RGee's
Corner

In the early thirties they were still using the old
livery stable (on Church Street) to keep the company mules, which
were used to “work” the streets. Had a road scraper pulled
by a team. And used drag pans to move dirt from place to place.
Have forgotten the code but when a fire happened they
used to ring the mill bell. So many rings meant the mill was on fire,
and so many meant a house fire somewhere in the village. Had a fire
hose cart pulled by hand. The hose cart was still kept at the machine
shop when I was working there after WW2 and men would sit on the rear
of the company pickup and hold onto the handle of the hose cart to
pull it where it was needed.
Before the mill was electrified there was only water
power to run it. Used to have a rope alley with a really large wooden
pulley and a number of ropes which, in my minds eye, were about 3
inches in diameter. So many ropes were used to turn a shaft on each
mill floor. The shaft ran from one end of the mill to the other, and
each machine was powered by a belt from the shaft by moving a long
wooden handle which shifted the belt from the idler pulley to an active
pulley on the shaft.
Those old worn leather belts were used to half sole
many a shoe. Seems every family had a shoe last to mend shoes. My
father had a number of different screw drivers using leather handles.
The blacksmith would forge the screwdriver and father would cut leather
washers to thread on the shank to form the handles.
Others
would use the same method to make handles on their reed hooks, which
every weaver had to have. Reed hook handles were also made using scraps
from damaged red fiber cans used to hold roving in the card room.
Some handles were “fancy,” made of celluloid. And while
I was in the shop I made and sold a number of reed hooks with aluminum
handles.
Editors note: The reed hook was probably
the most common implement in the village. Weavers used them to fish
individual threads through the “reed,” a screen-like device
on a loom that keeps the warp threads correctly lined up. If you had
anything to do with the weave room, one or more of these would likely
end up in your home. Designing the handles was an art form of a sort.
The green one in the picture is of green and white layered plastic;
the other is more intricate, of alternating layers of leather and
fiber.