American Tower Newton was a 411.2 metre high guy-wired aerial mast for the transmission of FM radio and television programs in Newton, Massachusses, USA (Geographical coordinates: 42°18'27" N and 71°13'25" W).
A committee of the Society of American Archeology was in charge of the project, with archaeologist Hugh Henken, Harvard University, as supervisor of the fieldwork.
The validity of this theory is confirmed by a well documented series of stone signal towers (through squatter and sturdier in appearance) ranging across the high peaks of the Pyrenees warning the mountain folk of the Languedoc, caught in the vise between French and Spanish sorties, of approaching trouble.
Horace Silliman, in his articles and monograph on the Newport Tower, published by NEARA, was the lone proponent of a carefully reasoned theory that the tower was built by restive Catholics as a secret base from which to plot the restoration of a Catholic monarchy in England.
Martin Ward was born in Newton on December 10, 1873, a son of Martin Ward and Mary Crotty Ward.
The Newton Slate Corporation executed a trust mortgage to the Harrison National Bank, of New York, under which it was authorized to issue $100,000 in ten-year 7% bonds.
In March 1919, the Newton Board of Trade secured $25,000 in loan subscriptions and a $10,000 mortgage from the Newton Trust Company to finance construction of a new factory to be occupied by Mazuy Mills, manufacturers of corset cloth, who had offices in Manhattan and two mills in Paterson.