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19 Flint Street, Salem
According to available evidence, this house was built in 1871 for Leonard
Harrington, leather dealer.
On 18 March 1871 Leonard B. Harrington Jr. for $3000 purchased from Samuel P.
Andrews a parcel of land, 8058 square feet, fronting easterly 60' on Flint Street
(ED 818: 145). At about the same time, Mr. Hanington exchanged small gores of
land, which helped to square off the house-lot (ED 819:89). Mr. Harrington, thiliy,
then proceeded to build the present house on the lot, probably in the spring of
1871. (Salem valuations for 1871 have the penciled notation that Leonard
Harrington had a new house at 7 Flint Street, house worth $7000, lot worth $2000).
Leonard B. Harrington Jr. was born in Salem on 8 September 1841, the son of
Leonard B. Harrington, a currier, and his wife Margaret C. Hersey. Leonard was
the last of their four children. An infant, also named Leonard, had died in 1834,
while Henry and Mary Elizabeth had survived.
Leonard grew up in a house on upper Federal Street. His father, born in 1803, was
a native of Salem, the son of Charles Harrington, who had come to Salem from
Watertown after the end of the war for independence. L.B. Harrington Sr. went to
sea at thirteen, but soon gave up that life and was apprenticed to a currier in
Roxbury. In 1824 he began as a journeyman currier, curing leather to be used to
make various items such as shoes, saddles, etc. In 1829 he went into business for
himself; and in January, 1831 he married Margaret Hersey of Roxbury. In the
1830s he formed a partnership with Henry Turner as Harrington & Turner,
curriers, with their leather operation situated at 35 Boston Street, Salem. At first
the Harringtons resided on upper Essex Street, but by 1841, when Leonard Jr. was
born, they had a house on Federal Street (evidently #153, where they certainly
resided in the 1850s).
In the decade before Leonard's birth, Salem's maritime commerce had waned.
The merchants had taken their equity out of wharves and warehouses and ships and
put it into manufacturing and transportation, as the advent of railroads and canals
in the 1830s diverted both capital and trade away from the coast. Some merchants
did not make the transition, and were ruined. Old-line areas of work, like ropemaking, sail-making, and ship chandleries, gradually declined and disappeared.
Well into the 1830s, Salem slumped badly.
1
�Despite its woes, Salem was chartered as a city in 1836. City Hall was built in
1837-8 on Washington Street and the city seal was adopted with an alreadyanachronistic Latin motto of "to the farthest port of the rich East"-a far cry from
"Go West, young man!" The Panic of 1837, a brief, sharp, nationwide economic
depression, caused even more Salem families to head west in search of fortune and
a better future. Salem had not prepared for the industrial economy, and had few
natural advantages. The North River served not to power factories but mainly to
carry the waste from the many tanneries (23 by 1832), like L.B. Harrington's, that
had set up along its banks. Throughout the 1830s, the leaders of Salem scrambled
to re-invent an economy for their fellow citizens, many of whom were mariners
without much sea-faring to do. Ingenuity, ambition, and hard work would have to
carry the day.
One inspiration was the Salem Laboratory, which was Salem's first science-based
manufacturing enterprise. At the plant built in 1817 on the North River, the
production of alum and blue vitriol was a specialty; and it proved a very successful
business. Salem's whale-fishery, active for many years in the early 1800s, led, in
the 183 Os, to the manufacturing of high-quality candles at Stage Point, along with
machine oils. The candles proved very popular. Some of the whale-blubber was
perhaps processed on Boston Street, at "Blubber Hollow." Lead-manufacturing
began in the 1820s, and grew large after 1830, when Wyman's gristmills on the
Forest River were retooled for making high-quality white lead and sheet lead (the
approach to Marblehead is still called Lead Mills Hill, although the empty mill
buildings burned down in 1960s).
These enterprises were a start toward taking Salem in a new direction. In 183 8 the
Eastern Rail Road began operating between Boston and Salem, which gave the
people of Salem and environs a direct route to the region's largest market. The
tam1ing and curing of leather was a very important industry by the mid- l 800s. It
was conducted on and near Boston Street, along the upper North River. There
were 41 tanneries in 1844, and 85 in 1850, employing 550 hands. The leather
business would continue to grow in importance throughout the 1800s.
In 1846 the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company completed the construction at
Stage Point of the largest factory building in the United States, 60' wide by 400'
long. It was an immediate success, and hundreds of people found employment
there, many of them living in industrial tenements built nearby. Also in the 1840s,
a new method was introduced to make possible high-volume industrial shoe
production. In Lynn, the factory system was perfected, and that city became the
2
�nation's leading shoe producer. Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe
workers from outlying towns and country areas. Even the population changed, as
hundreds of Irish families, fleeing the Famine, settled in Salem; and the men went
to work in the factories and as laborers. At that time the Catholics worshipped at
St. Mary's Church, which stood nearby at the corner of Bridge and Mall Streets.
In the face of all this change, some members of Salem's waning merchant class
continued to pursue their sea-borne businesses; but even the conditions of shipping
changed, and Salem was left on the ebb tide. In the late 1840s, giant clipper ships
replaced the smaller vessels that Salem men had sailed around the world; and the
clippers, with their deep drafts and large holds, were usually too large for Salem
and its harbor. The town's shipping soon consisted of little more than Zanzibartrade vessels and visits from Down East coasters with cargoes of fuel wood and
building timber. By 1850 Salem was about finished as a working port. A picture
of Salem's sleepy waterfront is given by Hawthorne in his "introductory section"
(really a sketch of Salem) to The Scarlet Letter, which he began while working in
the Custom House.
The symbol of Salem's new industrial economy was the large twin-towered granite
train station, built in 1848-9 on filled-in land at the foot of Washington Street,
where before had been the merchants' wharves. The 1850s brought continued
growth: new churches, schools, streets, stores, etc. More Catholic churches were
built, and new housing was constructed in North Salem and the Gallows Hill areas
to accommodate the workers. A spur railroad line came in from Peabody (South
Danvers), past the end of Northey Street, and turned down Saunders Street, where
it crossed Bridge Street and ran on to Phillips Wharf, where the trains freighted
coal and catTied it all the way to the factories of Lowell.
In 1860, Leonard Hmrington (Jr.), 19, was listed as residing at his father's house,
153 Federal Street, and working in Boston as a clerk at 91 Milk Street (1861 Salem
Directory). At home lived his parents, his brother Henry, 27, a clerk, his sister
Mary, 21, and a servant, Eliza Derrell, 25. Mr. L.B. Harrington then owned real
estate worth $10, 000 and had $100, 000 in personal estate ( 18 60 census, ward four,
house 1942).
