Up: Glassmaking
Reminiscences 67 of 123
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for a doubtful enterprise. Death thinned their ranks, and the works,
after passing into other hands for a short trial, have years since
ceased to exist.
From 1820 to 1840 very many attempts were made,
by corporations and firms, to establish the manufacture of flint-glass
in the Atlantic States, but almost with entire failure. The parent tree,
the old South Boston concern, failed; the works were revived from time
to time by at least five different concerns, and all ended in failure;
and for years the works remained closed, till the present occupant,
Mr. Patrick Slane, hired the premises,
and by his enterprise and great industry has greatly enlarged the works,
and is now carrying on a large and active business. In his factory we
learn the old system among the operatives he does not allow to have a
foothold, and the individual industry of his hands is not cramped or
limited by the oppressive system of the old school operative.
As a record of the past and a reference for the
future, we find, in reviewing the various attempts to establish flint-glass
works in the Atlantic States, that it would not be just to place the names
of those identified with them before the reader; for many were deluded by
the
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