From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

Page 1

Page 2
Search
results in pages
Metadata
Ward Thomas Wren (1786-1858) Ward Linda Gray (1788-1858) Pt 1 (1786-1819)
Ward, Thomes When. 1786-1858
1
Ward, Lydia Gray. 1788-1874
Pf:1: 1786-1819
cop Thousaidrea Word
(1786-1858)
THOMAS WREN WARD OF BOSTON FAMILY TREE
(Compiled by Ronald H. Epp, August 2019)
William W. & Ruth Putnam
Of Salem
William W. (1761-1827) m. 1. Martha Proctor (1762-1788); 2. Joanna 'Nancy' Chipman (1761-
)
Thomas Wren Ward (1786-1858)
m. Lydia Gray W. (1788-1874), daughter of Samuel Gray (1760-1816) m.
Anna Orne (1767-1797)
Samuel Gray
George Cabot
Martha
Mary Gray
William
Mary Gray
John
Thomas Wm.
(1817-1907)
(1824-87)
(1812-53) (1816-19) (1819-30) (1820-1901) (1822-56) (1831-59)
m. 1840
m. 1850
William Dorr
Anna Hazard Barker W.
daughter of Jacob & Eliza Barker
Charles Hazen Dorr
(1851
(1813-1902)
(1821-1893)
George B. Dorr
(1853-1944)
Anna Barker Ward
Lydia Gray Ward
Elizabeth Barker Ward
Thomas Wren Ward
(1841-75)
(1843-1929)
(1850-1920)
(1844-1940)
m. 1862
m. 1870
m.
m. 1872
Joseph Thoron
Baron Richard F.
Baron Ernst Schoenberg
Sophia Read Howard
(1828-1901)
Von Hoffman
(1850- )
(1849-1918)
Maria Louisa
Lt. Col. George C.
Elizabeth Howard Ward
Howard Ridgely Ward
(1864-1950)
(1876-1936)
(1873-1954)
(1881-1946)
m.
m. 1901
m. 1896
m. 1905
T.W. Ward
Wm. Crowninshield
Justine Cutting
Charles Bruen Perkins*
Beatrice Kidder
Elizabeth
Endicott Jr.
(1860-1929)
Beatrice
(1860-1936)
Ward P.L.F.F.S. Thoron
Francis
Anna
Elinor
Mary
* *son of Charles
(1867-1938)
Davenport 'Nancy' Perkins Perkins
Callahan Perkins &
Perkins
Perkins
Mansfield
Ryan
Frances D. Bruen
(1897-1970) (1899-1993) (1900-70) (1912-93)
6/1/2017
The direct descent of the Pickering family, down to the
Ward family is as follows:
1st generation
John Pickering & Elizabeth had son
2nd Generation
John Pickering who married Alice Flint, & had son
3rd Generation
John Pickering who married Sarah Burrill, & had daughter
4th Generation
Sarah who married Joseph Hardy, & had daughter
5th Generation
Martha who married Benj. Goodhue, & had daughter
6th Generation
Hannah, who married Robert Proctor, & had daughter
7th Generation
Martha, who married William Ward & had son
second OI the name)
Thomas Wren Ward, who married Lydia Gray
Quin quennial Catal st the Officers as
graduate
of Harvard University 1636-1915.
INDEX OF GRADUATES
Walsh
Walz
Warder
1804 Owen
1827 John Henry
1803 h Michael
1895 g John Albrecht
I874 S Robert Bowne
I832 Theodore
1814 John
1899 i William Emanuel
1819 h Robert
Wardman
1832 William
1903 William-Seaver
1858 m Peter Duggan
Wambaugh
1888 Ervin
1871 l James Laurence
1873 m Edmund
1876 Eugene
Warner
1884 Correa Moylan
I9IO Miles
Wardner
1754 William
I888 Henry Steele
1815 William Augustus
1885 m Frank Winfield
1890 George Philip
1850 Hermann Jackson
1889 Rich. Varick DeW.
Wang
1895 Townsend
I9IO En Tsê
1905 Drew Mallon
1863 m Emerson
1864 l Aaron Edwards
1898 Vincent James
1913 Chen-Fuh
Wardwell
I868 Vespasian
I900 I Joseph Patrick
1853 George Smith
I869 Joseph Bangs
I90I Richard McC.
Wannamaker
I902 l Charles Albert
r888 m Wm. T. Sherman
1870 m Charles Henry
I902 Olin Dantzler
1903 Homan Watson
1898 I Allen
1870 m George Otis
1902 g William Hane
1898 Henry@Fitch
1872 l Edgar Morris
1903 Peter Leo
1903's Frank Wellington
1874 William Pearson
I904 Edmund Francis
1905 Richard Brabrook
Wanton
1905 m James Knight
1882 Henry Eldridge
1891 l Milton Burrage
1906 Charles Burton
I75I Joseph
1907 l Sheldon Eaton
1893 Edgar Haga
1906 Francis Martin
1907 Richard John
Ward
Ware
1898 Eugene
1898 Roger Sherman
1908 l Fred William
1909 l Edwin Raymond
I645 James
1785 Henry
1902 dn Charles Thomas
1719 Robert
I790 Jonathan
1903 Hoyt Landon
1910 m John Gormley
I733 Thomas
1804 Ashur
1903 Langdon
I9II Dennis Joseph
1913 John Gaynor
I736 Enoch
1812 Henry
1906 Joseph Everett
1914 Joseph Francis
1748 Artemas
1813 John
1907 Frederick Harris
1763 Ephraim
I816 William
1009 Goodwin
1834 Charles Eliot
Walshe
1765 Nathaniel
1009 John Adams
1783 Artemas
1838 George Frederick
IQI2 Sam Bass
1853 m John Danvir
I79I Henry Dana
1838 John W.
1808 Andrew Henshaw
I842 Thornton Kirkland
Warren
Walster
I816 Henry Artemas
I843 Henry
1816 Henry Dana
I850 John
I725 John
1913 g Harlow Leslie
1816 William
I850 Loammi Goodenow
I745 James
I852 Darwin Erastus
I759 Joseph
Walsworth
1829 Joshua Holyoke
I852 Robert
1760 John
1836 Samuel Gray
1905 l Roscoe
I843 George Cabot
I852 William Robert
I77I John
I86r l G. Washington
1776 James
I843 h Thomas Wren
Walter
I845 h George Atkinson
I862 Charles Pickard
1782 Charles
1684 Nehemiah
1848 m Eliab
1865 Frederic
I784 Moses
I7II Increase
1867 Horace Everett
I786 Joseph
I853 David Henshaw
I7I3 Thomas
I862 John Langdon
1871 William Rotch
I790 Joseph
I729 Nathaniel
1864 John Tucker
1873 Arthur Lovell
1795 Silas
1756 William
1876 Charles Eliot
1797 John Collins
I866 Thomas Wren
1817 Lynde Minshull
1879 l John Allen
1800 Ebenezer Tucker
1870 dn Frank Edward
1857 h Thomas Ustick
1870 m Rollin Clayton
1880 Charles
1805 Isaac
I88I Edward James
1813 Henry
1871 Joseph Rhoads
1876 Samuel Gray
1890 Clarence Rosa
1883 g Duren J. H.
1890 Richard Darwin
1813 Winslow
1906 g Herbert Eugene
1885 Andrew Henshaw
1893 Henry
1815 Pelham Winslow
1914 Alfred
1895 g Richard
1817 Charles Henry
I886 Hugh Campbell
1887 m George Otis
1899 s John
1817 George Gilbert
Walters
1889 Robert DeCourcy
I899 Leonard Everett
1826 Edward
1901 Francis C.
1829 m Samuel
1873 s Henry
I892 g Henry Baldwin
1902 Moses Weld
1830 George Washington
1892 Stanley
1902 Storer Preble
1832 James Sullivan
Walthall
1893 l Chris. Longstreth
1896 John Chamberlain
1903 Thornton Marshall
1832 m Jonathan Mason
1843 I John Nathaniel
1898 George Cabot
1904
Richard C.
1834 Charles Newell
1898 g Harry Frederick
1906 Charles Eliot
1836 m John Wright
Walton
1907 Malcolm C.
1841 Charles
1898 m Parker Myles
1908 Gordon
1846 m Royal Sibley
1729 Benjamin
1899 Artemas
179I John
I899 S Harry C
1910 Thornton Kirkland
1854 William Wirt
1855 s Cyrus Moors
1875 George Lincoln
1899 m Wm. Greenleaf
1900 Holcombe
Warfield
1858 Winslow
1879 m Alfred
1860 George Willis
1894 dn William Joseph
1900 m John Thomas
1913 l William Smith
1862 I Lucius Henry
1903 Daniel Day
1903°m Edward Silvanus
1863 m Dewey Kellogg
1904 Bartlett
1903 Howard Ridgely
Waring
1863 Horace Winslow
1913 Charles Franklin
1903 Lauriston
1852 William Henry
1863 John Collins
1905 S Neil Callen
I882 Guy
Walver
I865 Wm. Harrington
1906 g Benjamin Rogers
I9I3 James Henry N.
1866 Webster Franklin
1647 Abraham
1908 g Fred Uriah
I871 Jos. Weatherhead
Warland
1873 Thomas.Barnes
Walworth
Warden
1770 Owen
1874 m Herbert
1848 h Reuben Hyde
1878 Henry Prince
1786 John
1875 Samuel Dennis
I033
Pg. of3
American National biography. V. 22. Eds. garraty M. carnes
(c) 1994)
2
652
WARD
been questioned by other critics. Nevertheless, it was
private study, and Boston social life. However, by
cor
widely regarded as one of the finest dramas by a black
September 1827, he confided to his diary, he would
to
American up to its time.
shortly have to either reenter business or retrench. If
flo:
he chose business, he added, then his commitment
me
Ward's unpublished scripts are deposited in the Hatch-Bil-
should be wholehearted. In 1828 he visited England,
Se
lops Collection in New York. This collection also contains a
where he was invited by Joshua Bates to become sole
dle
four-hour taped interview (five tapes) of Ward conducted by
agent for Baring Brothers in America. Bates had
tio
Camille Billops, dated Apr. 1974, and other primary materi-
worked with Ward in William Gray's counting house,
fev
als. Ward's published plays are included (often with exten-
sive commentary) in the following anthologies and periodi-
had then managed Gray's ships in England, and had
cals: Big White Fog: A Negro Tragedy (1939), is excerpted in
recently become a leading partner in Barings. After
eff
Sterling Brown et al., eds., The Negro Caravan (1941); the
some consideration Ward agreed to Barings' proposi-
ca:
complete script is in James V. Hatch, ed., Black Theatre,
tion in October 1829.
pr
U.S.A. (1974). Our Lan' (1947), is in Kenneth Thorpe Rowe,
With Ward's assistance, Barings became the leading
of
A Theater in Your Head (1960), and in Darwin T. Turner,
Anglo-American merchant house in the early 1830s.
re
ed., Black Drama in America (1971). John Brown (1949), is
excerpted in Masses and Mainstream, Oct. 1949. The Daubers
The Barings and Bates provided the capital and strate-
ha
(1953), is excerpted in Alice Childress, comp., Black Scenes
gy of the house, but Ward provided the essential
la
(1971). Challenge (1962), is in Mainstream, Feb. and Mar.
American connection and representation. The Lon-
th
1962. The following unpublished scripts are listed and de-
don partners recognized Ward was hard working, de-
El
scribed in Bernard L. Peterson, Jr., Early Black American
termined, honest, and well informed, if sometimes
to
Playwrights and Dramatic Writers (1990), which also includes
also mildly eccentric. His main task in the early 1830s
sources of reviews and commentary, and further references:
W
was to select, organize, and report on the Barings' cli-
Sick and Tiahd (1937) Falcon of Adowa (1938), Even the
fl
Dead Arise (1938) Skin Deep (1939), Deliver the Goods
ents and business interests in North America. He was
U
(1941), Shout Hallelujah! (1941), Throwback (1951), Whole
able to build a strong clientele for the firm among
th
Hog or Nothing (1952), The Daubers (1953), John de Conquer-
prosperous New England merchants and manufactur-
li
or (folk opera, 1953), Madison (musical, 1956), Charity (mu-
ers who needed Baring credits to import coffee and
di
sical, 1950), Big Money (musical comedy, 1961), The Bell and
sugar from Latin America or cotton from the Ameri-
Y
the Light (musical, 1962), Of Human Grandeur (1963), and
can South. He also tapped into the network of New
B
Candle in the Wind (1968). An "Interview with Playwright
England merchants, who, like Jonathon Goodhue and
g
Ted Ward is included in Afrika Must Unite 2, no. 15 (1973).
