Kirk Boott's Home (Mill and Mansion) |
When Kirk Boot was given the task of managing the new mill
town being built on the Merrimack, he was leaving behind the family mansion in
Boston and the life of the socially elite to which he was accustomed. Back in Boston, the Boot’s were well known
for their mansion on Bowdoin Street and its fine art and architecture. The family was also known for its beautiful
gardens, greenhouses, and especially for their roses. So it was providential in 1822 that when Mr.
Boott was building his Greek-Revival mansion in East Chelmsford, soon to be
Lowell, he would include space for the cultivated lawns and landscaping to
which he was accustomed. His blueprint
for the construction of the Merrimack Manufacturing Company would include a landscaped
entrance area to the mill along with plants and flowers placed between the
different buildings.
To achieve that end
Mr. Boott brought John Green up from Boston to serve as his gardener and
steward. History does not tell us how
the two men met. Perhaps he worked for
the Boott family in Boston? John Green
was born in Aughavading, Co. Leitrim in 1798.
He arrived in Boston in 1823 living there for a short time before
settling in Lowell. Green’s name appears
in several histories of Lowell being listed as one of the prominent Irishmen of
the period. His first mention in Lowell
was paying the poll tax in 1826. His
occupation was regularly listed in the Town/City Directories as gardener working
at Boott’s. After his death his son,
John J Green, reminisced about his father being the superintendent of
landscaping at the Merrimack and being part of the planning of the North
Common.
When Mr. Boott died unexpectedly in 1837, Green continued
working as a gardener at the
Lowell Map, 1850 |
His son, John J Green, was a member of the Lowell chapter of
the Irish American Historical Society, which attempted to preserve the Irish
history of Lowell. Unfortunately none of
the minutes of the group survive today that recorded the actual recollections
of those early Irish pioneers. In 1921
John J Green tried to persuade the city to memorialize the walk of Hugh
Cummiskey and the first Irish laborers with parades, lectures, church services,
and the erection of a suitable monument on the North Common.
Like John J Green, George O’Dwyer (author of Irish Catholic Genesis of Lowell), and
others, the Irish Cultural Committee of St. Patrick Parish tries to preserve
Lowell’s Irish past. Please join us this
March as we present the 31st annual Irish Cultural Week. https://www.facebook.com/#!/LowellIrish
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