Lowell Through Time is a visual exploration of how changes in
architecture, industry, commerce, demographics and entertainment shape
the experience of this riverfront city. The requirements of textile
manufactory drove its development, walling off the city proper off from
the Merrimack River by a mile of mills. The southward migration of the
textile industry began as far back as the late nineteenth century. Area
shopping malls weakened the business district a century later. Other
cities in the Commonwealth also suffered economic downturns, but it is
arguable that Lowell has rebounded better than most, undergoing a
mini-renaissance with a burgeoning university, status as a National Park
and a resurrected commercial core. Industrial architecture was finally
recognized as a heritage rather than a blight and its destruction
halted. Old textile mills, former department stores, fire stations and
schools have been recycled. Lowell may now look much the same, but, in
many ways, it is not. These photos tell something of that story.