Prime Ward and King, had established themselves in
p
Extensive commentary on Big White Fog and Our Lan' is in-
New York in the early nineteenth century and had be-
p
cluded in Doris Abramson, Negro Playwrights in the American
Theorre, 1925-1959 (1969). An obituary is in the New York
come the leading American trading houses. These and
g
Times, 5 May 1983.
similar firms controlled many of the New York packet
J:
BERNARD L. PETERSON, JR.
lines. Through them the Barings' interests extended to
financing several packet lines and controlling a sub-
t
stantial share of the southern cotton trade. Ward also
r
WARD, Thomas Wren (20 Nov. 1786-4 Mar. 1858),
bought and sold on the firm's behalf.
F
merchant banker, was born in Salem, Massachusetts,
The Barings controlled the general policy of the
I
the son of William Ward, a merchant, and Martha
firm, for instance, encouraging Ward to expand cred-
t
Proctor. His father had worked for William Gray of
its in the early 1830s and to contract sharply in 1836.
1
Salem, the leading New England shipowner; he later
They also established detailed rules over the handling
moved to Medford and became president of the State
of credits. In practice, however, slow transatlantic
Bank in Boston. Thomas's mother died when he was
communications often obliged them to trust Ward's
young, and his father married Joanna Chipman of
discretion. Almost all of the Barings' North American
Marblehead, Mrs. William Gray's sister. Thomas
business passed through his hands, and he was paid a
Ward was educated at Foster's School in Andover but
substantial basic salary of £2,000 in 1832, with addi-
was sent to sea at the age of ten. By the time he was
tional allowances and opportunities. In the first three
twenty he had sailed several times to Asia, Europe,
years of his agency-exclusive of bond operations, he
and the American South and was commanding his
calculated later-he had granted credits to American
own ship. At age seventeen he had brought his ship
merchants worth $50 million. In comparison, the total
home from Calcutta, his captain being ill and the mate
value of American imports over the same period was
dead. In 1810 he married Lydia Gray, the daughter of
about $250 million.
his uncle Samuel Gray, William Gray's brother. The
Barings' share fell in the mid-1830s as more aggres-
couple had eight children.
sive houses took advantage of the boom. Barings' cau-
Ward soon set up business in New York with his
tious policy and Ward's careful administration, how-
cousin Jonathon Goodhue. Aided by generous com-
ever, placed them in a very strong position after the
missions from William Gray, the firm apparently
panic of 1837. In 1837 and 1839, therefore, Ward not
prospered, despite the difficult trading conditions, be-
only dunned recalcitrant clients but also expanded
tween 1810 and 1817. In 1817 Ward returned to Bos-
Barings' operations. From 1838 to 1842 he secured for
ton and formed a new partnership with William
the firm very large cotton shipments on commission
Ropes; this lasted until early 1825 when, "business be-
and on their own account. These exceeded 100,000
coming unprofitable," he "retired" to enjoy his family,
bales in 1839-1840, worth about $4 million. Barings
P9.2 0F3
WARD
653
considered cotton "the great staple by which we hope
"possessed the entire confidence of the House" and
to make up for all our losses" (Hidy, p. 255). They also
that they had permitted him "to exercise a power
floated very large loans in Europe for state govern-
which no one partner would have been allowed to ex-
ments, canals, banks and railroads, and assisted the
ercise" (Diary, 30 Aug. 1841). In 1848 Bates assured
Second Bank of the United States (BUS). Ward han-
him that they would "never find anyone to manage the
dled the American end of all these substantial transac-
business as well as you have done" (Hidy, p. 580). Pri-
tions through very difficult times, effectively and with
vately, however, in 1849, Bates reported Ward had be-
few losses.
come prolix and slow and that "the liberality and high
Ward protected the Barings' interests not only by
character of the House drew the business and not T.
effective management but also by influencing Ameri-
W. W.'s influence, which was rather a drag" (Ziegler,
can public opinion. In 1838 he argued strongly in the
p. 208). Finding a new agent as experienced and trust-
press and with leading bankers in favor of resumption
worthy as Ward proved difficult, however, and thus
of specie payments. Assisted by both the temporary
Ward remained Barings' agent until 1853, when his
recovery in 1838 and large gold inflows, most banks
son Samuel Gray Ward succeeded him and ran the
had resumed payments by mid-1839. The fresh col-
agency until 1884. Samuel had worked with his father
lapse in late 1839, however, caused new suspension in
since 1849, handling the negotiations for the large
the South and West, but not in New York and New
Mexican indemnity loan and managing Barings' rapid-
England. Ward claimed in January 1840 that the Bos-
ly growing railroad interest.
ton and New York banks
The relative freedom of the agent's role suited
were prevented from suspending mainly through my in-
Ward's personality. He wrote in 1838 that "having no
fluence & knowledge of the position of the Bank of the
concerns of my own, my mind is free for Barings, free
United States, and that it must suspend
[I showed]
for Society, free for my family and free for objects of
them that the effect [of its suspension] would be to re-
public usefulness" (Diary, Mar. 1838). Yet this role,
lieve [them]
After the suspension, the [BUS]
despite his relative anonymity, made him one of the
did everything in [its] power to break down the New
most influential men in the United States. He was on
York Banks and the Boston Banks I authorized the
good terms with the leading Boston merchants and
Banks in both cities to draw on Barings largely, which
manufacturers, the Appletons, Brooks, and Law-
gave confidence & prevented export of specie and sus-
rences, and few ventures in Massachusetts were start-
pension. Mr. Sam Ward in New York & Mr. Wm Ap-
ed without their approval and aid. Ward served as
pleton and Mr. Nathan Appleton here aided much in
trustee of the Massachusetts General Hospital, treas-
giving publick opinion the right direction (Diary, 5
urer of the Boston Athenaeum (1828-1836), director
Jan. 1840)
of the Massachusetts Board of Internal Improvements,
Ward also led the struggle in America in the 1840s
and treasurer of Harvard (1830-1842). Of the latter he
to persuade state governments to avoid default and to
wrote in 1841, "I should continue to hold the office of
resume payments on their debts. The Barings were es-
Treasurer
there is no one else who has the means
pecially interested in Maryland, Pennsylvania, and
of doing it SO well or with SO little trouble, nor is there
Louisiana and hoped that if these could be persuaded
any other person in the Corporation who will give his
to resume the rest would follow. "If we can keep Mary-
time and thought to the general management of the
land right" wrote Bates to Ward in November 1841, "I
College" (Diary, 24 Jan. 1841). Ward's major private
shall be very happy
pray look to it without delay"
preoccupation was reading, in English, the British,
(Ziegler, p. 153). Initially Ward balked, but he then
French, and Latin classics. His diary shows great con-
launched a very effective campaign to encourage re-
cern for his family. Upon his death at home in Boston,
sumption. He secured Daniel Webster as counsel;
he left $650,000, including small legacies to the Boston
hired agents such as John H. Latrobe, the attorney of
Athenaeum, Harvard, the American Peace Society,
the Baltimore and Ohio, to lobby politicians; and
and the Boston Missionary Society.
flooded the press with articles demanding resumption.
Ward's career can be followed from three main sources: the
He even persuaded the clergy to adapt their sermons.
Ward Family Papers at the Massachusetts Historical Society
"Every Christian man and woman," he wrote, "will
in Boston; the Baring Papers at the Bank in London, Eng-
feel this obligation when it is presented to their atten-
land; and the Baring papers in the Canadian National Ar-
tion" (Ziegler, p. 154). Most states did resume pay-
chives in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The Barings' London
ments in the mid-1840s. Long run influences such as
archives originally contained all of Ward's in-letters and the
the growing prosperity of the United States and the in-
Barings' replies. The Baring collection in the Canadian Na-
creased desire for new investments were most impor-
tional Archives was created when a substantial proportion of
tant. However, Ward's campaign did count at critical
these letters were removed to Ottawa before World War II.
points, including victories in the Pennsylvania and
The collection in the Massachusetts Historical Society in-
cludes Samuel Gray Ward, The Ward Family Papers (1900),
Maryland legislatures in 1844 and 1847, respectively.
by Thomas Ward's son; transcripts of Thomas Ward's dia-
Ward continued to manage the Barings' substantial
ries, 1828-1855; and many Ward family papers, 1655-1899.
cotton purchases through the 1840s. He also executed
These include Ward's correspondence with his family, 1797-
very large secret British government corn orders for
1857, and with Joshua Bates. The most useful books on Bar-
Ireland in 1847. By the late 1840s Ward began seeking
ings and on Ward's role in the firm are Ralph W. Hidy, The
retirement. Bates had assured him in 1841 that he
House of Baring in American Trade and Finance: English Mer-
Lecturer in Economic History,
University of Leeds Circa 1974
654
WARDE
chant Bankers at Work, 1763-1861 (1949), and Philip Ziegler,
style of McCullough, along with much of the venera-
The Sixth Great Power: Barings, 1762-1929 (1988). Hidy fo-
ble Forrest-McCullough repertory.
cuses relatively narrowly on the business history of the firm's
operations in North America over the antebellum period;
In 1881 he formed a touring company of his own;
Ziegler provides a wider ranging survey. Hidy's original rela-
years of itinerant performances followed. He enjoyed
tively brief Dictionary of American Biography entry was appar-
great success outside New York, especially the
ently written before he had used the London and Massa-
South, the Midwest, and along the Pacific Coast. As a
chusetts manuscript sources. Stanley Chapman, The Rise of
regional star he produced a combination of classic
Merchant Banking (1984), provides a good survey of British
plays (much-cut versions of Hamlet, Othello, Richard
merchant banking. The milieu in which Ward moved in Bos-
III, Macbeth, and Fulius Caesar) and antique romantic
ton can be assessed from Robert F. Dalzell, The Enterprising
tragedies (Virginius, Brutus; or, The Fall of Tarquin,
Elite: The Boston Associates and the World They Made (1987),
Galba the Gladiator, Ingomar the Barbarian, and Da-
and Edward Pessen, Riches, Class and Power before the Civil
War (1973).
mon and Pythias). Along with his contemporaries
Thomas W. Keene, Charles B. Hanford, William F.
J.R. KILLICK
Owen, Joseph R. Grismer, Phoebe Dayies, Robert
Downing, and Marie Wainwright, Warde represented
WARDE, Frances. See Warde, Mary Frances.
a specific type of touring actor popular at the end of
the nineteenth century. Purveyors of an old-fashioned
WARDE, Frederick Barkham (23 Feb. 1851-7 Feb.
tradition of acting and a well-worn repertory, these
1935), actor, was born in Deddington, Oxfordshire,
traveling tragedians carried familiar material far and
England, the son of Thomas Warde, a schoolmaster,
wide into the American provinces./ However, what
and Anne Barkham. Following the death of his father,
worked in the hinterlands flopped in New York City,
he and his mother moved to Sussex, where young
and Warde's reliance on outmoded plays and staging
Frederick attended the Shoreham Protestant Gram-
techniques exasperated many big/c commentators.
mar School, and later to London, where he attended
Some critics faintly praised his workmanlike efforts;
the City of London School and was eventually articled
others harshly condemned his lack of passion. Howev-
to a company of attorneys. Unsuited to the practice of
er, Warde's reception outside New York City was dif-
law, he succumbed to the lure of the theater. He made
ferent both in kind and degree, reflecting the tension
his professional acting debut in a small part in Macbeth
between the new theatrical forms and audience expec-
at Sunderland on 4 September 1867. Like many aspir-
tations then emerging in cosmopolitan centers and
ing English actors before and since, he gained invalua-
those still popular and prevalent in the country at
ble experience in provincial companies, appearing be-
large. In places like Greeley, Colorado; Nashville,
fore audiences in scores of towns/across Great Britain
Tennessee; La Crosse, Wisconsin; Jackson, Mississip-
and honing his skills under the tutelage of visiting
pi; and Sioux City, Iowa. Warde was commended for
stars. From 1870 to 1872 Warde was a member of
his powerful, studied interpretations. His classical
Charles Calvert's stock company at the Prince's Thea-
productions were particularly admired by provincial
tre, Manchester; a series of engagements in Brighton,
reviewers. Indeed, it was Warde's scholarly approach
Liverpool, and London followed. He married Annie
to Shakespeare's plays that distinguished him from
Edmondson in 1871; the couple had four children.
other second-rank tragedians of his day.
