Architectural Description:
NRDIS, Styled with a nod to Georgian Revival with door bays decorated with very elaborate neoclassical facades. Reinforced concrete throughout with a brick and limestone facing, consistent with the "Colonial Revival" architecture of the Village.
Historical Narrative:
Themes - Architectural, Commerce, Community Development, Industry & Transportation.
Shawsheen Village was named after the Native American name for the river Shawshin, which means Great Spring. Prior to Shawsheen Village this area was known as Frye Village.
The Shawsheen Garage was built as part of the Shawsheen Village development, 1918 - 1924, by William M. Wood, President of the American Woolen Company. Wood hired about eight different architects to design the homes and structures for the village. Adden and Parker of Boston were the architects, and also designed the Post Office building across the street, the Balmoal Spa building and the Administration Office Building for American Woolen Company, (now Balmoral Condominiums).
This garage was used for parking cars or "live storage" and primarily as a full service mechanical facility. The building was opened in 1921 and by 1922 it was necessary to construct the second garage on Haverhill Street. William Madison Wood, the "dreamer" of Shawsheen Village, considered individual garages unaesthetic, so Shawsheen residents were required to park in the common garage. This first garage, which also included a repair shop and was quickly outgrown.
Andover Townsman - July 22, 1921 p. 8 - "Shawsheen Garage - Nothing Has Been Spared to Make It a Completely Equipped Service Station - Employing a force of eighteen men, with a car storage capacity and gas and oil storage capacity equaled by few garages in the state, and with a machine shop and repair shop which boasts equipment complete enough to do anything to any car, the Shawsheen Garage can well lay claim to being amoung the best, if not the best garage in the state.
Certainly nothing has been spared to equip it fully in every detail and to make it a complete unit as far as garage repair is concerned. With underground tanks on both the first and second floor, the garage is capable of storing a maximum of 3500 gallons of gasoline at one time. Eight Bowser hydraulic pressure oil thanks, store a total of 800 gallons of oil.
It is impossible to judge the size of the garage from the street floor on Main street. While the upper floor has a capacity for car storage of fifty cars, the lower florr with an entrance from Haverhill Street, stores more than sixty and may even take a few more in the machine shop. All permanent berths on both floors are taken at the present time. Everything has been done on the upper floor for the convenience of the touring motorist. Does he desire gas, an air-pressure tank will furnish him with five gallons in ninety seconds and he need not enter the garage and go to the trouble of backing out again. If he desires repair work done, he but drives his car into the garage and while the work is going on, his wife or other women guests may enjoy the ladies' rest room. Most certainly a garage is something different from others if it provides a blue and gold, wicker-furnished rest room for its lady patrons, furnishes reading matter, and even the necessary accoutrements for a short game of bridge, if the repairs are longer than usual.
No other garage in the country has such an efficient system of air for tires. A compressor on the lower florr which automatically keeps air pressure above 135 pounds and below 190, furnishes air to a stopcock on every cement column in the garage, upstairs or down. No maneuvering or hauling of a tank on wheels is necessary. A peculiar feature of the system is the attachment which allows the use of the air to spray gasoline or kerosene when cleaning parts of the car or engine, and also to spray polish when shining is to be done. The nozzle has a very delicate adjustment and a trigger action which makes its use extremely simple.
The repair shop, under the direction of Carl M. Peterson, is said to be the finest and best-equipped repair shop in the country. The shop is fitted out to do repair work and machine shop work of all kinds. It has a traveling crane with 20-ton capacity that lifts up a motor truck like an infant in arms. It has a two and one-ton trip hammer, a moving hoist for motors and another for truck and pleasure car bodies, several power lathes with all attachments necessary for grinding and reseating valves, etc., it has a 20-ton press which is used only for putting solid rubber tires on heavy trucks; in short, there is nothing much which a first class machine shop should have, which this one has not.
The garage building itself is 150 feet long and eighty feet wide in addition to the back ell containing the machine shop, which is about thirty-five feet by eighty feet. It is built throughout of reinforced concreted and sis made especially suitable for garage purposes through the use of steel-silled windows which afford an abundance of daylight throughout the garage. Plans were drawn by Adden & Parker of Boston. Carl M. Stevens is in general charge of the establishment."
After the death of William M. Wood on Feb. 2, 1926 most of the residential and commercial buildings were then sold. Some were held by the Wood family in the "Arden Trust" and others with the American Woolen Company, which had been deeded the property in December 1920. The A.W.Co. Board of Directors authorized its President, Lionel J. Noah, to deliver all deeds, as deemed necessary to the Textile Realty Co. for sale on Dec. 29, 1931.
