The Draper Companies

Four Early Shops

The Draper business, 1856-1878

Draper shops, 1885 – 1890

Draper shops in 1902

Pre-1910 photos of the Draper shops

Draper and Dutcher temples

The Dutcher Family and Business        The Frank Dutcher home

The Dutcher Family and Business by Peter Hackett

The History of Spindles (By William F. Draper, on the Harvard U. Library site.)

Draper Plant Expansion, 1856 – 1886 (From Model Company Town.)

The Development of the Northrop Loom, Iincluding the bobbin battery  .)

James Northrop

Charles Roper (Draper inventor)

Draper Products   (Although best known for their automatic loom, the company also manufactured many other products. This article tells what they were doing in 1896.
Inventors of Hopedale  – Part 1         Part 2
Looms at Work   (Pictures of two mills with large numbers of Draper looms at work.)

Now and Then at the Main Office

The Draper plant, 1890 – 1913   See how it grew and changed.

Shuttle workers, 1903

The Hopedale Machine Company

Draper Strike of  1913        Strike articles from Milford Gazette

Draper response

Strike of 1913 – The Unmaking of an Industrial Utopia

Teaching unit on the strike

Striking Women: Massachusetts Mill Workers in the Wake of Bread and Roses, 1912-1913.

Drapers Will Hire Women

Eben Draper Bancroft – Vice president and director of Draper Corp at the time of his death in 1925.

Draperville (Grantham Historical Society slide show of the Draper bobbin plants in North Newport and North Grantham, NH in the early  twentieth century.)

Beebe River -(Draper bobbin plant in New Hampshire.) More on bobbins – Cotton Cjats, June 1952  Also Cotton Chats, February 1940.      Beebe River 40th anniversary booklet   Tupper Lake, New York  (Another Draper bobbin plant)

Alterations to the plant (Brick facade on Hopedale and Freedom streets, and much more. 1934.)

The Draper apprentice school – (1940 into the 1960s)

Draper Manufactures Howitzers – (World War II)

Aerial views of the plant – 1947 – 1951

Draper 40-year banquet photo – 1948

Workers at machines in the shop

Draper shop organization chart, c. 1950 (Lots of familiar names for those of you who remember the company at that time.)

Main Office workers, 1950s

The Draper foundry in 1950   (a Cotton Chats article)

More on the foundry, c. 1950

Harry Pickard retirement party, 1950 (Many photos of Draper management at that time.)

Draper open house, 1951

Workers at their machines and benches

The Shop Bell

Claude Snider

Cotton Chats   (Several early issues of the Draper monthly on the website, Digital Treasures.)

Cotton Chats: The Voice of the Draper Company, by Anita Cardillo Danker

Cotton Chats – 1940     1946     1948     1952     1953     1954

Miscellaneous Draper photos from the 1940s and 1950s

Draper phone directory from the 1950s (Over 20 pages of names from that era.)

Cartoons of Draper employees in the 1950s.by Arthur “Red” Pennington.

East Spartanburg plant open house – 1953
Foundry operations – Spartanburg, 1953

Foundry workers strike at Draper Corp., 1953

The 1955 Flood    Inside the Draper plant     Outside the plant   

Draper’s first computer – The UNIVAC, c. 1950s

Roy Rehbein – Working at Draper

The Draper apprentice school

Photos of Draper employees in 1961 report

Aerial Views, 1964

Draper shuttleless loom, 1964

Draper plant photos that appear to be from the 1960s. Saved by Bob Anderson of Upton when Rockwell people were discarding them.  Page 1 (machinery and workers – some from the West Foundry) Page 2 (machinery and workers)     Page 3 (machinery and workers)     Page 4 (machinery and workers)     Page 5 (office workers, executives and meetings)     Page 6 (loom assembly)     Page 7 (people)  Page 8 (shuttle department)     Page 9 (salesmen’s book – captioned photos)     Page 10 (the rest of the salesmen’s book)   Page 11  (more pictures from
inside the shop)   Page 12 (building the West Foundry)

A View from the South

A View from the  Southeast

The West Foundry, 1966

Last Years Before Rockwell

Rockwell Buyout – NYT 1967

Draper Foundries in the Rockwell Era

The 150,000-gallon oil tank (John Cembruch)

Strike, 1976

Rockwell sale of property, 1976

Mike Cyr   (Working in textile mills, including one that used Draper looms.)