The Civil War began in April, 1861, and went on for four years, during which
hundreds of Salem men served in the army and navy, and many were killed or died
of disease or abusive treatment while imprisoned. In mid-September, 1862,
Leonard Harrington, 21, enlisted for nine months in the U.S. Army, as a private in
the 50th regiment of Mass. Volunteer Infantry, which had many Salem men. He
3
�was assigned to Company A (the Salem Light Infantry), under Capt. George D.
Putnam. After encamping in New York for some weeks, Company A embarked on
Dec. 13 on the transport Jersey Blue, bound for the Gulf of Mexico; however, once
at sea, the vessel proved unseaworthy and made an emergency landing in a storm
at Hilton Head, SC. On another vessel they made their way to New Orleans,
arriving Jan. 20, 1863 and proceeding upriver to Baton Rouge, where they camped
and prepared for combat. After some skirmishing and many long marches,
Leonard Harrington and the other men of Company A were engaged in May and
June in the bloody attacks on Port Hudson, which finally surrendered after a siege.
In August the men were sent home, and arrived by train in Salem on August 11th,
"thus completing an exceedingly arduous term of service, which left its marks
deeply upon all of the command." (see George D. Putnam's article in Hurd's
History ofEssex County).
The war continued, and Leonard Harrington resumed his job in Boston and his
place in his father's house on Federal Street. The people of Salem contributed
greatly to efforts to alleviate the suffering of the soldiers, sailors, and their
families; and there was great celebration when the war finally ended in the spring
of 1865.
Through the 1860s and 1870s, Salem continued to pursue a manufacturing course.
The managers and capitalists tended to build their new, grand houses along
Lafayette Street (these houses may still be seen, south of Holly Street). For the
workers, they built more and more tenements near the mills of Stage Point. A
second, larger, factory building for the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company would
be added in 1859, and a third in 1865; and by 1879 the mills would employ 1200
people and produce annually 14,700,000 yards of cloth. Shoe-manufacturing also
continued to expand, and by 1879 Salem would have 40 shoe factories employing
600-plus operatives. More factories and more people required 1nore space for
buildings, more roads, and more storage areas. Salem kept building infrastructure;
and new businesses arose, and established businesses expanded. Retail stores
prospered, and machinists, carpenters, millwrights, and other specialists all thrived.
In the 1870s, French-Canadian families began moving to Salem to work in the
mills and factories, and more houses and tenements were built in what had been
open areas of the city.
During this period of industrial expansion, Leonard's father, Leonard B.
Harrington Sr., was one of the leaders of the city's profitable leather industry.
Leonard Jr. continued to work in Boston (at 93 Pearl Street by 1871) and to board
at his father's at 153 Federal Street (see 1872 Salem Director).
4
�In 1871 Mr. Harrington, who was engaged to marry Ellen P. Langmaid, had this
house built in the then-popular French Empire style, four-square with mansard roof
and some Italianate trim. They married on December 4 111 • That year, 1871, was
uneventful in Salem, which, in 1870, had received its last cargo from Zanzibar,
thus ending a once-impmiant trade. President U.S. Grant passed through Salem in
October, 1871; and a new Salem & New York freight steamboat line was in
operation. In 1872, a fire destroyed a tam1ery on Franklin Street in North Salem,
near the site of a similar fire in 1870. Leonard Harrington kept commuting to his
job; and on Nov. 9th the financial and manufacturing district of the city of Boston
was destroyed in a terrible fire. It is likely that Mr. Harrington's office was among
the many consumed in that infe1no, one of worst urban fires in American history.
Boston rebuilt, and Mr. Harrington carried on his business in downtown Boston.
In 1873, the Harringtons had a child, a girl whom they named Mabel.
Salem continued to prosper in the 1870s, carried forward by the leather-making
business. In 1874 the city was visited by a tornado and shaken by a minor
earthquake. In the following year, the large Pennsylvania Pier (site of the present
coal-fired harborside electrical generating plant) was completed to begin receiving
large shipments of coal. Beyond it, at Juniper Point, a new owner began
subdividing the old Allen farmlands into a new development called Salem Willows
and Juniper Point. In the Centennial Year, 1876, Prof. A.G. Bell of Salem
announced that he had discovered a way to transmit voices over telegraph wires;
and in 1877, with the arrival of a vessel from Cayenne, Salem's foreign trade came
to an end. On Boston Street in 1879, the Arnold tannery caught fire and burned
down.
Through this period, the Harringtons appear to have lived in comfort in their nice
house. In 1880 the family resided here (Leonard Harrington, 39, leather dealer, his
wife Ellen, 34, their daughter Mabel C., six), along with two servants, Sophia
Baudrot, originally of Nova Scotia, and Nellie Cobane, 17 (1880 census, ED 234 p.
42).
By 1881 this house was re-numbered 6 Flint Street. The Harringtons lived here;
Mr. Harrington worked in Boston at 161 Summer Street, as a leather dealer in his
partnership, Harrington & Cummings. Mr. Harrington's father, Mr. L.B.
Harrington Sr., continued operating his very successful leather factory on Highland
Avenue, Salem. In the fall of 1886 the leather workers went on strike, and there
was a riot on Boston Street on Nov. 25, followed three days later by a settlement.
5
�In 1887 the John Bertram house, nearby on Essex Street, was donated to the city
for a public library; and there was a great parade of temperance clubs.
Leonard Harrington kept commuting to Boston through the very cold winter of
1887-1888. On January 26, 1888, occurred a total eclipse of the moon, which Mr.
Harrington probably observed. He fell ill in February; and on the morning of 4
March 1888, a Sunday, he died here at home, aged 47 years. His obituary noted
that he was a member of the firm of Harrington & Cummings, leather dealers, in
Boston, and that he belonged to Post 34 of the Grand Army of the Republic. His
death was "quite sudden." He left his widow Ellen and daughter, Mabel, as well as
his father, who would die in 1889.
In the years that followed, Mrs. Ellen P. Harrington resided here. Her daughter
Mabel married a Mr. Buck.minster, and moved to Burlington, Mass.
After withstanding the pressures of the new industrial city for about 50 years,
Salem's rivers began to disappear. The once-broad North River was filled from
both shores, and became a canal along Bridge Street above the N01ih Bridge. The
cove adjoining Northey Street was filled in from Bridge Street all the way to the
railroad tracks. The large and beautiful Mill Pond, which occupied the whole area
between the present Jefferson Avenue, Canal Street, and Loring Avenue, finally
vanished beneath streets, storage areas, junk-yards, rail-yards, and parking lots.
