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New York Belting and Packing Co.

Coordinates: 41°25′52″N 73°16′42″W / 41.43111°N 73.27833°W / 41.43111; -73.27833
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New York Belting and Packing Co.
New York Belting and Packing Co. is located in Connecticut
New York Belting and Packing Co.
New York Belting and Packing Co. is located in the United States
New York Belting and Packing Co.
Location45-71 and 79-89 Glen Road, Newtown, Connecticut
Coordinates41°25′52″N 73°16′42″W / 41.43111°N 73.27833°W / 41.43111; -73.27833
Area12.8 acres (5.2 ha)
Built1856 (1856)
ArchitectLey, Fred T. & Co.
Architectural styleItalianate
NRHP reference No.82004367[1]
Added to NRHPJune 2, 1982

The New York Belting and Packing Co. complex, also known locally for its main 20th-century occupant, the Fabric Fire Hose Company, is a historic industrial complex at 45–71, 79-89 Glen Road in Newtown, Connecticut. Its centerpiece is a four-story brick mill building with an Italianate tower, built in 1856. The property also includes a dam impounding the adjacent Pootatuck River, a mill pond, and a hydroelectric power generation facility.

The site's industrial history begins about 1850, when the dam was built. The Goodyear Rubber Packing Company, headed by Josiah Tomlinson, brother-in-law of Charles Goodyear, started operations on the site at that time, but the company went bankrupt in 1856. The New York Belting and Packing Company bought the premises in that year. One of the buildings burned down that year, and the company built the present factory building on that site, as well as another further upstream (no longer extant), where it operated until 1917. The property was then acquired by a subsidiary of the United States Rubber Company (later known as Uniroyal), which leased the premises to the Fabric Fire Hose Company until 1977.[2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[1]

The complex was renovated into an office building in 1980[3] named Rocky Glen Mill. A notable occupant in the late 1980s was Stepstone, which created the Objective-C programming language.[4] The building was renovated again in 2000.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ "NRHP nomination for New York Belting and Packing Co". National Park Service. June 2, 1982. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
  3. ^ Howard, Jan (August 3, 2001). "A Sandy Hook Landmark Mill Was Once State Of The Art". The Newtown Bee. Newtown, Connecticut. Retrieved August 2, 2021.
  4. ^ Cox, Brad J.; Naroff, Steve; Hsu, Hansen (June 2020). "The Origins of Objective-C at PPI/Stepstone and Its Evolution at NeXT". Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages. 4 (HOPL): 82:15. doi:10.1145/3386332. The company moved from its original quarters in a renovated dentist's offices to a rustic fire-hose factory in Sandy Hook, CT.
  5. ^ Perrefort, Dirk (November 22, 2015). "History lives on in Sandy Hook industrial building". The News-Times. Danbury, Connecticut. Retrieved August 2, 2021.
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