<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<mods:mods xmlns:mods='http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3' xsi:schemaLocation='http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3 http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/v3/mods-3-7.xsd' version='3.7' xmlns:xlink='http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink' xmlns:xsi='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance'>
  <mods:titleInfo displayLabel='primary_display' usage='primary'>
    <mods:title>Galen Street, looking over the Galen Street bridge toward the south side.</mods:title>
  </mods:titleInfo>
  <mods:typeOfResource>Still image</mods:typeOfResource>
  <mods:genre authority='gmgpc' authorityURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/graphicMaterials' displayLabel='general' valueURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/graphicMaterials/tgm007721'>Photographs</mods:genre>
  <mods:physicalDescription>
    <mods:digitalOrigin>reformatted digital</mods:digitalOrigin>
    <mods:internetMediaType>image/jpeg</mods:internetMediaType>
    <mods:internetMediaType>image/jp2</mods:internetMediaType>
  </mods:physicalDescription>
  <mods:abstract>The Walker &amp; Pratt Foundry is on the left where the delta is today and the Lewandos building is on right. Miles Pratt built a foundry in 1855. A long brick warehouse was flush with the sidewalk on Galen street, the moulding room was flush on Main Street and there were wharves in the Charles River. The factory covered about two acres. As Miles Pratt struggled with his business, he associated himself with Luke Perkins of the grist mill as his superintendant and Oliver Shaw was his manager. It became Pratt and Perkins in 1857. In 1862, the company reformed again and became Miles Pratt and Co. All three came from Carver. MA. Pratt consolidated with W. Walker &amp; Co. The new partner was Arthur Walker of Malden. In 1877, the Company incorporated and became Walker, Pratt &amp; Company. In 1861 the Company went to manufacturing ammunition and gun-carriage castings. They worked with Gen. Thomas Jackson Rodman, Commander of the Watertown Arsenal. In 1880 a fire-proof building was constructed, 264 feet long, sixty feet wide and three stories high on Galen Street. The pattern storeroom on the island, with a solid wall towards Galen Street -- that is a wall without windows, although ornamented with piers and arches, - shows on the south side by its tiers of windows, four stories above a solid foundation wall. There is a furnace capable of melting fifteen tons of iron at a blast. The moulding room is 14,000 square feet. Walker and Pratt built homes between the stockyards and Hood Rubber Company for their employees. They built a new brick factory. They found markets all cross the U.S. and Southern Africa for their Pratt furnaces and Crawford stoves. Heating apparatus were made for the Hotel Vendome, Boston and Madison Square Theater in New York City. They also made hot water and steam heater, ranges and steam and hotel cooking apparatus, tin roofing and copper, tin and sheet-iron work. Walker and Pratt endured a strike by the employees for a salary of $2.50 a day. The picture was taken prior to 1906 when the new (present) bridge was added and the traffic configuration changed. Note the Trolley tracks.</mods:abstract>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Neighborhood--Massachusetts--Watertown</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Architecture--Watertown--Massachusetts</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Buildings--Watertown--Massachusetts</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Streets--Watertown--Massachusetts</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>City and town life--Massachusetts--Watertown</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Business enterprises--Massachusetts--Watertown</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Commercial buildings--Watertown (Mass.)</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Electric railroads--Watertown--Massachusetts</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject authority='tgn' authorityURI='http://vocab.getty.edu/tgn' valueURI='http://vocab.getty.edu/tgn/7014591'>
    <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
      <mods:county>Middlesex</mods:county>
      <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
      <mods:continent>North and Central America</mods:continent>
      <mods:state>Massachusetts</mods:state>
      <mods:city>Watertown</mods:city>
    </mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
    <mods:cartographics>
      <mods:coordinates>42.3667,-71.1833</mods:coordinates>
    </mods:cartographics>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:relatedItem type='host'>
    <mods:titleInfo>
      <mods:title>Watertown Street Views</mods:title>
    </mods:titleInfo>
  </mods:relatedItem>
  <mods:identifier type='uri'>https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/7d279004w</mods:identifier>
  <mods:identifier type='local-other'>figure 877</mods:identifier>
  <mods:location>
    <mods:physicalLocation>Watertown Free Public Library</mods:physicalLocation>
  </mods:location>
  <mods:location>
    <mods:url access='object in context' usage='primary'>https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/7d279004w</mods:url>
    <mods:url access='preview'>https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/7d279004w/thumbnail</mods:url>
    <mods:url note='iiif-manifest'>https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/7d279004w/manifest</mods:url>
  </mods:location>
  <mods:accessCondition displayLabel='license' type='use and reproduction'>Contact host institution for more information.</mods:accessCondition>
  <mods:accessCondition displayLabel='rights' type='use and reproduction'>Management Restrictions apply. See application form at http://watertownlib.org/research/historic-watertown/photographs</mods:accessCondition>
  <mods:recordInfo>
    <mods:recordContentSource>Boston Public Library</mods:recordContentSource>
    <mods:recordCreationDate encoding='w3cdtf'>2021-09-28T07:15:38Z</mods:recordCreationDate>
    <mods:recordChangeDate encoding='w3cdtf'>2021-09-28T07:15:38Z</mods:recordChangeDate>
    <mods:recordOrigin>human prepared</mods:recordOrigin>
    <mods:languageOfCataloging>
      <mods:languageTerm authority='iso639-2b' authorityURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-2' type='code' valueURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-2/eng'>eng</mods:languageTerm>
    </mods:languageOfCataloging>
  </mods:recordInfo>
</mods:mods>