The South River, too, with its epicenter at Central Street (that's why there was a
Custom House built there in 1805), disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza
and New Derby Street, and its old wharves (even the mighty Union Wharf,
formerly Long Wharf, at the foot of Union Street) were joined together with much
in-fill and turned into coal-yards and lumber-yards. Only a canal was left, running
in from Derby and Central Wharves to Lafayette Street.
In the early 20th century large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian families came to
Salem and settled primarily in the Derby Street neighborhood. By the eve of
World War One, Salem was a bustling, polyglot city that supported large
depaiiment stores and large factories of every description. Its politics were lively,
and its economy was strong.
In 1911 Mrs. HaITington 1noved to Burlington, probably to live with her daughter;
and the house was then occupied by Walter C. HaITis, who worked in Boston as a
private secretary at 50 State Street (see 1912 Directory). Mr. Harris, who had
grown up on Bridge Street, had resided at 15 Winter Street in 1911. Mrs.
6
�Harrington returned to Salem by August, 1913, when her daughter Mrs.
Buckminster granted her a life estate in the homestead here (ED 2227:291).
On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in Blubber Hollow (Boston Street opposite
Federal), a fire started in one of Salem's fire-prone wooden tanneries. This fire
soon consumed the building and raced out of control, for the west wind was high
and the season had been dry. The next building caught fire, and the next, and out
of Blubber Hollow the fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke
(passing by not far from the back yard of this house), wiping out the houses of
lower Boston Street, upper Essex Street, Warren Street, and upper Broad Street,
and then sweeping tlu·ough Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential
streets. Men and machines could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into
South Salem and destroyed the neighborhoods west of Lafayette Street, then
devoured the mansions of Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the
tenement district. Despite the combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many
towns and cities, the fire overwhelmed everything in its path: it smashed into the
large factory buildings of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company (Congress
Street), which exploded in an inferno; and it rolled down Lafayette Street and
across the water to Derby Street. There, just beyond Union Street, after a 13-hour
rampage, the monster died, having consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses, and 41
factories, and leaving tlu·ee dead and thousands homeless. Some people had
insurance, some did not; all received much suppmi and generous donations from
all over the country and the world. It was one of the greatest urban disasters in the
history of the United States, and the people of Salem would take years to recover
from it. Eventually, they did, and many of the former houses and businesses were
rebuilt; and several urban-renewal projects (including Hawthorne Boulevard,
which involved removing old houses and widening old streets) were put into effect.
Mrs. Ellen Harrington left town again, never to return. She was dead by March,
1918, when the homestead here was sold by her daughter Mrs. Mabel (Harrington)
Henderson, of Burlington, to John H. Sullivan of Salem, who immediately
conveyed the premises to his wife, Margaret P. Sullivan (ED 2387:470, 471). The
Sullivans would reside here for many years. Mr. Sullivan was president of his own
company (the J.H. Sullivan Co., formerly the P.J. Smith Co.), with a facility at 30
Foster Street for manufacturing cement counters for the shoe industry. He was
born in 1875 in Massachusetts of parents born in Ireland. He married, by 1907,
Margaret, who was a year older and of similar background. They had a son
William T., born c.1906, and a daughter Mary born c.1917 (per 1920 census, ED
265, SD5).
7
�By the 1920s, Salem was once again a thriving city; and its tercentenary in 1926
was a time of great celebration. From that time forward, Salem boomed right
through to the 1960s. Eventually, the arrival of suburban shopping malls and the
relocation of manufacturing businesses took their toll, as they have with many
other cities. More than most, Salem has navigated its way forward into the present
with success, trading on its share of notoriety arising from the witch trials, but also
from its history as a great seaport and as the home of Bowditch, Mcintire, Bentley,
Story, and Hawthorne. Most of all, it remains a city where the homes of the oldtime mariners, mill-operatives, and leather-dealers are all honored as a large part of
what makes Salem different from any other place.
--Robert Booth for Historic Salem Inc., 20 Dec. 2002
8
�Glossary & Sources
A figure like (ED 123:45) refers to book 123, page 45, Essex South registry of Deeds,
Federal Street, Salem.
A figure like (#12345) refers to Essex Probate case 12345, on file at the Essex Probate
Court, Federal Street, Salem, or on microfilm at Mass. Archives, Boston, or at the Peabody
Essex Museum's Phillips Library, Salem.
MSSRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers & Sailors in the
Revolutionary War, available at the Salem Public Library among other places.
MSSCRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers, Sailors, & Afarines in
the Civil War, available at the Salem Public Library among other places.
EIHC refers to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (discontinued), a multi-volume set
(first volume published in 1859) of data and articles about Essex County. The indices of
the EIHC have been consulted regarding many of the people associated with this house.
The six-volume published Salem Vital records (marriages, births, and deaths through
1849) have been consulted, as have the Salem Directory and later Naumkeag Directory,
which have information about residents and their addresses, etc.
Sidney Perley's three-volume Hist01y ofSalem, 1626-1716 has been consulted, as has the
four-volume William Bentley's Diary, J. Duncan Phillips' books, some newspaper
obituaries, and other sources.
Salem real estate valuations, and, where applicable, Salem Street Books, have also been
consulted, as bave genealogies.
Tbere is mucb more material available about Salem and its history; and the reader is
encouraged to make bis or her own discoveries.
--Robert Bootb
9
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Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Flint Street
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Title
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19 Flint Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for Leonard Harrington, leather dealer, 1871
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
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Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1871, 2002
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
Language
A language of the resource
English
1871
19
2002
Flint
Harrington
History
House
Leonard
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
-
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df3678016e1512962887c4ac9a0841ca
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Title
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Grove Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
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Title
A name given to the resource
24 Grove Street, Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by Henry W. Balcomb, carpenter in 1871
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
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Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1871, 1982
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1871
1982
24
Balcomb
Grove
Henry
Joyce
King
Massachusetts
Salem
Street
-
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c70cae88487c3cb1c5794c1eb938ca56
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Title
A name given to the resource
Forrester Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
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Title
A name given to the resource
2-4 Forrester Street, Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for John H. and Joseph M. Parsons, masons and stucco workers
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1871, 1984
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joan Nestor, Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1871
1984
2
2-4
4
Forrester
Joan
Joyce
King
Massachusetts
Nestor
Salem
-
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71e4081b7c65293f7dad5f8a27a9582d
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Title
A name given to the resource
Briggs Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
19 Briggs Street, Salem, Massachusetts, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
Built for David G. Batchelder, Manufacturer 1871
Description
An account of the resource
House history
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1871, 1989
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Rory Goff
Language
A language of the resource
English
1871
19
19 Briggs
1989
Batchelder
Briggs
David
David W. Batchelder
Italianate
Manufacturer
wood
-
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b052470951bbb5cdde244361f274dd34
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Title
A name given to the resource
Arbella Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
26 Arbella Street, Salem, Massachusetts 1970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for Martha P. and Abraham Edwards, cloth folder by 1871
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
by 1871, 1980
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1871
1980
26
26 Arbella
Abraham
Abraham Edwards
Arbella
Edwards
Empire
Martha
Martha P. Edwards
Second
wood
-
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9aab9bf9a3eae23261da3133169b0104
PDF Text
Text
7 Burnside Street
Charles P. Chase, butcher
Built in 1871
Researched and written by Leslie Fontaine
July 2022
Historic Salem Inc.
