This Week in Concord History

July 26, 1970: The Associated Press reports that Mel Bolden's campaign for the Executive Council makes him “the first Negro to seek the seat.”

July 26, 1927: His tour stop over, Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and his “Spirit of St. Louis” take off from Concord Airport at 11:50 a.m. There is a report that he passed over Claremont at 1:20 p.m. on his way to Springfield, Mass.

July 26, 1965: Trains carrying 71-foot laminated wooden arches arrive in Concord. Shipped from Oregon, they will become rafters for the new Everett Arena.

July 27, 1927: The police report more evidence of the pickpockets who worked the crowd during Col. Charles A. Lindbergh's visit to Concord two days before. Two young boys have found 20 more pocketbooks in a hole covered with paper behind the airport hangar. The number of people robbed now totals at least 36.

July 28, 1827: Othello is performed at the Eagle Coffee House in Concord. Crowds are sparse.

July 28, 1855: The Concord city council registers its approval of the state's new anti-drinking law. “Resolved that the late act for the suppression of intemperance in this state meets with our entire approbation. Therefore, resolved that the city marshal and his assistants are requested to prosecute, with promptness and energy, all violations and infringements of said law.”

July 28, 1927: Nellie Taylor Ross, the nation's first woman governor, stops at the Concord home of former New Hampshire governor John G. Winant. She is on her way to Tilton, where she will give a Chatauqua speech in the evening. The Monitor reports that Ross, the former governor of Wyoming, is “noted for her charming manner” and “travels in an expensive car, with her own chauffeur.”

Asked whether she will reveal all in her speech, Ross says one hour won't give her enough time. “There is a difference between the truth and the whole truth,” she says. “Certainly I tell the truth.”

July 29, 1927: Police Chief A.S. Kimball orders the Lapp carnival on the Bridge Street fairgrounds to close “forthwith.” The shutdown follows the arrest of two men who work for the carnival on gambling charges. Both men are convicted and fined $50.

The chief investigated after receiving reports of gambling and indecent shows at the fair, including one show to which only men were admitted. The sponsoring Elks Club will argue in vain for a reversal of Kimball's closure order.

July 29, 1988: Developers announce plans for an eight-story office and retail building at the corner of Main and Bridge streets in Concord. (It won't happen.)

July 30, 1777: After riding all night from Exeter, Lt. Col. Gordon Hutchins, Concord's legislative representative, bursts into the Sunday service at Concord's meeting house to say that Gen. John Stark is marching west but needs more men. “Those of you who are willing to go had better go at once,” Rev. Timothy Walker tells his congregation. All men present leave.

July 31, 1860: Sen. Stephen A. Douglas, the Democratic nominee for president, comes to Concord. The crowd at the railroad station is “dense and ungovernable,” and 5,000 people jam onto the State House yard to see the most famous politician of his day. Douglas denounces his fellow Democrat, President James Buchanan, for placating the South.

July 31, 1911: Samuel Eastman buys the assets of the Abbot & Downing Co. for just over $50,000, with more than half the money going to pay down the failing company's debt. Eastman will reorganize the company.

August 1, 1848: The Boston, Concord and Montreal Railroad opens its line to Meredith Bridge (Laconia).

Author: The Concord Insider

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