[The Age of Invention by Holland Thompson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Age of Invention CHAPTER IV 15/29
There Howe was born in 1819.
His father was an unsuccessful farmer, who also had some small mills, but seems to have succeeded in nothing he undertook. Young Howe led the ordinary life of a New England country boy, going to school in winter and working about the farm until the age of sixteen, handling tools every day, like any farmer's boy of the time.
Hearing of high wages and interesting work in Lowell, that growing town on the Merrimac, he went there in 1835 and found employment; but two years later, when the panic of 1837 came on, he left Lowell and went to work in a machine shop in Cambridge.
It is said that, for a time, he occupied a room with his cousin, Nathaniel P.Banks, who rose from bobbin boy in a cotton mill to Speaker of the United States House of Representatives and Major-General in the Civil War. Next we hear of Howe in Boston, working in the shop of Ari Davis, an eccentric maker and repairer of fine machinery.
Here the young mechanic heard of the desirability of a sewing machine and began to puzzle over the problem.
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