|
|
The Town of Lee Mass
lies in the valley of the Housatonic River between the Taconic Range and
the southernmost extent of the Green Mountains. It was first settled in
1760, relying on agriculture and lumbering, and grew quickly enough to
be incorporated by 1777. The town took its name from General Charles Lee,
second in command to George Washington. The community supported some textile
manufacturing in the 19th century but its first paper mill was built by
Samuel Church in 1806 and as textiles declined in the town and region,
paper-making took its place as the foundation of the community's economy.
By 1857 there were 25 paper mills
in Lee producing $2 million in paper, as well as a set of subsidiary industries
producing lime and paper-making machinery. In 1852 another major industry
was launched in the town, as builders and architects discovered Lee marble,
said to be the hardest and finest marble in the world. Large scale quarrying
was carried on in Lee for such projects as construction of a wing of the
Capitol. Almost half a million cubic feet of marble was quarried and shipped
on the Housatonic Railroad in 1867.
About the same time, a new process
for making paper solely from wood pulp was adopted and the poplar forests
in the town fueled a huge leap in paper production, making Smith Paper
Company of Lee the largest paper producer in the world until the forests
were depleted. Lee, divided into three villages, still retains the first
house ever built in town, dated 1760, still hosts a paper company and a
lime kiln and still has many of the farmhouses, estates, business blocks
and factories that exemplify its history. Residents like to believe that
history is still alive and well in Lee.
Lee Mass is located in Western Massachusetts,
bordered by Tyringham and Great Barrington on the south, Lenox on the northwest,
Becket on the east, Washington on the northeast, and Stockbridge on the
west. Lee is 9 miles south of Pittsfield, 122 miles west of Boston. |