Guest column: From water wheels to iron horses, Park Brothers did it all

Guest column: From water wheels to iron horses, Park Brothers did it all

I’ve chosen to relieve the winter season blues by offering some brief, however really intriguing historic truths about Chatham-Kent history.

Released Mar 02, 2024Last upgraded 16 hours ago2 minute read

The Parks Brothers foundry in Chatham, circa 1880s. (Supplied)
The Parks Brothers foundry in Chatham, circa 1880s. (Supplied)

By: Jim and Lisa Gilbert

To assist reduce the winter season blues, here are some brief however really intriguing historic realities about Chatham-Kent history:

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Samuel Thomas Martin got here in Chatham in 1874 and quickly ended up being really abundant and accomplished and got the label Scoop.

In 1878, Martin purchased 600 acres (243 hectares) of land in Dover Township for the paltry amount of $75. The land was just great for farming when the Lake St. Clair water levels were low. For the majority of the year, it was a shallow lake.

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Martin started developing plans to pump off and stay out the water. When windmills and numerous pumps stopped working, Martin started to explore drastically imaginative concepts. He developed and had actually built a wheel almost 5 metres in size and 0.9 metres large that dipped 1.2 metres into the water and made 6 transformations per minute.

Much to the surprise of everybody however Martin, it worked, and he quickly had the ability to plant and harvest crops with ease. The creation developed in your area the concept of drain by diking and pumping and made Sam ‘Scoop’ Martin abundant (the huge home he developed throughout from Blessed Sacrament Church in Chatham vouches for that).

The Martin ‘Scoop’ Water Wheel– long an unique location of respect at the Milton Agricultural Museum– likewise brought its contractors, the super-creative and in your area popular Park Brothers, and their foundry, to prominence.

In the mid-1880s, the Park Brothers ran a hectic foundry on William Street (near today’s Terrace Forty apartment building), producing steam boilers, pumping equipment and other developments. Among those whimsical innovations was the “Iron Horse.”

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Simply north of the foundry and east on William Street was a large typical acreage where circuses would establish. One circus in the 1880s overwintered in Chatham, and its supervisor encouraged the Parks to construct a novelty product that would delight the residents.

The Park Brothers, constantly up for an obstacle, concurred and when spring got here signboards all over town declared the future exposed “Iron Horse.”

It debuted in the circus season’s opening parade, looking quite like a huge horse that might spit fire and blow steam.

Not just had the Park Brothers produced a great circus promo, however likewise Chatham-Kent’s very first traction engine. Approximately that time, engines had actually been horse-drawn. Needless to state, farmers in the area for the circus entrusted concepts of the “horseless tractor” dancing in their heads.

For the typical Chathamite, who was not from the farm, the sight of a huge fire-breathing horse passing through the streets of Chatham should have been memorable.

Jim and Lisa Gilberts are acclaimed historians with an enthusiasm for informing the stories of Chatham-Kent’s remarkable past.

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