Long a fixture of Sharon Valley, the "Valley Store" was opened by Aaron Reed in 1820. Hotchkiss and Company, manufacturers of malleable iron products such as curry combs, nails, mousetraps and screw wrenches, operated the store from the middle of the nineteenth century.

In the 1930s, the store was operated by Alanson (Lance) Middlebrook and his wife, Ruth, and employed young men as clerks and delivery men. Lance served as a state representative from Sharon. Note the outhouse to the left and the Sharon Valley Post Office sign.

   
 

The Blast Furnace in Sharon Valley, is supposed to have been the first of the kind in Sharon. Samuel Roberts, now of Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., says his grandfather, Lyman Bradley, owned and ran it in 1825, and he thinks he was the builder of it. It has had several owners since, the last being "The Sharon Valley Iron Company". Its ruins are still standing to remind us of the time when Sharon Valley was the most industrious portion of the town.

Another important industry in Sharon Valley was the Mouse-Trap Shop at the "Jewett Manufacturing Company's" plant. Bass-Wood lumber in car-load lots was bought and stacked in the yard for seasoning. The traps were of six sizes, and were called one, two, three, four, five and six hole traps. The one hole traps were triangular in shape. The two and three hole were oblong, the four hole was a perfect square, and the five and six hole were round. They were cut and stained, after which the holes were bored. Augurs and bits of different sizes were belted together so that the pulling of a single lever completed the boring of many holes at the same time. The wires were bent into the many shapes required, by machines that were almost human in their operation. I have been told these were the invention of Judson Bostwick, father of our neighbor, A.J. Bostwick. The shaping of the traps from the rough lumber gave employment to many hands, many of them boys and some of them girls, for the work required nimble fingers rather than bodily strength. It also made quantities of chips which were carted away to be used for bedding for horses and cattle. It was a common sight to see people carrying away great sacks full of traps and wires to be put together at their homes during the long winter evenings. It was a source of income to many that was greatly missed after the burning of the mouse trap shop.

View National Register of Historic Places Nomination for the Sharon Valley Historic District.

View Videos of Sharon Valley

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

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Sharon Historical Society, 18 Main Street, Sharon, Connecticut
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