A Condensed History of Stamford,
Connecticut
The 19th Century
With the advance of the nineteenth
century, the face of America changed, and the Eastern seaboard became industrialized
and populous.
To meet the demand for better
transportation, the Post Road underwent continuing change and
improvement. Widened, graveled and finally paved, it stretched from
Maine to Florida as U.S. Route 1.
Driving along the Main Street in
Stamford today, you can still see the waterfall on Mill River, though
it does not look quite as it did to the eyes of George
Washington.
America is a nation of immigrants, and
Stamford is America in microcosm. With roots in the Anglo-Saxon
tradition, the city of Stamford has been molded and modified by many
cultural influences during the years from 1848 to the present
time.
With the opening of the railroad in
1848, Stamford became accessible to outsiders. By 1850 the population
had grown to 5,000 people, by 1880 it had reached 11,000.
The first wave of new residents were
mainly from Ireland, and many found jobs in the mills; some worked as
day laborers, gardeners, and coachmen. As would happen with later
immigrant groups in similar circumstances, the Irish lived among
themselves, mainly in an area near the railroad tracks called
Dublin.
The new residents were often aggressive
and spirited, but, as might be expected, such positive qualities were
not always warmly welcomed.
Prejudice, along with fear that “papists” would
have mixed loyalties, prompted antagonism. Men like Pat Hanrahan and Patrick
Boyle arrived from Ireland in the
mid 1840's, took whatever jobs there were, and set out to build a new
life. These men made it in Stamford, but we can't assume that success
in the melting pot was only a matter of time, toil and
temperament.
Fear, loneliness and homesickness were
often unbearable for many immigrants, and the pain of adjusting to
the ways of the New World was common to all of them.
In the 1880's political and economic
upheavals in Europe brought about a new wave of immigrants. A
considerable number of Germans settled in Stamford and like their
earlier Irish counterparts, they took whatever employment was
available.
By the last decade of the nineteenth
century, Stamford was rapidly becoming industrialized. It was the
availability of cheap foreign born labor that enabled many local
companies to prosper and expand. The Stamford Manufacturing Company,
formerly the old Cove Mills, and the St. John Woodworking Company,
later known as Getman and Judd, were dependable employers of
immigrant labor.
The most influential local business firm
of the era, the Yale and Towne Manufacturing Company, employed nearly
1000 people by 1892, roughly six percent of the total population of
Stamford.
Assimilation can seem a simple matter to those born
into the dominant culture, but to the immigrant settlers, there were two distinct
worlds, the place where one lived and the place where one worked, and each upheld
separate standards of behavior.
Next Chapter: Here's how segregation of living worked in Stamford: Revonah Manor
Assimilation
can seem a simple matter to those born into the dominant culture, but to the
immigrant settlers, there were two distinct worlds, the place where one lived
and the place where one worked, and each upheld separate standards of behavior.