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Bay State Village History Bay State Village The Bay State area got its name from the Bay State Tool Company which was located there. Most of the people who worked at Bay State Tool Company lived in the area and named it Bay State. The Bay State area also includes the Northampton Cutlery, formerly the Clement Cutlery, a brick block of workers housing and six wood frame houses constructed for mill workers. The buildings of the Cutlery date from 1850 to 1918 and document the growth of the th small hardware industry in the 19 century. Facing the cutlery on Ladd Avenue is the 1866 Clement Cutlery with Mansard roof, designed by E.C. Gardner. The Mill River setting of these structures is excellent and enhanced by the presence of worker’s housing on Lexington Avenue and Riverside Drive. An early (c.1840) unit of brick worker’s housing overlooking the Cutlery and six free-standing wooden frame structures (c.1860) on Riverside Drive east of the factories communicate the same functional values as the mill buildings themselves. These four elements well illustrate the vital relationship between the New England water power and early industrial development, and the impact of the factory system on the lives of factory operatives.