Smith and Dove Flax Mills

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John Smith was born in Brechin, Scotland in 1802. After the death of his father in 1810, John was unable to attend school regularly and began to work on farms and in flax mills to help his family survive.

Smith left Scotland and traveled to Boston via Halifax, Nova Scotia. He arrived on December 15, 1816. He found work as a machinist in Watertown. He left to travel the country in August of 1819, arriving back in Medway, Massachusetts in 1820, where he worked as a machinist again.

Smith founded a machine company in Plymouth known as John Smith & Co and asked his brother Peter to join him in America. Seeking the water power in Andover, John and his two business partners moved their company to an unoccupied mill in Frye Village in 1824; the business partners died in 1829.

In 1833, Peter Smith and John Dove decided to form a company to spin flax and manufacture machinery needed for the process. They had originally met in Scotland where they worked for John Dove's father. John Smith went into business with them and eventually the company ceased making machinery. They bought water power and buildings from Abel and Pascal Abbot in Abbot Village in 1843. In 1864, John and Peter Smith and John Dove incorporated as the Smith & Dove Company. New mill buildings were added in 1994 and by 1896 they employed 300 people. In addition to the jobs the company provided housing and recreational facilities for employees.

In 1927 the Smith & Dove Company was sold to Ludlow Manufacturing which moved the manufacturing plant and the mill was closed in 1928.

In 1970's two additional buildings were added to the complex and the the Smith & Dove complex was turned into the Dundee Park office complex.

John and Peter were philanthropists. John donated funds to Phillips Academy, Abbot Academy and $50,000 to establish Memorial Hall Library. John saw slaves being sold in South Carolina and became a staunch abolitionist. He founded the Free Christian Church based on anti-slavery doctrine - something he became adamant about after seeing slaves being sold in his travels in the South. Peter was a supporter of the West Parish Church.


John's home on 349-351 North Main Street became the Shawsheen Manor.


Both John and Peter are buried at the West Parish Garden Cemetery.

See


Hillside House



The Townsman, November 19, 2015, page 11


--Eleanor 12:53, October 7, 2006 (EDT)
--Leslie 17:48, August 8, 2012 (EDT)
--Eleanor 20:46, December 27, 2012 (EST)
--Eleanor (talk) 14:58, 22 January 2016 (EST) back to Main Page