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Alton, Rhode Island: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 41°26′15″N 71°43′02″W / 41.43750°N 71.71722°W / 41.43750; -71.71722
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{{Short description|Village in Richmond, Rhode Island, U.S.}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2024}}
{{Coord|41|26|15|N|71|43|02|W|type:city_region:US-RI|display=title}}
[[Image:St Thomas Episcopal Church, Alton RI.JPG|thumb|right|250px|<div style="text-align: center;">St. Thomas Episcopal Church</div>]]
[[Image:St Thomas Episcopal Church, Alton RI.JPG|thumb|right|250px|<div style="text-align: center;">St. Thomas Episcopal Church</div>]]

'''Alton''' is a small village of about 250 residents within the town of [[Richmond, Rhode Island]]. It is located about one hour south of [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]], the state's capital. The village is primarily residential, with no retail stores. Alton is located at a crossing of the [[Wood River (Pawcatuck River)|Wood River]] and is 5 miles from the [[Pawcatuck River]].
'''Alton''' is a small village of approximately 250 residents within the town of [[Richmond, Rhode Island]], United States. It is located about one hour south of [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]], the state's capital. The village is primarily residential, with no retail stores. Alton is located at a crossing of the [[Wood River (Pawcatuck River)|Wood River]] and is five miles from the [[Pawcatuck River]].


== Local pollution ==
== Local pollution ==
A major employer in the town was Charbert mill, a fabric [[dye]] factory located in the center of town.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.altoncommunityaction.com/Background.html |title=Alton Community Action |access-date=January 19, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009052149/http://www.altoncommunityaction.com/Background.html |archive-date=October 9, 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Charbert mill was a division of Narrow Fabrics of America. Though the building still stands, it has been closed for many years.


Residents of Alton have complained about Charbert polluting their air and water since 1978, when a rotten egg smell ([[hydrogen sulfide]]) was first perceived.<ref>''[[Providence Journal]]'' article, 6/21/04</ref> This is primarily due to Charbert's five open-air, unlined lagoons used to treat its wastewater from factory production. As a result, toxins present in the wastewater have seeped into the [[groundwater]], which all residents use for drinking water, and into the air that local residents breathe.
A major employer in the town was Charbert mill, a fabric [[dye]] factory located in the center of town.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.altoncommunityaction.com/Background.html |title=Alton Community Action |access-date=2007-01-19 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009052149/http://www.altoncommunityaction.com/Background.html |archive-date=2007-10-09 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Charbert mill was a division of Narrow Fabrics of America. Though the building still stands, it has been closed for many years.


Nineteen homes in Alton had their water tested in 2004 by the Department of Health. Charbert paid for these tests, which considered the levels of 63 different VOCs ([[volatile organic compound]]) and MTBE ([[methyl tert-butyl ether]]) in the drinking water supply. (Each home has its own private well; there is no public water system.) Three homes were placed on a bottled water supply in response to the test results because their MTBE levels were above health advisory levels.<ref>Katie Mulvaney, "MTBE found in wells near Charbert mill", ''[[The Providence Journal]]'', 12/17/03</ref> The drinking water supply in four homes on River street that directly face the Charbert factory is tested on a quarterly basis; the other homes have not had their water tested again since 2004.
Residents of Alton have complained about Charbert polluting their air and water since 1978, when a rotten egg smell ([[hydrogen sulfide]]) was first perceived.<ref>Providence Journal article, 6/21/04</ref> This is primarily due to Charbert's five open-air, unlined lagoons used to treat its wastewater from factory production. As a result, toxins present in the wastewater have seeped into the [[groundwater]], which all residents use for drinking water, and into the air that local residents breathe.


== See also ==
19 homes in Alton had their water tested in 2004 by the Department of Health. Charbert paid for these tests, which considered the levels of 63 different VOCs ([[volatile organic compound]]) and MTBE ([[methyl tert-butyl ether]]) in the drinking water supply. (Each home has its own private well; there is no public water system.) Three homes were placed on a bottled water supply in response to the test results because their MTBE levels were above health advisory levels.<ref>Katie Mulvaney, "MTBE found in wells near Charbert mill," Providence Journal, 12/17/03</ref> The drinking water supply in four homes on River street that directly face the Charbert factory is tested on a quarterly basis; the other homes have not had their water tested again since 2004.
* {{Portal inline|Rhode Island}}


== References ==
== References ==

{{Portal|Rhode Island}}
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


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{{Authority control}}


{{Coord|41|26|15|N|71|43|02|W|type:city_region:US-RI|display=title}}

[[Category:Villages in Washington County, Rhode Island]]
[[Category:Providence metropolitan area]]
[[Category:Providence metropolitan area]]
[[Category:Villages in Rhode Island]]
[[Category:Villages in Rhode Island]]
[[Category:Villages in Washington County, Rhode Island]]

Latest revision as of 02:27, 2 January 2025

41°26′15″N 71°43′02″W / 41.43750°N 71.71722°W / 41.43750; -71.71722

St. Thomas Episcopal Church

Alton is a small village of approximately 250 residents within the town of Richmond, Rhode Island, United States. It is located about one hour south of Providence, the state's capital. The village is primarily residential, with no retail stores. Alton is located at a crossing of the Wood River and is five miles from the Pawcatuck River.

Local pollution

[edit]

A major employer in the town was Charbert mill, a fabric dye factory located in the center of town.[1] Charbert mill was a division of Narrow Fabrics of America. Though the building still stands, it has been closed for many years.

Residents of Alton have complained about Charbert polluting their air and water since 1978, when a rotten egg smell (hydrogen sulfide) was first perceived.[2] This is primarily due to Charbert's five open-air, unlined lagoons used to treat its wastewater from factory production. As a result, toxins present in the wastewater have seeped into the groundwater, which all residents use for drinking water, and into the air that local residents breathe.

Nineteen homes in Alton had their water tested in 2004 by the Department of Health. Charbert paid for these tests, which considered the levels of 63 different VOCs (volatile organic compound) and MTBE (methyl tert-butyl ether) in the drinking water supply. (Each home has its own private well; there is no public water system.) Three homes were placed on a bottled water supply in response to the test results because their MTBE levels were above health advisory levels.[3] The drinking water supply in four homes on River street that directly face the Charbert factory is tested on a quarterly basis; the other homes have not had their water tested again since 2004.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Alton Community Action". Archived from the original on October 9, 2007. Retrieved January 19, 2007.
  2. ^ Providence Journal article, 6/21/04
  3. ^ Katie Mulvaney, "MTBE found in wells near Charbert mill", The Providence Journal, 12/17/03
[edit]