August 1, 2007
    Hopedale History
    No. 88
    The Pistol Club


    Hopedale in July      

    What was it like to be in the artillery during World War I? Click here to read what Wickliffe Draper
    had to say in a talk given at the Hopedale Community House.           

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    Hundreds of gunshots are fired in the center of Hopedale every week, but it rarely makes the
    news. Here's one story about it, written back in 1949.

                                                        Hopedale Pistol Club History

    HOPEDALE - On Nov. 26, 1937, 10 men met in the Community House for the purpose of forming
    a pistol club.  The club objective was to encourage revolver and pistol shooting. Madison H. Goff
    was elected president and Burleigh W. Lapworth was elected secretary.

      A shooting range with four alleys of 25-foot range, was constructed in the basement of John A.
    Bell's barn. [The 1939 town directory lists John A. Bell as living at 83 Mendon Street.] A small but
    faithful group enjoyed many evenings there.

      Later five alleys of 60-foot range were constructed in the basement of the old stable of
    Hopedale Coal & Ice Co.  More people became interested and through persistent efforts of a few
    members, the club prospered. A few matches with out-of-town clubs were held.

      Due to the war, club activity was discontinued until Sept. 25, 1947, when a meeting was held in
    the new range with President Goff in charge.  The building is owned by the Draper Corp. and
    rented to the club. It is made of cinder blocks and is 125 feet long, 25 feet wide, and contains six
    shooting positions with a 50 and 60 foot range. The fluorescent lighting arrangements were
    designed by the University of Maryland especially for shooting ranges.

      In addition to the range, there is a clubroom and an observation window, 15 feet by 30 inches,
    for spectators. Heat is furnished from the Draper Corp. central heating plant.  Open house was
    held Oct. 8, 9, and 10. People came from near and far and were favorably impressed with the set-
    up.

      About this time several ladies developed an interest in shooting. As a result of this, today some
    of the ladies? scores rate higher than their husbands.

      Monday and Wednesday nights are reserved for rifle shooting, and Tuesday and Thursday
    nights are reserved for pistol shooting. Friday is an open night.

      On April 28, 1948, Mr. Goff retired after serving as president for several years. Charles Watson
    became president. Much activity took place with Tri-State shoot, matches with other clubs, and
    many holiday parties.  The club is affiliated with N.R.A. and has recently received its charter.

       This year's activities open with dinner and annual meeting at Chicken Pete's, Sept. 28. Milford
    Daily News, September 14, 1949  Pictures and more, related to the story above.

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      In recent years, all of the old factories of the area have come to be called mills. That wasn't
    always the case though. The term used depended on the kind of work done. When Draper
    Corporation was still operating, and even into the Rockwell years, their place of business was
    almost always referred to as "the shop." Below is a letter on the subject, printed in the Milford
    News on July 29, 2007.

      As an aside to the devastating Bernat Mill fire in Uxbridge, I was somewhat disappointed to
    note your paper is still referring to the former Draper Corp. building in Hopedale as the "Draper
    Mill."  I thought that Mr. Sparling had explained in a letter that Drapers wasn't really a mill, it was a
    shop that manufactured textile machinery to service and supply the mills, where cloth was
    woven.  Perhaps this is a very small point to many today, but for we former employees, and
    longtime residents of Hopedale, it makes us cringe to read such a misnomer.  I don't think the
    signs that proclaim Hopedale as being a Mill Town are accurate either.  Don McGrath Hopedale

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    Recent deaths:

    Wesley L. Tinkham, 84, Springfield, New Hampshire, July 13, 2007, HHS 1941.

    Angelo J. Roberti, 89, July 14, 2007

    Dorothy M. (Murray) Cornacchia, 81, July 21, 2007, HHS 1944.

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