Category archives for: Canton History

True Tales from Canton’s Past: Lost at Sea

At age 58, James Ritchie had accomplished more than 10 men would in a lifetime. Think of a life in chapters or seasons and the storyline becomes clear. Born here in Canton on May 12, 1815, in what is now the Draper House at Pequitside Farm, the young man flourished under the watchful eye of […]

True Tales from Canton’s Past: Cornelius Callahan

Invention is both art and science. The mind of an inventor is complex and patient. These are the people who ask “what if?” and are the people who study process to improve or even save lives. There is no better case for the inventor than that of Cornelius Callahan. It was Callahan who invented and […]

True Tales from Canton’s Past: Lost and Found

There is always talk of passing the torch to a new generation. And at the venerable local Historical Society very few young people become engaged in the work of preservation and discovery. Yet every once in a while a young person will enter our orbit, and through their eyes we see the history of Canton […]

True Tales: Grow Tires & Stock Options

George Grow was a natural-born salesman. In the Roaring Twenties, Grow had become very wealthy selling used cars. Through his connections, he would network with wealthy men selling their cars, and men on the way up the ladder purchasing the cars. Grow never spoke of his family background, and all outward appearances led his customers […]

True Tales: Taking Stock of Preservation

A few weeks ago I was invited to the Canton Senior Center to speak with the Canton Women’s Club. The invitation came at the behest of a dear friend over a year ago. As has always been my practice, I had been thinking about the subject matter for several months. My mind ran through so […]

True Tales from Canton’s Past: Endangered No More

In 2008, after a failed rezoning effort left his clients short on hope and looking to cut its losses, a prominent Canton zoning attorney signed off on a request to demolish the buildings at Plymouth Rubber. The gauntlet was thrown down, and the situation looked bleak. Local preservationists on the Canton Historical Commission raised the […]

True Tales from Canton’s Past: Our Painted Lady

Can a house have a gender? Are there feminine lines to some houses and in others masculine elements that give the observer the sense that a house has the grace of a lady or the demeanor of a gentleman? There is a term for beautiful old Victorian Style homes that describes them perfectly: painted ladies. […]

True Tales from Canton’s Past: Dr. Abbot’s House

There are very few architecturally significant houses from the early 1800s that have survived almost intact with respect to their adornment and features. One such example is the splendid house built for Dr. Ezra Abbot at 470 Washington Street. Even today, 182 years after it was built, this Italianate home exemplifies a style that is […]

True Tales from Canton’s Past: A Bag of Silk

That old silk flag must have been glorious. The boys that carried her would have looked resplendent in their uniforms. They were dressed in gray coats, white pantaloons, smart belts, and caps. In the fashion of the early uniforms of West Point, they were magnificent on that day. Atop their heads a leather shako cap […]

True Tales: Pt. 2 – Day of Sorrow

Below is the second in a two-part story about the Gelpke twins of Canton. Click here to return to part one, “Giving Thanks.” Bob and Roy Gelpke, twins that had never spent a day apart, left Canton together in May 1943. They can be seen smiling on a troop transport train as it leaves North […]

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