Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Baystate Corset Block

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Area
  
less than one acre

Architect
  
Robinson Marsh & Co.

Opened
  
1874

Built
  
1874 (1874)

NRHP Reference #
  
83000737

Added to NRHP
  
24 February 1983

Baystate Corset Block httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
395-405 Dwight St., 99 Taylor St., Springfield, Massachusetts

MPS
  
Downtown Springfield MRA

Similar
  
Adler Company Corset Fa, Forest Park, Symphony Hall - Springfield, MassMutual Center, Naismith Memorial Basketbal

The Baystate Corset Block is a historic commercial block at 395-405 Dwight St. and 99 Taylor Street in Springfield, Massachusetts. Built in 1874 and twice enlarged, it was from 1888 to 1920 home of the Baystate Corset Company, one of the nation's largest manufacturers of corsets. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

Description and history

The Baystate Corset Block stands on the north side of Springfield's downtown area, at the northeast corner of Dwight and Taylor Streets. The main portion of the building, facing Dwight Street, was built in 1874 by Marsh & Robinson. It is a four story brick structure, whose original styling, visible on the side elevation, includes segmental arch windows and a corbelled cornice. The front facade, which was redone in 1918, consists on the upper level of five bays of tripled windows, separated by brick piers. The storefronts are largely unaltered.

The first tenants of the building were woodworking shops, who occupied it until 1883, when it was occupied by a paper products business. P. P. Kellogg, its owner, expanded the premises, building an extension along Taylor Street in 1888. In 1886, the Baystate Corset Company, founded two years earlier in West Brookfield, Massachusetts, leased space in the building. Baystate grew rapidly, and purchased the building in 1895, occupying it until 1920. It was one of the nation's largest corset manufacturers at the time, shipping products all across the country. Baystate used the top floor of the building as a cutting room, with the second and third floors arrayed with sewing machines at which its products were manufactured.

References

Baystate Corset Block Wikipedia


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