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Chicopee (/ˈɪkəpi/ CHIK-ə-pee) is a city located on the Connecticut River in Hampden County, Massachusetts, United States. As of the 2020 census, the city had a population of 55,560, making it the second-largest city in Western Massachusetts after Springfield.[7] Chicopee is part of the Springfield, Massachusetts Metropolitan Statistical Area. The communities of Chicopee Center (Cabotville), Chicopee Falls, Willimansett, Fairview, Aldenville, Burnett Road, Smith Highlands and Westover are located within the city.

Chicopee, Massachusetts
City
Clockwise from top: Chicopee City Hall, Berchmans Hall at College of Our Lady of the Elms, the Polish Center of Discovery and Learning, Al's Diner, and the Carreau Block
Nicknames: 
Crossroads of New England
Kielbasa Capital of the World[1][2]
Motto(s): 
Industriæ Variæ (Latin)
"Varied Industries"
[3]
Location in Hampden County in Massachusetts
Chicopee, Massachusetts
Location in the United States
Chicopee, Massachusetts
Chicopee, Massachusetts (Massachusetts)
Coordinates: 42°08′55″N 72°36′30″W
Country United States
State Massachusetts
County Hampden
Settled1640
Incorporated (town)April 29, 1848
Incorporated (city)April 18, 1890
Government
  TypeMayor–council city
  MayorJohn L. Vieau (I)[4][5]
Area
  Total23.87 sq mi (61.83 km2)
  Land22.91 sq mi (59.33 km2)
  Water0.97 sq mi (2.50 km2)
Elevation
200 ft (61 m)
Population
 (2020)
  Total55,560
  Density2,425.57/sq mi (936.53/km2)
Time zoneUTC−05:00 (Eastern)
  Summer (DST)UTC−04:00 (Eastern)
ZIP Codes
01013, 01020, 01021, 01022
Area code413
FIPS code25-13660
GNIS feature ID0617597
Websitewww.chicopeema.gov

One of the ventures of the Boston Associates,[8] Chicopee is a city built around several smaller former mill communities on its namesake, the Chicopee River. During the 19th century, the city was home to the first American producer of friction matches as well as a variety of other industries,[9] including the Ames Manufacturing Company, an early pioneer in machining lathes, building upon the work of Springfield's Thomas Blanchard, and the largest producer of swords and cutlasses for the Union Army during the Civil War.[10][11] By the start of the 20th century, the city was home to a number of industrial plants, including those of the Fisk Tire Company, one of the largest tire makers of that time, and some of the earliest sporting goods factories of A. G. Spalding.[12]

Today the city is home to a variety of specialty manufacturers, as well as Westover Air Reserve Base, the largest Air Force Reserve Base of the United States, built in 1940 with the emergence of World War II.[13] Chicopee today goes by the nickname the "Crossroads of New England" as part of a business-development marketing campaign, one that West Springfield also uses. The name reflects the city's location among a number of metropolitan areas and its transportation network. Four interstate highways run through its boundaries, including I-90, I-91, I-291, and I-391, as well as state routes such as Route 33, 116, and 141.


Name


The city is named after the Chicopee River, a tributary that flows into the Connecticut River at the confluence on in its boundaries. "Chicopee" is derived from the Nipmuc language, probably from the words chekee ("violent") and pe ("waters") in most Algonquian dialects, with reference to rapids. The Nipmuc are the indigenous people who occupied this area before the arrival of European colonists.

