Friday, November 2, 2012

The Springfield Armory, The First And Last National U.S. Armory


  Original Springfield Armory Building


The Third Continental Congress established the Springfield Armory on April 2, 1794 and this became the birthplace of the small arms industry in the United States. However, the Springfield Armory was also active during the Revolutionary War. In 1777 a barn was rented for the repair of arms. In 1778 buildings were rented on Main and Cypress Streets for the manufacture of paper cartridges for muskets with the powder mill located on the Mill River. Upon recommendation of General Henry Knox, Springfield was chosen as the site for the National Armory. General George Washington chose Springfield even though the Congress had voted Brookfield, Massachusetts as the ideal site.


Throughout its 174-year operation, Armory weapons influenced battlefield tactics and wartime strategy in all major conflicts throughout U.S. history. Armory inventions and industrial processes revolutionized American manufacturing and helped launch the Industrial Revolution. Located in the heart of Springfield, Massachusetts on the former Armory site which also now houses Springfield Technical Community College, the Museum displays one of the largest (over 20,000) collections of small firearms in the world along with some of the machines used to manufacture these firearms.


Springfield Armory Emblem






Springfield Model 1817 Type 1 Flintlock Pistol


The U.S. Model 1795 Musket, a Flint Lock, was the first official U.S. weapon and the first Springfield weapon produced. The fine craftsmanship and engineering of the Springfield workforce were consistent through its history. Thomas Blanchard and his Blanchard lathe in 1819 are a classic example. Its creation later played a great part in the development of interchangeable parts. Probably the most noted of recent employees of the Armory was John C. Garand. In 1936 Garand submitted a design accepted by the Government for the first semi-automatic rifle. His design came after approximately twenty years of successful research, experimentation and testing across the country. General George S. Patton, Jr. reported to the Ordinance Department on January 26, 1945: “In my opinion, the M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised. In the face of overwhelming odds, the capability of the M1 rifle to deliver superior firepower would most often carry the day." The last small arm developed by the Armory was the M14. The M14 has evolved over the years into a more modern sniping rifle, the M21.



The M1 Garand semi-automatic rifle


Perhaps less appreciated is the Springfield Armory's central role in the industrialization of America and the acceleration of the pace of technology's influence in our everyday lives. Philosophically, it also represents the vexing irony that the economic drivers of war may inevitably have lead to dramatic advances during peacetime that both vastly improved the quality of human life and fueled a regional economy that went on to sustain legions of skilled workers and their families. The Armory was responsible for crucial advances in machining processes and equipment such as lathes and die-cutters that made it a formenter of the Industrial Revolution in the United States.

Current Springfield Armory Building


Monday, July 23, 2012

Hampden County - 200th Birthday



Hampden County Massachusetts celebrates it's 200th anniversary August 1, 2012.  It was created by an Act of Congress on February 25, 1912 and became effective August 1, 1812. 

Prior to its incorporation, Hampden County had been part of Hampshire County since 1662, of which the three original towns were Springfield (1641) purchased from the Agawam Indians in 1636, Northampton or Nonotuck (1653) and Hadley (1659).  Westfield, formerly Woronoco, was annexed in 1647 and became a town in 1669.  Massachusetts Bay Colony organized counties in 1643.  Earlier areas were vast territories, called 'civil divisions'.
 
On April 2, 1663, a Hampshire County Committee was formed.  The members were Captain John Pynchon, Henry Clarke, Captain Aaron Cook, Lieutenant  David Milton and Elizur Holyoke.  They conducted all of the legal business of the county including maintaining the land records.  Meetings were held March 1st annually and alternated between Northampton and Springfield.  The book of court records was transported between the two locations.

Springfield's population grew from 1790, pop. 1,574, to 1810, pop. 2,767.  The City was represented in the State Senate by Moses Chapin, Jacob Bliss, Oliver B. Morris and Edmund Dwight. This growth indicated the economic dominance taking place in Springfield and thus the Massachusetts congress created Hampden County in 1812.

The original members of the Hampden County Committee in 1812 were George Bliss, John Hooker and John Ingersoll.  On November 12, 1812 they made an agreement of Settlement between Hampden and Hampshire Counties.  The Committee from Hampshire County included Joseph Lyman, Thomas Shepard and Daniel Wright.  This document can be found in Court of Sessions Record Book 1, pages 5-6 located in the Archives of the Hampden County Registry of Deeds.  A typed version of this document is available.

Edward Pynchon, a descendant of the founder of Springfield, William Pynchon served as the first Register of Deeds of  Hampden County in 1812.  Two hundred years later, the governing body of the county, the commission, is no longer in existence.  However, Hampden County is a geographical entity within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts with Donald E. Ashe serving as guardian of the real estate records as Register of Deeds.