Town annual report of Andover 1950-1954, Part 8

Author: Andover (Mass.)
Publication date: 1950
Publisher: The Town
Number of Pages: 1012


USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Andover > Town annual report of Andover 1950-1954 > Part 8


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Beedie, Alexander


Janitor 8 Elm St.


Belul, Febi


Rubber Worker


109 Pine St.


Bendroth, Harold W. B.


Student


17 High St.


Berry, Ralph T.


Cloth Examiner 83 Pine St.


Bissett, James R.


Recreation Dir. 11 Chestnut St.


Blake, Preston H.


Food Broker


7 Stratford Rd.


Bliss, Arthur


Retired 1 Hidden Rd.


Blomquist, Bror G.


Electrician 49 Union St. Telephone Mgr. Appletree Lane


Brooks, Arthur


Chemist 357 No. Main St.


Brouillard, Joseph


Painter Bailey Rd.


Brown, George B. Buxton, Walter E.


Painter 19 Summer St.


Shipper 120 No. Main St.


Cairnie, Henry Cairnie, Robert Y.


Operative 18 Baker Lane


Chadwick, Harry


Janitor


34 Avon St.


Chadwick Nathaniel


Clerk


4 Main St. Terr.


Chambers, Arthur S.


Farmer Lowell St.


Cheney, Paul G.


Cook


76 Chestnut St.


Clark, Dana W.


Civil Engineer 3 Punchard Ave. Mgr. Consult. 30 Chestnut St. Ins. Agent 117 Chestnut St.


Clark, Myron H. Clough, Harry E. Cole, John N. 2nd Comber, Joseph


Connor, Joseph W.


Conway, John J.


Andover Press 10 Wolcott Ave. Signal Operator Center St. B.V. Gas Station Prop. 107 High St. Manager Jenkins Rd.


153


Shipper 29 Main St.


Bramley, Edwin L.


Bateson, James


Daniels, Roy A. Dearborn, Roy S. D'Entremont, Francis H. Disbrow, Herbert


Electrician Clerk


78 Chestnut St. 109 Elm St. 132 Main St.


Bus Driver


Farmer Chandler Rd.


Trucking


19 Washington Ave.


Contractor


7 Argyle St.


Retired


Dresser


34 Summer St. 109 Elm St.


Ellison, Arthur N.


Farmer


Ballardvale Rd.


Fairweather, James D.


Caretaker


15 Abbot St.


Fallon, Joseph E. Jr.


Accountant


58 Maple Ave. 45 Abbot St.


Flather, Frederick Jr.


Manufacturer


Contractor


Retired


37 Maple Ave. 23 William St. Lowell St.


Gilchreast, Cleveland


Egg Manager


Electrician


23 Bartlet St. 63 Bartlet St.


Gilfoy, Elven W.


Mechanic


29 Summer St. 16 Cuba St. Lowell St.


Gilman, Albert E.


Watchman


Godfrey, Harold T.


Salesman


Farmer


Clerk


Operative


Clerk


Retired 68 Haverhill St.


Retired 30 Wolcott Ave. Draftsman 62 Chestnut St. Operative 4612 High St. Assistant Manager 101 Elm St.


Insurance 11 Cheever Circle


Technician 215 Lupine Rd.


Accountant 232 No. Main St.


Electrician 13 Chestnut St.


Storekeeper 72 Salem St.


Retired


74 Chestnut St. Cost Account. 120 Chestnut St.


Holland, Robert C.


Jaques, Robert G.


Johnson, Howard B.


Kearn, Frederick


Janitor 69 Maple Ave.


Engineer 66 Carmel Rd.


Carpenter Haggetts Pond Rd.


154


Fleming, John J. Gahm, George L. Gaskill, John G.


Minister


Glines, Roland B.


Gill, Joseph M.


Carpenter


33 Pasho St. 22 Carmel Rd. 10 Burnham Rd. Tewksbury St. B.V. 34 Washington Ave.


Golden, William H.


Gouck, Harry Greenwood, Ralph L. Gray, Claremont I. Greenfield, Alfred


Hadley, Ralph E. Hamblet, William P. Hardy, Frederick C. Harnedy, William A. Haselton, George E. Hatch, William G. Hickey, Vincent P. Hill, Charles A. Hill, William R. Hodge, Robert


Dole, Percy J. Dufton, George F. Elliott, Leonard Ellis, Franklin T.