Alternatively, chikkuppee ("of cedar") may be the adjective form of chickkup ("cedar").[14]


History



Nayasett (Cabotville and Chicopee Falls)


Top to bottom: Cabotville as it appeared in 1844, prior to the incorporation of Chicopee; the dam at Chicopee Falls today

In 1636, William Pynchon purchased land from the Agawam Indians on the east side of the Connecticut River. He moved from the Town of Roxbury to Springfield to found the first settlement in the area that comprises the territory of today's Chicopee Center (Cabotville). Both Cabotville and the Falls were developed as manufacturing centers (villages).[15]

According to local historian Charles J. Seaver, the area above the falls was first settled in 1660. The land purchased from the Indians was divided into districts. Nayasett (Nipmuc for "at the small point/angle") was the name given to the area of what are now Chicopee Center and Chicopee Falls. The settlement in the upper district was at Skipmuck (possibly based on Nipmuc Skipmaug, meaning "chief fishing place" or Shipmuck, meaning "big watery place"), a place above the falls on the south side of the river.[citation needed]

Colonists built a sawmill as the first industrial site along the river. The mill was built at Skenungonuck (Nipmuc for "green fields") Falls (now Chicopee Falls) in 1678 by Japhet Chapin, John Hitchcock and Nathaniel Foote.[citation needed]

In 1786, what was called Factory Village began to develop when two acres of land was leased to 10 local men, with the understanding that they would build an iron foundry within two years. This was accomplished and the business flourished.[citation needed]

In 1823, Jonathan Dwight purchased the water privilege at Skenungonuck Falls in Chicopee. He built a textile mill and five years later, it operated 14,000 spindles and nearly 500 looms, making it the second-largest operation in the state. It processed cotton from the Deep South, becoming part of the extended slave economy and King Cotton. By 1831, settlers had developed two giant dams, two waterpower canals, and two manufacturing communities on the Chicopee River.[citation needed]

In 1848, Chicopee, which for more than two centuries had been a part of the Town of Springfield, was separated and organized as a distinct town. Political factions in Springfield wanted that jurisdiction to remain a town, rather than become a city and take on a mayoral form of government. By partitioning Chicopee, those political factions prevented Springfield from becoming a city until 1852. The result was that Springfield lost 2/5 of its land area and nearly half of its population when Chicopee was created.[citation needed]

Before and after the partition, eight Chicopee River companies gained product recognition around the globe: Ames, Belcher, Lamb, Dwight, Stevens, Spalding, Fisk, and Duryea. Below the falls, in the bend of the river at a place called Factory Village, an important chapter of the region's industrial history was played out.[citation needed]


Various industries


Chicopee adopted the motto "Industriae Variae", which means "Various Industries". Chicopee's industries included cotton mills, woolen mills, textiles, brass and iron foundries, paper making, footwear factories, for leather boots and shoes, the first friction matches, and ship building. In nearby South Hadley Canal, the firearms company Crescent-Davis specialized in producing double-barrel shotguns.

The Ames Manufacturing Company made many machines and bronze cannons, and more swords than any other American manufacturer at the time. Ames cast a number of bronze statues, including Thomas Ball's monumental equestrian statue of President George Washington, installed in Boston's Public Garden. Ames was a major provider of cannon to the Union army during the Civil War.[16] The Stevens Arms plant (later Savage) was responsible for most of the No. 4 Enfields manufactured for the British under Lend-Lease. Chicopee was home to production of the first gasoline-powered automobile made in the United States, the Duryea.[17][18]


Bicycles

Overman advert
Overman advert

During the late nineteenth century, Chicopee Falls became a major manufacturing center of bicycles.[19] The town was the site of at least two bicycle factories: The Overman Wheel Company (1882 to about 1899), and the Spalding sporting goods company.[20]

Albert H. Overman moved his bicycle production from Hartford, Connecticut to Chicopee Falls in 1883.[19] The Overman company benefited from the surging popularity of the safety bicycle during the bicycle boom of the 1890s. At its height in 1894, Overman's factory employed over 1,200 workers. The boom eventually went bust, as overproduction drove the price of bicycles down. By 1901 the Overman firm was out of business.[19]


Library


Chicopee was the first city west of Boston to form a publicly funded public library. The Chicopee Public Library was formed by a donation to the city by the Cabotville Institute.

Main Branch of the Chicopee Public Library
Main Branch of the Chicopee Public Library

Neighborhoods



Willimansett


In 1641, Willian Pynchon expanded his 1636 holdings by buying the land from the Chicopee River north to the Willimansett (Nipmuc for "good berries place" or "place of red earth") Brook. Land sales in Chicopee were recorded in 1659, but apparently no homes were built immediately.

