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Mill Talk: How To Fuel an Industrial Revolution-Coal and the Energy Economy of Boston, 1820-1970

  • Charles River Museum of Industry and Innovation 154 Moody St Waltham, MA, 02453 United States (map)

Mill Talk: How To Fuel an Industrial Revolution-Coal and the Energy Economy of Boston, 1820-1970


presented by Thomas Speight

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FREE to the public
REGISTRATION REQUIRED

This talk will discuss the use of coal as a fuel for industry, utilities and domestic life in metropolitan Boston between roughly 1820 and 1970, including the core years of the Industrial Revolutions. During this period, coal accounted for the majority of Boston’s energy supply, and provided energy to Boston’s homes, factories, foundries, power plants, shipyards and other operations. Coal also fed the city’s multiple gasworks, which provided street lighting and domestic and industrial fuel, and supplied power to both the water and sewage pumping stations.

This heavy reliance on coal also created significant quality of life issues for Boston residents, and resulted in one of the nation’s first smoke abatement laws (Chapter 651 of the Acts of 1910).

Speaker Bio

Thomas Speight has twenty years’ experience in the environmental field as a consultant and regulator, including approximately fifteen years with a primary focus on assessment and remediation of contaminated sites. He is a Massachusetts Licensed Site Professional and a Certified Hazardous Materials Manager, and a member of the Society for Industrial Archaeology. He is a coauthor of Manufactured Gas Plant Remediation: A Case Study (CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 2018), with Allen W. Hatheway.


Mill Talks at the Charles River Museum of Industry and Innovation are free and open to the public and are made possible by the generous support of the Lowell Institute.

Earlier Event: February 27
2nd SHIFT Concert: Winterpills