9 North Street, Salem, MA 01970
(978) 745-0799 | info@historicsalem.org
© 2022
�(Photo courtesy of MACRIS SAL.2941)
Bridge Street Neck is on a peninsula of land between the North River and Collins Cove. It is a compact
urban neighborhood located a short distance from downtown Salem and serves as an important
gateway into the city from the town of Beverly to the north. The resources of Bridge Street Neck,
ranging from the late 18th century to the present day include the homes of prosperous sea captains
and merchants, as well as the dwellings of the middling and working classes who found employment in
the neighborhood’s maritime-related businesses and, in nearby factories and car shops during the 19th
and early 20th centuries.
In the late 19th century, the growth of Bridge Street Neck was fueled by a variety of neighborhood
industries including factories that produced jute bags, leather, and lead products as well as the repair
shops and car barns for several railroads. This house is located within an area believed to be the first
settlement of Europeans in Salem in 1626 and is one of the first colonies along the New England
coast.1
According to city council records, 2 Burnside Street was officially laid out in 1874 by a petition from
Chase P. Chase and 16 other petitioners, though it had been referred to by that name for at least a
couple of years. This lot (Number 4 on the plan of Charles A. Putnam, dated August 31, 1863) was part
of the Phillip English Estate and was divided into lots after the death of Phillip English, recorded in
18703.
1
United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places
City Council Records 1871-1873: Volume 7
3
Southern Essex Registry of Deeds: Book 809, Page 10
2
1
�The house on 7 Burnside Street is set on a stone foundation and is oriented with the gabled end facing
the street. On the East side of the house is a single-story sheltered entrance. This 5x2 bay home is a 2
½ story home that features projecting eaves, and newer windows, except the attic window with its 2
over 2 sashes indicating what the original house windows would have looked like. It was built shortly
after Charles P. Chase purchased the property, likely with the money he received from the mortgage he
obtained in 1871. By the 1874 Atlas of the City of Salem the house is there and shown as owned by
Charles P. Chase.
(Map of Salem in 1700 by Sydney Perley)4
4
Perley, S. (18971909). The Essex antiquarian: an illustrated ... magazine devoted to the biography, genealogy, history and
antiquities of Essex County, Massachusetts. Salem, Mass.: Essex Antiquarian.
2
�Chase Family (1871-1886)
Charles P. Chase was born in Salem around 1840 to James Chase and Abigail Ann Cutler Langley. In
the 1860 census, he worked as a butcher and lived in Salem’s Ward 1 with his wife, Mary A. (Chipman)
Chase, and their 7-month-old daughter, Ella Chase5. According to Civil War military records, he served
in Company B of the 24th Regiment and was captured in 18626.
The Twenty-fourth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, 1861-1866, "New England Guard Regiment,"
By the 1865 census, Charles was back in Salem, listed as a soldier, and living with his wife’s family, the
Chipmans. When he bought the property in 1874 he had returned to his past career of being a butcher
and in the 1872 Salem City Directory, he is listed as working at 46 Pleasant Street. The Chase family
moved around Salem quite a bit throughout their lives and in the census of 1880, around 8 years after
building their house at 7 Burnside, they were back living with Mary’s family at 2 Broad Street. It appears
that while they were living with Mary’s family they were renting out the property until the bank
foreclosed around 1886.
Charles’s first wife, Mary A. (Chipman) Chase, was born in Salem around 1840 to Andrew Mansfield
Chipman and Nancy (Willard) Chipman. Records indicate they may have had 4 children together,
though none of them survived through childhood. She died of kidney disease at home on February 7th,
18957.
On October 12, 1905, Charles married his second wife, Elizabeth (Heath) Wragg Chase, a housewife,
in Ipswich, MA. Elizabeth was born in Nottingham, England in 1855 to Hannah (Mather) Heath and
Thomas Heath. Charles and Elizabeth would spend their final days at their house on 17 Saunders
Street, Elizabeth predeceasing her husband in 1918, Charles living until June of 1923, by which time he
had retired8.
5
"United States Census, 1860", database with images, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZHK-KDG : 18 February 2021), Charles P Chase, 1860.
6
Roe, A. S. (1907). The Twenty-fourth Regiment, Massachusuetts Volunteers, 1861-1866, "New England Guard
Regiment,". United States: Twenty-fourth veteran association.
7
"Massachusetts Deaths, 1841-1915, 1921-1924," database with images, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NWHZ-YGZ : 2 March 2021), Mary A. Chipman Chase, 07 Feb 1895;
citing Salem, Massachusetts, p 554, State Archives, Boston; FHL microfilm 961,515.
8
"Massachusetts Deaths, 1841-1915, 1921-1924," database with images, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-P3NG-7K63?cc=1463156 : 1 April 2021), > image 1 of 1; State
Archives, Boston.
3
�Dunn Family (1886-1906)
William and Mary (Condon) Dunn, both from Ireland, resided in this home for much of the time they
owned it. William is listed as a stoker for Salem Gas Works in the city directories for the years they lived
here. William was born around 1848, immigrated in 1865, and lived until 1911. Mary was born in 1861,
immigrated here in 1864, and lived until 1933. They are both buried at Saint Mary’s Cemetery in
Salem9.
Together the Dunns had eleven children during their lives, seven of which were born at home during
their time at 7 Burnside. Their children were: Mary Dunn, born 1877, Catherine Dunn, born 1879,
William F. Dunn, born 1881, Ellen (Dunn) Page, born in 1884, Johanna Dunn, born 1887, Anna V.
Dunn, born 1889, Margaret Dunn, born 1900, 2 unnamed stillborn children born in 1891 and 1892,
Elizabeth G. Dunn, born in 1894, and Frances Dunn, born 1898.
By the 1900 census, there was a different Dunn family living at 7 Burnside Street, renting the house,
presumably from their Dunn relatives that had moved to Peabody, according to city directories. Thomas
and Mary (Tobin) Dunn lived here with their children: Pattrick, Thomas, Anna, William, and Edmund 10.
This Dunn family never appears on the city directories so they likely did not live here for long. They sold
the property in 1906 to the Murphy family.
