History of Downtown Nashua

The Downtown Nashua of today, with its unique shopping and dining experiences
and charming commercial buildings, is the outgrowth of nearly 200 years of
commercial and retail metamorphosis. Even in the 19th century, merchants
had to be innovative and creative to keep pace with the ever-changing interests
of their customers. Nowhere is this more evident than in the history of Downtown
Nashua. Click the
pdf link here or on the map
on the left to download a self-guided tour to learn the rich history
behind many of Nashua’s most prominent buildings and businesses.
1800 - 1830

Downtown Nashua became a retail center shortly after the founders of the
Nashua Manufacturing Co. brought Asher Benjamin, an architect primarily known
for his residential and religious structures, to Nashua to layout the city,
during which time he set out key Downtown streets such as Factory, Spring,
and East and West Pearl Streets. 100-foot lots on Main Street started being
bought up in the late 1820s and ‘30s and commercial buildings began to appear
on what had previously been a residential street. The earliest mercantile
activity was clustered around the Main Street Bridge, but by 1850 the commercial
district had grown south towards East and West Pearl Streets. Construction
of the Merchant’s Exchange (169-185 Main Street), built in 1872, and the
Masonic Temple (194 Main), built in 1889, pushed Downtown even further south,
with the final phases of development being marked by the erection of the
Montgomery Ward Building (221 Main) in 1928.
1830 - 1929
Throughout most of the 19th century, the majority of Downtown businesses catered to the interests of thousands of female workers or “mill girls” who came to Nashua for work. Clothiers, hat shops, shoe stores and other retailers that catered to women lined the streets of Downtown. With the turn of the century, the types of businesses and goods offered Downtown changed. F.E. Nelson (100 Main) became Nashua’s first department store in 1904. The concept of selling a diverse selection of goods—from clothes to jewelry to house wares—all under one roof was brand new at the turn of the century. F.E. Nelson had stores in Lowell, Lawrence, Manchester, Concord and Rutland, Vermont, so setting up shop in Nashua put the city on par with other significant industrial cities from of that time. Nelson’s was soon followed by Woolworth’s (111/113 Main) in 1907; Goodnow, Hunt & Pearson (138-140 Main) and several others. The early 20th century also saw the establishment of two family-owned businesses that are still in operation today, Burque Jewelers (89 W. Pearl) and Scontsas (169 Main).
1929 - 1970
With the onset of the Great Depression, construction of new commercial buildings
came to a hault. However, several new businesses opened up in existing buildings,
some of which are still operating today, including Aubuchon Hardware (217 Main)
and Avards, now Dick Avards Haberdashery (now at 117 Main).
After World War II, the 1940s saw a stream of new retailers and the construction
of a Downtown landmark, the Sears & Roebuck Department Store (184 Main),
also known as the Professional Building. The opening of Sears & Roebuck
made the front page of the local papers, as many felt that its coming symbolized
that Nashua had “arrived.” Other well-known businesses during this time included
Brockleman Bros. grocery, Carroll Cutrate department store, Berg’s Shoe Store,
JJ Newbury Five and Dime, and the Downtown institution, Millers, which became
the quintessential Downtown meeting place, so much so that the phrase “Meet
you at Millers” became their motto.
With changing manufacturing practices, many companies were closing or heading
to foreign countries where labor and production were cheaper, and the Nashua
Manufacturing Company closed its doors in 1948, leaving a significant part
of Nashua’s workforce unemployed. This would be the first of many major economic
and social changes Downtown would face in the 20th century. Construction of
Route 3 in the late 1950s would also greatly impact Downtown. Route 3’s creation
was characteristic of a national shift in community planning, which was moving
away from walkable neighborhoods where residential, commercial and industrial
uses were close together, and towards sprawling communities where the different
components were separated by distances that required a car to go from one place
to another.
This shift in focus to an automobile-centered lifestyle brought about a change
in how people shopped. Shopping plazas, with their buildings set back from
the road, behind expansive parking lots, came to Nashua in the late 1950s and
early ‘60s. On the heels of the shopping plaza came the shopping mall. Plazas
and malls were modern renditions of the traditional Main Street commercial
district, only the automobile was at the heart of their design, thus creating
a sea of asphalt through which shoppers had to walk in order to get to stores.
Although plazas and malls offered similar goods and services as Downtown, parking
there was free and seemingly unlimited, and thus people found shopping at them
to be more convenient. As retailers must follow consumer trends to survive,
many Downtown businesses felt compelled to leave and establish themselves in
plazas and malls. By the early 1990s, Downtown institutions such as Sears,
Millers and Woolworth’s had either moved to a mall or closed for good. Gone,
too, by this time were the local banks, such as Indian Head Bank and the Nashua
Trust.
1970 - Present
In the early 1970s, in response to the increasingly vacant storefronts and sidewalks, local merchants banded together and formed the Heart of Nashua merchants association, through which they advocated for Downtown businesses and revitalization. The Heart of Nashua disbanded in the late 1980s and other efforts were put forth to unify and revitalize Downtown. The economic revitalization movement that finally “took off” was organized by the City’s Downtown Development specialist, Alan Manoian. During the mid-1990s, Manoian and Downtown advocates worked to pass ordinances that would allow for sidewalk cafes and develop programs that encouraged vibrant downtown street life. Alec’s Shoe Store’s (201 Main) move to Main Street and the opening of Nashua’s first urban bistro, Michael Timothy’s (212 Main) were clear indicators that a new Downtown was emerging in the mid-90s. New businesses, combined with signature events such as the Taste of Downtown and the Winter Holiday Stroll, put Downtown back on the map as a destination for unique retail, culinary and cultural experiences.
In the 21st century, the revitalization continues. The Riverfront Park project and the highly anticipated opening of Peddler’s Daughter will create even more exciting opportunities for exploring Downtown. Since 2002 Great American Downtown took over the role of planning the Taste of Downtown, Holiday Stroll and the newest event, the Great American Ghost Town, and will be working over the next year to develop additional programs in support of Downtown merchants and visitors.
In its first 200 years, Downtown has proven itself to be resilient, innovative and newsworthy. Great American Downtown, the City of Nashua, the merchants and developers are working hard to ensure that Downtown’s future will be equally impressive.
Great American Downtown would like to acknowledge Alan Manoian, Community & Economic
Development Professional, for his invaluable contributions to this article. Historic
photo courtesy of the City of Nashua Contemporary photos by Jodie Andruskevich,
www.jodiephoto.com