Warde first appeared in the United States on 10 Au-
In 1892 he formed a three-year partnership with
gust 1874 at Booth's Theatre, New York City, as Cap-
Louis James, another actor who had found his greatest
tain Marston Pike in Belle Lamar, a Civil War drama
success outside New York City, and appeared in
by Dion Boucicault, He remained at Booth's Theatre
eighty-six cities with a familiar classical repertory. The
for two years, enhancing his reputation in traditional
leading roles he, essayed in this period were romantic
tragic roles and acting with American favorites Char-
standards or new plays conceived in the romantic
lotte Cushman, Joseph Jefferson, Adelaide Neilson,
style: Richelieu, The Lion's Mouth, Francesca da
Clara Morris, and Barry Sullivan. In 1876 he toured in
Rimini, and Runnymede. In 1896 he undertook the role
support of Edwin Booth and then with E. L. Daven-
of King Lear for the first time. Two years later Warde
port and Lawrence Barrett. After a brief return to
and James were reunited and joined by a third regional
Booth's Theatre, he moved to the Broadway Theatre,
star, Kathryn Kidder, for a tour that included The
where he supported Fanny Janauschek and Charles
School for/ Scandal, Fulius Caesar, Macbeth, Othello,
Fechter /Following a short tour with Maurice Barry-
and Hamlet. In 1902 Warde teamed with James to pro-
more and John Drew in 1878, Warde felt himself at a
duce The Tempest and a new tragedy packed with
crossroads: should he pursue his lifelong goal of be-
thrilling incidents called Alexander the Great; in 1904
coming a classic tragedian, or should he focus his ef-
he and Kidder toured in Salambo, a picturesque dra-
forts on modern plays? "My ambition and inclination
ma set in ancient Carthage, and a new production of
favored the tragic drama," he observed many years lat-
The Winter's Tale.
er. Consequently he accepted an offer to support John
Warde was forced from the theater following the
McCullough, a physically imposing actor best known
1904-1905 season because of his reluctance to embrace
in the brawny heroic roles he had inherited from his
new plays and modern styles of production. His tech-
teacher, the irascible Edwin Forrest. For two years
nique was stentorian and sentimental, and although he
Warde absorbed the thundering, declamatory acting
recognized that many of the plays in which he had be-
The direct descent of the Pickering family, down to the
Ward family is as follows:
1st generation
John Pickering & Elizabeth had son
2nd Generation
John Pickering who married Alice Flint, & had son
3rd Generation
John Pickering who married Sarah Burrill, & had daughter
4th Generation
Sarah who married Joseph Hardy, & had daughter
5th Generation
Martha who married Benj. Goodhue, & had daughter
6th Generation
Hannah, who married Robert Proctor, & had daughter
7th Generation
Martha, who married William Ward & had son
second of the name)
Thomas Wren Ward, who married Lydia Gray
HATHI TRUST
pg. l of 2
Ellery, Harrison
Bowditch, Charles P. Contride J Wilsont Son
1897,
554
THE PICKERING GENEALOGY. Vol.2
16. VIII. 180. Mary Jackson Delano, his wife, born in Boston,
died in Cambridge, Mass., of old age.
Mrs. Gardner lived to the great age of ninety-four years, having been a
widow sixty-one years.
She was a daughter of Joseph and Sarah (Reed) Delano. Her ancestry
includes the following families: Delano, Reed, Peirce, Johnson, Wiswall,
Smith, Converse, Long, Carter, Sawyer, Prescott, Wright, Dix. See
ANCESTRY TABLES VIII
17. VIII. 182. Martha Ann Proctor [Robert 17. VII. 104], born
in Salem, died in Salem, pneumonia. Residence: Salem.
17. VIII. 182. David Nichols, her husband, born in Salem, died in
Salem. A tanner. Residence: Salem.
Mr. Nichols was a son of Stephen and Abigail (Moulton) Nichols.
Ichabod Nichols [44. VI. 69] was his granduncle His ancestry includes
the following families: Nichols, Moulton, Gaskill, Southwick, Gardner,
Frier, Pope, Folger, Buffington, Buffum, Pope, Moulton. See ANCESTRY
TABLES VIII 77.
17. VIII. 183. Thomas Wren Ward [Martha 17. VII. 105], born
in Salem, died in Boston, of heart disease. A banker. Residence: Boston.
After his mother's death, Thomas Wren Ward was sent, at an early
age, to Mr. Foster's school at Andover, Mass., a superior school for those
days. On leaving school, he went to sea, and at eighteen, as second
officer, brought home his ship from China, the master and first officer being
disabled. After having made one or two voyages to China as captain, he
married at the age of twenty-four, left the sea, and went into business in
Boston. The times being unfavorable, he moved to New York, and, with
his mother's cousin, Jonathan Goodhue, established the house of Goodhue
& Ward. Though successful in New York, he preferred to return to
Boston, which he did in 1817. He bought the house on Park Street, in
which he lived until his death, in 1858.
About the year 1824, being fond of books, and having a fair compe-
tence, he retired from business for several years. During this time he
Google
Original from
POLICETON
P9 2 of 2
EIGHTH GENERATION.
555
visited his friend, Joshua Bates, in London, a partner of Baring Brothers
& Co., who proposed to him that he should become the American agent
of his firm. A year or two later he accepted their proposition, and
carried on all the American business of the Barings until his retirement
in 1852.
From 1830 to 1842, he was treasurer of Harvard College. In 1843,
the college conferred on him the honorary degree of A.M. A portrait of
him by Page hangs in Memorial Hall.
Mr. Ward was a man of great influence, and of the highest character.
He was an intimate friend of Channing, Bowditch, Ticknor, Chief Justice
Shaw, and others. He was named for a Dr. Wren, of England, who had
befriended his father while he was imprisoned in Dartmoor prison. His
portrait, painted by William Hunt, is in the possession of his son, Samuel
Gray Ward, of Washington, D.C. The heliotype here given is from a
daguerrotype.
17. VIII. 183. Lydia Gray, the wife of Thomas W. Ward, born in
Salem, baptized there Aug. 4, 1788, died in Canton, Mass.
The heliotype of Mrs. Ward here given is from a photograph.
Mrs. Ward was a daughter of Samuel and Nancy (Orne) Gray, of Med-
ford, Mass. John C. Gray [53. VII. 301], Horace Gray [53. VII. 304],
Henry Gray [25. VIII. 253], and Alice Orne [52. VI. 93] were her first
cousins; Edward Orne [52. VII. 288] was her first cousin once removed;
Timothy Orne [1-11. IV. 1] was her great-granduncle. Her ancestry
includes the following families : Gray, Williams, Calley, Burrill, Ivory,
South, Jarvis, Orne, Thompson, Ingersoll, Felton, Elvins, Beadle. See
ANCESTRY TABLES
17. VIII. 184. Stephen Wheatland [Martha 17. VII. 107], born in
Salem, died at sea. Residence: Salem.
Mr. Wheatland, H. C. 1816, entered upon a sea-faring life, and died at
sea on board the ship Perseverance, while on his second voyage. was
very fond of music, and was a good performer on several instruments,
1
Letter of Samuel Gray Ward, dated Sept. 25, 1893.
Digitized
Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Ward Family Papers
Sameel Gray ward.
CHILDREN OF THOMAS WREN WARD AND
1900.
LYDIA GRAY WARD
Mass. Hist. Society.
T
HE children of Thomas Wren Ward and
Lydia Gray Ward were as follows :-
Martha Ann Ward, born August 12, 1812; died
November 2, 1853; aged forty-one years, two
months.
Mary Gray Ward, born June 3, 1816; died Feb-
ruary 6, 1819; aged two years, eight months.
Samuel Gray Ward, born October 3, 1817.
William Ward, born February 6, 1819; died June
24, 1830; aged eleven years, four months.
Mary Gray Ward, born September 29, 1820.
John Gallison Ward, born September I2, 1822;
died January 5, 1856; aged thirty-three years,
three months.
George Cabot Ward, born November 4, 1824; died
May 4, 1887; aged sixty-two years, six months.
Thomas William Ward, born September 3, 1831;
died December 3, 1859; aged twenty-eight years,
three months.
Jr.
Thomas Wren Ward was born Oct. 8, 1844 at Lenox.
]
Thomas Wren Ward born Nov. 20, 1786, died March 4, 1858.
Married Nov. 15, 1810 Lydia Gray, daughter of Samuel Gray and Anna Orne
his wife. They had eight children.
1. Martha Ann Ward, born Aug. 12, 1812, died Nov. 2, 1853
2. Mary Gray Ward, born June 3, 1816, died Feb. 6, 1819.
Samuel
3. Lawrence Gray Ward born Oct.2, 1817, died Nov. 17, 1307.
Married, Oct. 3, 1840 Anna Hazard Barker, daughter of Jacob Barker
and Elizabwth Hazard his wife.
4. William Ward, born Feb. 6, 1819, died June 24th, 1930.
5. Mary Gray Ward born Sept. 28, 1820, died Oct. 21, 1901.
Married June 4, 1850 Charles Hazard Dorr, sore of Samuel
(sic)
Dorr and Susan Brown his wife.
6. John Gallison Ward, born Sept. 12, 1822, died June 5, 1856.
7. George Cabot Ward born Nov. 4, 1824, died May 4, 1887.
Married Jan. 82, 1852 Mary Ann Southwick, daughter of
John Alley Southwick and Elizabeth Kinsman his wife.
They had two children, Samuel Gray Ward, Marian Ward.
8. Thomas Wren Werd born Sept. 3, 1831 died Dec. 3, 1859.
(Not same as bracketed lead sentence]
ESSEX INSTITUTE
HISTORICAL CO LLECTIONS
VOL. LXXIII.
OCTOBER, 1937
No. 4
"REMARKS ON THE CANTON TRADE AND THE
MANNER OF TRANSACTING BUSINESS."
From A MANUSCRIPT OF 1809 IN THE PEABODY MUSEUM
OF SALEM.
CONTRIBUTED BY WALTER MUIR WHITEHILL
Among the commercial papers of Captain Benjamin
Shreve of Salem, received by the Peabody Museum of
Salem in 1930 from the estate of Dr. Octavius B. Shreve,
is an unbound manuscript notebook of sixty pages con-
taining chiefly records of the business transactions of the
ship Minerva of Salem, Thomas W. Ward, master, during
a stay at Canton in the autumn of 1809. Pages 4-15
contain the ship's disbursements, port charges and fac-
tory expenses, and pages 17-33 the Prices Current at
Canton for 1809. Pages 32-42 are devoted to an account
of the manner of transacting business at Canton, with
brief characterizations of the principal merchants, which
is here reprinted, while the remainder of the book con-
tains copies of the invoices for part of Thomas W. Ward's
adventure from Canton and comments upon transacting
business with Chinese merchants.
ne Society
When a ship arrives in Macao Roads it is customary
to put anchor at about 3 or 4 miles distance, when no
danger is apprehended from the Ladrones, or you may
if you please go within 1/2 mile of the town in 2 fathoms
water, where you will be completely sheltered from exter-
nal danger, and in case of a Tyfong coming on, there is
a channel across into the Typa with 14 fathoms water.
Of these circumstances a man may make himself acquaint-
(303)
"REMARKS ON THE CANTON TRADE AND
THE MANNER OF TRANSACTING BUSINESS"
305
a short time on shore. There is a post established
sail is prudent to carry, when a ship will for-reach, or
en Macao & Canton, unless interrupted by the
when drop astern. You must by questioning him & by
ones.
looking at your directions find the Channel & where it is
: anchoring you will send your Boat (a China Boat
narrow as at the Bay. If beating to the windward or
be hired for two or three dollars as the weather may
going down with the ebbtide, continually keep his mind
ut keep a hostage on board or pay no money till the
fixed on his business by asking questions &c.
returns) ashore with an Officer or Master & give in
If you have a fair wind and everything favourable,
of your men, guns, passengers & cargo, of which it
these precautions are perhaps unnecessary, or some of the
cessary to have some to obtain an entry without
Pilots may be better than those I have seen. Of this the
le; a very little will answer. After you have given
our list (or before) you will call on the Portuguese
master must judge. The navigation is plain generally,
and but few accidents ever happen in this river. When
rnor a few minutes, & you have nothing else to do
you arrive among the shipping, you had better take en-
ake your pilot as soon as they will permit & proceed
tire charge & place your Ship where you find the best
o Whampoa.
birth mooring with a Stream anchor to Wd (up River)
here is nothing gained by endeavouring to hurry these
& a Bower to the Eastward, if convenient as near the
le in giving you a Pilot by loud talking; coaxing &
weather shore as possible. Take care to have your Cables
sing the palms of hands being the only means of do-
well served.
t. I believe in general there is not much trouble or
tion, but this year we were 36 hours before we got
You will now or before perhaps have some applications
for the birth of Ship Comprador, and they are all with-
op for the Pilot, besides paying the whole pilotage,
on the nail.
out exception a set of cheats, & this they will vouch for,
if you should doubt their rascality. They are not SO fond
ou need not be very particular in your Cargo esti-
S handed in here, & if it is expedient, or policy should
of taking a small Ship as a large, the former not wanting
ate, you may call your wooden guns Iron, & keep
SO much provisions as the latter. They will expect a Cum-
y Chinese out of your Ship & have a whistle on board
shaw of 260 or 280 dollars for the Liberty of cheating
you out of twice that sum, & that too with your consent
ake all the show possible. It is generally easy to
ure a few men at Macao, to go as far as Whampoa,
as it were, as you are knowing to the fact, without having
it in your power to prevent it. The prices of the articles
our Ship if necessary.
