Robbins and Lawrence Armory Richard S. Lawrence, a brilliant mechanic, moved to Windsor in 1838 at age 21 and started making guns in the Windsor Prison. He joined Nicanor Kendall, who had a gun-making shop, and together started a new company. Four years later businessman Samuel E. Robbins came to Windsor. In 1846, Samuel Robbins, Nicanor Kendall, and Richard Lawrence took the bold step of bidding on a government contract for 10,000 rifles. Having won the contract, they then constructed a four-story brick building beside Mill Brook. Over the next eight years, the factory was built and machines to make precision parts were made. They brought in workers and mechanics, invented new machines, adapted old ones, and perfected techniques for producing interchangeable parts. Later, Lawrence bought out Kendall. Within a few years, they were exporting not only rifles but also their new metal cutting machines across North America, to England and around the world. The technology for making guns was quickly adapted to making consumer products as well as parts for many other machines The imposing, four-story structure rises from a stone foundation adjacent to a brook that provided immediate and efficient use of waterpower. Inside, power was distributed throughout each floor with line shafting; the shafts were connected to individual machines by leather belts. Abundant windows and the building's narrow width relative to its length (40’ x 100’), brought daylight into the interior work areas. Outside, the immediate neighborhood is still home to worker housing that was built at various times in the factory's history. The nearby Connecticut River and the active railroad attest to the importance of transportation in the development of the site. File:Conjectural Belting Diagram - Robbins and Lawrence Armory, 196 Main Street, Windsor, Windsor County, VT HAER VT-39 (sheet 12 of 12).tif|Conjectural Belting Diagram (Building Cutaway) File:Isometric - Robbins and Lawrence Armory, 196 Main Street, Windsor, Windsor County, VT HAER VT-39 (sheet 10 of 12).png|Isometric View File:Evolution 1846-1853 - Robbins and Lawrence Armory, 196 Main Street, Windsor, Windsor County, VT HAER VT-39 (sheet 2 of 12).tif|1846 -1853 Evolution of Building File:Evolution 1884-2009 - Robbins and Lawrence Armory, 196 Main Street, Windsor, Windsor County, VT HAER VT-39 (sheet 3 of 12).tif|1884-2009 Evolution of Building
The Armory Building: 1866–1964 The building operated as a cotton mill beginning in 1866 for nearly two decades, before returning to manufacturing machine tools in 1888. Ten years later the property was sold to the Windsor Electric Light Company, before being sold to the Central Vermont Public Service Company in 1926.
The Museum: 1966 - Present In 1964, CVPS proposed razing the building, prompting Smithsonian curator and Windsor resident, Edwin A. Battison to formulate plans for the creation of a museum. Battison had a relationship with CVPS, storing various items in the building since the 1950s. Windsor native Battison founded the American Precision Museum in 1966 and served as its director until 1991. Battison, a curator of Mechanical Engineering at the
National Museum of American History at the
Smithsonian Institution, secured the Robbins & Lawrence Armory to house the museum and the collection of historic machine tools, related books, and archival materials he had collected during his lifetime. The armory building is significant for its architectural integrity, which reflects the size, scale, and operation of a 19th-century factory. A
National Historic Landmark, in 2001 it was designated a special project of
Save America’s Treasures; in 2003, APM received a
Save America’s Treasures award of $200,000 for installing a new slate roof to replace the deteriorated original. == Legacy of Robbins and Lawrence ==