Some photographs from Lunar New Year parade that I forgot to upload!
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Some photographs from Lunar New Year parade that I forgot to upload!
James Barton
James Barton was the owner of a rope walk in the West End, on the land of descendants of Sir John Leverett.
Read on our website.
Image: The Bonner map clipped to show Barton's Ropewalk (The Leventhal Collection, Boston Public Library).
Barton owned a ropewalk running along the bank of the Old Mill Pond, roughly one block from the site of the West End Museum. A ropewalk is a narrow, long building where ropes were made with hemp, cotton, and melted tar; working in close quarters, ropemakers operated in highly flammable environments. The walk was constructed on Leverett Street, on eleven acres of land rented from the Leverett family (descendants of Sir John Leverett — hyperlink here) on what became known as Barton’s Point. The land also contained an orchard and a tenement. The name “Barton’s Point” appeared on the map of Boston designed by Captain John Bonner in 1722; the ropewalk was in operation as early as 1686, when ropemaker Edward Gray appeared in records as an apprentice at Barton’s Point.
@doubledutchdrinks Indian Tonic with @josecuervouk at @ropewalks_lounge #liverpool #twinmagic #tonic #ropewalks (at RopeWalks Bar And Kitchen)
Arts Club, Seel Street
Our home for ten weeks, from October 2013. We'll be in the main foyer on the left hand side. Watch this space...
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