, Mt. Holyoke, MA (c. 1940) In 1857, the firm of Platner and Smith made paper from wood pulp, but their endeavor failed to be commercially viable because of the lengthy process used to reduce the wood to
pulp and the high cost. The paper they produced was quite coarse and did not take print well. In 1866, Albrecht Pagenstecher, a German immigrant living in
Stockbridge, Massachusetts, together with his brother Rudolf, bought two German-made
Keller-Voelter grinders. On March 5, 1867, in nearby
Curtisville, Pagenstecher was the first in the United States to manufacture commercially viable
wood pulp. He sold the pulp to the Smith Paper Company which immediately produced commercial newsprint. Many of the
Holyoke mills quickly converted to wood pulp, and Holyoke with twelve major paper mills became the world's largest center for papermaking. Additionally the city was home to
D. H. & A. B. Tower, who specialized in mills operating using the
sulfite process; at one time their firm was reportedly the largest in the United States. Because of its prominence in industrial papermaking, Holyoke's machinery and labor practices would be the subject of extensive study by officials and industrialists of Japan and China alike, who sought to modernize their production methods. ==Decline==