From collection Eastern Illustrating & Publishing Company Collection
Red Men's Bldg, Bristol, Conn. 95.
Image of an imposing Neo-Classical masonry building. This image is part of a series made by one of the three Eastern Illustrating & Publishing Company photographers assigned to cover New England or upstate New York. The quest for images that would be saleable as postcards resulted in the documentation of small towns and small town life at the turn of the 20th century. As the photos were shot, the glass plates were promptly sent back to Belfast, Maine, and processed into postcards at the printing plant on High Street. Above the grand entrance are the words: "Imp'd. Order Red Men", which identify the home of th Bristol CT chapter of the oldest patriotic fraternity in the U.S. The Improved Order of Red Men was formed in the 1830s to commemorate the Colonists' alliance with the native American Mohawk tribe against the British. The Bristol chapter organized in the1850s, but after incorporating in 1901 required a larger home. They erected this structure in 1911, with a state armory on the ground floor, and a large meeting hall on one of the upper stories. It was designed by the architect Walter Crabtree. In later years the building became the site of many town events. [source: historicbuildingsct.com]