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Matthew Farfan
Born
in 1845 on his parents' farm at Kingscroft, in Barnston Township,
Arthur Osmore Norton studied at nearby Barnston Academy. By age
16, Norton was working as a clerk in a local general store. In 1870,
he married Helen Richardson of Coaticook. The couple would have
two children together. By 1875, Norton had entered the wholesale
and retail jewelry business in Coaticook.
In the 1880s,
Norton purchased the rights to a device specially invented by Frank
Sleeper for use in the railway industry. Norton's subsequent manufacture
in Coaticook and Boston of the "Norton Ball Bearing Lifting
Jack," as it came to be known, would make him a very rich man.
It was not long before "the Norton Jack" was in demand
all over Canada, the U.S., and the world. His company was incorporated
in the U.S. in 1906 as A. O. Norton Inc., and in Canada in 1913
as A. O. Norton Ltd. The Coaticook plant suffered a disastrous fire
in 1912, but was rebuilt the following year.
A. O. Norton. (Source: Men of Today in the Eastern
Townships)
A leading Townships
industrialist, Norton was also a philanthropist, making sizable
contributions in the areas of health, education, and the arts. The
opulent Norton family home, built in Coaticook in 1912, is now home
to the Beaulne Museum.
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