Camp Cameron: The Civil War Boot Camp in North Cambridge

Cambridge Chronicle August 17, 1861

We write this post in honor of Veterans’ Day, November 11, and to shine light on a comparatively little-known Cambridge chapter in the Civil War: that of Camp Cameron, the militia camp established in North Cambridge in 1861 and not to be confused with Camp Cameron in Washington, D. C. We tell the story as reflected in the newspapers of the day…seeing the actual print image – even if a little blurry – most viscerally conveys the feeling of the times.

Picture this: You are walking north on Mass Ave between Porter Square and Alewife. About a half a mile up, directly across the street from the Friendly Corner Convenience store on the left, you see the Law Offices at 2409 Mass Ave, shown below.  This is the exact location of Camp Cameron.

Google street view, March 2022

On April 15, 1861, three days after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter, President Lincoln issued a proclamation calling for state militias to raise a total of 75,000 troops. Months before that proclamation, Cambridge attorney James Richardson saw what was on the horizon and had already begun recruiting men for a volunteer militia:

Cambridge Chronicle January 26, 1861
Col. James P. Richardson in his captain’s uniform in 1861 and Richardson’s recruiting broadside. Courtesy of Mrs Edwin R. Sparrow, “Colonel Richardson and the Thirty-Eighth Massachusetts,” by Richard C. Evarts, Proceedings of the Cambridge Historical Society, Vol. 39

But before we get to the story of Camp Cameron: the very first militia camp was established in 1861 on Fresh Pond: an abandoned icehouse previously owned by ice dealers Reed and Bartlett was fixed up for barracks to hold 1,000 men. It was called Camp Ellsworth after Col. Elmer Ellsworth, a personal friend of Abraham Lincoln, and the first Union officer killed in the Civil War.

Detail of Map of the city of Cambridge for 1865 by J.G. Chase, courtesy Harvard Map Collection
Cambridge Chronicle June 8, 1861

Very damp, indeed. In fact, a marshy disaster. Lt. Amory of the army declared that the quarters were “unfit for the troops.” So, on June 13th, after only two weeks at Fresh Pond, the units departed for Camp Cameron on North Avenue in Cambridge, led by Col. Robert Cowdin (1805-1874).

Robert Cowdin, Civil war photographs, 1861-1865, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.

Camp Cameron, June 1861-January 1863

The new site consisted of 140 acres along the northeastern section of Mass Ave between Shea Road and what is now Clarendon Ave, extending up the hill to Holland St in Somerville. The land was leased every six months by the government from the Union Horse Railroad and real estate investor Gardner G. Hubbard, namesake of Hubbard Park off Brattle Street, and subsequent son in law of Alexander Graham Bell.  

The camp was named after the Secretary of War Simon Cameron. That was another bad choice. Cameron’s reputation for corruption precipitated renaming the camp just a year later in August 1862 to Camp Day. The new designation honored Ralph Day (1802-1887), a successful Cambridge builder who was involved in projects like Porter’s Hotel. Active in Cambridge politics, Day had owned a substantial portion of the land since 1842. Day Street is named after him. By 1854, Day had also sold a large portion of his holdings to George Meacham, a local real estate developer and commissioner of the Cambridge Cemetery. Meacham served as a Colonel in the war, was wounded, and died in 1864. Meacham Road is named for him.

Detail: Map of the city of Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts by H.F. Walling (1854), Harvard Map Collection

Eventually the 30 buildings on the site housed about 1,000- 2000 recruits!

Daily Evening Traveller July 2, 1861 (Excerpt)
Detail: Russell’s Horse Railroad Guide for Boston and Vicinity, May 1862. Cambridge Historical Commission.

Just think of the noise and the smells! Up to 2000 men drilling, marching, and firing arms for target practice. There would be supply wagons clanking through the area, the smell of 30 fires cooking food, latrines, burning trash, and 90 baggage carts clattering down Mass Ave accompanying a regiment on the way to war. Not to mention bellows of up to 1,000 heads of cattle from the nearby Cattle Market at Porter Square, and the smell of the tannery near Alewife Brook.

