Medford in the Victorian Era

Medford in the Victorian Era

by Barbara Kerr
Medford in the Victorian Era

Medford in the Victorian Era

by Barbara Kerr

Paperback

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Overview

When the Boston and Lowell Railroad came through in 1835, Medford was a quiet town with fewer than two thousand residents. By the twentieth century, it had become a thriving city of eighteen thousand. In Victorian Medford, everything was new, from the Medford Opera House, the town hall, and the Mystic Lakes to the camera, the bicycle, and the gypsy moth. The shipbuilding, rum, and brickmaking industries gave way to new businesses, and traditional houses came to share neighborhoods with Queen Anne and Shingle-style architecture. In the mid-nineteenth century, there was great social change, as abolitionists Lydia Maria Child and George Luther Stearns spoke out against slavery and men went to the Civil War. James W. Tufts invented the soda fountain, Fannie Farmer wrote her first cookbook, and James Pierpont wrote "Jingle Bells."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780738536651
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 09/08/2004
Series: Images of America Series
Pages: 128
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.31(d)

About the Author

Barbara Kerr, the assistant director of the Medford Public Library, has worked in the heart of Medford's history for almost twenty years.
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