Winthrop McKinstry writes that the sons of Deacon Samuel Chapin appear to be the first home builders. Henry Chapin is believed to have constructed his at Exchange and West streets (lower Chicopee) in 1664, and Japhet Chapin north of what is now known as James Ferry Road (upper Chicopee) in 1673. It is apparent from McKinstry's book that the Chapin family dominated the area north of the Chicopee River for the settlement's first 70 years. Chicopee Street was part of the First Parish in Springfield.

By the 1750s, Quabbin Road (now McKinstry Avenue) allowed the farmers to access the meadows and fields on the plains at the top of the hill. The Chapins used the land in common for grazing livestock and built ice houses near several large ponds. The ponds were drained by several brooks which flowed into the Connecticut River.

At the end of the 19th century, the city voted to build the Willimansett Bridge, connecting Willimansett with Holyoke across the Connecticut River. The results were profound. Willimansett and Aldenville would develop close ties to Holyoke; even postal and telephone service were (and still are) tied to the "Paper City." The legislative act ordering the building of the bridge was passed in 1892. L.L. Johnson reports that the completion of the bridge was grandly celebrated.

By the 20th century, Willimansett village had developed into quintessential Americana with a high percentage of French Canadian inhabitants. In total, Chicopee became four distinct commercial and political sub-divisions, each with its own ethnic makeup representing its own special interests and, much too frequently, in conflict with each other.

Located between Fairview and Willimansett, the Smith Highlands section once had its own school (first and second grades), Holyoke Street Railway bus service from Ingham Street across Irene, Factory, and Prospect streets, and two locally owned markets. The former Robert's Pond swimming area was a popular summer attraction, and the fields where the current Bellamy Junior High School is located were a popular sledding and skiing location winters.


Fairview


Fairview is the northernmost neighborhood (village) in Chicopee and originally included the lands that are now part of Westover ARB. Primarily agricultural, Fairview was known for its tobacco farms. After 1939, Westover helped to rapidly develop the village into a residential and commercial district. Memorial Drive (Route 33) flows north–south connecting Chicopee Falls with South Hadley.


Aldenville


On August 18, 1870, Edward Monroe Alden purchased 600 acres of land just east of Willimansett for the sum of $9,000 with the intent to create a "little city on the hill," which would become Aldenville. In 1890, he began laying out streets which he named for family members and divided the land up into 60-by-170 feet lots. French-Canadian factory workers from Chicopee Falls, Cabotville (Chicopee Center), and Holyoke began to build up the community. Sold for a selling price of $150 with $10 down, the first house was bought and built by French-Canadian builder and carpenter Marcellin Croteau.[21]


Partition from Springfield and modern history


Seal of the former Town of Chicopee, prior to its incorporation as a city in 1890
Seal of the former Town of Chicopee, prior to its incorporation as a city in 1890
Basilica of Saint Stanislaus, Bishop & Martyr
Basilica of Saint Stanislaus, Bishop & Martyr

The villages of Cabotville, Chicopee Falls, Willimansett, and Fairview (and the lands that would become Aldenville) remained a part of Springfield, Massachusetts, from 1636 until 1848, when they were partitioned to form the Town of Chicopee. Political factions in Springfield had wished to keep Springfield a "town," instead of becoming a "city," which would give it a mayoral form of government. To keep Springfield sufficiently unpopulated to subvert a state regulation that would have required it to become a city, they partitioned Chicopee, which contained approximately 2/5 of Springfield's land area, and nearly half of its population.

Regardless of the partition, Springfield became a city only four years after the partition of Chicopee. Both cities continued to flourish for over a century after the partition.

On April 18, 1890, the community was granted a charter as a city by the Massachusetts General Court. George Sylvester Taylor (1822–1910) became Chicopee's first mayor on January 5, 1891.