George Bushnell (Draper and Country Club memories)

Draper work diary by John Callery (A view of the last years, month by month.)

Rockwell letter to employees, 1978

The End Is Near – Newspaper articles (1978) about the impending closing of the Draper plant in Hopedale.

Draper – Now just a memory (Milford Daily News, March 31, 1980)

It’s All Over (A Milford News article from 1980 about the closing of the Draper plant.)

Water leak – ((Ends manufacturing in rented space at Draper shop in 1988.)

Draper plant in January 2006      More pictures of the same area taken a few months later – July 2006.  Five from August 2006.   October 15, 2006.    October 30, 2006.   More taken in  February 2007

The Draper plant in 2001     in 2006    and in 2007

Now and Then – The Draper yard from the 1890s to 2013.

$50M Proposal for the Draper plant – 2018

Drone view of the Draper plant before demolition.

Draper demolition – Hopedale Street, south end

The Decline of a Technological Leader: Capability, Strategy, and Shuttleless Weaving, 1945 – 1974.    (In this paper, William Mass, writing at the University of Lowell, with funding from the University of Connecticut, takes a close look at decisions made during the final years of Drapers.)

Developing and Utilizing Technological Leadership, Industrial Research, Vertical Integration, and Business Strategy at the Draper Company, 1816 – 1930 (Another paper by  William Mass,)

Draper plant demolition, 2020-2021 Hopedale Street side, south end     Hopedale Street side, Social to Freedom     Freedom Street side, western parts     Freedom Street side, eastern half     Post-demolition site cleanup  (2021 – 2022)

Other Draper-Related Pages

Hopedale, 1881

Blackstone Valley Baseball League   Draper teams,  1935    1948   1951

Mill Village or Shop Town?

Field Days      Draper Field Days slide show on YouTube.

Summary of Edward Spann’s Hopedale: Commune to Company Town

Short Biographies of Prominent Hopedale People

From Christian Utopia to Company Town: Communal Life and Corporate Paternalism in 19th and 20th Century Hopedale, Massachusetts.

Hopedale and the Drapers, 1888 (The Springfield Daily Union.)

Hopedale and the Drapers   (A summary of Hopedale history written in 1909.)

Hopedale and the Drapers, 1910 – (The Boston American)

The Duplexes      Bancroft Park photos,( c 1900)

Octagon houses  

Milford Hospital

Draper fire stations

Draper gas station

Garages   (Car garages for people living in Draper houses.)

Hopedale Manufacturing Company

The Larches

White City   (Memories of that Draper neighborhood by John Chute.)

White City   ( Memories of Hermina Cichanwicz Marcus.)

Draper Field

The publication of Five Generations of Loom Builders, 1950

Hopedale Airport

The Textileers

Site Protection (Preserving the appearance of the town.)

Frederick FitzGerald Killed in Plane Crash – 1960

The Final Chapter by Peter Hackett

Proposal for 1200 condo units at former Draper site.

A Draper loom in the 21st century – Pete and Laurie Eaton’s amazing restoration of a Draper loom.

And another Draper loom restoration story. Michael Masterson and the X-3.

Draper looms weaving denim in North Carolina in 2012

Shuttles and the Swannanoa Museum

Shuttle lamp plans

Little Red Shop Menu

The Little Red Shop in the Draper Era

Joseph Bancroft (Lilla Bancroft Bracken Pratt’s story of her father’s life. The Bancrofts have been included here because, in addition to Joseph’s position with the Draper Company, the Drapers and the Bancrofts were related. Sylvia’s sister Anna was married to Ebenezer Draper, and her sister Hannah was married to George Draper. Also, Joseph was an executive with the various Draper companies nearly all of his working life, and president of Draper Company for the last couple of years of his life.

The Uxbridge Connection

Draper plant demolition, 2020-2021 Hopedale Street side, south end     Hopedale Street side, Social to Freedom   Freedom Street side, western parts     Freedom Street side, eastern half     Post-demolition site cleanup  (2021 – 2022)

There are also many more Draper family and Draper Corporation pages on ezines and elsewhere on this site. You can look through various menus, do a site search from the homepage, or contact me. Email address is on the homepage

   Draper Family Menu          HOME