Last Tuesday evening, that Muse of Historical Research -- to the Greeks, that would be Clio -- tapped my shoulder during a virtual panel of mystery authors "at" the Tewksbury (Massachusetts) Public Library. Tewksbury is one town east of Lowell, the marvelous center of fabric mill invention that anchored the Northern profits from Southern enslavement. As of 1840, there were 32 mills in the city. Readers of Katherine Paterson's historical fiction may have pictured the lives that the "mill girls" led there (see Lyddie); those who've pursued history tourism in New England may have visited the remarkable National Park that now embraces some of the remaining mill structures and stewards their history. American freedoms, gender roles, Labor as a force in politics, all these and more can be embraced in the history in Lowell.
But I hadn't known about Tewksbury. One of the people attending the author panel mentioned "the old library" and the librarian moderating the panel sent me a link to some photos that reminded me of the libraries I haunted in the 1950s and 1960s.
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The "old" Tewksbury Public Library. |
Then, of course, I began to explore what this urban library offers in the way of historical collections, and here's what I found in the town public history collection there:
Tewksbury History Topics
- Anne Sullivan and the Tewksbury Hospital
- Captain John Trull (Tewksbury Minuteman)
- King Philip's War
- Lowell Mill Girls and Women
- Merrimack River
- Mico Kaufman (local sculptor)
- Tewkesbury, England (Town namesake)
- Town Anniversaries (including 200th Anniversary Time Capsule)
- Tewksbury State Hospital (State Almshouse)
Link to online historical patient registers
Visit the Public Health Museum at Tewksbury Hospital
- Town of Tewksbury Annual Reports (1878 - present)
- Wamesit Indians
Any one of these could slip into the books I'm writing, set in Vermont in the 1850s and 1860s, when Vermonters still saw Massachusetts as the place where the War of Independence began, rather than a traffic nightmare or a set of distant museums and restaurants. I also discovered that Tewksbury was struck by a devastating tornado in 1857 -- something that may go directly into Book 4 of my Winds of Freedom series.
Most of all, I get the sense that Clio the Muse is always ready to alert me to "something old, something new" to learn. You know, I used to feel a little guilty that I took the writing path, instead of going boldly abroad for adventures. But it occurs to me now -- every time I find another prime resource like the Tewksbury Public Library, I'm having an awesome adventure. Just wait and see what comes up in the next couple of novels I've got rolling! (Don't you love being able to share the adventure, too?)