Murphy / Mahoney / Lovering Families (1906-1953)
Timothy J. Murphy was born in 1846 to John Murphy and Ellen (Callahan) Murphy, both of Ireland. He
was a laborer who purchased this property in 1906 with his daughter, Julia M. Murphy. Upon his death,
of arteriosclerosis, on April 12th, 1913, aged 67 11, the property was passed to his daughter and her
husband. Julia married her husband, James B. Mahoney, on February 4th, 191312, shortly before her
father’s passing.
James B. Mahoney, of Marblehead, was the son of James and Elizabeth (Barry) Mahoney. He was a
shoe worker and he and Julia had two children in this home at 7 Burnside Street. Their first child was
9
Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/145457050/mary-f-dunn : accessed
17 July 2022), memorial page for Mary F. Condon Dunn (1861–1933), Find a Grave Memorial ID 145457050,
citing Saint Mary's Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Thomas F. Scully
(contributor 46818179) .
10
"United States Census, 1900," database with images, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-67BS-CJL?cc=1325221&wc=9BW3-VZ4%3A1030549901%2C103
1589101%2C1032609401 : 5 August 2014), Massachusetts > Essex > ED 444 Salem city Ward 2 > image 13 of
36; citing NARA microfilm publication T623 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration,
n.d.).
11
"Massachusetts Deaths, 1841-1915, 1921-1924," database with images, FamilySearch
(https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:2:9FLH-753 : 2 March 2021), Entry for Timothy J Murphy, 12 Apr
1913; citing Salem,,Massachusetts, 509, State Archives, Boston; FHL microfilm 2,401,909.
12
"Massachusetts Marriages, 1841-1915," database with images, FamilySearch
(https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:2:9JHY-NSJ : 10 March 2021), Entry for James B Mahoney and Julia
M Murphy, 4 Feb 1913; citing Salem, Essex, Massachusetts, United States, State Archives, Boston; FHL
microfilm 2,409,945.
4
�named Elizabeth E. Mahoney and was born on April 13, 1914 13. Their second child, James T. Mahoney,
was born at home on January 10th, 1918 when James was 41 years old and Julia Mahoney was 3914.
By the time of the 1950 census, James and Julia Mahoney were listed as living downstairs at 7
Burnside Street. Their daughter, Elizabeth was married to Gorden Lovering and they had two children,
Earle, 6 years old, and Mack, 2 years old, and were living in the upstairs part of the house.
Gordon Lovering was born in Brockton on February 15, 1916 to Earle W., a nail maker, and Grace M.
(Gould) Lovering, both from Lynn15. They would continue to live in this home until 1953 when they sold
it to the Lukjanowicz family. Gordon would predecease his wife in 1988 and Elizabeth lived until 1996,
apparently never remarrying.
Lukjanowicz Family (1953-1957)
Wladyslaw and Mania Lukjanowicz, both born in Poland, arrived in the US by the time of the 1950
census and were living at 52 Liberty Street, in Danvers, with relatives, as well as their two children,
Anna, age 13, and Wladyslaw Jr., age 6, born in Germany16. There they lived with were their aunt and
uncle, Juston, 61, and Mary Lukjanowicz, 56, and at the time Wladyslaw was 42 and Mania was 37
years old. In the census, they stated they were living in Germany the previous year, so when they
immigrated here they must have lived in Germany for at least 5 years after leaving Poland. By 1953
they were able to purchase the property at 7 Burnside Street and lived there for the next 4 years until
they sold it to the Sawulski family.
Sawulski Family (1957-2019)
Chester Sawulski was born on April 30th, 1919 in Thompson, CT, and was married to Janina “Babcia”
(Sowa) Sawulski, born June 20th, 1922 in Poland. Janina met her husband, Chester, an American
citizen, while he was living abroad in Poland. She immigrated to the United States in 1945 and resided
in Salem since her arrival.
13
"Massachusetts Deaths, 1841-1915, 1921-1924", database with images, FamilySearch
(https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:2:SMDN-WWL : 27 October 2020), Entry for Elizabeth E. Mahoney,
1914.
14
"Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1920", database with images, FamilySearch
(https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QLKG-QPMH : 1 September 2021), James B Mahoney in entry for
James T Mahoney, 1918.
15
Massachusetts: Vital Records, 1916-1920. From original records held by the Massachusetts Archives. Online
database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2018. (Original index:
Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1920. FamilySearch, 2011.)
https://www.americanancestors.org/DB2738/rd/53050/157/1423153553
16
1950 US Census, Massachusetts, Essex, 5-82
5
�Chester died on June 27th, 2006 and Janina died 6 years later on August 31st, 2012. Janina was
survived by many family members, including 2 sons and daughters-in-law, as well as many
grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Both Chester and Janina are buried at St. Mary’s Cemetery in
Salem17. After Janina’s passing her house at 7 Burnside Street passed to her son and daughter-in-law,
Charles B. and Paula Sawulski, both of Salem. She was predeceased by one brother and three sisters,
all from Poland.
Janina Sawulski18
17
Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/182779531/chester-sawulski :
accessed 18 July 2022), memorial page for Chester Sawulski (30 Apr 1919–27 Jun 2006), Find a Grave Memorial
ID 182779531, citing Saint Mary's Cemetery, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Thomas
F. Scully (contributor 46818179) .
18
https://www.currentobituary.com/obit/114591
6
�SOURCES
7
�Probate Record of William English19
19
Essex County, MA: Probate File Papers, 1638-1881.Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic
Genealogical Society, 2014. (From records supplied by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Archives.)
8
�1851 Map of Salem
1874 Atlas of Salem, Plate E
9
�1883 Birds Eye View of Salem
1890 to 1903 Atlas of Salem, Plate 16
10
�1897 Atlas of Salem, Plate 10
1906 to 1938 Atlas of Salem, Plate 3
11
�1911 Atlas of Salem, Plate 8
Charles P. Chase and Elizabeth (Heath) Wragg Marriage, 1905
12
�1865 Census - Chipman and Chase Families
1880 US Census - Chipman and Chase Families on Broad Street
13
�Charles P. Chase Death Certificate
14
�William Dunn Birth Record
15
�William F. Dunn Death Certificate
16
�Margaret Dunn Birth Record
17
�Mary Dunn Birth Record
18
�Johanna Dunn Birth Record
Frances Dunn Birth Record
19
�Ellen (Dunn) Page Death Certificate
Elizabeth G. Dunn Death Certificate
20
�Catherine Dunn Birth Record
Anna V. Dunn Death Certificate
21
�1900 US Census Showing 7 Burnside Residents
22
�Timothy J. Murphy Death Certificate
Elizabeth Mahoney Birth Record
23
�James T. Mahoney Death Certificate
James B. Mahoney and Julia M. Murphy Marriage Record
24
�1950 US Census Showing Lukjanowicz Family
25
����1874.
ray 112
Vol.
pound
petition of John Roberts and 5
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244
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Aldermen
that
essity exists for the construction of a Common Sewer,
a nec-
as followas Sewer
Wa.
commencing in Essex Ste opposite the store of Richardson &
En—
Essex St.
to Washington Ste,
and. running westerly through
Easext
to Front
also,
thence southerly through
St.;
Washington Street
Front
Washis
commencing in Market Square at a point opposite the north west
of the Market Houses
and running
Ste.
corner
southerly, on the westerly side of the Market Houses to Front St.,
thence westerly through
to Washington
and that public notice
Front St.