The Textile Realty then transferred ownership to the Andover Shawsheen Realty Company on June 30, 1932, holding the mortgage on the properties. T. Edwin Andrew, treasurer, was authorized to sell or lease the properties. With the Great Depression sales were sluggish and many homes were rented until the economy rebounded.
The property was first leased then sold to Claude P. Woodworth, agent for the Jenny Manufacturing Co. on August 3, 1936. Jenny Manufacturing Co. then owned and operated the garage from 1936 to 1960. The gas and oil sold was Jenny. The property was then purchased by Claude P. Woodworth on Nov. 1, 1960. Woodworth expanded the business into automobile sales of Chevrolet and Cadillac with a new show room built on the corner park between the Shawsheen Garage and the former Shawsheen Laundry on Haverhill Street. The new structure was not without controversy as many residents in the Village felt the building did not fit into the style or design of the Village.
Woodworth owned for 18 years making use of every piece of the property for service and retail. Woodworth family sold to William P. & Kathleen M. DeLuca, Jr. on May 16, 1978.
Bibliography/References:
Essex County Registry Deeds, Salem, MA
Essex Northern Registry Deeds, Lawrence, MA
Andover Maps, 1852, 1872, 1888, 1906, 1926
Andover Street Directories
Andover Townsman
Mills, Mergers and Mansions, by Edward Roddy 1982
Andover Historical Society files - See Area Form - Shawsheen for complete bibliography
See Map plan #704 - American Woolen Company - Sept. 1927
#880 - June 1932 - Textile Realty Company lot #
Owners;
John Smith & Peter Smith – Dec. 29, 1841 –b. 335 leaf 99
Smith & Dove Manufacturing Co. – July 1, 1864 - b. 677 leaf 259 Salem deed
Robert Braisford, General Degreasing Co. – July 21, 1902 – b. 197 p. 32
Beacon Trust Company. – Dec. 23, 1904 – b. 217 p. 80
Daniel C. Smith –Mar. 28, 1909 – b. 258 p. 446
Arlington National Bank – June 11, 1909 – b. 274 p. 565
James E. McGovern – July 17, 1909 – b. 275 p. 400 – mgt sale
Henry P. Binney, Trustee of A. W. Co. – Aug. 14, 1909 - b. 277 p. 310
American Woolen Company, Wm. M. Wood Pres. - Dec. 30, 1920 - p. 435 p. 215 14th & 24 parcel
Textile Realty Co., Lionel J. Noah, Pres. A.W.Co. - Dec. 30, 1931 - b. 563 p. 351
Andover Shawsheen Realty Co. - June. 30, 1932 - b. 565 p. 87
Andover Shawsheen Realty Co - Oct. 30, 1937 - b. 611 p. 177 - parcel 2
Jenny Manufacturing Co, Claude P. Woodworth, agt. - Aug. 3, 1936 - b. 599 p. 456 - parcel 1
Jenny Manufacturing Co., Claude P. Woodworth, agt. - Dec. 29, 1944 - b. 670 p. 278 parcel 2
Claude P. Woodworth - Nov. 1, 1960 - b. 947 p. 243 - 2 parcels
Woodworth Realty Trust, Grace A. Hardenbrook, pres. & treas. - May 16, 1978 - b. 1338 p. 362
Samuel T. Concemi - May 16, 1978 - b. 1338 p. 365
William P. & Kathleen M. DeLuca, Jr. - May 16, 1978 - b. 1338 p. 367
William P. DeLuca Jr. & Kathleen M. DeLuca - Dec. 30, 2013 - b. 13744 p. 69
Shawsheen Laundry Company, Inc. - 8 Haverhill St. parcel
Woodworth Motors, Inc., Claude P. Woodworth - July 21, 1953 - b. 778 p. 237
Inventory Data:
Street | North Main St |
Place | Shawsheen Village |
Historic District | Shawsheen Village NRH District |
Historic Name | Shawsheen Village Garage |
Present Use | Car dealer |
Original Use | garage and parking for 400 cars |
Construction Date | 1921 |
Source | ERDS, ENRDL, assessers' rec./style-njs |
Architectural Style | Georgian Revival |
Architect/Builder | Adden and Parker |
Foundation | stone and concrete |
Wall/Trim | brick |
Roof | slate & asphalt |
Condition | good |
Acreage | 1.12 acres |
Setting | commercial |
Map and parcel | 52-1 |
MHC Number | ANV.404 |
Recorded by | Stack/Mofford, James Batchelder |
Organization | Andover Preservation Commission |
Date entered | 1975-77, 8/4/2015 |