Westover Field was created by a war-readiness appropriation signed by president Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1939. The site used to be tobacco crop fields east of and part of Fairview, east of Aldenview, and northern Willimansett. It was assigned to the United States Army Air Corps Northeast Air District. It was renamed Westover Air Force Base in 1948 after that Air Force's creation as a separate service. In 1974 SAC leadership turned the base over to the Air Force Reserve.

In 1991, St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Church, located on Front Street, was proclaimed a minor basilica by Pope John Paul II.


Geography


Chicopee is located at 42°10′13″N 72°35′19″W (42.170159, –72.588630).[22]

The city is made up of several neighborhoods; the result of the city's origin as a collection of four villages in the northernmost part of Springfield, which seceded from it in 1848. Chicopee Falls, Chicopee Center (Cabotville), Fairview, and Willimansett continued to develop. In the early 1900s, Aldenville developed as a distinct community. Since then, the city has filled in most of its open space resulting in a number of new neighborhoods. These neighborhoods include Chicomansett, Ferry Lane, Sandy Hill and the geographically isolated Burnett Road neighborhood.

The city is bordered by Holyoke to the northwest, West Springfield to the southwest, Springfield to the south, Ludlow to the east, Granby to the northeast and South Hadley to the north. Chicopee is located 29 miles (47 km) away from Hartford, 89 miles (143 km) away from Boston, 90 miles (140 km) from Albany and 140 miles (230 km) from New York City.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 23.9 square miles (62 km2), of which 22.9 square miles (59 km2) is land and 1.0 square mile (2.6 km2) (4.31%) is water. The Chicopee River flows through the south part of the city, emptying into the Connecticut River. Many ponds, lakes, and streams are part of the Chicopee River or Connecticut River watersheds.

Willimansett, and portions of the Center and Falls are on low land, with Aldenville, Fairview, Westover, and the Burnett Road neighborhoods on an elevated plateau. At 288 feet, the highest elevation in the city is on Old Lyman Road, in the Fairview section.


Culture



Events


Westover ARB Tower at The Great New England Air Show
Westover ARB Tower at The Great New England Air Show

Sites


A Chicopee War Memorial
A Chicopee War Memorial
A tank in Szot Park
A tank in Szot Park
Chicopee City Hall
Chicopee City Hall
Edward Bellamy House
Edward Bellamy House

Economy


The standard 5-cup Chemex coffeemaker, as seen on display at the Brooklyn Museum
The standard 5-cup Chemex coffeemaker, as seen on display at the Brooklyn Museum

Chicopee is mostly a service economy with a mixture of small, local businesses and national chains. The city is also home to a number of Polish-American food product manufacturers, reflecting the city's history, and include the Chicopee Provision Company, a major producer of Polish sausage kielbasa under the Blue Seal brand, Millie's Pierogi, a producer of those traditional Polish dumplings, and Domin & Sons, the region's largest producer of horseradish, whose largest market was Polish consumers at Easter.[28]

Despite changes in the global economy, Chicopee does remain home to manufacturers including Callaway Golf which produces more than 5 million golfballs a year at its Willamansett production plant.[29] Since 2013, Chicopee has been home to the headquarters of the Chemex Corporation, makers of the Chemex pour-over coffeemaker, which has been produced with the same design since 1941.[30][31] Chicopee also hosts the Buxton Company, which "designs, manufactures, and markets personal leather goods, travel kits, and gifts collections for men and women." Founded as L.A.W. Novelty Co. in 1898, the firm changed its name to Buxton Co., LLC in 1921.[32]

Chicopee is home to a handful of financial businesses as well including Alden Credit Union,[33] The Polish National Credit Union[34] and Chicopee Savings Bank.[35] Chicopee Savings Bank is run by Chicopee Bancorp, which operates trades as CBNK on the NASDAQ exchange.

The Chicopee River Business Park and Westover Business Park are within the city's boundaries.


