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85:. By 1807, the village included the Slatersville Mill, the largest and most modern industrial building of its day, two houses for workers, the owner's house and the company store. The Slaters also donated a meeting house for Slatersville Congregational Church, which they attended. John Slater died in 1843 and was buried in Slatersville.
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Slater was born in
England in 1776 and received an education from Thomas Jackson, also his older brother's teacher, and then became a millwright's apprentice. Slater gained technical mill information in
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Slatersville Green and the
Congregational Church meeting house which the Slaters donated and attended
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Period paintings of John and Ruth Slater currently owned by the
Slatersville Congregational Church
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The
Textile Industries of the United States: Including Sketches and Notices of Cotton, Woolen,...
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36:(December 25, 1776 – May 27, 1843) was an early American industrialist, founder of
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145:. Vol. VIII. James T. White & Company. 1924. p. 270
142:The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
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109:Slatersville Mill, 2005, prior to renovation
92:, later became a prominent philanthropist.
16:For other people with the same name, see
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188:North Smithfield, Rhode Island History
208:American manufacturing businesspeople
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183:Slatersville, Rhode Island History
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169:(The Riverside Press: 1893)
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75:Slatersville, Rhode Island
38:Slatersville, Rhode Island
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153:– via Google Books.
44:, father of the American
203:American philanthropists
79:Smithfield, Rhode Island
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46:Industrial Revolution
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34:John Slater
18:John Slater
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63:Manchester
71:Pawtucket
56:Biography
96:Gallery
67:Oldham
151:2021
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