Slatersville, Rhode Island


Contributors to Wikimedia projects

Article Images

Slatersville is a village on the Branch River in the town of North Smithfield, Rhode Island, United States. It includes the Slatersville Historic District, a historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Slatersville Historic District

Slatersville Green and the Congregational Church

Slatersville, Rhode Island is located in Rhode Island

Slatersville, Rhode Island

LocationMain, Green, Church, and School Sts. and Ridge Rd., Slatersville, Rhode Island
Built1805
Architectural styleGreek Revival
NRHP reference No.73000002[1]
Added to NRHPApril 24, 1973

Slatersville was associated with and named for Samuel Slater and John Slater.

In the late nineteenth century, the Woonsocket and Pascoag Railroad was built through the village, and the line is now owned and operated by the Providence and Worcester Railroad. The freight rail line now terminates in Slatersville near a steel distributor by the Slater Mill, rather than its former endpoint in Pascoag.

History

 
Slatersville Mill, 2005, prior to renovation

The region was originally settled in the 17th century by British colonists as a farming community. The village was founded in 1803 by entrepreneurs Samuel and John Slater, in partnership with the Providence firm of Almy and Brown. The firm purchased the land and began construction of a textile mill.[2] By 1807, the village included the Slatersville Mill, "the largest and most modern industrial building" of its day, two houses for workers, the owner's house and the company store.[2] When the first mill building was destroyed by fire in 1826, it was replaced by the large stone mill which stands on the site today. Behind the 1826 mills stands a stone mill of similar design built in 1843. The mills were powered by water from the large Slatersville reservoir.[2] Slatersville's village green was laid out in 1838 in a traditional New England pattern. Many of the houses around the Green were built by the Slater company in 1810-20.[2] They were substantially renovated earlier in the 20th century to make Slatersville look more like a traditional New England Village. At the head of the Green stands the Slatersville Congregational Church, a steepled Greek revival building, which houses the oldest continuously operated Sunday School in America. The Slater family owned the village until 1900 when it was sold to James R. Hooper who used the mills to bleach and dye cloth. In 1915, Hooper sold the Slatersville village to Henry P. Kendall. Kendall took a personal interest in the village and initiated many of the improvements which give Slatersville its traditional New England character.[2] Today, Slatersville is now owned by private individuals and in 1973 it became a National Historic District, bounded by Main, Green, Church, and School Sts. and Ridge Rd., with 3,100 acres (13 km2), 149 buildings.[1]

  • John Slater and Ruth Slater co-founders of Slatersville

  • Union Grange Hall, built in 1897 as a chapel for the St. Luke's Episcopal Mission

  • Stone Arch Bridge, built in 1857, over the Branch River near the Slatersville mills. It replaced a wooden bridge built around 1800.

  • Slatersville Mill North Smithfield RI

  • Slatersville Common

  • Slatersville Common

  • Slatersville Common

  • Slatersville Mill

See also

Further reading

  • History You Can See - Scenes of Change In Rhode Island 1790-1910 written by Hadassah Davis and Natalie Robinson and published by the League of Rhode Island Historical Societies, Providence, 1986.
  • Working Water - A Guide to the Historic Landscape of the Blackstone River Valley published by the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management and the Rhode Island Parks Association, 1987.

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009. Cite error: The named reference "nris" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b c d e Walter Nebiker, The History of North Smithfield (Somersworth, NH: New England History Press, 1976).