Oliver Whipple (1794-1872)
Of the many water-powered industrial developments along the Concord River in the early
19th century, the gunpowder works of Oliver M. Whipple was one of the most extensive.
Born in Wethersfield, Vermont. Whipple left his hometown at the age of 21 and reportedly
walked to Boston with a bundle clothes and $15 in cash. He stayed only a short while
before moving to Southwick, Massachusetts, where he learned the art of making gunpowder.
Whipple then relocated to East Chelmsford and joined a gunpowder manufacturing enterprise
established by Moses Hale in 1818, on River Meadow Brook, about 200 feet below Gorham
Street. Whipple worked first as a manger and, soon after, became a partner. His marriage
in 1821 to Sophronia Hale, a daughter of Moses, secured Whipple’s ties to the family’s
business interests.
It was Whipple, backed by Tileston and David Hale, who constructed a much larger powder
works on the Concord River in 1821, using the waterpower of the Concord River at Wamesit
Falls. Whipple built a canal about 1,000 feet long, extending from the falls to the
confluence of River Meadow Brook and the Concord River, and used the fall of 25 feet to
power the works. When completed in 1822, the powder works contained a water-powered
grinding mill, using cylindrical iron rolls, six feet in diameter, instead of pestles,
to grind the powder. The new works employed 10 men who produced 300,000 pounds of blasting
and gunpowder each year, which was loaded into 25 pound casks and sold under the name
"Boston Gunpowder."
From its earliest years, the powder works of Moses Hale and Whipple, Tileston & Hale,
were extremely dangerous work places. In the early morning of December, 1820, a massive
explosion at the River Meadow Brook works destroyed a number of structures and killed
four workers, including two young brothers. The blast was heard some 30 miles away.
Quickly rebuilt, this powder works caught fire and exploded just six months later, killing
three more workers. Incredibly, six months later a fire in the drying house oven sparked
another explosion, killing one Thomas Sullivan, blowing open doors of barns and
dwellings in the vicinity of the works, and shattering numerous windows.
Despite this loss of life and property Whipple and his associates reaped steady profits
from the sale of their gunpowder. After David Hale ceased being a partner in 1826 and
Tileston withdrew three years later, Whipple became the sole proprietor. Over the
course of the 1830s he brought two brothers into the business. In 1833 he purchased
a gunpowder works on the Presumpscot River in Gorham, Maine, and placed one brother,
Lucius Whipple, in charge of this plant. About five years later, Oliver Whipple
acquired a waterpower site in Exeter, New Hampshire, on the Exeter River at King’s
Falls, and established another gunpowder factory. Whipple also leased a warehouse
in Salem, Massachusetts, for exporting the powder produced on the Concord River.
Casks were transported by covered wagons, pulled by four to six horses, and
delivered to the Salem "Powder House." Large amounts of Whipple’s exported gunpowder
were shipped to Africa as this commerce played a role in the late stages of the
African slave trade with the Americas.
Disastrous explosions continued to wreak havoc at all three of Whipple’s powder
mills, with one in Maine claiming seven lives, including James Whipple, a brother
of Oliver, and Oliver G. Whipple, Oliver’s son. Yet another blast occurred in Lowell
in early 1843 when Marhsall Kinsman and George Shedd, about to begin repairs in the
"Press House" at eleven o’clock in the evening, accidentally ignited gunpowder dust
with Kinsman’s lantern. The building splintered apart as it caught fire, showering
the works with incendiary debris. Both men were hurled through the air and Shedd’s
clothes were aflame. Remarkably neither man was killed and Shedd extinguished his
burning clothing by rolling in the snow. About one-half hour later a second
explosion rocked another mill building, in which gunpowder had recently been
mixed, ignited by a burning piece of wood from the obliterated Press House.
Although no one was killed from the second blast, a number of Whipple’s powder
works buildings were severely damaged and he sustained a loss of $3,000. The
nearest resident John G. Locke, whose Wamesit Cottage stood about 1,000 feet
from the powder works, had all of the windows of his house shattered.
Suffering from ill health in 1855, Whipple discontinued the manufacture of
gunpowder in Lowell and shipped some of the machinery to the powder works in
Gorham, Maine. He hired as his agent Ephraim B. Patch, a prominent Lowell
auctioneer and real estate speculator, who managed Whipple’s extensive
industrial and residential properties. Patch played an important role in
expanding manufacturing at Whipple’s mills.
By 1862 Patch had acquired property on both sides of the Concord River, thus
securing for Whipple the exclusive rights to all of the water power at the
Wamesit Falls. Patch then oversaw the expansion of the Whipple Canal by some
500 feet, along with the deepening (about six to eight feet) and widening
(to 20 feet) of the entire waterway. These major improvements led to the
construction of several new factory buildings during the Civil War, including
the woolen mills of Chase & Hosford, Luther W. Faulkner, and Charles A. Stott.
In 1865 Patch sold the entire Whipple property to the newly formed Wamesit
Power Company, led by Benjamin F. Butler. Over the next several decades the
Wamesit company would enlarge the mill district that Oliver Whipple had
founded during the early years of Lowell’s development.
For many years Whipple was the largest individual taxpayer in the city, with
his annual tax bill typically amounting to about $1,500, more than ten times
the typical annual wage paid to a Lowell textile worker. Active in local
politics Whipple helped draw up the original city charter and won election
as an alderman when Lowell was first incorporated as a city in 1836. He
later served four terms as a state representative from Lowell and was among
the few Democrats elected from the city that the Whig party dominated for
nearly a generation. Whipple lived in a sizeable, though unostentatious
wood-frame dwelling, that he built on Whipple and Moore streets in the
1830s. He married three times (Sophronia Hale, 1821-1836; Julia Ann
Wentworth, 1837-1843; Sarah Kinsman, 1844-1872) and had ten children.
Whipple was also a founder of the Lowell Cemetery, located across from
his works on the Concord River. He and his family members, as well as
several of those killed at his mill, are buried there. He was President
of Lowell Cemetery from 1841-1857?

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