The New England Wireless and Steam MuseumNEWSM Logo


1300 Frenchtown Road
East Greenwich, RI 02818 USA
Telephone: 401-885-0545
Robert W. Merriam, Director





Steam Building History

In 1971 the New England Wireless and Steam Museum built the first part of the Steam Building. The William A. Harris engine with the tangye bed had recently been donated by National Laundry in Dorchester Massachusetts and it needed a home. As you can see from the following four photographs the foundation for the Harris engine was built and the engine was assembled on the foundation before the building was built. The National Guard did the heavy work while Robert Merriam (Dark Coat) and Nancy Merriam (Light Coat) supervised.

The following photographs show the Steam Building in the summer of 1971during construction. In the foreground of the fouth photograph you can see the disassembled Fitchburg engine that powered the Noone Textile Mill in Peterboro, NH.

In the picture to the above right you can see the Fitchburg engine that powered the Noone Textile Mill in Peterboro, NH in the foreground and the American Ball engine that generated electricity for the National Laundry Company in Dorchester, MA at the left.


For more information please e-mail: Robert W. Merriam, Director
All pages, HTML, text, images, and movies are ©1997-2008 The New England Wireless and Steam Museum, Inc.
Web page comments and suggestions to: Michael Thompson.