Monday, August 18, 2008

195 State Street: Sweatin' in the Oldie

Some jobs are tougher than others come the dog days of summer. Roofers, road crews, fire fighters, shade tobacco pickers and office workers come to mind right off the bat. Wait a minute. Office workers? Why sure, especially when those fine filing folks happen to be melting away in poorly-ventilated old buildings built in the day when impressive architectural appearances outweighed the productive proclivity for practicality.

The offices of the Springfield School Department at 195 State Street fit that description. First occupied on July 3, 1905, as the headquarters of the Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company, the limestone Classical Revival-style structure is infamous for its warm weather oven-like qualities among the 150 or so education employees who work there year 'round. In a Springfield Republican article (link) dated August 4, 2008, Finance Control Board executive-director, Stephen P. Lisauskas, told the paper: "That facility, it's not even close to being an efficient model for a modern workplace." What a difference a day (or thousands of them) makes. In the book, 'Springfield Present and Prospective,' author J. Frank Drake avers - much to the contrary - that the brand new home of Springfield Fire and Marine is "...complete and adequate in every respect, finely appointed and fitted with every modern convenience and device for the transaction of the underwriting business of today..." Of course, when Drake was writing, in 1905, electricity was a "modern convenience," a welcome sparking citizen less than two decades old within the city's borders.

Here are some images of 195 State Street, all but the first and last scanned from the aforementioned book.

This postcard from the Barbara Shaffer collection captures two major Springfield-based insurance companies in one image. The Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company is in the left foreground, the eight-story Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company building in the westerly distance, on the corner of State and Main streets. Both began business in 1851. Notice the tracks of the Springfield Street Railway running along a hard-packed dirt State Street.


One modern convenience lurking around the corner from 1905, the automobile, was certainly not planned for in the footprint of 195 State Street, with virtually no land put aside for parking.


Not a clerk or agent a'stirring. Must be lunchtime. Or a hot summer afternoon...


Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company began opening branches and enlisting agents all over the country soon after its incorporation. Even 1882 Red Cloud, Nebraska, had an agency handling Springfield Fire insurance policies. The Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company was also a member of the American Foreign Insurance Association, "Organized September 1918 for the purpose of extending and promoting the operation of American companies in foreign countries." Hmm...outsourcing...Don't let Lou Dobbs catch wind...


In the days of devastating fires, when whole cities could burn virtually unchecked, the Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company paid out some hefty sums to folks who had lost it all. The Chicago fire of 1871: $8,550,000; the Boston fire the very next year: $260,000; and the San Francisco fire of 1906: $81,639,063.39.


195 State Street, Springfield, Massachusetts - 1905


195 State Street, Springfield, Massachusetts - 2008


For more old photographs of State Street, check out the previous EWM post, 'Photos: State Street, Springfield, Massachusetts.'

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



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3 comments:

  1. Wow, the outside doesn't seem to have changed one bit. Even the lightposts on the steps look the same...

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  2. Amazing that the outside of the building has not changed much at all... the inside however is vastly different. At a city teacher last year I was inside that building on a few occations... looks nothing like those pictures now inside!

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  3. In the early 60's, I worked for Insurance Company of North America which was located in this building. It was a beautiful building. Have fond memories of that time. INA later build a new building on Maple Street.

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