Francis Cabot Lowell

Francis Cabot Lowell (April 7, 1775 - April 10, 1817) was the American business man for whom the city of Lowell, Massachusetts, United States is named. He was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts, the son of John Lowell (1743-1802) and Susanna Cabot (1754-1777). He graduated at Harvard in 1793. On November 2, 1798 in Boston, Massachusetts, he married Hannah Jackson, daughter of Jonathan Jackson and his wife Hannah Tracy, with whom he had four children. He studied the textile industries of Lancashire and Scotland while visiting the British Isles in 1810-2. On his return to the United States, he joined his brother-in-law Patrick Tracy Jackson and Nathan Appleton to found the Boston Manufacturing Company in Waltham, Massachusetts (1812; factory built 1813-14), the world's first textile mill in which all the operations for converting raw cotton into finished cloth could be performed. With Paul Moody he devised an efficient power loom and spinning apparatus. He died in Boston, Massachusetts.

See also

Lowell, Francis Cabot Lowell, Francis Cabot Lowell, Francis Cabot

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
anatole
mielikki
duck dodgers
list of city nicknames
jean pierre laud
mountain view
wood block
woodside
deflagration
detonation
flat shading
santa cruz futebol clube
walnut (disambiguation)
walnut creek
shower night
quiz
elihu thomson
heisenberg picture
lempo
judith nathan
piano concerto
prime minister of jamaica
adam copeland
eddie guerrero
wallerfangen
bitches brew
thomas docwra
gary sick
football conference
hitchin
plymouth superbird
redeye
nachman of breslav
list of snes games
fur bearing trout
preston, hertfordshire
click of death
chang
military science fiction
spitzer space telescope
gary kleck
neriah
apparent motion
survivor: pearl islands