are fixed by old custom, and you agree to pay him the same
efreshments may be had more reasonable at Macao
as other Ships pay. The price of every article must be
1 at Whampoa. There is a decent tavern or hotel
; by a Mr Bodwell, who is obliging, treats you well &
named in the agreement & he bound as fast as you can
bind him.
lot very extravagant in his charges. Here the Eng-
, Dutch & other Supercargoes reside during the leisure
It is sometimes the case that Ships employ the Hoppo-
ths: the Americans, I believe, generally tarry at Can-
man (or Custom House officer who stays by the Ship all
the time you are there to prevent smuggling) instead of
throughout the year. You may perhaps see at the
dows some handsome Ladies to regale your eyes after
a Comprador, in which case you must pay to the Linguist
200$ in lieu of Compradors Cumshaw, & perhaps 20 dol-
our or five months passage.
lars per month wages to the Hoppoman who will supply
Having your Pilot on board you are not to place your
you at the same rate that the Comprador does. I do not
p entirely in his charge, as perhaps more attention is
uisite on the part of the Commander than before. He
approve of the practice, as it gives the Hoppoman an op-
not work the Ship, nor does he generally know what
portunity of getting too well acquainted with your crew,
& tampering with them, and likewise you often have
306
"REMARKS ON THE CANTON TRADE AND
THE MANNER OF TRANSACTING BUSINESS"
307
trouble in procuring what things you want by reason of
of furniture. We paid ours 80 dollars M' Hurd 70 dol-
his not being a regular Comprador, & the Mandarins give
lars Mr Dorr 50 dollars & as may be judged expedient.
him much disturbance at times.
The House Comprador furnishes whatever may be wanted
There is nothing more essential to good order, regular-
for the use of the Factory & charges the customary prices,
ity, and safety of a Ship at Whampoa than a very strict
and if you expend 1000$ will clear 700 or more. Here
lookout for every boat that comes along side, permitting
you may see & feel imposition to perfection.
none in the night, particularly the Hoppoman, as there
Of the Servants it will be well to ask a resident, as they
is no villainy that they will not be guilty of if possible.
know a great many, and can tell you if they are notori-
They ought to be made at Sundown to drop astern, till
ously bad. Take care the Washman does not change your
Sunrise and never be permitted to come on board, &
linen, that your Servants do not steal, and tell the Com-
flogged every time you detect them in any connection with
prador when you employ him that he shall be accountable
your people. With regard to Compradors, it ought to be
for all losses taken out of the Factory.
agreed that he should be accountable for what is stolen
Your House establishment consists of Comprador, Cook,
from the Ship, and his accounts to be cut the value of
Boy & two Coolies to bring water &c &c. and to attend at
the same.
the Pack House when you ship goods. Having seated
Having immersed the Ship in roguery, we will now
you amidst Capons, Geese, Turtle & all the luxuries of
look at Canton to which place if you go in a passage boat
life, living at the expense of 3 or 4 dollars per day, or
you must pay Three dollars. The Factories generally
more if you please, we will now call upon the merchants:
occupied by the Americans, are the American, which has
5 parts, the Sweedish which has 6 or 7, the Imperial &
HOUQUA² is at the head of the Hong-is very rich, sends
the French Factories. The front Factories are generally
good cargoes & just in all his dealings, in short is a man of
engaged and rent from 1000 to 1500 & 2000 dollars per
honour and veracity-has more business than any other man
annum or season. The Interior Factories rent for 900,
in the Hong and secures 12 or 14 American Ships this year.
800, 600 & none less than 550 dollars.
YOUQUAS is next best not rich-honest-sends good
It is usual for two Ships families to live in one Fac-
cargoes-pushed for money at times- is well esteemed by
tory, there being about room sufficient, and no business is
the E. I. Company & has two shares of their business-will
transacted at the house which can interfere or clash with
in a few years be head man perhaps. Head of the house is
each other. If one hires a Factory and afterwards takes
Pwanqua. Youqua excellent judge of Tea. Secures 3 Ships.
in another, it is customary for the new comer to pay in
CHEONQUA4
very rich-suspected of roguery-bad
lieu of House rent 550 dollars, and bear his proportion
cargoes sometimes. Secures 2 or 3 Ships this year
may
of all expenses, or to pay 1000 or 1200 dollars as may be
do very well with a Strong agreement & good looking after.
agreed, and bear no expense whatever.
CONSUIQUA
Rich-roguish-insinuating-polite-
Having taken a Factory, you hire your China Ware
sends some excellent cargoes-some bad Cargoes-not atten-
of Old Synchong, or some other merchant and your plate
tive enough to business and a man with whom you cannot
of Cumshing or some other Jeweller: your house Com-
talk with safety, as he will promise everything & perform
what he pleases-not to be seen always.
prador which you now take will furnish your house with
what furniture & other articles that may be wanted, &
KINQUA
honest-poor-few friends-will do at times
-no advance of cash-good man for black teas.
charge you for the use of them. The Philadelphians gen-
erally pay the Comprador $100 for Cumshaw and hire
2 Marginal Note: Houqua is rather dear, loves flattery & can
be coaxed.
1 Marginal Note: Take care the first day or two after your
3 Marginal Note: Do much Bengal business.
arrival, as there is more thieving then than afterwards.
4 Marginal Note: Company's Business.
308
"REMARKS ON THE CANTON TRADE AND
THE MANNER OF TRANSACTING BUSINESS"
309
NUNQUA is in nearly the same case as Kinqua-probably
you may without much risk, if necessary by making
not SO honest.
proper inquiry.
LOONQUA
PONQUA
& HENQUA
do no
American business, but all the above have a share in the
ESHING-Of outside Merchants Eshing is the first. He
Companys business in rotation, & some two shares. A share
is a silk merchant but deals in Teas & Nanking likewise.
in common times is worth to the merchant 70 to 100,000
His prices rather high-always has supported the character
dollars per annum.
of an honest man, and many purchase of him without ever
seeing their Goods. He is the most candid man in Canton-
It is customary to make a written agreement with the
his goods will pass in the United States without opening.
merchant who secures your Ship, wherein is named your
POONQUA-Silk merchant Old Ch. Street, a good man
outward Cargo-the price-the allowances, and all charges
sends good goods & is pretty safe to contract with for Silks.
paid by him except boat hire which you pay-Goods
LOONSHONG-Old Ch. St. general dealer-will do well
weighed on board Ship & free of risk on delivery. Goods
with looking after.
which compose the return cargo-prices-qualities-time
WASHING-China St. is next to Eshing-a safe man to
-musters of particular Kinds of Goods (any unsaleable
deal with, always performs his contracts, is honest no doubt,
article in the outward cargo, to be taken off your hands)
but more from interest than principle. He will do you jus-
tice-is rising very fast in business.
All damages on outward cargo had best be settled
HEPSHING-is an honest chow man & deals fairly, because
on Shipboard, & whatever items may occur to the Factor.
he is wise enough to perceive it is for his interest SO to do.
All goods are sent on board by the merchant free of charge
He is also rising in the world.
except the price originally agreed on prepaid &c All
YINQUA-Laquered Ware.
goods are imported free of charge if sold to a Hong Mer-
CUMSHINGSilver Smith.
chant except boat hire for which you pay the Linguist
TYSHING-Ivory, Combs, Fans &c.
from 15 to 25 Dollars per boat of 30 tons.
AsHIE-Cabinet Maker. are head men at their business
These items ought to be expressed in the agreement.
& pretty honourable men, & deal fair with looking after.
In the sales of any article to outside men have every thing
KINGLUN-CHEEQUA-MUTON0 and most of the outside
mentioned in the agreement that you can think of make
Merchants will cheat you if possible. The best way of deal-
him write down the substance of it in Chinese, & have it
ing with these men & most or all of the outside merchants,
read over before his face, & have ernest money of him,
is to buy by muster & examine & pack at your own house,
taking care not to exasperate them too much by sticking too
before you close the agreement, than if he disapoints you
close to the agreement when you are making a very good
you can keep the ernest money, that being China Custom,
bargain. And in buying goods by the weight, always make
& never deliver the article till you have received the full
it a part of the agreement that the goods shall be weighed
value thereof.
by English Scales and reduced to Piculs @ 133 1/3. Their
There is no risk in advancing money to the first men
Dotchings or weights not being very exact are short weight
here, say Houqua, Youqua, Cheonqua, perhaps Consequa,
& a stranger very liable to be cheated by them.
but to the poorer Merchants it is as well to receive the
goods previous to payment. It is often the case that the
There are many outside men who do considerable
richest of them do not want money: having no immediate
American and English business, some men fancying one
use for it, they will not then receive it unless as a favour.
man honest, & some another. The only way of trading
Sometimes they are much pushed for money, which you
with safety is perhaps by dealing with those whose char-
will always know, if not from themselves, from many
acter & standing are such as to secure their honesty by
ties of interest. It is best to have as small a chow chow
others, & the probability of their standing may be gener-
ally ascertained. It is not best to advance money, but
chop as possible, the Mandarins giving much trouble
EARLY AMERICAN MERCHANT SEAFARERS
1
IRA DYE
FEW GROUPS in our history are seen through
farers began, by the mid-1780's, to carry papers
such a romatic haze as are American seafarers of
attesting to their citizenship. These apparently
the early 1800's. We are unable to see the men
were copies of parish or town birth records or
for the stereotype: Jack, the Jolly Tar, bowlegged,
notarized statements by persons of substance and
happy-go-lucky, a gold ring in his ear, a fancy
reputation attesting to the bearer's American
pigtail down his back, loyal, large-hearted, throw-
citizenship. Seamen often obtained passports
ing away the pay of a six-month cruise on six
from the secretary of state or from American
days of rum, whores and tobacco, then back to sea
consuls overseas.4 None of these documents were
again, and SO forth. This is not to say that there
"official" in the sense of being the result of a gov-
may not be much truth in this picture. However,
ernment program designed to help the seaman
it is a picture drawn from sources which, even if
avoid impressment.
contemporary, did not see the seamen up close
Although there had been considerable discus-
and which either romanticized or patronized him.
sion of the impressment issue in the Congress,
However, the men themselves rarely left letters
little was done until after a particularly flagrant
or diaries. Attempts to see them clearly must
incident of impressment from an American ship
lean heavily on contemporary newspaper accounts
at sea in February, 1796.5 Public arousal forced
or surviving official records. Of the latter, a
congressional action and "An Act for the Relief
considerable volume exists mostly related to the
and Protection of American Seamen" was passed
impressment issue, usually unexploited, nearly al-
April 28 and approved May 28, 1796. e
ways containing personal detail on specific in-
The act called for a number of things, among
dividuals : protection certificate applications, crew
them the following
lists, and later, British prison records from the
Each district collector of customs was to keep a book
War of 1812. The reason that these records have
registering the names of all seamen who produced to
remained largely untouched is principally the diffi-
him authenticated proof of their American citizen-
culty of using them without modern data-process-
ship.7
ing equipment.
To these seamen, he was to furnish a certificate of
their American citizenship in the form prescribed by
There have been a few useful attempts to get
the act. In common parlance this was the "protec-
behind the stereotype. This paper is intended to
tion."
complement these efforts and to provide a quanti-
Zimmerman, 1925: p. 30, has a 1790 example. The
tative context for further work in this direction.
earliest example so far found in the National Archives'
Its purpose is to use the detailed information
files dates from July, 1794 (certificate of George
from these records of individual seafarers to build
Hartley).
A number of such passports, dating from as early as
a quantitative, statistical description of the group
1794 were found among the early SPC applications, ap-
and to provide some initial analyses and in-
parently submitted to the Collector as the evidence of
ferences.
citizenship required under the 1796 Act.
Attempting to protect themselves against illegal
5 The Lydia Case. Described in Zimmerman, op. cit.,
impressment by the British navy, American sea-
at p. 48. Also, there is a brief contemporary official re-
port of the incident in RG 59, National Archives:
(NNFD-90(529))
1 Research for this article was conducted with the
6 Acts of the Fourth Congress, 1796: pp. 477-478.
support of a grant from the Penrose Fund of the
7 There were 67 Collectors of Customs in the various
American Philosophical Society. The author is grateful
ports (most of these ports are now minor or little used),
for the advice, criticism and encouragement of Pro-
established by "An Act to provide more effectually for
fessor Daniel S. Smith, University of Illinois at Chicago
the Collection of Duties," passed May 4, 1790.
