Bristol is a town in the historic county seat of Bristol County, Rhode Island, United States. The population was 22,954 at the 2010 census. Bristol, a deepwater seaport, is named after Bristol, England.
Major industries include boat building (and related marine industries), manufacturing and tourism. The town's school system is united with neighboring Warren, Rhode Island. Prominent communities include Luso-Americans (Portuguese-Americans), mostly Azorean, and Italian-Americans.
The first battle of King Philip's War took place here in 1675; although Philip was eventually defeated, a variant of his Indian name, Metacomet, is now the name of a main road in Bristol: Metacom Avenue (RI Route 136).
King Philip made nearby Mount Hope (Montaup) his base of operations. "King Philip's Chair", a rocky ledge on the mountain, was a lookout site for enemy ships on Mount Hope Bay. After that war concluded, the town was settled in 1680 as part of the Plymouth Colony. It was presumably named after Bristol, England.
Aquidneck Island is an island located in the U.S. state of Rhode Island, in Narragansett Bay. The total land area is 97.9 km2 (37.8 sq mi), which makes it the largest island in the bay. The 2000 United States Census reported its population as 60,870.
Aquidneck Island is home to three towns, from north to south geographically: Portsmouth, Middletown and Newport.
English colonists first settled on present-day Aquidneck Island in 1638 in the region called by the natives "Pocasset" (meaning "where the stream widens"), the northern part of Portsmouth. At one time, Aquidneck Island was controlled by the Wampanoag, whose leader was the Sachem Massasoit. Traditionally, Massasoit greeted the Pilgrims at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621. Aquidneck Island was used primarily as a hunting territory although it was probably a summer residence as well.
As many as nine in ten of the Wampanoags were killed by the epidemics brought to North America by the Europeans in 1617–1619. The Narragansetts, who were unaffected by the diseases, fought for and obtained control of Aquidneck Island and other places. The Wampanoags regained control over their territories.
Bristol was a large sidewheel steamer launched in 1866 by William H. Webb of New York for the Merchants Steamship Company. One of Narragansett Bay's so-called "floating palaces", the luxuriously outfitted Bristol and her sister ship Providence, each of which could carry up to 1,200 passengers, were installed with the largest engines then built in the United States, and were considered to be amongst the finest American-built vessels of their era.
Both ships would spend their entire careers steaming between New York and various destinations in and around Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island. Bristol was eventually destroyed by a fire while in port in 1888.
Bristol and Providence owed their existence to a short-lived company known as the Merchants Steamship Company, which placed the initial order for the vessels with the Webb shipyard in about 1865. Merchants Steamship was an amalgamation of three existing Narragansett Bay shipping lines, the Commercial Line, Neptune Line and Stonington Line. The Company intended to run the two steamers between New York and Bristol, Rhode Island in competition with the Fall River Line, which ran a similar service from New York to Fall River, Massachusetts (both Lines then linking up to railway lines that continued on to Boston).
The Bristol TDX Station is a proposed regional rail station along the Transdominion Express in Bristol, Virginia. The station would serve as the southern terminus for both the Washington and Richmond lines, and bring passenger rail transit to the Tri-Cities Region.
Bristol (formerly known as Pemaquid) is a town in Lincoln County, Maine, United States. The population was 2,755 at the 2010 census. A fishing and resort area, Bristol includes the villages of New Harbor, Pemaquid, Round Pond, Bristol Mills and Chamberlain. It includes the Pemaquid Archeological Site, a U.S. National Historic Landmark. During the 17th and early 18th century, New France defined the Kennebec River as the southern boundary of Acadia, which put Bristol within Acadia.
Once territory of the Wawenock (or Walinakiak, meaning "People of the Bay") Abenaki Indians, early Bristol was one of the most important and embattled frontier settlements in the province. Beginning with seasonal fishing, as early as 1625 the English established at Pemaquid Point a year-round trading post for fur trading. In 1631, the area was granted as the Pemaquid Patent by the Plymouth Council to Robert Aldsworth and Gyles Elbridge, merchants from Bristol, England.
(M. Boxer, T. Delillo, M. Epstein, W. Gottlieb, G. Levine, B.
Rothschild, T. Weisbrot)
Woke up last night
3 A.M.
Noone around
Must've been a dream
Then I heard
A most familiar voice
In my head
I didn't have a choice
It said, "You better
Hit the road
Today,
Before it's too late
It doesn't matter what you need,
You just have to find me"
(Down to Rhode Island)
You don't have to call
(Down to Rhode Island)
You don't have to write
(Down to Rhode Island)
Noone has to know
(Down to Rhode Island)
I packed my bags
I got in my car
I took all the back roads
It wasn't very far
I crossed the border
To Rhode Island state
And just leave to to me
To just leave to to fate
I walked in the bar, it was
3 P.M.
When I walked in I saw
My old friend McBain
He said, "I'm so glad
You made it,
I guess it was
Just fate"
(Down to Rhode Island)
You don't have to call
(Down to Rhode Island)
You don't have to write
(Down to Rhode Island)
Noone has to know
(Down to Rhode Island)
Providence!...
(Down to Rhode Island)
You don't have to call
(Down to Rhode Island)
You don't have to write
(Down to Rhode Island)
Noone has to know
(Down to Rhode Island)