Early history Before the arrival of European settlers, the area of Florence and Northampton was called Nonotuck, meaning either "middle of the river" or "far away land." Nonotuck was a settlement in the
Pocumtuc confederacy.
Name The Florence area was known as "Broughton's Meadow" referring to John Broughton, an English settler who purchased land in 1657 that included what is now Northampton and Florence. Broughton's Meadow was used to describe the area until 1846. Other names included "Warner School District" after three brothers who had lived in the area during the early 19th century, and "The Community" referring to the Northampton Association of Education and Industry from 1842 through 1846. In 1848, the village took on the name Bensonville after George W. Benson and the Bensonville Manufacturing Company. After Benson's company went bankrupt in 1849, the village adopted the name Greenville after Greenville Manufacturing Company. In preparation for creating a post office, the village came together in the fall of 1852 to select a new name. The name "Florence" was suggested by Dr. Charles Munde, and this name was approved by residents.
19th century Early industry Factory villages along the Mill River were producing cotton goods, silk, wool, thread, buttons, wood items for domestic use, furniture, and leather by 1840. He planted of
mulberry trees in Florence in order to raise
silkworms. Whitmarsh's company, the Northampton Silk Company, began manufacturing silk thread in 1837. Members of NAEI believed that the rights of all should be "equal without distinction of sex, color or condition, sect or religion." The association was 1 of 3 utopian groups founded in Massachusetts before the Civil War. A member of the anti-slavery movement, Hill's home at 31-35 Maple Street in Florence served as a stop for the
Underground Railroad. After the NAEI dissolved, Hill took over the factory and ran it as the
Nonotuck Silk Company and was also a partner in other local factories. Hill and others founded the Free Congregational Society in 1863 and supported the construction of Cosmian Hall. A supporter of education, Hill organized the Florence Kindergarten in 1876. Upon his death in 1882, he left an endowment to support the kindergarten which later became the Hill Institute. After the community dissolved in 1846, she bought a house on Park Street where she lived until 1857. In Florence, Truth gave her first public lecture and developed her craft as a public speaker. She met Olive Gilbert within the NAEI community who would transcribe
Narrative of Sojourner Truth: A Northern Slave. NAEI introduced Truth to William Lloyd Garrison who connected her to the printer of
The Liberator and Frederick Douglass's slave narrative. Truth published her narrative in 1850 on credit with the same publisher. A memorial statue was erected in her honor in Florence in 2002.
David Ruggles was an African American abolitionist, journalist, business owner, and a practitioner of hydropathy. He was one of the founders of the New York Committee of Vigilance, an organization dedicated to protecting the rights and safety of African Americans in the 1830s. By the early 1840s, Ruggles was struggling due to falling out with the New York Committee of Vigilance, the death of his father, protests in New England over segregated seating on trains, and his overall declining health rendered him almost blind. On learning of his health and financial struggles,
Lydia Maria Child and others arranged for him to join the NAEI community. As a member of the community, he sought out hydropathic treatments for his ailments under Dr. Robert Wesselhoeft in Cambridge. Ruggles began practicing hydropathy himself, and in 1845 he established a water cure hospital on the Mill River. Ruggles died in Florence in 1849 at the age of 39. Charles Munde emigrated from Germany. He became familiar with the water cure methods of
Vincent Priessnitz around 1836. After the death of
David Ruggles in 1849, Munde picked up where Ruggles left off and opened the Florence Water Cure, also called the Munde Water Cure.
Underground Railroad Florence residents Samuel L. Hill, David Ruggles, Seth Hunt, Austin Ross, A.P. Critchlow, and Elisha Hammond have been identified as part of the Underground Railroad network working to free the enslaved.
Manufacturing and industry The
Nonotuck Silk Company later changed its name to the
Corticelli Silk Company. It grew to be one of the world's largest producers of silk thread, made with raw silk imported from
Japan. The company went out of business in 1930.
20th century Mirage Studios, the creative force behind the
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comic books, was based out of a renovated factory space in Florence. Florence was the filming location for the 1999 movie,
In Dreams. The
Miss Florence Diner opened in 1941 and is a popular landmark on the National Register of Historic Places. Coopers Corner opened in 1938.
Recent history Many areas of Florence have undergone renovations in the recent past, with former factories now playing host to art studios and small retail stores. ==Places of interest==