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Lowell native donates `gold mine' to city

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  • Lowell native donates `gold mine' to city

    Lowell Sun, MA
    June 9 2005

    Lowell native donates `gold mine' to city

    Document he found as a child was written by future U.S. official
    By ELISE COMTOIS, Sun Staff


    LOWELL -- It was just a piece of paper, but Lowell native Ahron
    Ahronian believes the document he handed to historic officials
    Tuesday will bring a new wave of prosperity Lowell.

    It chronicles a childhood event of Gustavius V. Fox, who grew up in
    Lowell and became assistant secretary to the Navy during the Civil
    War.

    `I think this document will prove to be a gold mine for the city of
    Lowell,' Ahronian said, `a gold mine of potential to draw people to
    the city.'

    Martha Mayo, director of the Center for Lowell History, said she
    hopes Ahronian's aspirations for the document are realized, but she
    thinks his personal story, that of being a young, Armenian boy in
    Lowell who came across it, might be just as valuable.

    `In some ways, that part of the story is equally important and
    poignant,' Mayo said.

    As he was roaming the banks of the Merrimack River in 1936,
    13-year-old Ahronian found a time capsule containing a document
    written by 13-year-old Fox that was left there 101 years earlier.
    Ahronian kept it for over 50 years, until he ran into a local
    historian who explained Fox's historical significance.

    Fox is not only credited for his position as assistant secretary of
    the Navy but also for coming up with a plan some say could have
    prevented the Civil War. When Union troops were under siege at Fort
    Sumter, Fox proposed a plan using sea steamers and tugboats to get
    reinforcements to the troops. President Lincoln approved the plan,
    but a horrible storm at sea delayed the reinforcements, and war
    commenced before they could get there.

    Ahronian shared his story with a captivated audience of a dozen in
    the basement of Pollard Memorial Library on Tuesday, when he gave the
    document to the Center for Lowell History.

    Ahronian, now 80, described how, as a boy, he spotted a
    foreign-looking object that looked like a stick of dynamite on the
    banks of the Merrimack River. Upon closer inspection, Ahronian
    realized it was actually a scroll of papers, the contents of the time
    capsule.

    The scroll included a green paper imprint of a woman leaning against
    a Grecian column, a copy of the Lowell Gazette from 1835, and a small
    yellow document relating an important event from Fox's childhood.

    Ahronian's mother threw the first two objects away, but he held on to
    the last.

    The small, yellowed paper Ahronian kept appears to be written by Fox
    and his 16-year-old friend from England, William Dalton Dauncy, and
    describes how they found a rock on the banks of the Merrimack River
    that intrigued them. They named the rock `the Rialto,' fortified it
    with thorns and sticks, and supposedly fended off 20 schoolmates who
    were trying to get to the rock.

    Soon after, it seems the boys put together the time capsule and left
    it in a cleft in the rock.

    Ahronian said he can only recall one rock on the southern bank of the
    Merrimack River, the one he and many other local children used to
    play on as children, and believes that rock is the same one Fox and
    his friend left the time capsule in.

    Although Ahronian did not find the capsule in a rock, he thinks the
    flooding of the Merrimack River in 1936 dislodged the capsule from
    the rock. Unfortunately, in more recent years most of the rocks on
    the Merrimack have been destroyed and removed for sewage treatment
    purposes, Ahronian said, and he thinks the rock in question was
    destroyed with the rest.

    Ahronian said with time he thinks there will be national interest in
    the document, not only because it involves an important historical
    figure, but also because it chronicles a unique and distinctive
    event.

    `I do believe the words `The Rialto' will become household words far
    and wide,' Ahronian said.

    While the document is unique, Ahronian thinks the city needs a new
    Rialto to really attract greater tourism to Lowell.

    `It's up to the city to maxmimize the potential this rock carries
    with it,' Ahronian said.

    Ahronian is trying to publish a book on the story and would like to
    talk to other people who may remember playing on the same rock as
    children. Anybody who would like to share such information may
    contact Dora St. Martin at the Pollard Memorial Library at (978)
    970-4128.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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