St.,of such in.
Let
tention has been givens
it is hereby,Sguarc
Ordered
that the Commissioner
of Streets ' under the diters
rection of the Committee on Streets, be and he is hereby directeded to construct
a Common
ewer as above
described,
and accord-
ing to a plan by C. A. Putnam, Surveyor, March 1874, and to rePort
a schedule
of the
expense
thereof
to
men
men
pursuant to law."
The
Order
The Board
Attest,
was
adopted.
then
adjourned.
M.
Meek,
Henry
Clerk.
rthe Mayor
or and Alder-
�13.
April
Vol.
1874.
account of the Park St.
8.
Page
226
Sewer$ be referred to the Committee on
Streetse
The motion was adopted,
The Board then adjourned.
Attests
Henry M.
Meeks
Clerk.
A meeting of the Mayor and Aldermen was bald on Monday
evening$ April 13th. s 18749 at 7J o' clock.
All the members were present.
The reading of the record was dispensed with.
The petition
ing
and
X 32 ft. t
Sts.
Federal
18
of J.
B.
Tsdwardsp
for leave
two stories high,, from the
to Lemon St.;
9
and also, a
to move
a build-
of
Beckford
corner
one story hight from Prince St. s to the foot of Pingree St., p was
The first part of the petition was referred to A1Patterson;
second part to Alderman Brooks;
and sent down
submittede
derman
to
be ,
joined.
Came back Messrs.
first$ and Messrs.
The
petition
stones
stepping
mon
St&
tee
on Streets.
was
of
be
Brooke
Luke
placed
and
submitted;
and
13
across Bridge
the
same
was
that
requesting
St.,
parallel with Lereferred to the Commit
otheral
petition of Charles D. Chase and
submitted;
of Burnside St. lwas
ferred to the Committee on Streets.
Charles
of
Burnside
The petition
St.
ferred to the Committee
g
was
y.
16
and
Chase and 16
submitted;
and
others,
the
for
same
the
was
re-
others# for the
was
the same
re-
ac-
on Streets.
The 84ayart for the Committee on Streets$ to whom had
been referred the petition of Charles A. Ropes and others,
for
dredging the docks in South River, made a verbal report, stating that the petitioners would be granted a hearing at eight
o' clock this evening.
The
Report
Bu i,1&ink
Benjamin and Fowler joined to
The
ceptance
l
Brown and Brooks on second.
acceptance
of
Rem ov
building 14 x 20 ft. 9
was
accepted.
Cross-
TE—
Stones
BurnsidE
Sto
Dredgit
Docks
��Homeowner
Graham Hines
Graham Hines & Magdaline
Lawhorn
Charles B. Sawulski & Paula
Sawulski
Charles B. Sawulski
Chester Sawulski & Janina
Sawulski
Wladyslaw Lukjanowicz & Mania
Lukjanowicz
James T. Mahoney & Elizabeth
M. Lovering
Julia M. Murphy & Timothy
Murphy
William Dunn & Mary Dunn
Date
Purchased
Years of
Ownership
Number of
Years
05/06/2021 2021-Present
05/13/2019 2019-2021
09/28/2012 2012-2019
10/1/2012 2012-2019
06/07/1957 1957-2012
06/29/1953 1953-1957
10/4/1949 1949-1953
08/14/1906 1906-1949
05/04/1886 1886-1906
2
7
7
55
4
4
43
20
Documents
Purchase Price Referenced
Description
$380,000.00 39848:573
NE: By Burnside 50', SE: By land now or late of Phillip Brown, being Lot No. 5 on plan
recorded with Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 809, Page 10, 112' 8", SW: by land now or late
of Edwards 50', NW: by land now or late of Fairfield, being Lot No. 3 on said plan, 112' 4",
Being Lot No. 4 on said plan. References prior deed: 37588:517.
$390,000.00 37588:517
NE: By Burnside 50', SE: By land now or late of Phillip Brown, being Lot No. 5 on plan
recorded with Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 809, Page 10, 112' 8", SW: by land now or late
of Edwards 50', NW: by land now or late of Fairfield, being Lot No. 3 on said plan, 112' 4",
Being Lot No. 4 on said plan. References prior deed: 32609:587 (Deed to Trust).
Nominal
Consideration 31788:488
NE: By Burnside 50', SE: By land now or late of Phillip Brown, being Lot No. 5 on plan
recorded with Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 809, Page 10, 112' 8", SW: by land now or late
of Edwards 50', NW: by land now or late of Fairfield, being Lot No. 3 on said plan, 112' 4",
Being Lot No. 4 on said plan. Mentions the probate no. ES12P243EA. References prior deed:
4374:385. Being the same premises conveyed to Chester J. Sawulski and Janina Sawulski by
deed of Wladyslaw Lukjanowicz et ux. For my title, see estate of Janina Sawulski, Essex
Probate No. ES12P243EA
Nominal
Consideration 31788:486
NE: By Burnside 50', SE: By land now or late of Phillip Brown, being Lot No. 5 on plan
recorded with Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 809, Page 10, 112' 8", SW: by land now or late
of Edwards 50', NW: by land now or late of Fairfield, being Lot No. 3 on said plan, 112' 4",
Being Lot No. 4 on said plan. Mentions the probate no. ES12P243EA. References prior deed:
4374:385. Being the same premises conveyed to Chester J. Sawulski and Janina Sawulski by
deed of Wladyslaw Lukjanowicz et ux. For my title, see estate of Janina Sawulski, filed
herewith.
Consideration
paid 4374:385
the land in said Salem, with the buildings thereon, being Lot No. 4 on plan recorded with Essex
South District Deeds, Book 809, Page 10, and bounded and described as follows:
Northeasterly by Burnside Street 50', Southeasterly by land now or late of Phillip Brown, being
Lot No. 5 on said plan, 112' 8", Southwesterly by land now or late of Edwards 50',
Northwesterly by land now or late of Fairfield, being Lot No. 3 on said plan, 112' 4". Being the
same premises conveyed to us by deed of James T. Mahoney et al dated June 29, 1953,
recorded with said Deeds, Book 3989, Page 81.