Circle, and for the technical assistance of Professor
8 Figure 2 provides an example of the form as used
David G. Smith, University of Virginia, in the develop-
in Philadelphia in the early years. The wording of the
ment of the career lengths methodology.
form did not change from 1796 to 1861, although the
2 Notably, Lemisch, 1968: pp. 371-407, for American
purpose of the SPC did, from "protection" to "identifi-
seafarers of the Colonial and Revolutionary period.
cation."
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, VOL. 120, NO. 5, OCTOBER 1976
331
This content downloaded from 137.49.191.250 on Thu, 21 May 2020 15:41:27 UTC
All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms
Members of the Salen East India Marine
Incorp. 1801
162
Appendix B
society
77
Jan. 1804
John Forrester
d Salem, 1837
11
78
Jan. 1804
d Salem, 1847
11
Joseph J. Knapp
79
Jan. 1804
John Clarke
d West Indies, 1815
12
80
Mar. 1804
Thomas Binney Osgood
d Salem, 1818
15
81
May 1804
William Ashton
d Salem, 1835
li
82
May 1804
James Gilchrist
d New Hampshire, 1826
83
May 1804
Ward Blackler
d at Sea, 1815
84
Jul. 1804
Benjamin Swett
d Andover, 1820
85
Sep. 1804
John R. Dalling
d Salem, 1808
86
Sep. 1804
Solomon Towne
d Sumatra, 1835
87
Sep. 1804
Abijah Northey, Jr.
d Salem, 1853
88
Sep. 1804
Jesse Smith
d Salem, 1844
89
Sep. 1804
Jeremiah Lee Page
d St. George, 1866
90
Sep. 1804
George Peirce
d Salem, 1822
91
Sep. 1804
William Putnam Orne
d Springfield, 1815
92
Nov. 1804
Henry White
d Salem, 1826
93
Mar. 1804
John Andrew
d Salem, 1829
94
Jul. 1804
Jeremiah Briggs
d Boston, 1844
95
Nov. 1804
William Story
d Salem, 1860
96
Nov. 1804
Thomas West
d Salem, 1849
97
Nov. 1804
Nathaniel Hathorne
d Surinam, 1808
98
Mar. 1805
Thomas Ruee
Lost at Sea, 1813-14
99
Sep. 1805
William Haskall
d Cuba, 1833
100
Nov. 1805
William Allen
d Salem, 1853
101
Jan. 1806
Charles Burrill
d abroad, 1812
102
Jan. 1806
Francis Coffin
Dead
103
Mar. 1806
Peter Lander, Jr.
d Salem, 1832
104
Jul. 1806
John Beckett, Jr.
d at Sea, 1815
1
105
Sep. 1806
Nathan Leach
d Boston, 1826
1
106
Sep. 1806
John White
d 1840
1
107
Sep. 1806
Joseph Beadle
d Salem, 1848
108
Nov. 1806
Thomas Wren Ward
Left Society
109 Nov. 1806
Benjamin Goodhue, 3d
d Salem, 1814
110 Nov. 1806
Nathaniel Fisher, Jr.
d Salem, 1810
111 Nov. 1806
Richard Ward, Jr.
d New Orleans, 1822
112 Nov. 1806
Charles Saunders
d Cambridge, 1864
113 Nov. 1806
Samuel Dudley Tucker
d Salem, 1857
114 Nov. 1806
Timothy Wellman, 3d
Lost at Sea, 1823
115
Nov. 1806
Benjamin Beckford
d Beverly, 1811
116
Jan. 1807
Oliver Obear
d New York, 1849
117
May 1807
Gamaliel H. Ward
Left Society
The East India Manni Society ad the Peabady leasen
oF Salem: a Scsquicentennicl History
Walter Muir Whitehill
Salen: Pealoody buseur 1949,
MHS
T.SN. Ward Papers
Martha Ann wad, sister of Many Ward.
(1812-1853). CBP's aunt.
George Cabot word, (CGW) brother of Mary word
(1824-1887). GBD'S uncle.
Esq.
Harvard College
Thomas When Ward, father of
Treasurer of Boston Atheneum
(1788-1858). - 3/4 In second decade of 19thc
11/20
check.
Come to NY6 to "with L relative" Green
Jonathan goodhue, founded in NYC
"gudhere + Wand In 1817 Fretherned to
Boston + In 1827 become the Am. agent I
Baring Brothers. with Thomas' death (1858),
business devolved to son Somed Gray Ward(
).
n.
GCW graduated from Hanvard (Class of
),
studied in Heidelberg after voyan on sailing
shop and wored. Seltes in Nec founded firm
of ward, Compbell Co.
Capt.
Martha Ann (8/12/12- - 11/2/53)
Villiam
- TW ward
Lacorence Gray C1013/17- 11/17/07) m. 1840 Annal B.
Ward
and
George Cabot(1114/24-54/87 M. .1852 Barteer
Mary Gray (6/5/16 2/6/19 Sathwick &
Many
Sam Gray - Lydia Gray
Mary Gray (9/27/20 - 10/21/01) m. C.H.Dor *
+
m.
ma orne
11/15/10. (13th)
Villian C (2/6/19. 6/24/30)
7/30/88
Thomas www.(933)-12(3)54)
John Gallison (9/12/22-6/5/56)
fcw. Shard from with Somere the Baring 1885.
Extensive characteryatia to GBD.
GCW wa Twestes of children's ANd Society
"
"
Bank of IF cer.
"
interested in of gave "air" of quaint vess
1
abstraction. that 622 for
Son of S anwel Dorr t Susan Brown.
Two children Samuel Graward 4 llarion Wards
HATH / TRUST
Ellery, Harrison
10/17/2017
Bowditch, Charles P. Contride. J Wilsont Son
1897
554
THE PICKERING GENEALOGY. (Vol.2
16. VIII. 180. Mary Jackson Delano, his wife, born in Boston,
died in Cambridge, Mass., of old age.
Mrs. Gardner lived to the great age of ninety-four years, having been a
widow sixty-one years.
She was a daughter of Joseph and Sarah (Reed) Delano. Her ancestry
includes the following families: Delano, Reed, Peirce, Johnson, Wiswall,
Smith, Converse, Long, Carter, Sawyer, Prescott, Wright, Dix. See
ANCESTRY TABLES
17. VIII. 182. Martha Ann Proctor [Robert 17. VII. 104], born
in Salem, died in Salem, pneumonia. Residence: Salem.
17. VIII. 182. David Nichols, her husband, born in Salem, died in
Salem. A tanner. Residence: Salem.
Mr. Nichols was a son of Stephen and Abigail (Moulton) Nichols.
Ichabod Nichols [44. VI. 69] was his granduncle His ancestry includes
the following families: Nichols, Moulton, Gaskill, Southwick, Gardner,
Frier, Pope, Folger, Buffington, Buffum, Pope, Moulton. See ANCESTRY
TABLES VIII 77.
17. VIII. 183. Thomas Wren Ward [Martha 17. VII. 105], born
in Salem, died in Boston, of heart disease. A banker. Residence: Boston.
After his mother's death, Thomas Wren Ward was sent, at an early
age, to Mr. Foster's school at Andover, Mass., a superior school for those
days. On leaving school, he went to sea, and at eighteen, as second
officer, brought home his ship from China, the master and first officer being
disabled. After having made one or two voyages to China as captain, he
married at the age of twenty-four, left the sea, and went into business in
Boston. The times being unfavorable, he moved to New York, and, with
his mother's cousin, Jonathan Goodhue, established the house of Goodhue
& Ward. Though successful in New York, he preferred to return to
Boston, which he did in 1817. He bought the house on Park Street, in
which he lived until his death, in 1858.
About the year 1824, being fond of books, and having a fair compe-
tence, he retired from business for several years. During this time he
Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVER
EIGHTH GENERATION.
555
visited his friend, Joshua Bates, in London, a partner of Baring Brothers
& Co., who proposed to him that he should become the American agent
of his firm. A year or two later he accepted their proposition, and
carried on all the American business of the Barings until his retirement
in 1852.
From 1830 to 1842, he was treasurer of Harvard College. In 1843,
the college conferred on him the honorary degree of A.M. A portrait of
him by Page hangs in Memorial Hall.
Mr. Ward was a man of great influence, and of the highest character.
He was an intimate friend of Channing, Bowditch, Ticknor, Chief Justice
Shaw, and others. He was named for a Dr. Wren, of England, who had
befriended his father while he was imprisoned in Dartmoor prison. His
portrait, painted by William Hunt, is in the possession of his son, Samuel
Gray Ward, of Washington, D.C. The heliotype here given is from a
daguerrotype 1
17. VIII. 183. Lydia Gray, the wife of Thomas W. Ward, born in
Salem, baptized there Aug. 4, 1788, died in Canton, Mass.
The heliotype of Mrs. Ward here given is from a photograph.
Mrs. Ward was a daughter of Samuel and Nancy (Orne) Gray, of Med-
ford, Mass. John C. Gray [53. VII. 301], Horace Gray [53. VII. 304],
Henry Gray [25. VIII. 253], and Alice Orne [52. VI. 93] were her first
cousins; Edward Orne [52. VII. 288] was her first cousin once removed;
Timothy Orne [1-11. IV. 1] was her great-granduncle. Her ancestry
includes the following families : Gray, Williams, Calley, Burrill, Ivory,
South, Jarvis, Orne, Thompson, Ingersoll, Felton, Elvins, Beadle. See
ANCESTRY TABLES THE
17. VIII. 184. Stephen Wheatland [Martha 17. VII. 107], born in
Salem, died at sea. Residence: Salem.
Mr. Wheatland, H. C. 1816, entered upon a sea-faring life, and died at
sea on board the ship Perseverance, while on his second voyage. K was
very fond of music, and was a good performer on several instruments,
1 Letter of Samuel Gray Ward, dated Sept. 25, 1893.
Digitized Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Page 1 of 2
Note on front of original:
This written by my father's uncle Benj Ward
T. W. W.
Joshua Ward was born in the Towne of Hurr in the
Country of Kent ( Old England) came to this country soon after
the First settlement. Obtained a Lot and Settled in Salem.
Was lost a Shallop fishing about the year 1677 or 78 (his
widow maried a Mr Kezer) Left Issue Two Sons & three daughters
viz:
Joshua Ward who was killed in the Great Pasture by a cart whele
going over his Neck at about 10 or 12 years of age.
One daughter who maried a Mr Pitman of Marblehed
One daughter who maried a Mr Collins.
One daughter who maried a Mr Mosses. She deranged at times
and was found drowned in a well up at Trask's Plains.
And Miles Ward born about the year 1672. He maried a Massey,
daughter of Mr Massey who was the first male child born in
the Massachusetts Collony. This left Issue four sons viz:
Joshua, Miles, John & Ebenezer. He married a second wife,
Sarah Ropes. She died 7 Febriy 1768 aged 86 years. He
died 20 Aug't 1764 aged 921/2019 years.
His son Joshua Ward, before mentioned, was born
died
aged
He maried three
wives. By the first he had issue
sons and
daughters.
By his second wife he had issue
By his third wife he had:
Miles Ward born 16 Aprill 1704. He died 14 June 1792. He
had two wives By his first (a Webb) he had issue two Sons
and Six daughters. By his second (a widow Hawthorne) he
had issue - three sons and five daughters.
Page 2 of 2
2.
John Ward born
Died
He married a Higginson
his first wife & had issue three sons and one daughter. His
second wife, a Batter No issue.
Ebenezer Ward born April 10, 1710 Died March 4, 1791 Aged
81 years. He Maried Rachel Pickman Born July 25, 1717 died
Jan'y 7, 1789. They had issue five Sons and five daughters
viz: William Ward born August 9, 1736; died Oct'r 9, 1767
on a passage from Jamaica. He mar ied Ruth Pytman born
They had issue two sons and one daughter vis William Ward
born
Ruth Ward born
died of a throat distemper May 25, 1770
Caleb Ward born
died of a throat distemper May 28, 1770
Ebenezer Ward born 26 May 1738 died Oct'r 26, 1773. He marie
Mehitable Buttolph. They had issue one son and five daughter
Benjamin Ward born 18 Sept's
1739 maried Elizabeth
Babbidge Nov'r 17, 1770. His first wife had issue three sons
and three daughters who all died in Infancey. He maried a
second wife Mary Carlton.
Sarah Ward born July 19, 1741 Died Oct 17, 1754
Caleb Warn born Jan'y 12, 1743. Lost at Sea Jan'y 3, 1764.
Miles Ward born July 12, 1744 died Oct'r 23, 1796. He maried
Hanah Chipman. They had issue one Son & one Daughter.
Rachel Ward born Jan'y 10, 1746. Maried to Edward Lang April
23, 1768. Had issue three sons & seven daughters.