Kelley, Sherwood W. Kinsman, Leslie S. Kress, Fred


Lindsay, Stafford A.


Salesman


6 Argyle St.


Livingston, Clinton R.


Florist


Andover St.


Livingston, George F.


Locke, Richard G.


Locke, Sherman S.


Contractor


5 Windsor St.


Look, Donald B.


Photographer


115 Main St.


Luce, Rowland L ..


Furniture


19 Summer St.


Lynch, James A.


Farmer Gray Rd.


Manthorne, Harold N.


Veteran 31 Washington Ave.


Marshall, Clifford E.


Cashier 22 Pasho St.


McCarthy, Frank G.


Contractor


12 Wolcott Ave.


Monahan, Francis


Operative 3 Stirling St.


Monan, Joseph C.


Tel. Co. Tester


7 Argyle St.


Mooar, Philip C.


Mechanic


108 Lowell St.


Morgan, Norman


Poultryman


Lowell St.


Muelig, Emil


Retired


25 Avon St.


Muller, Walter F.


Clerk


3 Lupine Rd.


Murphy, Michael M.


Machinist


94 Haverhill St.


Nelson, Edward J.


Retired 99 High St.


Newman, Winthrop R.


Clerk 121 Elm St.


Newton, Charles M.


Poultryman Boutwell Rd.


Nicoll, Frank L.


Painter


2 Stratford Rd.


Noss, Frederick B.


Minister 62 Elm St.


Lumber Yard Mgr. 53 Whit. St.


· O'Connell, Charles H.


Plumber 95 Chestnut St.


Counsellor 1 Punchard Ave.


Chauffeur


49 Elm St.


Machinist Helper Upland Rd. Auto Salesman 12 Florence St.


Poultryman Dascomb Rd.


Peterson, Elmer O.


Poultryman


Greenwood Rd.


Peters, Howarth J.


Printer 79 Elm St.


Petrie, Alexander B. Petrie, John P. T.


Gardener 51 Bartlet St.


Gardener 53 Bartlet St.


Pitman, Douglas B.


Purdon, Frank L.


Accountant 78 Salem St. Ret. Army Off. 65 Central St. Plumber 44 River St., B. V.


Quinn, Peter D.


Salesman 16 Coolidge Rd. Marine Engineer 18 Summer St.


Operative Lowell St.


Farmer Brown St.


Contractor 3 Windsor St.


Noyes, Lee E.


O'Connell, John F. O'Connor, Michael J. Patterson, Willard H. Pearson, Walter Pendleton, Andrew S.


155


Robb, David B. Robertson, Foster G.


Janitor


32 Park St. 7 Canterbury St.


Rogers, Irving E.


Ronan, William A.


Chauffeur


Sunset Rock Rd. 60 Morton St.


Purch. Agent 48 Wolcott Ave. Loomfixer 11 Tewksbury St.B.V. Selling Agent 5 Avon St.


Shaw, Clinton D.


Salesman


Wildwood Rd.


Sheeley, Russell F.


Electrician 17 Enmore St.


Sherry, Richard A.


Chauffeur River St., B.V.


Smith, Arthur J.


Bricklayer Rattlesnake Hill Rd.


Smith, Frederick C.


Insurance 6 Stratford Rd.


Stack, Robert A.


Operative 20 Summer St.


Stark, John W.


Retired 26 Marland St.


Stevenson, Henry J.


Mech. Eng. 68 Cheever Circle Contractor So. Main St.


Sutton, Osborne


Candy Maker 119 Chestnut St.


Taylor, Thomas D.


Machinist


79 Lowell St.


Teichert, Frederick E.


Manufacturer


West Knoll Rd.


Thomas, Horace R.


Retired 129 Lowell St.


Thomson, James G.


Operative 42 Summer St.


Tucker, Charles H.


Operative 111 Abbot St.


Turner, Harvey G.


Farmer So. Main St.


Wade, Albert N.


Retired 91 Lowell St.


Wade, Kenneth E.


Carpenter High St., B.V.


Ward, Everett


Insurance Agent 72 Park St.


