Lamb's textile industry of the United States, embracing biographical sketches of prominment men and a historical résumé of the progress of textile manufacture from the earliest records to the present time; . gh the co-operation of his fathercreated the model mill village in Alabama, and who met with a fatal ac-cident while engaged in the performance of his duties, Mr. Nichols erectedat Alabama City a Public Library Building. He gave to the Hale Hospital,Haverhill, Mass., when that edifice was rebuilt in 1900, the administrationbuilding, also in memory of his son; and erected and dedicated to t


Lamb's textile industry of the United States, embracing biographical sketches of prominment men and a historical résumé of the progress of textile manufacture from the earliest records to the present time; . gh the co-operation of his fathercreated the model mill village in Alabama, and who met with a fatal ac-cident while engaged in the performance of his duties, Mr. Nichols erectedat Alabama City a Public Library Building. He gave to the Hale Hospital,Haverhill, Mass., when that edifice was rebuilt in 1900, the administrationbuilding, also in memory of his son; and erected and dedicated to thememory of his father and mother a public library in his native village,Kingston, N. H. March 15, 1870, Mr. Nichols married Charlotte Peabody, daughter ofDaniel, and Charlotte (Tenney) Kimball, a descendant of Richard Kimball(1595-1675), who immigrated from Ipswich, England. Four children wereborn of this union, one son, Howard Gardner, and three daughters:Eleanor, who married Dr. Henry O. Marcey, Jr.; Grace; and Charlotte,who married Edwin Farnham Greene, treasurer of the Pacific Mills. Mr. Nichols died at his home in Newton Mass., September 15, 1905,being survived by his widow and three


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidlambstextileindu01brow