Demographics


Historical population
YearPop.±%
18508,291    
18607,261−12.4%
18709,607+32.3%
188011,286+17.5%
189014,050+24.5%
190019,167+36.4%
191025,401+32.5%
192036,214+42.6%
193043,930+21.3%
194041,664−5.2%
195049,211+18.1%
196061,553+25.1%
197066,676+8.3%
198055,112−17.3%
199056,632+2.8%
200054,653−3.5%
201055,298+1.2%
202055,560+0.5%
* = population estimate.
Source: United States census records and Population Estimates Program data.[36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45]
Source:
U.S. Decennial Census[46][47]

As of the census of 2010, Chicopee was 3.1% black, 1.6% Asian, 18.5% Hispanic or Latino of any race, 75% white

As of the census[48] of 2000, there were 54,653 people, 23,117 households, and 14,147 families residing in the city. The population density was 2,389.7 inhabitants per square mile (922.7/km2). There were 24,424 housing units at an average density of 1,067.9 per square mile (412.3/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 89.82% White, 2.28% African American, 0.20% Native American, 0.87% Asian, 0.10% Pacific Islander, 4.90% from other races, and 1.84% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 8.76% of the population (12.8% Puerto Rican, 0.5% Dominican, 0.4% Mexican, 0.2% Colombian). Chicopee is the second largest municipality in Western Massachusetts, after Springfield (defining Western Massachusetts as Hampden, Hampshire, Franklin, and Berkshire counties).

There were 23,117 households, out of which 26.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 42.6% were married couples living together, 14.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 38.8% were non-families. 32.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 14.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.32 and the average family size was 2.96.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 22.6% under the age of 18, 8.5% from 18 to 24, 28.8% from 25 to 44, 22.5% from 45 to 64, and 17.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 39 years. For every 100 females, there were 90.7 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87.1 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $35,672, and the median income for a family was $44,136. Males had a median income of $35,585 versus $25,975 for females. The per capita income for the city was $18,646. About 9.6% of families and 12.3% of the population were below the poverty line, including 19.5% of those under age 18 and 9.3% of those age 65 or over.


Government and Politics


Chicopee has a mayor-council form of government, with a City Council for its legislative branch and a Mayor for its executive branch.

The City Council consists of nine Ward Councilors and four Councilors-at-Large. One Ward Councilor is elected from each ward. The four Councilors-at-Large are elected by all voters in the city. Ward Councilors serve one-year terms, while Councilors-at-Large serve two-year terms. Mayors serve one two-year term. Since 1941, local elections in Chicopee have been non-partisan.[49] From 1890 to 1914, the city had a bicameral legislature consisting of eight wards, with one member of the Board of Aldermen and two members of the Common Council elected from each ward.[50] The city replaced this system by abolishing the Common Council and adding ten aldermen-at-large to the Board of Aldermen.[51] In 2008, the Board of Aldermen approved a home-rule petition to change the legislature's name to the City Council.[52] The name change took effect in 2009.[53]

Chicopee also directly elects the following local offices and bodies:

City Council Members[55]
TitleNameDistrictFirst elected
Councilor-at-Large / PresidentFrank N. LaflammeAt-Large2010
Councilor-at-LargeGerard RoyAt-Large2014
Councilor-at-LargeJames TillotsonAt-Large1996
Councilor-at-Large / Vice-PresidentRobert J. ZygarowskiAt-Large2004
Ward CouncilorJoel McAuliffe12018
Ward CouncilorShane D. Brooks22014
Ward CouncilorDelmarina López32022
Ward CouncilorGeorge A. Balakier42018
Ward CouncilorFrederick T. Krampits52002
Ward CouncilorDerek Dobosz62018
Ward CouncilorWilliam Courchesne72016
Ward CouncilorGary R. Labrie82013
Ward CouncilorMary Beth Pniak-Costello92022