Weeks, Clarence H.


West, Howard


Whitcomb, Irving J.


3 Main St. Terr.


Whitcomb, Roger H.


Clerk 3 Main St. Terr.


White, Frederick


Salesman


196 Shawsheen Rd.


Whiteside, Charles B. M.


Purch. Agent 53 Whittier St.


Wilkinson, Ernest


Real Est. & Ins. 57 Salem St.


Inspector 173 Lowell St.


Williams, Richard L. Wilson, P. Leroy


Newsdealer 9 Avon St.


Wood, Cornelius A. Young, William J. Zalla, Eugene


Trustee 276 No. Main St.


Electrician 44 Elm St.


Ship. Clerk 3 Chester St., B.V.


156


Roundy, Glen H. Schofield, James F. Sellars, Harry


Caretaker


Publisher


Com. Agent 66 Chestnut St. Power House Haggetts Pond Rd. Insurance Salesman


Stone, Robert L.


Trustees and Staff of Memorial Hall Library


CAROLINE P. LEAVITT


LEO F. DALEY


WINSOR GALE


ARTHUR W. REYNOLDS


E. DEAN WALEN


WILLIAM N. PERRY


ALAN R. BLACKMER


Chairman WINSOR GALE


Secretary WILLIAM N. PERRY


Treasurer ARTHUR W. REYNOLDS


Librarian MIRIAM PUTNAM


MARGARET D. MANNING, Assistant Librarian, in charge, Readers' Services


MARGARET LANE, Children's Librarian


MARY F. ZECCHINI, Catalog and Reference Librarian


ELEANORE G. BLISS, Circulation Assistant*


CAROLYN S. BENDROTH, Secretarial Assistant M. ETHEL ZINK, Branch Librarian, Ballard Vale


Janitor ARCHIBALD D. MACLAREN


*Part-time


157


THE LIBRARY SERVES THE INDIVIDUAL


A number of years ago there appeared a book with the provoca- tive title The Education of the Whole Man. The exact thesis of the book does not concern this report directly. The exciting idea im- plicit in the title, however, lies very close to the major purpose of the public library, which perhaps more than any other institution is geared to serve the "whole man." It thinks primarily in terms of the individual, and the group activities it carries on are in- formal in character. This informality and the concern for the individual and his need are doubly important in a world where so much is done on a mass scale-entertainment-business-com- munication-government-perhaps even education. A library user who said, "This library makes me feel like a human being again," dramatically demonstrated this very point.


THE LIBRARY AND THE INDIVIDUAL


A public library does not exploit; has no special axe to grind. It serves the individual, or tries to, at the point where he is, know- ing full well that at another time he may be a completely different person with completely different needs. Its aim is to help in the development of an individual whose life is rich and rewarding because he has made the most of his potentialities. The public library welcomes every opportunity to spread before the individu- al books on significant issues, books which stretch his mind, give him understanding and sharpen his imagination. The public library's book collection is many-sided, with books representing many viewpoints. Its service is skillful if it can tempt readers to sample books which do more than bolster up already preconceived opinions.


The individual, the library finds a hopeful being even when his senses are assailed by war and rumors of war, with economic un- certainties and pleas for austerities. He seeks the library out for material which will help him plan a new home or remodel an old one, make toys for his children's Christmas, assist him in his work, or give him information about a new and more desirable field of work. If feminine, although the female has no monopoly, this individual may choose books which make for informed citizen action, or those that will make for better parent-child relation- ships, or still others about creative undertakings-rug-hooking, tray painting-to mention but two of the manifold handicraft


158


interests. The public library has to be alert to keep up with its readers!


THE LIBRARY AND YOUNG PEOPLE


Important individuals are the boys and girls and young people who need everything that a well-supported library can give them, for despite the H-bomb, there is hope that they will live to see a peaceful world in which to function creatively. A young people's program must be geared to their needs now and to the future unfolding of their inquiring minds. The Young People's Library has such a program and its collection of carefully selected books gives present pleasure, helps form habits of discrimination and builds values which endure in stress as well as in gentler times.