Abigail Ward born June 14, 1748 Maried William Hathorn Jun.
Issue none.
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
Thomas Wren
Ward Papers
1717-1943 ; bulk: 1778-1858
Guide to the Collection
COLLECTION SUMMARY
CREATOR:
Ward, Thomas W. (Thomas Wren), 1786-1858.
TITLE:
Thomas Wren Ward papers
DATES:
1717-1943
BULK DATES:
1778-1858
PHYSICAL
13 document boxes and 2 volumes in cases.
DESCRIPTION:
CALL NUMBER: Ms. N-1726
REPOSITORY:
Massachusetts Historical Society , 1154 Boylston StreetBoston, MA
02215 library@masshist.org (mailto:library@masshist.org)
ABSTRACT
This collection consists of the family papers, business papers, and diaries of Thomas Wren Ward (1786-
1858) of Boston, a merchant who served as an agent in the United States for the English firm Baring
Brothers from 1830 to 1853.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Thomas Wren Ward (20 Nov. 1786-4 March 1858) was a prominent Boston merchant and agent in
America for the English banking firm Baring Brothers. Ward was born in Salem, Mass. to William Ward
(1761-1827) and Martha Procter Ward (1762-1788). Following Martha's death just two years after
Thomas's birth, William Ward married Joanna "Nancy" Chipman Ward. Thomas Wren Ward first followed
his father into the mariner's trade, earning command of a ship at age 19, but after marrying Lydia Gray
Ward (b. 30 July 1788) on 13 Nov. 1810, he relocated to Boston and established himself in business.
With the help of Josiah Bates, a friend and Baring Brothers partner, Thomas Wren Ward became the
American agent for Baring Brothers in 1830 and held the post until 1853. Ward was essential in helping
Baring Brothers weather the financial crisis of 1837-1842 and responsible for retaining Daniel Webster as
the firm's legal council. After his retirement from active business life in 1853, his sons Samuel and John
assumed the duties of the Baring Brothers agency. Among the other positions held by Thomas Wren
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
1/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
Ward were Treasurer of Harvard College (1830-1842) and Treasurer of the Boston Athenaeum (1828-
1836).
Thomas Wren Ward and Lydia Gray Ward had eight children: Martha Ann Ward (12 Aug. 1812-2 Nov.
1853), Mary Gray Ward (3 June 1816-6 Feb. 1819), Samuel Gray Ward (3 Oct. 1817-17 Nov. 1907),
William Ward (6 Feb. 1819-24 July 1830), Mary Gray Ward Dorr (29 Sept. 1820-21 Oct. 1901), John
Gallison Ward (12 Sept. 1822-5 June 1856), George Cabot Ward (4 Nov. 1824-4 May 1887), and
Thomas Wren Ward, Jr. (3 Sept. 1831-3 Dec. 1859).
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION
The Thomas Wren Ward papers consist of 13 boxes and 2 cased volumes spanning the years 1717 to
1943 (bulk: 1778-1858). The collection is divided into four series: family papers, bound manuscripts,
business papers, and diaries.
The first series, family papers, contains family correspondence (including many typescripts), essays on
faith, and genealogical materials. Family matters are the primary theme of the family correspondence,
but Thomas Wren Ward frequently discussed business with his father and his sons, sharing information
on the condition of trade as his family members traveled.
The second series, bound manuscripts, contains a compilation of letters, essays, and other manuscripts
by Thomas Wren Ward, once bound together in a volume. The series includes letters to Nathan Hale
(1784-1863) and Daniel Webster, essays on trade and finance, and papers relating to the Boston
Athenaeum and Harvard College Library.
The third series, business papers, contains general business correspondence, Joshua Bates
correspondence, Daniel Webster correspondence, and accounts. Most of the series relates to Thomas
Wren Ward's duties as agent for Baring Brothers. The series also documents his earlier careers as a ship
captain and Boston merchant. Among the notable correspondents are Edward Everett, Nathan Hale, and
Thomas Baring.
The final series contains 8 diaries (with typescripts of most), and one typescript copy of a diary for which
MHS does not hold the original. Of particular interest are the largest diary which Thomas Wren Ward
kept from 1827-1853, which recorded business, family, and public events, and the smaller diaries he kept
documenting his 1828 trip to England.
The diaries and many letters have been marked up, apparently for publication, but there is no record that
the papers were ever published.
NOTE: Typescripts of manuscripts are extracts, not full transcripts.
ACQUISITION INFORMATION
Gift of the estate of George B. Dorr, April 1946.
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
2/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE COLLECTION
I. Thomas Wren Ward family papers, 1717-1943
This series is divided into nine subseries, as listed below. Typescript copies accompany a majority of
the manuscripts. There are also typescripts of letters for which MHS does not hold the originals. All
typescripts and manuscripts are interfiled in one chronological sequence within each subseries.
NOTE: Typescripts of manuscripts are extracts, not full transcriptions.
Correspondence is organized into series of letters between Thomas Wren Ward and individual
members of the Ward family and two series of general family correspondence.
A. Thomas Wren Ward-George C. Ward correspondence, 1835-1853
This subseries contains correspondence between Thomas Wren Ward and his son George C.
Ward. During George C. Ward's trip to Europe, 1846-1848, he traded many letters with his
father discussing contemporary European events, including the 1848 Rebellion in France.
Thomas Wren Ward frequently asked for information on the state of trade in places where
George traveled and mentioned the economic situation at home in Boston. See also Thomas
Wren Ward - John G. Ward correspondence for Thomas Wren Ward letters addressed to
John and George Ward.
Box 1
Folder 1-16
B. Thomas Wren Ward-John G. Ward correspondence, 1843-1855
This subseries contains correspondence between Thomas Wren Ward and his son John G.
Ward. The series also contains letters from John to his mother, Lydia Gray Ward, and
correspondence from Thomas Wren Ward addressed to both John G. and George C. Ward.
John G. Ward traveled to Europe and on to China as a partner in A. Heard & Co., 1847-
[1849]. He and Thomas Wren Ward exchanged business advice and observations on politics
and trade during the trip and at other times.
Box 1
Folder 17-26
C. Thomas Wren Ward-Martha A. Ward correspondence, 1816-1853
This subseries contains correspondence between Thomas Wren Ward and his daughter
Martha Ann Ward. Martha A. Ward frequently wrote her father while he traveled on business
and kept him informed of family matters.
Box 2
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
3/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
D. Thomas Wren Ward-Martha A. Ward correspondence, 1816-1853
This subseries contains correspondence between Thomas Wren Ward and his eldest son,
Samuel G. Ward. Samuel followed Thomas Wren Ward as an agent for Baring Brothers and
business is a recurring topic in the later correspondence. Thomas Wren Ward wrote Samuel
many letters describing his trip to England in 1853 in great detail.
Box 3
Folder 1-21
E. Samuel G. Ward Family correspondence, 1836-1901
This subseries contains correspondence between Samuel G. Ward and other members of the
Ward family, not including Thomas Wren Ward. Among the correspondents are mother Lydia
Gray Ward and sisters Mary Ward Dorr and Martha A. Ward. Family matters were the primary
theme of the correspondence.
Box 3
Folder 22-28
F. Thomas Wren Ward-William Ward correspondence, 1797-1825
This subseries contains correspondence between Thomas Wren Ward and his father, William
Ward. The series also contains correspondence with Thomas Wren Ward's step-mother
Joanna "Nancy" Chipman Ward. Of note are discussions of Thomas Wren Ward's adventures
at sea and later discussions of business matters.
Box 4
G. Ward Family correspondence, 1760-1855
This subseries contains the correspondence of various members of the Ward family, including
but not limited to Thomas Wren Ward, wife Lydia Gray Ward, brother William Ward, Jr., sons
William Ward (1819-1830), and Thomas Wren, Jr., daughter Mary Ward Dorr, daughter-in-law
Anna Barker Ward (wife of Samuel G. Ward), as well as various friends of the family. Early
family correspondence includes letters between William and Joanna "Nancy" Chipman Ward
and William, Jr., Thomas Wren, and Lucy Ann Ward Lawrence. Also included are some of
William Ward's business correspondence with William Gray, Jr. and Capt. John R. Dalling, as
well as Joanna Ward's correspondence with members of the Chipman family. This series also
includes Lucy Ward Laurence Reminiscences, [1850s].
1760-1816
Box 5
1817-1848
Box 6
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
4/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
1849-1855
Box 7
Folder 1-13
H. Essays on faith, n.d. and 1717
This subseries contains essays, also called "Confessions of Faith," by [Capt. John Gardner]
and Elizabeth Gardner (Thomas Wren Ward's great-great-grandparents) and Ruth Putnam
Ward (Thomas Wren Ward's paternal grandmother) that discussed each author's relationship
with God and the nature of their faith. Several of the essays have typescript copies. See also
Genealogical Materials for more information on the relation of the authors to Thomas Wren
Ward.
[Capt. John Gardner?], n.d. [1]
Box 7
Folder 14
[Capt. John Gardner?], n.d. [2]
Box 7
Folder 15
[Capt. John Gardner?], 3 June 1717
Box 7
Folder 16
(manuscript and typescript copies)
Elizabeth Gardner, n.d.
Box 7
Folder 17
(manuscript and typescript copies)
Ruth Putnam Ward, n.d.
Box 7
Folder 18
(manuscript and typescript copies)
I. Genealogical materials, 1786-1943
This subseries contains materials related to the family history of the Ward family. The series
includes one bound volume containing a family tree, William Ward sundry accounts, 1801-
1809, and an autobiographical letter (and manuscript copy) from William Ward addressed to
his grandchildren, [1820s?]. The series also includes a variety of manuscript, printed, and
typescript materials including obituaries, family trees, brief family history essays, and
correspondence concerning the genealogical research of the donor, George B. Dorr. For an
additional autobiographical essay, see Lucy Ward Lawrence Reminiscences [1850s], in the
Ward Family correspondence.
Bound volume, 1801-[1820s?]
Box 8
Folder 1
William Ward autobiographical letter to
Box 8
Folder 2
grandchildren
(manuscript copy of original in Bound Genealogical Materials)
1786-1943
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
5/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
Box 8
Folder 3-4
George B. Dorr Correspondence, 1901-
Box 8
Folder 5
1940
II. Thomas Wren Ward bound manuscripts, 1825-1840
This series is comprised of letters, essays, and other papers of Thomas Wren Ward that formerly
were bound in one volume. It is unclear who is responsible for compiling the volume. Due to the
fragile nature of the volume, the MHS staff removed the binding while retaining the page order
number. The volume includes letters to brother William Ward, Jr., Nathan Hale, and Daniel Webster.
Essay topics include education, taxes, finance, foreign mercantile debt, and tariffs. Also included are
papers relating to the Boston Athenaeum, Harvard College Library, and a savings bank.
Box 8
Folder 6-14
III. Thomas Wren Ward business papers, 1805-1857
This series is divided into four subseries, as listed below.
A. Business correspondence, 1805-1857
This subseries contains Thomas Wren Ward's correspondence with a number of business
associates, including but not limited to John R. Dalling, William Gray, Jr., William Ropes,
Jonathan Goodhue, Edward Everett, Nathan Hale (1784-1863) (see also Thomas Wren Ward
Bound Manuscripts), George Ticknor, Baring Brothers, Thomas Baring, Edmund Forstall, Dr.
James Jackson, and William Sturgis. Thomas Wren Ward's careers as ship captain, Boston
merchant, and agent for Baring Brothers are all represented in the correspondence. See also
Thomas Wren Ward correspondence with William Ward, Samuel G. Ward, George C. Ward,
and John G. Ward for additional discussion of business matters.
Box 9
B. Joshua Bates correspondence, 1828-1857
This subseries contains correspondence between Thomas Wren Ward and Joshua Bates, a
partner at Baring Brothers and close friend. The correspondence is a mix of business,
American and European politics, family news, and gossip about mutual acquaintances. For
additional Baring Brothers correspondence, see Business Correspondence.
1828-1842
Box 10
1843-1847
Box 11
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
6/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
1848-1857
Box 12
Folder 1-21
C. Daniel Webster correspondence, 1824-[1845?]
This subseries contains correspondence between Thomas Wren Ward and Daniel Webster,
as well as one letter from Joshua Bates to Webster. Webster served as legal council to Baring
Brothers in America. The correspondence discusses matters before Congress and
international politics and how both were likely to effect trade. For copies of additional letters to
Webster, see also Thomas Wren Ward Bound Manuscripts.
Box 12
Folder 22
D. Accounts, 1810-1811
This subseries contains several accounts involving shipping. The accounts include balances
with William Ward, Thomas Wren Ward, and Essex Bank. It is unclear who kept the accounts.