Voter Registration


Registered Voters and Party Enrollment[56]
Year Democratic Republican Unenrolled Total
2004 15,240 44.9% 3,836 11.3% 14,519 42.8% 33,907
2006 14,476 43.5% 3,748 11.3% 14,811 44.5% 33,306
2008 14,751 42.2% 3,759 10.8% 16,162 46.2% 34,959
2010 14,265 41.2% 3677 10.6% 16484 47.6% 34,645
2012 14,171 39.6% 3,786 10.6% 17,578 49.2% 35,761
2014 14,171 39.8% 3,707 10.4% 17,943 50.4% 35,583
2016 13,172 35.5% 4,070 11% 19,322 52.1% 37,110
2018 12,510 33.4% 4,153 11.1% 20,139 53.8% 37,410
2020 12,013 30.8% 4,357 11.2% 21,953 56.4% 38,943
2022 11,196 28% 4,088 10% 23,951 60% 39,816

Education


The former Chicopee High School, now the DuPont Memorial Middle School serving grades 6 through 8
The former Chicopee High School, now the DuPont Memorial Middle School serving grades 6 through 8

College of Our Lady of the Elms


The College of Our Lady of the Elms is a four-year liberal arts college offering thirty-three academic majors. It was first founded in 1897 as a girls' preparatory academy in Pittsfield, the Academy of Our Lady of the Elms. In 1899, it moved to Chicopee as St. Joseph's Normal College. A charter for the school to operate as a women's liberal arts college was approved in 1928, and the name was changed to the College of Our Lady of the Elms. It began admitting men in 1998.


Private elementary


Chicopee has a multitude of Catholic schools that are operated under the Diocese of Springfield. These schools include: Saint Joan of Arc School which serves Saint Rose de Lima Church on Grattan Street; and Saint Stanislaus School which serves the St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr's Parish Bishop and Martyr on Front Street.

Within the past decade, a number of private elementary schools and their associated parishes have closed. These include Assumption School which served the former Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary parish, Saint Patrick's School which served the former Saint Patrick's parish (closure of this parish is currently in dispute), Holy Name School which served Holy Name of Jesus parish, Mount Carmel School which served the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary parish, and Saint George School which served Saint George's parish that merged with Saint Rose de Lima / Saint Joan of Arc School.


Private secondary


Holyoke Catholic High School
Holyoke Catholic High School

Holyoke Catholic High School was founded in 1963 at the campus of the former Saint Jerome High School in Holyoke. In 2002 it relocated to the campus of Saint Hyacinth Seminary in Granby. It moved to its Holyoke location in September 2008, and 2015 it merged with Cathedral High School to form a new regional Catholic school that was completed in 2016 as Pope Francis High School in Springfield.[57][58]


