Andover Photographer - Jeff Lazzarino and Poor Wagon Shop: Difference between pages

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William Poor and his son Joseph opened a blacksmith shop on Poor Street (named for an ancestor) in 1833.  The blacksmith shop became the Poor Wagon Shop.  William and Joseph were abolitionists and built wagons with false bottoms to help transport runaway slaves to NH. William retired in 1895 and Joseph was forced to sell out a few years later due to poor health. 


Jeff Lazzarino was named television photographer of the year by the Boston Press Association in 2002. He has also won 3 Emmy Awards from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for outstanding achievement in videography. In 2002 he was the chief television photographer for WFXT-TV/Fox25 in Boston. A story about baseball in Cuba has also earned him a "Television Best of Show" Award.  
In 1906, William Wood, president of the American Woolen Company, moved the shop to his estate, Arden, on Main Street. He used it as a playhouse for his family and renamed it "the Casino." The building is located behind the present Christian Science church on Main Street, south of Shawsheen Square.


see
See
 
*"Poor Wagon Shop became underground stop, 'casino'", ''Andover Townsman'', July 22, 2010.
Picture This---2 Local Photographers Win Awards for Their Work. Townsman 5/16/2002, page 23.
 
 
 
--Leslie 16:30, October 25, 2011 (EDT)
 
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Revision as of 12:41, 31 October 2011

William Poor and his son Joseph opened a blacksmith shop on Poor Street (named for an ancestor) in 1833. The blacksmith shop became the Poor Wagon Shop. William and Joseph were abolitionists and built wagons with false bottoms to help transport runaway slaves to NH. William retired in 1895 and Joseph was forced to sell out a few years later due to poor health.

In 1906, William Wood, president of the American Woolen Company, moved the shop to his estate, Arden, on Main Street. He used it as a playhouse for his family and renamed it "the Casino." The building is located behind the present Christian Science church on Main Street, south of Shawsheen Square.

See

  • "Poor Wagon Shop became underground stop, 'casino'", Andover Townsman, July 22, 2010.



--Kim 12:41, October 31, 2011 (EDT) back to Main Page