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H. W. Clark Biscuit Company

Coordinates: 42°41′39″N 73°06′33″W / 42.69417°N 73.10917°W / 42.69417; -73.10917
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H. W. Clark Biscuit Company
The Icing Building, 2012
H. W. Clark Biscuit Company is located in Massachusetts
H. W. Clark Biscuit Company
H. W. Clark Biscuit Company is located in the United States
H. W. Clark Biscuit Company
LocationNorth Adams, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°41′39″N 73°06′33″W / 42.69417°N 73.10917°W / 42.69417; -73.10917
Built1923-30
Architectunknown
MPSNorth Adams MRA
NRHP reference No.09000235[1]
Added to NRHPApril 22, 2009

The H. W. Clark Biscuit Company is a former industrial complex at 179-191 Ashland Street in North Adams, Massachusetts. The bakery that Herbert W. Clark built at this site began at a facility on Liberty Street, and expanded into a shoe factory building (demolished in 1929) that Clark had operated with a partner. When the Liberty Street plant was destroyed by fire in 1913, Clark placed its employees on a second shift in the shoe factory building, and had the building now called the Icing Building constructed. This building was built in a style reminiscent of mills built in North Adams fifty years earlier, and is still sometimes thought to be an older building.[2]

In addition to the Icing Building, Clark in 1913 built a Boiler House, which was attached to a warehouse formerly associated with the shoe business (and is the oldest surviving building on the property, dating to 1884). In 1922 Clark embarked on an ambitious modernization of the facility, constructing the Baking Building out of reinforced concrete to a design by New York architect William Higginson. It was the first reinforced concrete building in the city.[2]

Clark sold the business in 1928 after his health began to fail. His successors operated the bakery until 1954. The buildings underwent a series of ownership changes, but were used for nearly forty years by the Tartan Machine Company. That business vacated the premises in 1990. After being vacant for two decades,[2] the property was rehabilitated and converted to residential use.

The complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2009.[1]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c "NRHP nomination for HW Clark Biscuit Company". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2013-12-05.