THE LIBRARY AS A DISTRIBUTOR OF IDEAS


The public library has a special importance to the individual because of the kinds of materials, book and otherwise, that it stocks. It plays a very small part actually in the total distribution picture but it performs a service within its own orbit that dis- tributors of mass media can not hope to do. The Public Library Inquiry, a recently published objective survey, underscores the importance of the public library, as one non-commercial agency where the individual can expect to find the most authoritative of the contemporary books; to find the artistic and cultural books; the unpopular and experimental; the not new although currently relevant; and non-book materials such as pictures, recordings, and in an increasing number of libraries, 16-mm films.


Carefully selected books, pamphlets, and magazines may not batter against the mind-or perhaps better the senses-with the ferocity of the mass media-the radio, the highly colored news- paper or magazine-but they have more lasting influence and in the long run have more to do with setting and changing opinion.


THE LIBRARY'S PUBLIC


Bernard Berelson, Dean of the Graduate Library School of the University of Chicago, in his study The Library's Public shows that while practically everyone reads a newspaper, listens to the radio-perhaps it should be added looks at television-only one person in four reads a book a month. It would be interesting to know how this finding checks with book reading in the Andover


159


community. This has implications for the public library. Will it be possible to attract some of the non-book-reading public? Should the public library perhaps limit the amount of ephemeral and light weight recreational material which it adds and put its major attention on materials of more significance which are not so readily available except at the library?


THE LIBRARY AVAILABLE AROUND THE CLOCK


The library is available to the individual the whole year round and its liberal schedule of hours makes it possible for almost anyone to use it despite hours of work. The library is sensitive to the slow round of the year and needs no calendar to tell the changing seasons. The demands of its users keep it alert to each day's significance. In the library, too, there is a time of planting and reaping, of holiday making, a time for self-improvement-in fact a time for almost every interest under the sun.


THE LIBRARY YEAR UNFOLDS


The library year with its activities has been well-recorded and it would be repetitious to recount it in detail. A few impressions follow, particularly those which seem to offer most of value to the individual, the keystone of the library's structure.


THE LIBRARY AND FILMS


Since the film has become so powerful an instrument in the dissemination of ideas, the Memorial Hall Library has cast around for ways in which films could best be promoted in the community. More than sixty public libraries in the United States have their own collections of 16-mm films for community use. Probably the Memorial Hall Library will never own films out- right but it may one day become part of a regional plan whereby for stated intervals, it will have changing packets of films avail- able for community use. In an effort to promote film awareness, the library has held film preview meetings, developed a film in- formation service and a booking service for community groups, in addition to its own film programs. It is early to assess results but increasingly the library is called upon for film information, to plan film programs and to book films. A Film Festival, held in March and April, gave many people ample opportunity to dis- cover the beauty and importance of many of these films.


160


THE LIBRARY AND RECORDINGS


Another non-book media, the recording, has gradually come to the fore in public libraries. Only three years old the Memorial Hall Library record collection has proved to be one of the most popular library services for young and old alike. South Pacific, The Gondoliers, George Gershwin vie in popularity with Bach, Brahms, Beethoven and other musical "greats", classical and modern. The demand for Christmas carol recordings was almost more than the collection could meet and shows one way in which the library serves the seasons in their rounds. Some borrowers are finding delight in non-musical recordings - Robert Frost reading his poems, Judith Anderson in Macbeth.


BUT MORE IMPORTANT THE BOOKS


Important as films and recordings are, they can never take the place of the printed page. A general impression more or less buttressed by frequent examination of books in use points to an upturn in the reading of thoughtful and worth-while books. Book circulation has not, however, kept pace with population growth and in this television has no doubt been a factor. Circula- tion of recordings, pamphlets and subject books showed a slight gain for the year. There was a slight falling off in the amount of fiction borrowed. One of the 1950 trends, not perhaps so note- worthy, has been the skyrocketing popularity of science fiction, to which might be joined several subject books published as seri- ous scientific works. It will be interesting to see what future social historians make of this trend.


THE INDIVIDUAL ASKS QUESTIONS


Some questions in slightly varying form are asked over and over again. Others are the only ones of their kind. Occasionally a few are "stickers" which necessitate calling upon the resources of larger collections. In these days of high prices and conflicting advertising claims, consumer questions come to the fore with con- sumer magazines literally read to tatters as people seek to find the "best buy" in radios, television sets, washing machines. "How-to- do-it" books seldom gather any dust on the shelves as they are called into service to answer one demand after another. A few typical questions will suffice to show the variety and the need for


161


a wisely selected and broad-in-scope book collection to answer them.