An official flag raising ceremony took place at Camp Cameron on June 28, 1861. The event was reported on in this sentimental piece describing solders walking “arm in arm with ladies, …whispering loving words into the ears of those who were soon to be separated from them, never, perhaps, to meet again”:

Daily Evening Traveller June 29, 1861
Boston Herald September 28, 1861

The camp served as a short-term boot camp for the inexperienced volunteers from New England and New York before they shipped out to the war. Numbers fluctuated weekly as troops arrived and departed for the front:

Boston Evening Transcript July 1, 1861
Boston Evening Transcript August 11, 1861
Cambridge Chronicle August 17, 1861
Cambridge Chronicle September 28, 1861
Cambridge Chronicle December 28, 1861

Complaints soon arose around two issues at Camp Cameron. Despite the hopeful newspaper article below, the culinary situation at the camp was nearly intolerable, driving soldiers to regularly leave camp without a pass in search of edible sustenance.

Boston Evening Transcript June 21, 1861

One solder wrote “Nine days I have been in camp with a hard board to lie on, without any blanket to cover me at night, and insufficiency of food by day.” (Excerpt from Boston Herald September 3, 1862). The same article described how “many of the men are compelled to come into the city to get food enough to satisfy their hunger.

Boston Herald September 3, 1862 (excerpt)

It was a letter to the editor from E. R. Mudge, a wealthy Boston dry goods merchant whose son had been in the army for a year, that triggered the above article. Mudge noted that not only were the rations bad, he called attention to the large number of deserters: Out of 61 recruits for the 2nd Regiment, who had enlisted and been sent to camp since …only 31 could be found on Saturday. The rest had deserted.A year later, Mudge generously put his financial resources behind the recruiting effort for the 2nd Massachusetts Volunteers.

Deserters? That was the second and more serious problem at Camp Cameron. With no perimeter fence nor gate, it was easy for recruits to become “bounty jumpers.”

Here is how the system worked: In addition to their pay—generally about $13 per month—each recruit received a “bounty” of $25 paid by the U. S. Government, and an additional $100 paid by the City of Cambridge. When the need arose for specialized troops, additional bounties would be offered:

Boston Journal October 7, 1862

On top of these amounts, some businessmen such as Mudge also contributed to supplementary bounties from their private funds to increase recruitment. $1,000 was a pretty handsome supplement!:

Commercial Bulletin August 23, 1862

Inevitably some ne’er-do-wells took advantage of the loose security at camp to take off for parts unknown. Showing up in another town, they repeated their scam.  

Boston Semi Weekly Advertiser November 5, 1862

Col. Hannibal Day (no relation to Ralph Day) was the General Superintendent of the Recruiting Services for the State of Massachusetts in 1861. Day also was aggrieved at the bounty jumping situation, which ultimately led to him closing the camp in January of 1863.

Who were these enlisted men?

On August 9, 1862, Congress passed the Recruitment Act, ordering a draft of an additional 300,000 militia.  Each state was assigned a quota by the then Secretary of War, Edwin M. Stanton. If the state could not meet the quota, the government would establish a draft in that state to complete the roster. A second Enrollment Act, passed in 1863, increased the bounty paid to recruits, and, astonishingly, allowed individuals to avoid military service by paying someone else $500 to join in their place.

The newspapers published the names of those who had chosen to pay for another man to fight the fight:

Cambridge Chronicle August 9, 1862

This category of replacement is not to be confused with “Representative Recruits.” In 1864, the War Department allowed for those men “not fit for military duty, and not liable to draft, from age or other causes…to procure at their own expense, and present for enlistment, recruits to represent them in the service.” These were called “Representative Recruits.” They were also listed in the papers:

Cambridge Chronicle August 9, 1862

A good description of the men volunteering appeared in the Cambridge Chronicle of September 7, 1861. These were the men who made up Company C, 3rd Recruitment, Cambridge Volunteers, led by the above-mentioned James P. Richardson of Cambridge, during the three months the unit was stationed on the coast at Fort Monroe, VA.:

