![]() ![]() In 1800, a saw mill was built on the Sebasticook River on the site that is now the Edwards Company (EST), by William Bradford and Mr. Located on North Main Street, at the Mill Pond dam. Sold to Alfred & Sessa Menendez in 1973 and became Pittsfield Bowling Center. Managed by George Chadbourne from 1964-1986. The Bowl-Rite Lanes and Recreation Center, owned and managed by Charles Rowell of Harmony, was a most popular indoor gathering place ever since it was established in 1963. Located on South Main Street, set back from the road, almost opposite from C.N. Opened in Maderio’s Market location, closed. Also see Nancy’s Restaurant.ġ7 Main Street. Closed in 2020.Ĭlosed in 2003 after 1 year. For a more detailed history, see the Community Theatre page. Right photo from Eisenhower visit in 1955. Sold to Town of Pittsfield in 1977, and opened as Pittsfield Community Theatre. Originally opened in 1915 as Leger’s Theatre. The name of the restaurant at this site from 1998 to 2002. Located on Middle Street, across from Hathorn Park. Closed, two story wooden building torn down in to make room for drive-up window at Merrill Bank. “Dick” Berry, purchased the business in 1971 from Donald Humphrey who had purchased it from Dick’s father. See ad on pages 36 in Loder’s 1907 Souvenir of Pittsfield ME. Berry operated the store as Libby’s Pharmacy. No longer in business (moved out of town).Ĭhain department store, opened in May, 1981, in Somerset Plaza. His son David Welch has a seasonal ice cream shop there now (2005).ġ7 Main Street. Located on Main Street at corner of Central Street. See ad on page 41 in AJ Loder’s 1907 Souvenir of Pittsfield ME.Ĭlosed. Located on North Main Street “on the island”. Sold to Town & Country Realtors which then moved into Green Apple location (67 Main St.) in fall of 2004.īlacksmithing and jobbing. Pittsfield starts on page 70.ĭwayne Ames. mills all over the US as of 1920, including four mills in Pittsfield. Also see the Woolen Mills Photo Page and this complete list of American Woolen Co. In 1914 Pioneer was bought by American Woolen. A view of the Pioneer Woolen Mill (right photo). After 1945, American Woolen began closing the mills one after the other until eventually in 1953 it closed its last mill in Pittsfield, the flagship Pioneer Woolen Mill. By the early 1900’s all of Pittsfield’s woolen mills had fallen on hard times, and the American Woolen Co. Loder’s 1907 Souvenir of Pittsfield ME on page 45 and page 62 and other pages.Ħ Somerset Avenue, a home-based business, operated by Robert Simpkins. ![]() Loder, and included a photographic studio, florist shop, boots, shoes and rubbers shop, and offered water colors, crayon sketches, picture framing and bedding plants and cut flowers from their 150′ x 24′ greenhouse. Loder block housed the businesses of both A. Located at 11 Central Street, across from the Depot, the A.J. See ad on page 2 of the April 1882 Pittsfield Advertiser Cornforth building remains standing after the fire of 1881. With AAC, you can record at one of five different bit rates, from 64 to 320 Kbps, and at one of three different quality settings.A.H. ![]() Right now, the only options are AIFF and AAC. Once you’ve set a recording time, you can give your scheduled recording a name, choose which station RadioShark should record, and select what audio format you’d like to have your recording saved in. I do wish that repeating recordings could be set at other specific intervals, such as every half hour. Recordings can repeat hourly, daily, weekly, on weekdays, or on weekends. You can schedule repeating recordings, too. ![]() Despite the annoyances, I was able to schedule recordings rather easily. We barely noticed this because there are no check boxes or other tip-offs that denote these as changeable options. You can toggle the AM and PM options in 12-hour mode, but to do so, you need to click on AM or PM. For example, the application can display time in either 12-hour or 24-hour clock mode. Scheduling a recording with RadioShark is fairly straightforward, though not as easy or elegant as it could be. Clicking on the TS button slides out a drawer, below the main window, containing “time-shifting” playback features that let you pause and rewind the live broadcast in case you need to step away from your Mac or want to listen to something a second time. To schedule a recording for a particular station at a particular time, or to play back those recordings, click on the Sched button. Most important, if you click on the Rec button, the RadioShark starts recording what you’re listening to. Buttons allow you to switch bands and find the next strong signal. A slider along the top lets you change frequencies, and a second slider lets you adjust the volume. The main RadioShark application’s interface is a metallic, iTunes-style window. ![]()
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