Box 12
Folder 23
IV. Thomas Wren Ward diaries, 1827-1855
This series contains eight original diaries and one typescript for which MHS does not hold the
original. A typescript copy accompanies most of the diaries in the series. Several of the diaries are
travel journals kept on trips to Cape Cod and to England. The largest diary, 1827-1853, records
business and family events, as well as observations on politics and philosophy, the city of Boston, his
involvement at Harvard College, and thoughts on hearing Ralph Waldo Emerson lecture.
Diary, 1827-1853
Case 1
Note: A typescript of extracts from this diary can be found in Box 13.
Papers removed from diary, 1827-1853
Box 13
Folder 1
Typescript of diary, 1827-1853
Box 1
Folder 2-5
Diary, 1827
Box 13
Folder 6
(manuscript and typescript copies)
Account of trip from Boston to Cape Cod
Diary, 3 July 1828-[1828]
Box 13
Folder 7
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
7/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
Diary, 15 Sept 1828-[1828]
Box 13
Folder 8
Diary, 19 Oct-20 Nov 1828
Box 13
Folder 9
Typescript of portions of diaries 3 July 1828-
Box 13
Folder 10
[1828] and 19 Oct-20 Nov 1828
Account of trip to England
Diary, 1834
Box 13
Folder 11
Diary, 14 July -6 Oct [1834]
Box 13
Folder 12
Typescript of diary, 1845
Box 13
Folder 13
Diary, 1855
Case 2
Note: A typescript of extracts from this diary can be found in Box 13.
Typescript of diary, 1855
Box 13
Folder 14
PHOTOMECHANICALS REMOVED FROM THE COLLECTION
The following photomechanicals have been removed from this collection for placement and cataloging
with the Massachusetts Historical Society Photomechanical Collection.
Two photomechanicals, one of Paul Thoron, Esq., and one of Mrs. Paul Thoron, by J. Fabre, Marseilles,
n.d.
PREFERRED CITATION
Thomas Wren Ward papers, Massachusetts Historical Society
ACCESS TERMS
This collection is indexed under the following headings in ABIGAIL
(http://www.masshist.org/library/abigail.cfm) , the online catalog of the Massachusetts Historical
Society. Researchers desiring materials about related persons, organizations, or subjects should search
the catalog using these headings.
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
8/10
6/17/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
PERSONS:
Ward family--Genealogy.
Ward family.
Bates, Joshua, 1776-1854.
Dorr, Mary Gray Ward, 1820-1901.
Everett, Edward, 1794-1865.
Gardner, Elizabeth.
Gardner, John.
Goodhue, Jonathan, 1783-1863.
Gray, William, Jr.
Hale, Nathan, 1784-1863.
Jackson, James, 1777-1867.
Lawrence, Lucy Ann Ward.
Sturgis, William, 1782-1863.
Ticknor, George, 1791-1871.
Ward, George Cabot, 1824-1887.
Ward, Joanna Chipman.
Ward, John Gallison, 1822-1856.
Ward, Lydia Gray, b. 1788.
Ward, Martha Ann, 1812-1853.
Ward, Ruth Putnam.
Ward, Samuel Gray, 1817-1907.
Ward, Thomas Wren, 1831-1859.
Ward, William, 1761-1827.
Ward, William, 1819-1830.
Webster, Daniel, 1782-1852.
ORGANIZATIONS:
Boston Athenaeum.
Harvard University. Treasurer.
Baring Brothers & Co.
SUBJECTS:
Business and politics--United States.
Family history--1750-1799.
Family history--1800-1849.
Family history--1850-1899.
Merchants--Massachusetts--Boston.
Ocean travel.
Religious thought--18th century.
Ship captains.
Shipping--Massachusetts.
Voyages and travels.
Boston (Mass.)--Commerce--England.
China--Description and travel.
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0013
9/10
417/2015
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943
England -- Commerce -- Massachusetts -- Boston.
England -- Description and travel--1801-1900.
France--Description and travel.
United States--Politics -- and government--19th century.
Collection processed by Michael Rush, October 2001.
Revised 22 Feb. 2005
Encoded by Michael Rush, May 2003
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa001
10/10
WebVoyage Record View 1
Page 1 of 3
THE
MASSACHUSETTS
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
ABIGAIL: MHS Online Catalog
Search
Headings
Titles
History
Help
ABIGAIL Home
Database Name: Massachusetts Historical Society
Search Request: Keyword Anywhere = baring & company
Search Results: Displaying 2 of 10000 entries
Previous
Next
Bibliographic
Holdings
Table of Contents
MARC Format
Thomas Wren Ward diaries,
Relevance:
Database: Massachusetts Historical Society
Format: Manuscripts
Call number(s): Ms. N-1726
Contained in: In Thomas Wren Ward papers.
Creator: Ward, Thomas W. (Thomas Wren), 1786-1858.
Title: Thomas Wren Ward diaries, 1827-1855.
Description: 1 box and 2 volumes in cases.
Scope: Nine diaries kept by Thomas Wren Ward, a Boston merchant and an agent in the
United States for the English firm Baring Brothers, 1827-55. Two diaries, for the
years 1827-53 and 1855 respectively, record daily events (including foods eaten
and books read) and family matters such as the deaths of his son and daughter, and
include discussion of religion, business, politics, and government; the weather
(including temperatures); a fishing trip in Boston Harbor with John Quincy Adams
and other dignitaries; thoughts on a Ralph Waldo Emerson lecture; and notes on
his involvement as treasurer of Harvard College. Six diaries (including a typescript
for 1845 of which MHS does not hold the original), kept 1827-1845, contain
details of Ward's travels to Cape Cod, New York City, England, and France;
measurements of latitude, longitude, and wind on transatlantic voyages;
observations of English markets, goods, and society; descriptions of Baring
Brothers partners; and an account of Edward Everett as ambassador in London.
One diary, kept 1834, includes memoranda of subjects relating to his
responsibilities as agent for Baring Brothers.
Finding aids available: Unpublished guide in the Library.
Most items are individually described in the MHS manuscript catalog.
Subject(s): Ward family.
Baring Brothers & Co.
Harvard University. Treasurer.
Business and politics -- -United States.
Merchants -Massachusetts -Boston.
http://balthazaar.masshist.org/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=2&ti=1,2&Search%5FArg=baring.. 6/1/2009
WebVoyage Record View 1
Page 2 of 3
Merchants --Diaries.
Ocean travel --Diaries.
Religious thought -- 18th century.
Transatlantic voyages -- -Diaries.
Voyages and travels -- Diaries.
Weather.
Cape Cod (Mass.) -- --Description and travel.
England -- --Description and travel -- 1801-1900.
France -- -Description and travel.
New York (N.Y.) -- -Description and travel.
United States --Politics and government -- 19th century.
Diaries -- -1827.
Diaries -1828.
Diaries -1829.
Diaries -1830.
Diaries --1831.
Diaries --1832.
Diaries -1833.
Diaries --1834.
Diaries --1835.
Diaries --1836.
Diaries --1837.
Diaries --1838.
Diaries --1839.
Diaries -1840.
Diaries --1841.
Diaries --1842.
Diaries --1843.
Diaries --1845.
Diaries --1846.
Diaries --1847.
Diaries --1848.
Diaries --1849.
Diaries --1850.
Diaries --1851.
Diaries --1852.
Diaries --1853.
Diaries -1855.
Previous
Next
Record Options
http://balthazaar.masshist.org/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=2&ti=1,2&Search%5FArg=baring... 6/1/2009
WebVoyage Record View 1
Page 3 of 3
.
Select Download Format Full Record
Format for Print/Save
Enter your email address:
Email
Search Headings Titles
History Help Exit
http://balthazaar.masshist.org/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=2&ti=1,2&Search%5FArg=baring...
6/1/2009
5/27/04 Ward Famila Papers:Notes
MHS
2 copies inste 5/28/34.
Note: Typescopt can I us Not exact consespondence.
BI,F.2
6 large C. word to uss Tw.ward (Nather) Calcutta, 4/17/42.
Refers to Mather interest IN his eyes. "Since I have
been her they have bee gradeval improving and I think the
G the time I get from they well be near recovered.
As yet I have not he able to are than Much "
BIFF
T.W. Was tw Surge (6/16/45) describy his visit to Lenoxad
expectation - it become a "very tolerable and recrouable
idle man."
B 1, F5
Georgewed to T.W. (10/4/45) Fro NYC "a clerk for 2 gean,
now 21 yrs of age Waste to go to Germany to study several
year at University
On 10/7/45 george wite that heis "courved which I
have seen her before that should I take copy a literars
life, I could succeed in it a fully any in business
on 10/0/45 goose says her object cu to become a man ot
letter end an author " - confine itself to Pretry,
Play and Novels, ad Philosophy. But, such a
person "is the lash new in te world, you of I
or ay other then would line for a son.
T ward (1019) encourage son to return have to talk over
matters. Father write (10/11) to sm tollow a takin
on Park Street between the two Received his return
he wats to arrive at what is best," not to Note
a pat win position, 107- his "we take." Nonether
going abroad to "not at all practical le and
wouldn't contribut to respectable I usetulous
or happens."
Fru NYC, giogs anter (10/17) two scetence lette: be
deliveration at a and, not to futu Cernan but
well return have John in Bus New
Box 1 F6
T.W tofer (1/30/46) reter to Anna writz for be nox
GeoRgity T.W. (2110146) ton London are because + tour
Encourages in to and for hero as Basing's house".
that keep J 13 below zero it every at the Sedgwick's,
Cour to T.W. (2/22 Antworp
of Westminster Fliny.
on trouch
teadelberg (save at letter
box 1,F7.
Geor to T.W. 4 (3/9) 46) study Geruan. will alted leature.
(4/2) danawhics Germande system will they
"alwayslooh more at theory their at fact."
More an them, (4/22) + his da z activities (5/21),
he excussion down Rhine (615)
T.W. to George (7/15/46) be has mather's tonal to Mentual
bab Ehappian + hah longe for bl 3 weeks. T.w. is
x 1,F8
= that ing sister at Nahant.
Feerge 8/22/06) u transite So the (914) is aatherizin James
on to Progre (9124). Urenia pleased him the Most he
says (9124) From perlin. He not to be done I
work have IA but in Mo (1848) Several more letter
CFT
These with (Jan - llanch. 1847) in her states t come
Tw. group
hesting of T.W (3170) uputs from Boston on
of deed 2 the of slow at Pittsfield; Horace gray
last was, bused at let Auborn San
"Martha is very well + Mery well."
+ hids at henox and Ance at Haggenty; in Ny.
's
Four or fivi more letter re London trip + Itellan tup
preparations Tisney- (5/25) includes notet an
le Jeffries Wyman, Anesea naturalism and nest
who use staying 10 group Street has all the
flover of geoge B Dorr. Jeffer been Harvoid
profession a cal chargem of evolution.
(3)
X / E,11
Tw to graze (7/10/47) is "Tom is at henox and
Many at Mr. Storeg's at redford." writs T.W.
TW. (8/14) in family sailing at "Secconnet in R.I,
(8/7/47) the he I on My way home". Design Bible.
6 me earh of Neepart. "Mary is at Lanor: Sam
now hach at fanox followy (says GBD) a
heinting and cavoing tryi in th Aderendar
"themseal wilderness
Box 1,F.M george to T.W. (9/25/47) off to Italy. 'give of love to
the girls since in just heard from each. "llary
is pretty had nevertheless; four letters in
two years is no great thing! Mathe is
better but she does not tell ne much of
what is joy on." From Helan (11/7/47)
Tw. to grow (11/17/47) re "We drand te i at the.
Everett: last even " He, bee read Tacitus,
gibbon, Hame a Like of Colaridge groze to TW
12129) sped X was in Naples,
for , F 13 better from Naples, ind Vist to Pamper (lette 2/22/48)
u "Everyth in Europe is in the greatest agitation
now owing L the revolved on in France." (3/20/48);
Fronh Story arried from Boston, also other Bostoner
Word Sears's others. More from liaple (4/19/48),
then Rome (5/7/48) who he he sea "Louisa word:
F
14
Sangs has stay in Italy (6/4) 48 "themoral profestable
part of my whole lite." On to Paus (6/18/48),
anoth late (6) 2014F) is great libellion" on
last 4 days but George ua not hurt in the "stat
of Siege Fearh Story is there + well
Tw write (7/26/45) that "Trade is had March factory
very had + we are shrinbin j up. Refer to
their "parenty a) " to do with less." helts (8/7)
Cost If Europen trous ? 31, 200/ you in georgts T.W (11/8/48).
refer to Mary at Nahant with Julia Howe,"
Truck plan in Ny,will follow lifecature T again
4
declines business offers of T.W. Here use my
from Kevex
he naming a letter for T.W. who appear to
U have vened has favourial support at groge a
& right to with device it." Agui (11/13) Surger
a trust and not a gift, youhard in doubted
write that Twhen always for and
"use home lived tepther without exchanging a
(11/15/48) from Lensy he write that be is not
single word on the subject of money Again
made me.