“Whole number composing the Company, 94.
Born in Cambridge, 17; Boston, 16.
In thirteen other cities and towns in Mass, one each.
Total born in Massachusetts, 46.
Born in New Hampshire, 10; Maine, 8; Vermont, 3; Connecticut, 1; New York, 4; District of
Columbia, 1. Total American, 73
New Brunswick, 4; Nova Scotia, 3; Ireland, 7; England, 6; Scotland, 1.
Ages. – Oldest man, 39 years; youngest man, 18 years, average age, 22-3-95 years. [sic]
Tallest man, 6 feet 2 inches; shortest man, 5 feet 3 inches; average height, 5 feet ,7 one-half inches.
Occupations. – Clerks, 15; printers, 9, carpenters, 7; cigar makers, 6; book binders, 6; shoemakers, 5; painters, 4; soap makers, 2; plumbers, 2; bacon curers, 2; butchers, 2; farmers, 2; teamsters, 5; laborers, 2; wheelwrights, 2; sash and blind makers, 2; confectioners, 2, lawyers, 2; policeman, baker, stereotype finisher, carriage maker, machinist, hack driver, blacksmith, sawyer, physician, silversmith, barkeeper, tinman, cook, tailor, provision dealer, harness maker, 1 each.”

Some recruits belonged to regiments with interesting nicknames. For example, The Irish Brigade – the Massachusetts 28th Regiment,” recruited at Camp Cameron, was made up primarily of Irish men – by birth or descent.  Its nickname was the “Faugh-A-Ballagh,” Irish for “clear the way.”

Boston Herald January 2, 1862
28th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteers flag, via Massachusetts State House Battle Flag Collection inventory
Boston Evening Traveller November 18, 1861 (excerpt)

It is not hard to image in the emotional impact made on citizens by the daily drumbeat of newspaper announcements concerning the camp:

Boston Evening Transcript September 6, 1861
Boston Semi Weekly Advertiser September, 1861

Frequently, notices included where the troops were being deployed. Today, reading these announcements, we recall the famous battles so familiar to us. But to soldiers at the time, places like Harper’s Ferry, Newbern, or Bull Run, or the Wilderness may have been unfamiliar or even unknown.

Boston Herald August 5, 1861
The Cambridge Chronicle June 15, 1861
Cambridge Chronicle May 17, 1862
Boston Evening Traveller June 24, 1861
Boston Semi-Weekly Advertiser February 15, 1862
Boston Evening Transcript March 15, 1862
Boston Herald June 13, 1862
Boston Morning Journal August 1, 1862
Boston Evening Transcript August 11, 1862
Boston Evening Traveller August 25, 1862
Boston Evening Traveller September 5, 1862

The Denoument

Camp Cameron/Day closed in January of 1863 and remaining soldiers were transferred to the more secure Fort Independence on Castle Island in Boston:

Boston Evening Transcript January 22, 1863

Perhaps in preparation for its closure, camp items were auctioned off in 1862 ahead of its close in 1863.

Boston Morning Journal April 26, 1862

“One Wooden Building, 50 feet by 20.
Ten temporary framed Wooden Buildings, battened and shingled, about 12 feet square.
29 Cast Iron Cylinder stoves, 3 sizes
600 feet 5-inch English Iron Funnel
A lot of 8-inch Funnel
10 Cauldrons, with Russia Iron Covers
2 Iron Bedsteads
2 Husk Mattresses
4 Pair Sheets
2 Pillows
4 Pillow Cases
2 Chairs
Half dozen Axes
A quantity of Raye Straw, &c.

By order of Lieut. Col. H. Day, U. S. A., General Supt. Recruiting Services state of Mass.
Terms of sale, cash.”

Between 1861 and 1865, 4,588 Cambridge men enlisted in the Union Army and Navy. (Cambridge Historical Commission)

In the 1890s, Camp St and Cameron Ave were named after the camp. Fair Oaks St, Seven Pines Ave, Glendale Ave, Malvern Ave, and Yorktown St in the same neighborhood were named after Civil War battles.

An historic marker honoring James S. Richardson and Company C can be found in Central Square near the site of Richardson’s former law office on Richard B. Modica Way—otherwise known as “Graffiti Alley,” the passageway between Central Kitchen and Tent City on Mass Ave. True to its location, the marker is now covered with graffiti. A mockup can be seen here:

Richardson, with a white beard, appears front center in the photograph below, depicting of a reunion of Company C in 1886.

Surviving members of Company C posed for a photograph in front of City Hall, 1886. City of Cambridge Annual Report, 1940.

To Richardson’s left is Lieutenant Chamberlain. To the far left as you look at the picture stands drummer Charles Cobb, holding the drum he had carried throughout the war.