What do you feed young turtles after they are hatched?


How do you build a compost pile? brick steps? an 11-foot kayak?


How many white corpuscles are there in the blood of a normal person ?


What encyclopedia shall I buy for my child?


What is the trucking distance between Belle, West Virginia, and Wilmington, Delaware?


Have you books which will show how to electroplate with gold and silver?


What is the average flow of water in rivers and streams in Massachusetts and New Hampshire?


What books will help a young man become more aggressive in putting his ideas across?


What is the address of the Denver Fire Clay Company?


BOYS AND GIRLS LIKE STORIES


Impressions of a library year must include mention of the film and story hours for boys and girls. The carefully selected films and stories are an important factor in building discriminating taste for films and literature and for increasing understanding of other people and their ways. "They don't want to miss them," one mother told us, pleased that television had not completely taken over. The Young People's Library literally bulges at the seams as boys and girls pour into it on film and story days.


MOTHERS AND CHILDREN ENJOY THE LIBRARY TOGETHER


On any Wednesday morning during the school year at ten o'clock in the Young People's Library, a chance visitor would find twenty to twenty-five three- and four-year-olds, listening to records, playing games, being enthralled by stories. The popu- larity of this activity has meant dividing the group in two this fall, with Bluebirds and Robins meeting on alternate weeks. Mothers meet for discussion at the same time with an occasional film and outside speaker. As one mother put it, "I look forward to the meetings just as much as my child does." A three-year-old, not usually demonstrative, tells her mother after the Christmas party, "Wasn't it lovely?" If there is anything in early condition- ing, the library should not want for intelligent users in the years to come.


162


OUR VARIETY OF GREAT BOOKS DISCUSSION


No list of peaks would be complete without mention of the group which met together over a period of eight weeks to read and discuss Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain: It was difficult reading made the more rewarding because of the rich background which the leader, Dr. Walter Hasenclever of the Phillips Faculty, brought to the discussions.


THE LIBRARY AND UNITED NATIONS WEEK


Books and pamphlets about the United Nations abound in the library's collection but to focus attention even more dramatically on United Nations Week, the United Nations flag was flown from the library flag pole. At the end of United Nations Day, a small group of Brownies gathered to help take down the flag, each one eager to touch this symbol of world hope. Whatever United Nations vicissitudes may be in the coming days, this was a mo- ment to be remembered.


THE LIBRARY STAFF CLASSIFICATION AND PAY PLAN


This past year the Library Board adopted a new Classification and Pay Plan. It has importance among the outstanding events of the year since to attract well-trained librarians and to keep them, the library must offer salaries comparable to those offered in other parts of the country, yet in keeping with the salary pat- tern for similar work in its own community. It has importance, too, because of the implications which it has for good and efficient service to the individual.


. THE LIBRARY HAS ITS FACE LIFTED


Rather prosaic perhaps, but important in the scheme of things, was the repainting of the library exterior and the installation of oil heat. Maintenance of plant is essential in keeping a building bright, well-ordered and attractive. A new building not being in the foreseeable future, it is the more imperative that the present building be modernized and equipped in keeping with its present usefulness.


THE LIBRARY AND ITS FRIENDS


The library has no formal Friends of the Library, but it does have library friends, many of them! A hearty and appreciative thank-you goes to those who contributed books, or lovely and


163


unusual flowers in season; to the Andover Village Improvement Society for its project to beautify the library grounds; to the Andover Evening Study Program for its gift of two hundred dollars which was used for the Film Festival and for shades for Memorial Hall; to the Futterman Trust which gave this library fifty dollars for recordings from a fund set up for this purpose; to the Garden Club for a flowering crab which fortunately seems to have survived a spring and summer drought; to Mr. Howard Coon for the gift of one of his oil paintings to the Ballard Vale Branch Library and to the many others who have given tangible evidence of their affection for the library and its works.


