Shaw Brothers Tannery (Grand Lake Stream, Me.)

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Shaw Brothers Tannery (Grand Lake Stream, Me.)

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Shaw Brothers Tannery (Grand Lake Stream, Me.)

Shaw Tannery (Grand Lake Stream, Me.)

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Shaw Tannery (Grand Lake Stream, Me.)

F. Shaw & Bro. (Grand Lake Stream, Me.)

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F. Shaw & Bro. (Grand Lake Stream, Me.)

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active approximately 1800

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Biographical History

F. Shaw and Brothers was a Boston firm which dominated the Maine tannery business in the late 1800's. They had large tanneries at Kingman, Jackson Brook (now Brookton), Vanceboro, Forest City, and Grand Lake Stream. The three brothers in the firm, William, Fayette, and Thackster Shaw, had learned the business from their father who had a small tannery in Cummington, Mass. In the summer of 1870 the three of them started their operations in Maine after a trip to Hinckleytown or, as it came to be known, Grand Lake Stream Plantation. Bark was needed for the tanning process, and the Shaw Brothers often set up extract operations in the woods. Eventually the investment in the immense Shaw operations was too much and the firm failed in the summer of 1883. Creditors formed a nine man committee to investigate the firm's finances. Trustees ran the tanneries until the nineties, selling off land to pay off part of the debts. In the late nineties the remaining property was sold to the International Leather Company, which dismantled the mills and shipped the usable machinery to Boston. By the end of the eighties the Grand Lake Stream tannery, now run by the trustees, was getting its bark from the Machias River area. By 1910 the United States Leather Company had ceased operation in all the large tanneries purchased from the creditors of the Shaw family.

Charles W. Clement was a trustee of the business of the Shaw Brothers Tannery.

Fred E. Knapp was secretary of The United States Leather Company Executive Committee located in New York.

S. B. (Simon B.) Gates was the proprietor of the Katahdin House in Winn, Maine in 1904 and was interested in the Grand Lake Stream property owned by the United States Leather Company.

George H. Hamlin, a former professor of civil engineering at the University of Maine, was a consulting engineer for the International Paper Company.

Chester W. Lyman was manager of the Department of Insurance & Taxes of the International Paper Company in New York.

The United States Leather Company was established in 1893. In the state of Maine by 1910 the company had ceased operation in all of the large tanneries purchased from the creditors of the Shaws.

From the description of Records, 1880-1897 (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 60606182

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External Related CPF

https://viaf.org/viaf/159615832

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n97031842

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n97031842

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Languages Used

Subjects

Bark

Tanneries

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Activities

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Places

Maine--Brookton

as recorded (not vetted)

AssociatedPlace

Grand Lake Stream (Me.)

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AssociatedPlace

Forest City (Me.)

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AssociatedPlace

Maine

as recorded (not vetted)

AssociatedPlace

Maine--Grand Lake Stream

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AssociatedPlace

Maine--Forest City

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AssociatedPlace

Brookton (Me.)

as recorded (not vetted)

AssociatedPlace

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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>

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Identity Constellation Identifier(s)

w6gr1g2t

44631572