W. S. Reed Toy Company-Wachusett Shirt Company Historic District

Coordinates: 42°31′42″N 71°45′24″W / 42.52833°N 71.75667°W / 42.52833; -71.75667
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W. S. Reed Toy Company-Wachusett Shirt Company Historic District
W. S. Reed Toy Company-Wachusett Shirt Company Historic District is located in Massachusetts
W. S. Reed Toy Company-Wachusett Shirt Company Historic District
W. S. Reed Toy Company-Wachusett Shirt Company Historic District is located in the United States
W. S. Reed Toy Company-Wachusett Shirt Company Historic District
Location41-45 Summer St., Leominster, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°31′42″N 71°45′24″W / 42.52833°N 71.75667°W / 42.52833; -71.75667
Builtc. 1840 (1840)
Architectural styleSecond Empire
NRHP reference No.100006863[1]
Added to NRHPNovember 24, 2021

The W. S. Reed Toy Company-Wachusett Shirt Company Historic District encompasses two adjacent properties at 41 and 45 Summer Street in Leominster, Massachusetts. The two properties were historically associated with the business operations of William S. Reed, a businessman who operated a toy manufacturing company among other concerns. The properties were listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places in 2021.[1]

Description and history[edit]

William S. Reed was a native of Sterling, Massachusetts who came to Leominster in 1872, and soon afterward introduced the manufacture of toys to the city, at first wooden blocks. Some of his early manufacturing may have taken place in the brick house at 41 Summer Street, built in 1840. In 1879 he acquired factory properties on what is now Summer Street from J.C. Lane and Emerson Prescott, which had formerly served as furniture and comb factories. The following year he built the oldest surviving portion of what is now 45 Summer Street, a multi-story Second Empire brick factory building.[2][3]

Reed expanded his business into another adjacent factory in 1891, but it was destroyed by fire the following year. A second fire in 1896 destroyed even more of his plant, and the company was subsequently folded into the Whitney Reed Chair Company, a maker of rattan and reed furniture. Reed later became involved in the construction and operation of streetcar networks in the region.[2]

The plant was acquired by Francis Whitney in 1900, first housing his United States Thread Company, and then serving as the number 3 mill of the Wachusett Shirt Company. That company operated here at least until the mid-1950s; its principal plant was located across Monoosnuc Brook, which was joined to this property by a footbridge.[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Weekly listing". National Park Service.
  2. ^ a b c "MACRIS inventory record for W.S. Reed Toy Company". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  3. ^ "MACRIS inventory record for Emerson and Sophia Prescott House". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved December 6, 2021.