Tantiusques | |
Open Space Reserve Historic Site National Register of Historic Places |
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Tantiusques
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Country | United States |
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State | Massachusetts |
Location | Sturbridge, Massachusetts |
- coordinates | 42°3′26″N 72°7′52″W / 42.05722°N 72.13111°WCoordinates: 42°3′26″N 72°7′52″W / 42.05722°N 72.13111°W |
Plant | Oak-hickory forest, mountain laurel |
Founded | 1962 |
Management | The Trustees of Reservations |
Area | 57 acres (230,000 m2) |
Website: Tantiusques | |
Tantiusques Reservation
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Location | Leadmine Rd., Sturbridge, Massachusetts |
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Area | 15 acres (6.1 ha) |
Built | 1643 |
NRHP Reference # | 83004141 |
Added to NRHP | October 6, 1983 |
Tantiusques ("Tant-E-oos-kwiss") is a 57-acre (230,000 m2) open space reservation and historic site registered with the National Register of Historic Places. The reservation is located in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, and is owned and managed by The Trustees of Reservations; it is notable for its historic, defunct graphite mines. This is a rural area with much of the adjacent and surrounding area undeveloped and forested. The reservation is entirely forested with oak-hickory forest and red maple in the wet areas and mountain laurel abundant throughout the understory. The name Tantiusques comes from a Nipmuc word meaning “the place between two low hills." The Nipmuc used the graphite to make ceremonial paints. The property also contains the ruins of a 19th-century period house that belonged to a mine worker of mixed African American and Native American ancestry.
In 1644, John Winthrop the Younger, son of the first leader of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, purchased the area now occupied by the reservation from the Nipmuc and began a commercial mining operation. Besides graphite, the mine yielded modest amounts of lead and iron. The mine stayed in the hands of the Winthrop family until 1784 despite difficulties extracting minerals and its poor financial return.
In 1828, Frederick Tudor, a Boston merchant, purchased the property. He successfully mined the graphite for over a quarter of a century until his death in 1864 when the mining operation ceased with his death. He had employed Captain Joseph Dixon and his son, who would later found the J.D. Crucible Company of New Jersey. This company eventually evolved into Dixon Ticonderoga, the famous manufacturer of pencils.