It was not until 1866 that President Andrew Johnson issued a formal proclamation announcing the end of the Civil War.

Where once there were thousands of men training for war, today there are baby strollers, bikes and pedestrians.

Photographed by Kathleen Fox

Today’s post was written by CHC volunteer Kathleen M. Fox


Sources

Ancestry
Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. “military unit”. Encyclopedia Britannica, 26 Oct. 2023, https://www.britannica.com/topic/military-unit.
“Cambridge Civil War Monument” by Patrick T.J. Browne. https://macivilwarmonuments.com/tag/cambridge-civil-war-monument/.
Cambridge Historical Commission archives
Cambridge Public Library’s Historic Cambridge Newspaper Collection
“Cambridge History Minute: Meet ‘The Women of the Bee.’ by Alison Bauter. https://patch.com/massachusetts/cambridge/cambridge-history-minute-meet-women-bee.
“Camp Cameron: A Civil War Camp in Somerville” by Dan Sullivan. https://patch.com/massachusetts/somerville/bp–camp-cameron-a-civil-war-camp-in-somerville.
“Camp Cameron/Camp Day Diorama: An Exhibition” by Dan Sullivan. https://thecambridgeroom.wordpress.com/2016/08/29/camp-cameroncamp-day-diorama-an-exhibition/.
“A Camp Cameron Enthusiast” by Dan Sullivan. https://thecambridgeroom.wordpress.com/2012/05/29/a-camp-cameron-enthusiast/.
“Civil War Army Organization: Innovations, Opportunities, Challenges” in American Battlefield Trust. https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/civil-war-army-organization.
“Civil War Draft Records: Exemptions and Enrollments” by Michael T. Meier. Genealogy Notes, Winter 1994, Vol. 26, No. 4. https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/1994/winter/civil-war-draft-records.html.
“Civil War Training Camps in Massachusetts, Part One” by Patrick Browne. https://historicaldigression.com/2015/05/20/civil-war-training-camps-in-massachusetts/.
“Ending the Bloodshed: The Last Surrenders of the Civil War” by Trevor K. Plante. Prologue Magazine, Spring 2015, Vol. 47, No. 1. https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2015/spring/cw-surrenders.html.
Genealogy Bank
History Cambridge
“A Living History of the Civil War at the CPL.” https://thecambridgeroom.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/a-living-history-of-the-civil-war-at-the-cpl/
“President Lincoln Calls Emergency Session.” U.S. Senate Historical Office. https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/image/LincolnEmergencySession.htm.
“A Poor Man’s Fight” by William Marvel in Civil War Series: The Civil War’s Common Soldier. National Park Service. https://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/civil_war_series/3/sec2.htm.
“‘Representative Recruits’ in the U. S. Army.” https://civilwartalk.com/threads/representative-recruits-in-the-u-s-army.132221/.
“The Story of the Bee” by Mary Towle Palmer. https://historycambridge.org/articles/the-story-of-the-bee/.
“To Protect the Union”: Civil War History in Central Square. Cambridge Historical Commission. https://www.cambridgema.gov/-/media/Files/historicalcommission/pdf/CompanyC.pdf.
“Town recruitment and enlistment quota correspondence, 1862-1864.” Massachusetts Adjutant General’s Office. https://researchworks.oclc.org/archivegrid/collection/data/80284599.
Unit History – 28th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. https://www.28thmasscob.org/history.

A Brief History of The Fresh Pond Hotel

View of Fresh Pond Hotel, 1896 (Cambridge Historical Commission)

The Fresh Pond Hotel was built in 1796 on the bluff overlooking the pond on eight acres of land that Jacob Wyeth had purchased from his father, Ebenezer Wyeth.

Detail: Peter Tufts, A Plan of The First Parish in Cambridge, 1813

By the early 1790’s the West Boston Bridge and the Concord Turnpike had made the area attractive to wealthy Bostonians escaping heat and crowds in the city, and Jacob Wyeth’s hotel became a popular resort. Wyeth hired the architects Joseph Moore and John Walton to design the hotel building in the Federal style, which was later updated to the newly popular Greek Revival style.

