Edward Davoll was a respected New Bedford whaling captain in an industry at
its peak in the 1850s. But mid-career, disillusioned with whaling, he turned
to the slave trade, with disastrous results. In this riveting biography,
Anthony Connors details not only the troubled, adventurous life of this man
but also the turbulent times in which he lived.
Ingenious Machinists" recounts the early development of industrialization in New England and New York through the lives of two prominent innovators whose work advanced the transformation to factory work and corporations, the rise of the middle class, and other momentous changes in nineteenth-century America. Paul Moody chose a secure path as a corporate engineer in the Waltham-Lowell system that both rewarded and constrained his career. David Wilkinson was a risk-taking entrepreneur from Rhode Island who went bankrupt and relocated to Cohoes, New York, where he was instrumental in that city s early industrial development. Anthony J. Connors writes not just a history of technological innovation and business development, but also two interwoven stories about these inventors. He shows the textile industry not in its decline, but in its days of great social and economic promise. It is a story of the social consequences of new technology and the risks and rewards of the exhilarating, but unsettling, early years of industrial capitalism.