Consideration
paid 3989:81
The land with the buildings thereon situated at #7 Burnside Street in said Salem being Lot #4
on plan on the English Estate, recorded with Essex South Registry of Deeds Book 809 Page
10, bounded: Northeasterly by Burnside Street 50', Southeasterly by land now or late of Phillip
Brown, being Lot 5 on said plan, 112' 8", Southwesterly by land now or formerly of Edwards,
50', Northwesterly by land now or late of Fairfield, being lot 3 on said plan, 112' 4". Being the
same premises conveyed to us by James B. Mahoney, et ux by deed dated October 4, 1949
and recorded with said Registry Book 3869 Page 103.
No money
consideration 3869:103
The land in said Salem, with buildings thereon, being lot #4 on plan of the English Estate
recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds Book 809 Leaf 10, bounded
Northeasterly by Burnside Street 50', Southeasterly by land now or late of Phillip Brown, being
Lot 5 on said plan, 112' 8", Southwesterly by land now or formerly of Edwards, 50',
Northwesterly by land now or late of Fairfield, being lot 3 on said plan, 112' 4". Being the same
premises conveyed to me by deed of Pierre E. LeBlanc et ux, and recorded with said Registry
Book 3632, Page 385 (This reference to 3632:385 was a transfer from Murphys to LeBlanc
and then back - both recorded same day and time)
$1 and other
valuable
consideration 1836:289
A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon, situated in said Salem, being lot number
four on plan of the English Estate recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book
809 leaf 10, bounded Northeasterly by Burnside Street 50', Southeasterly by land now or late
of Philip Brown, being lot five on said plan 112' 8", Southwesterly by land of Edwards, now or
late, 50', and Northwesterly by land of Fairfield now or late being lot three on said plan, 112' 4"
being same premises conveyed to me by deed of Arthur L. Huntington, dated Sept 13th 1897
and recorded with Essex So. Dist. Reg. of Deeds Book 1524 leaf 530.
$2,200.00 1171:256
Charles P. Chase
10/10/1870 1870-1886
16
$23.02 809:125
Phillip English (William English)
04/09/1851 1851-1870
19
$2,000.00 443:163
5 Shillings 145:247
The following piece of land situated in said Salem and bounded as follows: butting
Northeasterly on land of Dudley Woodbridge, Southeasterly on Ferry Lane, so called,
Southwesterly on a way leading to the North River, and Northwesterly on said river containing
about 3 acres and one half and as it was the desire of the said Mary Toppan that the said land
might go to her grandson, Thomas Pickman, a minor, therefor we the aforesaid Benjamin &
Mary Pickman
08/09/1786 1786-1851
65
This reference to 3632:385 was
a transfer from Murphys to
LeBlanc and then back - both
recorded same day and time James T. Mahoney is the son of
James B. & Julia M. (Murphy)
Mahoney
A certain parcel of land situated in said Salem being lot number four on a plan of the English
Estate recorded in Essex So. Dist. Registry of Deeds B. 809 L. 10 bounded Northeasterly by a
private way, now Burnside Street 50', Southeasterly by land of Philip Brown now or late being
lot number five on said plan 112' 8", Southwesterly by land of Edwards now or late 50', and
Northwesterly by land of Fairfield, now or late, being lot number three on said plan, 112' 4"
being the same premises conveyed to me by deed of Thomas F. Hunt Adm et all recorded in
said Registry B 809 L 125 subject to the taxes assessed May 1, 1886 which the grantee
assumes and agrees to pay in addition to the above consideration. On September 13, 1897
they transferred the property to Arthur L. Huntington with a $300 mortgage and then Arthur L.
Based on city directories Arthur
Huntington transferred the property back to the Dunns without a mortgage. (Recorded 1524:
never appears to have resided
530).
here.
That certain lot of land (the same being lot no. four on a plan herewith recorded, made by
Charles A. Putnam August 31st 1863) situated in said Salem and bounded on a private way
laid out by the late Philip English as on said plan and running from Bridge Street through the
estate conveyed to him the said Philip, by warranty deed of Sophia Pickman, dated on the 9th
day of April 1851, and duly recorded with Essex Deeds Book 443, Leaf 163. Said lot, No. Four
measures on said private way 50' and is bounded Southeasterly by land this day conveyed to
Philip Brown 112 2/3', and Northwesterly by land this day conveyed to Philip English 112 1/3',
and on its remaining boundary 50', together with the right to pass and repass by a sufficient
and convenient way, forty feet wide as laid out on said Putnam's plan, and running from said
Bridge Street to land of the Eastern Railroad Corporation, and from said Corporation's land to
the North River. Also release of dower by the heirs of William English by William Estate by
Thomas Hunt, Administrator. Charles P. Chase had 2 mortgages (827:174 & 952:299) on the
property for $1,500 & $200, likely to build the house.
All that part of the following described piece of land, situated in said Salem, which was not
conveyed to the Eastern Rail Road Company by the said Sophia by her deed dated the 12th
June 1840 and recorded in the Registry of Deeds for the County of Essex, Book 319, Leaf 214
reference thereunto being had for a description of the same, the whole of which piece of land,
including that part conveyed as above to the Eastern Rail Road Company, is described as
follows, viz. bounded Northeasterly on land formerly of Dudley Woodbridge, Southeasterly on
Bridge Street, Southwesterly on land formerly described as a way leading to the North River,
and Northwesterly by said North River, being the same, which was conveyed by Benjamin &
Mary Pickman to Thomas PIckman by their deed dated the 9th August 1786 and recorded in
the Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 145, Leaf 247.
Sophia Pickman
Notes
Salem Five eventually owned
the property, likely due to
foreclosure, before selling the
property to the Dunn Family.
�Directory Year
Residents
Occupation or Notes
1872 Charles Chase
Butcher
1874 Charles P. Chase
Butcher, 46 Pleasant
1876 Charles P. Chase
Butcher, 46 Pleasant
Icabod W. Chandler
1878 Charles P. Chase
Icabod W. Chandler
1881 George O. Stevens
O. P. Wiggins
1882-1883 George O. Stevens
O. P. Wiggins
1884-1886 James L. Crocker
1890 - 1891 William Dunn
Olus Johnson
1893-1894 William Dunn
Joseph N. Milliard
1895-1896 William Dunn
George D. Rix
1897-1898 William Dunn
James F. Burns
1899-1900 William Dunn
Norman. J. McIntyre
1901-1902 William Dunn
William J. Busteed
1906 William Dunn
Adrian T. Robblee
1910-1911 Timothy J. Murphy
James M. Donovan
1914-1915 James B. Mahoney
John S. Fitzgerald
1917 James B. Mahoney
Silas D. & Helen M. Rivers
Painter
Butcher, 46 Pleasant
Painter, E.R.R. Car Shop
Conductor, H. R. R.