Lithograph depicting the Fresh Pond Hotel, ca. 1845 (History Cambridge)

Other factors contributing to the hotel’s success were “the building of Mount Auburn Cemetery and Watertown Branch Railroad (which brought people directly to Fresh Pond). It wasn’t long before the Hotel became a buzzing social center. It gave people a place to escape the city heat in the summer and offered fishing, fowling, sailing, rowing, bowling, fine dining with wines and other alcohols, and an orchestra for dancing.”

Cambridge Chronicle, April 8, 1847
Cambridge Chronicle, August 10, 1861

When, in the 1880s, the hotel was refused a liquor license, business began a downhill slide which lead to its closing. In 1885, the property was sold to the Sisters of St. Joseph who converted the building for their convent.

Cambridge Chronicle, March 14, 1885
Cambridge Press, March 23, 1889

In 1892 the former hotel/convent went up for auction and was bought by John E. Perry, a Cambridge Alderman. He moved the building to 234 Lakeview Avenue, where it was converted to apartments. Although the exterior clapboards were replaced by stucco, the interior space retains much of its original detail. It is on the National Register of Historic Places.

234 Lakeview Avenue, August 2019 (Google Street View)

Today’s post was written by CHC volunteer Kathleen Fox.


Sources

“Inside the Architecture: Fresh Pond Hotel” by NeighborMedia Archive.
https://www.cctvcambridge.org/node/614987.
Building Old Cambridge, Susan E. Maycock and Charles M. Sullivan, Cambridge Historical Commission. MIT Press 2016.

Alewife Brook Reservation and National Wildlife Week

This week is National Wildlife Week, a time to celebrate our nation’s incredible wildlife. According to their website, “the National Wildlife Federation is working to show how connecting with wildlife and the outdoors can help children and adults thrive during these unprecedented times.”

Hawk
Juvenile Red-Tailed Hawk, light morph, Fresh Pond. Photo credit: Amanda Hodges.

In honor of this week, we are featuring a special place in Cambridge to observe local wildlife and nature, the Alewife Brook Reservation. In addition to providing information on the history of Cambridge’s built environment, the CHC also collects historical information on Cambridge’s natural environment and landscape, and the City’s various land revitalization projects over the years.

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Alewife Brook near Concord Avenue, 1904.

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“The Fish Book.” Alewife Revitalization Study, 1979, Cambridge Community Development Department.

The Alewife Brook Reservation is a unique natural resource consisting of 160 acres of protected wetlands, woods, and meadows. A Massachusetts state park, it is “home to hundreds of species, including hawks, coyotes, beavers, snapping turtles, wild turkeys and muskrats,” as well as birds like osprey and Great Blue Heron. The park’s ponds, Little Pond, Perch Pond, and Blair Pond, are also spawning grounds for anadromous herring. 

Great_Blue
Great Blue Heron eating tadpole, Fresh Pond. Photo credit: Amanda Hodges.

The surrounding area of Fresh Pond and its natural watershed were formed by melting glacial ice and underground springs. Alewife Brook, historically known as the Menotomy River, is situated in what was the traditional territory of the Massachusett people and served as a gathering place for other groups. Native Americans came to the Pond and nearby area for fresh water; they constructed fish weirs along Alewife Brook, which traversed what was called the “Great Swamp” (also called the Great Marsh) to the north of Fresh Pond; and they hunted in the area’s marshes and uplands.  Alewife Brook was given its name after the abundance of alewife fish that returned from the Atlantic each spring, swimming up the Mystic River into the Brook to spawn. 

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Swamp and maple woods near claypits, 1890-1891. Source: Henry L. Rand Collection, Southwest Harbor Public Library, Maine.  Copied 12/92.

 

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Fresh Pond Marshes about 1866. William Brewster, Birds of the Cambridge Region, 1906. Source: “Finding Alewife” slideshow by Charles M. Sullivan.

As industrialization in Cambridge grew, the surrounding area was used for claypits and ice harvesting at Fresh Pond. Marshes and wetlands were filled in to make room for new development.

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Clay pit, Alewife Brook (M.D.C.), 1904.

 

In the early 1900s, landscape architect Charles Eliot planned for a reservation in conjunction with the Alewife Brook Parkway, forming part of the Metropolitan Park District. Eliot hoped to connect the Mystic River with Fresh Pond, creating parks along the watershed system. The Alewife Brook was straightened and channelized next to the parkway between 1909-1912 along with road construction, and landscaping was by the Olmsted Brothers firm.