Notable people


Edward Bellamy, c. 1889
Edward Bellamy, c.1889

See also



References


  1. Trausch, Susan (1990), "There is Life Beyond Boston – Really," The Boston Globe, June 6, 1990, p. 17: "[Springfield] has Chicopee, "Kielbasa Capital of the World," right next door."
  2. "'King Kielbasa' unveiled," Archived 2017-09-21 at the Wayback Machine UPI, September 5, 1984: "[Chicopee Provision Co.] has been making the kielbasa since the festival began in 1974 to boost tourism in the western Massachusetts city of about 55,000, which has a large Polish population and calls itself the Kielbasa Capital of the World." Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  3. Plourde-Barker, Michele (1998). Chicopee. Arcadia. p. 29. ISBN 9780738590066. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08.
  4. Lovelace, Curt (26 November 2002). "Republicans Give Thanks". Mass News. Archived from the original on 12 January 2016. Retrieved 17 September 2015. Mayor Richard Kos of Chicopee did nothing to dispel the mood when he proclaimed, 'There is an excitement in the air.' He went on to urge candidates to make sure that they 'stand for something." He added, 'If you stand for nothing, people will fear that you'll fall for anything.' Decrying government waste and the emphasis on 'bringing home the pork,' the four-term Republican Mayor, proclaimed.
  5. "Mayor's Office". City of Chicopee. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  6. "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  7. "Census - Geography Profile: Chicopee city, Massachusetts". Retrieved September 25, 2021.
  8. The Run of the Mill, Steve Dunwell, 1978
  9. Federal Writers' Project (1937), "Haverhill", Massachusetts: a Guide to its Places and People, American Guide Series, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, hdl:2027/mdp.39015014440781
  10. "Some Personal Items". Army and Navy Journal. Vol. XVIII. May 14, 1881. p. 850. Mr Woodworth is the president of the Ames Manufacturing Company- the largest sword manufacturing establishment in the country
    • Wylie, Arthur (1980). American Swords. Tulsa: MCN Press. ISBN 9781304811967.
  11. Tony Griffiths (November 24, 2018). "Ames of Chicopee Mass". Lathes.co.uk. Archived from the original on November 24, 2018. Although little is known of Ames Chicopee machine-tool production, they must have been at the forefront of developments: an example of their gunstock copying lathe is in the London Science Museum and several examples of an early and beautifully-made 7.25" swing backgeared and screwcutting lathe have survived. Although dating the lathes shown here must be a matter for conjecture, with Ames Chicopee founded in 1810 and machine-tool production starting in 1835
  12. Springfield Republican, October 10, 1893, p. 6
  13. "About Westover Air Reserve Base". Westover Air Reserve Base. United States Air Force. Archived from the original on September 5, 2019.
  14. An Historical Address / Delivered before the citizens of Springfield in Massachusetts at the public celebration May 26, 1911, of the Two Hundred and Seventy-Fifth Anniversary of the Settlement with Five Appendices, by Charles H. Barrows. Copyright 1916, Connecticut Valley Historical Society. Thef. A. Bassett Co. Printers, Springfield, Mass. Appendix A, "Meaning of Local Indian Names."
  15. Chicopee Illustrated 1896, Transcript Publishing Company, Holyoke, MA
  16. Lynch, Jacqueline T. (3 March 2009). "The Ames Manufacturing Company – Civil War and the New England Mill Town". New England Travels. Originally published in North and South Magazine June 2006. Archived from the original on 23 August 2011. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  17. G.N. Georgano. Cars: Early and Vintage, 1886-1930 (London: Grange-Universal, 1985)
  18. Kimes, Beverly Rae [editor] and Clark, Henry Austin, jr., The Standard Catalogue of American Cars 1805–1942 , 2nd edition, Krause Publications [1989], ISBN 0-87341-111-0
  19. Jendrysik, Stephen (June 26, 2013). "Stephen Jendrysik: Victor bicycle rode economic rise, fall". MassLive. Archived from the original on March 2, 2016. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  20. "The Overman Failure". Democrat and Chronicle. Rochester, New York. December 30, 1897. p. 13. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  21. www.masslive.com https://web.archive.org/web/20120924105715/http://www.masslive.com/holyokeplus/republican/index.ssf?%2Fbase%2Fnews-6%2F1302507943103390.xml&coll=1. Archived from the original on 2012-09-24. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  22. "US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990". United States Census Bureau. 2011-02-12. Retrieved 2011-04-23.
  23. "Great New England Air Show". www.greatnewenglandairshow.com. Archived from the original on 2011-04-23.
  24. "Westover Air Reserve Base Home". www.westover.afrc.af.mil. Archived from the original on 2006-04-23.
  25. "About Us". www.westover.afrc.af.mil. Archived from the original on 2016-01-12.
  26. Reserve, Air Force. "Air Force Reserve". afreserve.com. Archived from the original on 2016-01-05.
  27. "Westover Airport: quick turns, competitive rates & safety". Archived from the original on 2016-01-03.
  28. "Chicopee Farmers Get Kick Raising Uncommon Crop; Frank Domin & Sons Produce and Process Bulk of All Horseradish Grown in Western Mass". Springfield Union. Springfield, Mass. July 7, 1953. p. 13 via NewsBank.
  29. "Out of the rough: Callaway Golf Co. grows Chicopee factory, production workforce". MassLive. 4 September 2017. Archived from the original on 27 February 2018. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  30. Chemex Coffeemaker Archived 2011-08-09 at the Wayback Machine, official website. Retrieved January 2018.
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Further reading





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