Carpenter
Conductor, H. R. R.
Carpenter
Conductor
Stoker, Salem Gas Works
Car Painter
Stoker, Salem Gas Works
Car Carpenter
Stoker, Salem Gas Works
Carpenter
Stoker, Salem Gas Works
Shoemaker
Laborer
Blacksmith
Rem to Peabody
Shoe Cutter
Crossing Tender (Beverly)
Blacksmith
Laborer
Engineer at B&M RR
Shoemaker
Shoemaker
Shoemaker
Conductor
1921 James B. (Julie N.) Mahoney
Shoe Worker
Fred (Katherine) Litka
Shoe Worker
1931 James B. (Julie N.) Mahoney
Leather Worker
Vacant
1933 - 1936 Josephine Fuller
James B. (Julia M.) Mahoney
Leather Worker
Elizabeth M. Mahoney
Welder
1937 George A. (Josephine) Dupuis
Bakers Helper at Boris Bakery & Market
James B. (Julia M.) Mahoney
Leather Worker
James T. Mahoney
Clerk
�������������������������������������������Inventory No:
SAL.2941
Historic Name:
Chase, Charles P. House
Common Name:
Dunn, William - Mahoney, James
House
Address:
7 Burnside St
City/Town:
Salem
Village/Neighborhood:
Bridge Street;
Local No:
36-0157;
Year Constructed:
C 1870
Architectural Style(s):
No style;
Use(s):
Multiple Family Dwelling House;
Significance:
Architecture;
Area(s):
SAL.DW, SAL.IV
Designation(s):
Nat'l Register District (07/19/2002);
Building Materials:
Roof: Asphalt Shingle;
Wall: Vinyl Siding; Wood;
Foundation: Stone, Cut;
Demolished
No
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FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A DEVELOPER AND/OR A PROPOSED PROJECT THAT WILL
REQUIRE A PERMIT, LICENSE OR FUNDING FROM ANY STATE OR FEDERAL AGENCY YOU MUST SUBMIT A PROJECT NOTIFICATION
FORM TO MHC FOR MHC'S REVIEW AND COMMENT. You can obtain a copy of a PNF through the MHC web site (www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc)
under the subject heading "MHC Forms."
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Historical Commission
220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston, Massachusetts 02125
www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc
This file was accessed on: Thursday, May 12, 2022 at 12:28 AM
�NR DIS 7/19/2002
FORM B BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Assessor’s Number
USGS Quad
36-0157
Area(s)
IV,
DW
Salem
Town/City:
Form Number
SAL.2941
Salem
Place: (neighborhood or village):
Bridge Street Neck
Photograph
Address: 7 Burnside Street
Historic Name: Charles Chase House
Uses: Present:
multi-family dwelling house
Original: multi-family dwelling house
Date of Construction: c.1870
Source:
deeds, maps
Style/Form:
Architect/Builder:
unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation: stone
Locus Map
Wall/Trim:
vinyl siding
Roof:
asphalt shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
sheds
Major Alterations (with dates):
Date unknown – vinyl siding, new windows, enclosure of
porch
Condition:
Moved: no
fair (due to siding)
yes
Date:
Acreage:
0.129 acre
Setting:
mixed residential neighborhood
RECEIVED
Recorded by: Lisa Mausolf
SEPT 01 2011
Organization: City of Salem
MASS. HIST. COMM.
Date (month / year): March 2011
3/10
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
�INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
SALEM
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
7 BURNSIDE STREET
Area(s)
Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
IV,DW
SAL.2941
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form.
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION:
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
The house at 7 Burnside Street is a 2 ½-story, 5 x 2-bay dwelling which is set on a stone foundation and sheathed in vinyl siding.
It is oriented with its gable end to the street, displaying projecting eaves ending in cornice returns. The main entrance is
centered on the east elevation and is sheltered by a single-story porch which was enclosed in recent years and also covers the
two windows to the south as well. The 2/2 window which survives in the attic is an indication of the original window type; the
remaining windows have been replaced by modern 1/1 sash. Extending behind the main house block is a smaller wing of similar
height that is historic if not original. It has the same configuration on early 20th century Sanborn maps. A secondary entrance is
located on the east wall of the wing. Two small sheds are located in the back yard.
Despite alterations including siding and new windows, this house is a contributing property in the Bridge Street Neck Historic
District, listed on the National Register on July 19, 2002. The rear sheds are not referenced in the National Register nomination.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the
owners/occupants played within the community.
What is now Burnside Street was laid out in 1870 as part of the subdivision of the Philip English Estate. The house at 7
Burnside Street was built prior to 1872. The 1874 map shows the owner as Charles P. Chase; directories indicate that he was
living on Burnside Street in 1872. He was a butcher.
Deeds indicate that the property was acquired by William Dunn in 1886 and the 1897 map still shows him as the owner at that
time. The house was rented by William Busteed, a shoe cutter, in 1900. In 1906 Dunn sold the property to James & Julia
Mahoney. The 1910 Census indicates that the house was occupied by Timothy Murphy, a 54 widower who lived here with his
daughter Julia. He was born in England and worked as a laborer on the coal wharf. The other unit was rented to James
Donovan, a locomotive engineer. By 1920 the house was owned by James Mahoney and his wife Julia (nee Murphy). He
worked as a stitcher at the shoe factory. In 1930 the two tenants were the families of James Hubley, a carpenter, and Richard
McCarthy, a porter at the fish pier.
The property was sold by members of the Mahoney family in 1953 to Mania and Wladyslaw Lukyanowicz who sold the property
to Chester and Janina Sowalskie in 1957.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
City of Salem, Building Permits, 1871-1889. [Salem City Hall].
Essex County Registry of Deeds, Salem, Massachusetts.
Hopkins, G.M. Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts. Philadelphia: 1874.
Salem Directories, various dates.
Salem maps, 1897, 1911.
Sanborn Insurance Maps, 1890-1903; 1906-1955 [Essex County Registry of Deeds]
U.S. Census, 1880-1930.
Continuation sheet 1
�
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
7 Burnside Street, Salem, MA, 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Charles P. Chase, butcher
Built in 1871
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem Inc.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Built in 1871
House history completed 2022
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Leslie Fontaine
Language
A language of the resource
English
1871
2022
7 Burnside Street
butcher
Chase
Massachusetts
Salem