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Fresh Pond Drive, ca. 1905. Source: Detroit Pub. Co., Library of Congress.

Today, the Alewife Brook Reservation is a popular spot for people to walk, bike, nature watch/bird watch, and relax, while the Friends of Alewife Reservation work to protect the area. A 2011 project by the City of Cambridge constructed a 3.4-acre storm water management wetland, which also created habitats such as deep marsh and riparian forest. 

thumbnail_IMG_4245
Source: Friends of Alewife Reservation.

The CHC has many images – paintings, drawings, photographs and maps – of the Alewife area spanning several decades, as well as reports written in the 1970s and 1980s regarding Alewife’s revitalization. Once City offices are again open to the public, make an appointment with us to see these resources.

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Fresh Pond Marshes looking southwest, 1904.

NWC_P016_28
Fresh Pond, ca. 1949-1950, Anthony Cabral. Cambridge Photo Morgue Collection.

For a more in-depth history of the Alewife area, especially during the 19th century, we recommend: The Great Swamp of Arlington, Belmont and Cambridge – An Historic Perspective of its Development 1630-2001 by Sheila Cook (2002) and Fresh Pond: The History of a Cambridge Landscape by Jill Sinclair (2009), a small part of which is available on Google Books. For a visual history of Alewife and the Fresh Pond area, see Charles M. Sullivan’s slideshow, “Finding Alewife” (2014).

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Cows Near Fresh Pond, September 12, 1891, Henry Lathrop Rand, Henry L. Rand Collection, Southwest Harbor Public Library.

 

Sources:

https://friendsofalewifereservation.org

Fresh Pond Reservation Master Plan

http://friendsoffreshpond.org/aboutfpr/chronology.htm

Torn Down Tuesday: Prest-O-Lite

Welcome to Torn Down Tuesday where we feature buildings in Cambridge that have been demolished. Today we highlight the building that once stood where the Fresh Pond Mall is located today: 541 Concord Ave, the Prest-O-Lite industrial complex.

Aerial views: Prest-O-Lite complex at 541 Concord Ave (1947 and 1948)

Businessmen Carl Fisher, James Allison and P.C. Avery started Concentrated Acetelyene Company (later changed to Prest-O-Lite) in Indianapolis in 1906 with the plan to manufacture portable cylinders containing compressed acetylene.

Motor Vehicles – In Use – Model 18-F three-speed twin, Prest-O-Lite attachment with side car. Photographer: Harley-Davidson Motor Co., 1917-1918 (NARA)

The cylinders would allow drivers of motorcycles and automobiles to operate headlights on their vehicles via a sparking switch.

Advertisement from Scientific American (6 January 1912)

The company invented this technology before the use of electric lights, which were pioneered by Cadillac in 1912. In 1920, the Prest-O-Light Company obtained a permit to build a plant in Northwest Cambridge. The complex would include 13 buildings with the purpose of producing acetylene for use their line of products.

1930 Bromley Atlas image showing location of Prest-O-Lite complex

Bordered by Concord Ave and Alewife Brook Parkway, the site was originally marshland and later owned by the New England Brick Company. Construction for Prest-O-Lite was carried out by John T. Scully Co. builders, a company that had completed large projects for companies such as Simplex Wire & Cable Company and lumber dealer E. D. Sawyer. Like many industrial buildings of Northwest Cambridge from this period, the buildings were of an extended form and low scale.

Clipping from Cambridge Chronicle (7 August 1920)

North Cambridge was composed of prime agricultural land during the colonial period, while West Cambridge began as a swath of grazing land before evolving into a fringe industrial area during the 19th century. Up until the mid-twentieth century, much of the area was still composed of industrial or commercial properties.

Image of Prest-O-Lite fire, unknown source (1952)

Prest-O-Light operated in North Cambridge for over three decades without major incident. However, at 1:15pm on the day after Christmas 1952, an explosion of 200 gas cylinders rocked the neighborhood and shattered windows up to half a mile away. It was reported that the multi-colored flames rose 200 feet over the building and the ensuing smoke was visible from 20 miles away.

