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  • Tags: monograph

mhs-2019.263.pdf
"Home Market Club", "Forester Guide", "Rosebud", "Middlesex" and the "Captor" are just a few names of cigars manufactured in Maynard through the late 1920's.

mhs-2019.264.pdf
From the late 1890s to about 1920 a band of Gypsies regularly set up camp on the outskirts of town.

mhs-2019.266.pdf
In the early days of Maynard's history three organizations sprang up (which we have little information on): "Congress of Friends", "Order of Alfredians", and "Nashoba Tribe, Improved Order of Red Men".

mhs-2019.269.pdf
A small Finnish cooperative that was born out of a political differences with the United Coop. It operated for about 2 decades.

mhs-2019.270.pdf
Chautauqua was a traveling adult education and social movement in the United States, highly popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It came to Maynard starting in 1917 and continued through 1929.

mhs-2019.271.pdf
Before entertainment was available at the push of a button, the arrival of a carnival or circus in town would bring a little bit of excitement to quiet town life.

mhs-2019.272.pdf
The International Order of Good Templars, who promoted total abstinence from alcoholic beverages, had a lodge in Assabet Village, prior to Maynard's incorporation.

mhs-2019.273.pdf
The "Don’t You Wish You Knew?" club was a social group started in 1899 by local businessmen with membership limited to 20 with the apparent goal of sponsoring elaborate masquerade balls.

mhs-2019.274.pdf
An account of a fundraising event that turned out to be, perhaps, the largest single event ever held in Maynard: "Barbecue Day".

mhs-2019.275.pdf
James Farrell was a frequent contributor and speaker in the nascent years of the Maynard Historical Society. He passed away in 1968, four years shy of the Centennial celebration he helped shape.

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