A COOPERATIVE ENTERPRISE


Each individual whether he thinks of it in just this way or not took part in a cooperative venture of some size. He had recourse to a book collection which he could not and would not want to provide for himself. Help in the selection of books, in finding in- formation on a desired subject were his for the asking. He could participate in as many of the special programs arranged during the year as his fancy dictated. Many individuals got far more from their investment than they put into it in actual dollars and cents of tax money in 1950. More got very little in direct service, although most of them feel satisfaction in knowing that such re- sources exist to be drawn upon when needed.


The Memorial Hall Library serves the individual; there is no doubt of that. Contrary to some notions of its work, the public library is very much in the stream of life. It participates, although vicariously, in the joys and sorrows of its users. It knows when there has been a new life or when one has ended. The whole cycle of life is played out as the individual's use of the library spans his lifetime from his first days with the unrivalled joy of being able to read through youth, adulthood and old age. One of the library's oldest users, in an exchange of Christmas greetings along Main Street remarked, "There will always be a Santa Claus for me as long as I am able to get to that building across the street." May "that building across the street" continue in the new year and in the years beyond to merit such warm-hearted approval and af- fection.


164


1950 STATISTICS OF LIBRARY USE


BOOK STOCK


Volumes at beginning of year


Adult 36,246


Juvenile 9,509


Total 45,755


Volumes added by purchase


1,478


948


2,426


Volumes added by gift


107


2


109


Volumes lost or withdrawn


450


569


1,019


Lost volumes found


4


4


Total volumes at end of year


37,385


9,890


47,275


Newspapers and Periodicals currently received


145


Periodicals received by gift


36


USE


Volumes


% of total circulation


Volumes of adult fiction loaned


43,369


38.2


Volumes of adult non-fiction loaned


29,281


25.9


*Number of children's books loaned


34,507


30.4


Number of adult records loaned


5,060


Number of children's records loaned


799


5.5


Number of pictures loaned


376


Total number of books, records, etc. loaned 113,392


REGISTRATION


Adult


Juvenile


Total


Borrowers registered during year


544


322


866


** Total number of registered borrowers 3,205


1,376


4,581


Circulation per capita (based on 1945 census figures)


9.5


*Included in this total is 6326 recorded school circulation. Total books sent on school deposit numbered 8634 and each of these books was probably used from two to twenty times. The library, however, counts only recorded circulation.


** This is the first year that adult borrowers' registrations have automatically expired. This accounts for the apparent smaller total of registered adult library users.


165


Board of Public Works


Andover, Mass. January 1, 1951


The Board of Public Works voted to adopt the following re- ports of the Superintendent and Engineer as its reports for 1950 with recommendations for 1951.


SIDNEY P. WHITE, Chairman EDWARD A. DOYLE, Secretary JOHN H. KELLY P. LEROY WILSON


ALEXANDER H. HENDERSON


166


Superintendent's Report


To the Board of Public Works:


GENTLEMEN :


The major activities and developments in the Highway, Water, Sewer, Park and Street Lighting Departments during the year which ended December 31, 1950 were as follows:


HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT


The following table in inches shows the snowfall for the year 1950:


January


7.6 Inches


February


16.7 Inches


March


6.7 Inches


November


. 2 Inches


December


2.9 Inches


Total


34.1 Inches


The snowfall for the season November 1949 to March 1950 in- clusive totaled 37.25 inches.


The following roads were resurfaced with tar and honed: Cornell Avenue, Dascomb Road, Osgood Street, Dufton Road, Burnham Road, Porter Road, Hidden Road, Phillips Street, Morton Street, Bancroft Road, Gray Road, Shawsheen Road, · Canterbury Street, Greenwood Road, Gleason Street, Webster Street, Corbett Street, Magnolia Avenue, Poor Street, West Knoll Road, Alderbrook Road, Rattlesnake Hill Road, Sher- bourne Street, Whittier Street, County Road, Woburn Street, Ayer Street, Argilla Road, Stevens Street, River Street, Lowell Junction Road, Ayer Street, Marwood Drive, and sections of the following streets: Central Street, Chestnut Street, Princeton Avenue, Red Spring Road, Gould Road, Wildwood Road, High Plain Road, Abbot Street, Highland Road, High Street, Salem Street, Reservation Road, North Street, Chandler Road, Beacon Street, Andover Street, Bannister Road and Bradlee School Driveway.




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