Aerial image of Fresh Pond Shopping Center, Patriquin Collection (1984)

Just a few years after the massive fire, the Prest-O-Lite complex was razed in 1959 to make way for the Fresh Pond Shopping Center, which was developed in 1962. Check out our Instagram post to read more about the Fresh Pond Shopping Center!


Sources:
Krim, Arthur J. Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge: Report Five: Northwest Cambridge. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1977.
https://www.firstsuperspeedway.com/articles/prest-o-lite
https://www.firstsuperspeedway.com/sites/default/files/Prest-O-Lite.pdf
https://cambridgehistory.org/research/cars-in-cambridge-by-doug-brown/

Susan Butcher

This post is one in a series of stories we will be sharing about Cambridge women, in honor of Women’s History Month.

Susan Howlet Butcher was born in Cambridge on December 26, 1954. As a child growing up in Avon Hill, Susan grew to relish the outdoors and often preferred the company of dogs over playing with children of her age. Susan first became interested in sled dogs around age 16. Speaking about this time in her life during an interview with the Academy of Achievement, Susan remembers:

“I really feel I had a strong sense of myself from the earliest memories that I have. I knew very much who I was, approximately what I wanted to do. I didn’t know I wanted to be a dog musher. And I feel there are many things in life I could have done and had as much satisfaction as I am having. But I knew the type of things that I wanted to do, and I also knew that I wasn’t going to let anybody come in the way of that. When I got my second dog, and I was living in my mother’s house in Cambridge, and she said, ‘You will not get a second dog. I won’t let you have two dogs in the house.’ Instead of saying, ‘Okay, I won’t get a second dog,’ I got my second dog and moved out. So it was always a matter of… (being myself) and happily, and with a good relationship with my mother. This was not a negative thing towards my mother. This was not something that she even took as… I was very lucky to have parents that supported my ability to be responsible.”

07butcher.650
Susan Butcher with her sled and dogs. Credit: Paul A. Souders/Corbis, 1991

At just 20 years old, Susan relocated to Alaska where she moved into a log cabin in the remote wilderness. She began teaching herself to become a professional musher, dog breeder and trainer. Susan’s family had a long tradition of self-determination and autonomy. Her great-grandfather, Charles Butcher (1846-1916) emigrated to New York from England in 1867. He and his wife, Mary, moved to Boston a few years after the birth of their son, William Laramy (1875–1952).

Butcher_Charles
Undated image of Charles Butcher. Yankee Magazine, 1955.

Charles was a carpenter by trade, but according to an account by his granddaughter, Helen Elizabeth “Betty” Butcher (1914–1994), was appalled at the typical Bostonian’s method of cleaning the wood floors he installed–scrubbing with soap and water. With this in mind, Charles set out to manufacture a wax for cleaning floors, much like the product and technique employed in Europe.

681px-Butchers_wax
Photograph of Butcher’s Wax. Sample provided by the MFA Objects Conservation Lab. Photo credit: Keith Lawrence, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

This led to the development of Butcher Polish Company. Charles began manufacturing the product in the barn behind his property at 197 Lakeview Avenue near Fresh Pond. Butcher’s Wax was first sold in Boston in 1880.

197_Lakeview
Undated image of 197 Lakeview Avenue published in Yankee Magazine, 1955.

After Charles passed in 1916, his sons William Laramy and Charles Howlett (1884-1951) inherited the company and ran it much in the same way as their father. Later, their sons, including Charles’ son, Charles II (1916-2004) took over the business. Charles II, known as Charlie, married Agnes and together they had a daughter, Susan Howlet Butcher (1954-2006).

Butcher_CharlesH_WilliamL
Undated images of Charles H. Butcher and William L. Butcher. Yankee Magazine, 1955.

Above: Charles II (Charlie) portrait at Harvard (1939) and Susan Howlet (no date, Alaska Sports Hall of Fame)

Susan Butcher became known as a highly-skilled dog musher and in 1986 became the second woman to win the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, an annual sled dog race of around 1,100 miles. In 1990, she became the second four-time winner and the first to win four out of five sequential years. Butcher died in 2006 at age 51 after being diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia in 2005. Two years later, the Alaska state legislature established Susan Butcher Day, observed every year on the first Saturday in March.

Butcher2
Susan Butcher with her lead dog, Granite (no date, Alaska Sports Hall of Fame)