Rubber Relations

192 Regent Avenue, Valley Neighborhood, Providence, Rhode Island

In 1910, the O’Connors came to Providence, Rhode Island, from Chelsea, Massachusetts, and found an apartment here, in the Valley neighborhood. Daniel, my great-grandfather, was taking a mill job with the big US Rubber Company. He had previously worked at a rubber mill in Chelsea with his brothers Frank and Bernie. The O’Connors were immigrants from the city of Cork, as was Daniel’s wife, Kate (Holland). Chelsea and Providence were heavily industrialized in those days, and immigrants did much of the dirty work. Three children of the family also worked at some point in the rubber mills. During WW2, US Rubber employed 3500 workers in a complex of 29 buildings over 23 acres by the narrow Woonasqatucket River. In 1915, two thirds of the population of Providence was foreign-born or children of the foreign-born. The O’Connors contributed quite a bit to that count: two immigrants with ten children.

Published by Fred Lynch

Fred Lynch is an artist, illustrator and professor of Illustration at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). He lives near Boston, Massachusetts. ©Fred Lynch All rights reserved.

Leave a comment

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started