-built ships famous for three-quarters of a century. Medford ship men included: Turner, Lapham, Sprague, James, Rogers, Stetson, Waterman, Ewell, Curds, Foster, Taylor. They were a special breed and led important lives.

These Medford ship men built their vessels in ten yards in town. The fortunes of shipbuilding varied with the times: there were the good years, there were lean periods. Before the War of 1812, only a few ships were constructed in Medford. In the 1830's there was a shipbuilding boom all along the northeastern seacoast.

The Maine yards on the Kennebec River, the St. George and the Penobscot Rivers sparked the building of ships. These Maine shipyards offered real competition to yards like those in Medford. But Medford men were equal to the task. They "quietly evolved a new type (of ship) of about 450 tons burden which, handled by eighteen officers and men, would carry half as much freight as a British-Indianman of 1500 tons with a crew of 125, and sail half again as fast." Most owners wanted ships that could do all kinds of work and the "finest type" then being built was the Medford or Merrimac East Indianman. An example would be the Columbiana built in Medford in 1837, or Jotham Stetson's ship the Rajah, 531 tons, 140 feet long which was constructed in the previous year.

By the 1850's there were about 350 men working in the Medford yards, "one fourth of all the shipbuilders employed in Massachusetts."

Work began when the sun rose and ended when it set. Sixty men usually were at work building one ship and if it averaged 1000 tons it took about six months to build. Wages for carpenters, caulkers, and outboard and inboard joiners were two dollars a day. Their apprentices earned 40 to 50 dollars a year plus their board.

 picture here

 

President. Ocean-going vessel built in 1850 by John taylor for William Bramhall and Thomas Howe, Boston. Yard: Foster Court. Tonnage: 1,021 1/2.

Painted bye D. McFarlin, 1854.

 

 Shooting Star

 

Shooting Star. As Admiral Morison points out, ships built in Medford by the firms of J.O. Curtis, Hayden & Cudworth, S. Lapham "have more fast California passages to their credit, considering the number they built, than those of any other place." That is quite a record.

At the peak of the industry more than 350 men were working in the Medford yards. It was estimated that this was one fourth of all the shipbuilders employed in Massa- chusetts at the time.

All together, there were 568 ships built in this town, of 272,194 tonnage; the average was 490 tons - at a value which was estimated to be $12,500,000. No wonder there is on the seal of the city a representation of a ship about to be launched into the Mystic River. The largest ship ever constructed on these shores was the Ocean Express of 2,000 tons which was built in 1854 by the yard of James 0. Curtis. In the years between 1850 and 1855, 35 vessels were built here, each over 1000 tons. The most rapidly built Medford ship was The Avon of 400 tons built in just 26 days. Shipbuilding officially came to an end in 1873 when the last Medford ship, the Pilgrim, went sliding into the Mystic. Foster, who had the last Medford yard, went into - appropiately enough — the retail lumber business when his yard was closed.

The last ship launched in Medford was the Pilgrim in 1873. Among ship owners of the day, "Medford- built" came to mean the best.

There were reasons why the building of ships stopped in Medford. The signs were there during the last ten years, 1863 — 1873, when only 14 ships were built. The wooden ship was becoming obsolete; it was being replaced by steam-powered iron vessels too big for rivers like the Mystic. Furthermore, it was cheaper to build ships in foreign ports than in American ports. Thus shipbuilding, once a proud Medford activity, passed intc history. Never again would Medford boys or girls have a half holiday from school to watch a ship launched into their river. But they had been good days and they would never be forgotten.

 

 

The Medford Historical Society

This local historical society was organized in 1896 by concerned citizens from the city of Medford, Massachusetts. Their purpose was to collect and preserve the history of this historic city, to correct the myths that had grown up over the years, to build a historical library, to collect the artifacts of local history, and to celebrate historical anniversaries.

Follow the links on this page to learn more about the History of Medford and the exhibits and collections of the Medford Historical Society.

The Medford Historic House Marker Program

Homeowners can now celebrate the rich architectural history of Medford with an attractive historical marker that shows the original date their house was built. More information.

 
 

Civil War Photographs

Originally assembled by Medford citizen and first mayor, General Samuel Crocker Lawrence, who commanded a regiment in the Civil War, these photos were prepared largely in the expensive platinum method which insures photographs of extraordinary clarity and detail that is still apparent today. Landscapes of the Civil War.

Making Bricks

Brick from the Medford brickyards went up the Middlesex Canal and helped to build mills in Lowell and New Hampshire. Who knows how many private houses up-country were built with these same bricks which came out of Medford's claypits? Making Bricks in Medford.

Medford Rum

Daniel Lawrence & Sons made "The Best Rum in the States." Medford Rum.

Medford Slave Letters

This six-year correspondence between Timothy Fitch, a Medford resident, and a ship captain of Fitch named Peter Gwinn occured between January, 1759 and october 1765. An extensive selection of these letters are scanned and transcribed. Medford Slave Letters.

Middlesex Canal

Although most traces of the Middlesex Canal have long since been erased or built over, we in Medford have not forgotten the ingenuity and industry of our forebears in helping to build this canal. The Middlesex Canal.

Brooks Estate

The Brooks Estate has been a part of Medford history and the city's landscape for over 330 years. Linda M. Penta writes about the history and preservation efforts of this property. Brooks Estate.

Pitch, Tar and Tallow

In the nineteenth century the Mystic River was tidal and flowed unchecked to the ocean. Thatcher Magoun, a Pembroke man, saw the possibilities and started the first ship yard. Medford-Built Sailing Ships.

Afro-American Remembrance

West Medford forms part of one of the oldest Afro-American communities in the United States. A committee of several longstanding Afro-American residents are working with Tufts and Brandeis Universities to document the legacy of outstanding Afro-Americans from this community. Afro-American Remembrance.

Visit Our Museum Shop

Historical books and gifts are available from our Museum Shop.

Other Historical Organizations in Medford

The Brooks Estate. Fifty acres of historic open space, two historic buildings.

Royall House and Slave Quarters. National Historic Landmark.

Medford Historical Commission / Historic District Commission. Official city board for historic preservation and district issues.

From Africa to Medford

Few people today are aware of the extent to which slavery and the slave trade permeated New England. Students and faculty from Tufts University and Medford High School worked with Medford's Royall House Association to create an exhibit presented at the Medford Historical Society on the slave trade in Medford and in New England. From Africa to Medford.

Early Medford

Medford is rich in history. During the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, Medford grew from a small settlement of landed gentry to a middle-class streetcar suburb. Read about the first three centuries of Medford: A Peculiar Plantation, A Quiet Country Town, The Emerging City.

Funding for the Medford Historical Website was provided by Project LOCAL (Learning Our Community's American Lore) through the United States Department of Education.

 

 

Medford Historical Society | 10 Governors Avenue | Medford, Massachusetts | Unless noted, all material Copyright Medford Historical Society

http://www.medfordhistorical.org/index.php

 



History of Medford



 




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