"wite the allowance that you have
Letters being copied. on 10/4/49 group 5gs Le
will become in "broken in Stat Street (Bouton)
31F16
Group timels to New alean (5/3/50). Tw. says (5/12)
that "Many easy for the present No employment for
Sleeps an no profiture trade Manifacture
contineous had." From 5th ours (6/5/50) sup From
'st hous that he hopend to be hour in time
for lang's wedding Refer to Calterna
exigration, aholitia it slavery, etc
5
. 1.17
John to Urs word from London (612/43) ot he
Meet To Mr. Thomas Basing. West to fee
Juice Ward (notation that llaward to
John to lears was la neve (8/14/43);
Dr Someone Home) on her wedding Journey
B.F. 18
Lyon ( 8127) Agu, many annotation, 3 6 BD.
Lette for TW the "Dear Boys a 7/3/44 say
pg you bills + dail have hills "stang
unrecessary nor any longer than neurous
TW to hate haps (12/7/44) stack transport
of $20 K each from shares at Amosteag,
Mammark Bank of Commany Cobat, etc.
F15
T.W to John secured litter a Groge & also
@ Gusion
Job (7/23/47) on 56 day vagar for Southaupt
to Malta to Cairo the Caygon to Hona Kong
Her her a paster (in Carton) in A. Hoard No.
1,F.20
Canton letter (1847)
, F 21
Economic was. in Booton (1/26/48) TW salp
"shirinteing .. will reach us all near all our
factories maln no dividends, and the stocks
are unalable. John S we situated in Carton
T.W. s days (2/22/48) that hes heart to ur Divwell
(partner in Canton Hown of Heard x (o.).
T.W . sap (8/7/48) in letter John that "Ishall
utine as som a leasers. Baring source ever well
premie not may maths. Response it From (9/26)
w that he too "shall give up business "for he has
enough "and now then large to Lunz as I should
best urst." He usent 2 invest in safe
Manver + live structy with has income of
educate self, "an independent main at last."
6
B.L.F.22 Letter emonte home. T.W Says "George in
at Cambide, ad studen hard, be does not
touch ruch but I dure Siley he reserve
B1.F23
will vauch before your Sunshine.' (5/8/49).
Tw. to John (5/12/50). "Mary says you will be
In unk the in a few dgs (GBD rate that
T.W.s left arm had he mohan from house
"After may is named hell take long journed
falling in Jan. 1850), health now improving.
T.W to For 18/25) u "Mary seem most at Passure
with lers. Ward. Freseas "Empty home "syndrome,
and at ease."
1st notes
Chini total Dorr
T w an to for (9/17/50), "Mary is in the family way
perfectly well, and her husband and his
House of business all right, and Mar is
very happy."
B1.F24 T.W. to John (1/25/51) Heory signed a sprest for
a new partner dop For 5 year under return
name of Blake, Ward, t Co. ad we an
all pleased,
T.W. to for (11/2/51). "many and her baby will
Dorr are all fewil rate."
3.1.F25 Tu to John (1125/52) Georgi Lever married
on the 22nd + is stay with at
Clargis, + llan in the Dar accuse wis
for the week or tuc. Later (3/9/52) May
the Dorr are day happy as possible and
Mer Dorr is a friend with lang all from
a house read He also
he lt sudden qualities." TW higs group
says (8/26/52) tent Thorna Baring will
liky person have short Unit heven Fee
him in 23 years hope to retire (TW) at
3.1.F26 Death * lot
us of 1852. Cop
04 MHS
7
Box 8
Ha draw curology (E is date).
F 1 -
Handwritin Willia Ward autobay leta C
grandbhild 27 pp.
The Gray pid green for Thomas ward Eag.
for Same Swett, 3/30/54, Marblehead
Mass vegining 1. William Grey st Lynn
a Farm (sea hawis' Hitory ) in 1706
on Millips Hill. Discount 1758 lites Soz
Abrahom how 1713, mane hyder Calley.
The dautter
(daywlenst Francis Cally
F2
36 pp. handwritte Were word autoh bellet
In 6BDs hand:
Wm gray, the educat su, was born in Lynn on
For 27, 1750, hamed for has grandfather wm
10pp.or 3x5"
Gray, Then ratz a not clear
3
Baring House Arcestry
SCIC
Note. William Gray of Salem Merchant
Biograph Shetah L. Edward Gra
Houghtar little R.d.
4.
FES Wm Wand [1786].4 pp. had essy Josheen
Ward un born in the toune of Hurr in
the conf of Kent (old Empand) class to
the country soon after te 1st scetler t
settled in Salem
F5
May fanf had records
of Has letter to george @ his work ( ol'+ 0'3)
felter to Wm C Endicatt (1908) record arcestry
of Willia Graysurfe time Sidney Perley.
Edward In (1/7/12) letter 12 us. Dor' in
Joshua Bates t relate to William Hron
Thomas W. Ward 9/30/17 had leck to DEEN
re SMM pint= pussed seeing you a
(8
88F5
7/21/17 letter. Copied,
F7
Un of LNP stationary for statetes of
naval battle
F9
Lette to Her. Hale (under) to Form
F12
Howan College when hibray, 2 preconvent
"Sauntic an relating Lisrary 1826.
Box 3
Ganual & word
F1
Typescupt copes by GBD.
Letter from 1830's to T.W Word
F 3
S. C ready Barke, Pitts life
&
(Imple
Boston , March 6, 1836 letter to "My dear
Father, says on 18 2 "It is a
City that
-
before to
F4
marther Character a well.
Reference to Marthain illness (6/15/38, 6/17/38)
F5
Letters 1. from " Dittshurgh.
Cinanat
F6
11
"
New Orean (1839)
F7
u " N.Y.
Litte (3/4/39) for N Ocean upond a
"lady to whom I have been for some
time story attached" Us Anna Backer.
Wante 2 propose to her.
Presini assessment jeep. cotton
F8
hella to Horana, 4/12/39
Aug 9,1839 we from "llary some
to be will + styong May wish
to stay until when some of
her friends will be coming to Booton They
to have her with them
seen much attached to her, a desires
MSts
5/27/04
2.F8
Dug 26, 1839 letter to TW Ward "we selectoring
part with this Many who for with same
young falks 11 whom I gladf commit to your
find care
Sept. 9, 1839 letter ri Martha edite account
for Johni "failure to enter college.
San has great respect for John intelled
but "hehan 1 dith with in grasping
particulars as holding then in his Rind."
3 PP on John abilities All are suddy
disappointed.
N.V. 1,1839 : 3 p.p in Anna Backer + San feelings for ber.
Dec 3, 1839. Defense to Many's attachment to
Julia
Chick.
F9
Day 1, 1940 3 pp with an Anna New Oclear
Sept 28, 1840 New York wedding plans
Oct 2 , 1840 Sam's brother dies Say, Mary
unil be great affordance since sh
Oct 7. 1840 from with Nontain anna Barber Ward
prized him most.
to T.W. that father. in-low for he
Oct. 14, 1840 Saul december Wt lt l's + 30 rule
clessir Clish Mt Washing in next duty
horseback treff
Oct 18, 1840 encoute to Nothernston.
Signed by noth Sexu to and
STOP,
18 folders remains
MAS
T.SN. Ward Papers
Martha Ann ward, sister of Mary Ward.
(18 -1853). GBP's aunt.
George Cabot word, (GGW) brother of Mary word
(1824-1887). GBD's uncle.
Esq.
Thomas When Ward, father of
Treasurer of
Harvard College
Boston Athenoum
(1788 11/20 - 1858). 3/4 In second decade of 19thc
check
Come to NYC to "with his relative" Green
Jonathan goodhue, founded in NYC
+ Wand. In 18 Fretherned to
Boston + in 1827 become the Am. agent I
Baring Brothers. with Thomas' death (1858),
business devolved to son Somuel Gray Ward(
).
cn.
GCW graduated from Hanvard (Class of 1843 ),
studied in Heidelberg after voyan on sailing
ship and wored. Seltis in NYC founded firm
of ward Compbell Co.
Capt.
Martha Ann (8/12/12- 11/2/53)
William - TWWard
Lacorence Grog S1013/17- 11/17/07 m. 1840 ArnaB
Ward
and
SamGray
- Lydia Gray
Mary Gray (6/3/16 2/6/197 Sauhwick Many &
George Cabot(1114)24- 5/4/87 M.1852 Basteer
Mary Gray (9/29/20 + 10/21/01)m.C.H.Dor
+
M.
Anna orne
11/15/10. (13th)
William C (2/6/19. 6/24/30)
7/30/88
)
Thomas with (913131-12/3/59)
John Gallison 9/12/22-6/6/56)
gcw Shared from with Somere the Baring agency anti 1885.
Extensive characteryatia in obstrary similar to GBD.
ck
GCW wa Twestes of children's Aud Society
IL
"
Bank of Ficer.
"
interested in transculutural of gave air of quaint
1 abstraction. at odd born the
Son of Samuel Dor to Susan Brown.
0 Two children s Samuel Grayward & llarion Ward
MHS
T.W. Ward Papers - 2
Thornas Wien Word
ship commanded by fathers, Capt. wm. Ward.
Began career as mariner, ferit officers for
At 19 becomes commander of an "Indiamen"
belong to Hon. Wm. Gray. by age 23
relocated to Boston, established self a business
(in what?) until 29 years when he become
ch
forther in William t Hardy Ropes
CRopes i ward), until age 38 what Two
metern X
here eg Booton agent for Baring Brathers (London)
Treasures of Haward college, 1830-48, -
Treasure K Bostm athereum
received Hon. u. of arts in 1843 from Howord
Trustee : mass. General Hospital
Did TWW have a son c same name? Letter
to George for TWW "dated 2/1/13 from th
ch.
S.S. Caropic refer to Georgi's editorial
In the Huald."
Ch.
x GBD letter (3/15/13) to Henry L. Higginson, Eag.
re plan to deposit TWW to WilliamWard
letters in MHS, but also questmare
cleck
survival Joshiaa of Bates TWW 's original letters
Bates
his efforts to locate grandfathere letters
to ^ Bates (1834-39). 6BD is very thoroughin
to he professional calleagues. Scholarly
Holles?
stratigg. Response from H.Z.IH. ?2 check
MHS
T.W. Word Papers 3
Thomas W. Ward letter to "Georgi (9/30/17) re
appreciation for from dullaut Pub. which TWW
wishis he had hnow@ when hear "in net.
Desert " sure it would have "spurred me to
explore more of the northern traistion the
Ban Harber side. "He traced teails the
"high pilze of enjoyment for the contribution
to his health .He messed seey - GBD -
letter for Perkins St., Januaria Plain.
was EBD in Booton ? Washergton 9/30/17??
(by whom)
at about the
Library ie poletical matter-funtry the fots Lazy -
Updated handwritte B pg. utter from Howard Calley
ch
Hous's
defending the need for th Haward college therey. Date?
The BPL Thes is a duft of a letter
Thrus W.Ward litte to CBD for ast con P.O. (7/21/17)
Claiming that GBD's letter "seemed like an
apparition from out of the void," includy a
clapter
map. Ward talk of be
classes?
of a plastic seef hovering topopophecially
over the land." Tww say " I wonder
whether any one appreciate what
Grethre done. as a hounty of nature without
further thought."
Wards airfe is "Sophie".
MHS
T.W. WordPopers-4
14
"memoir of Joshua Bates", for 12th Anneal pp
Trustee of the Public Lobolary
forchea Bates of Waymouth (1788- - ).
At 15 years (1803), be entered "counting house"
of Willian R. Gray Eog., eldest son
of the Hon. Wm-Gray, "the first merchant
of New England, in the last generation."
Formed fun 7 Beckford :-Bates what
did not 1875 survive the "pressured the times,
C. At this time ? (he went down e the crash.).
Shepower 30-40 in the country, hairing usealy
Mr. Gray was "the largest
Bates Squar-rigged vessels afloat,
"
30 is Grays foreign agent, not get
Bates years of age (c. 1818).
secured friending from Peter Caesar Lebrouchers
Bates related y waving to te boung famely
secured America bus wen I Saring forif.
Date: Still confusion @
P
Thomas When Word (1844- ) parentage,
marriage, + death date.
2
Samuel gray Ward
Appart not Son of elder T.W.Ward;
MHS
Gray
T.W. ward Papers-5
mary Ward in her youth had one sister
and 5 brothers. By the time f her
manage (1850), one sister ad 4 brothers
surved of the eight children of T.W-ward.
Her out sester died a month fee George birth.
may in 1853, is only female -is 1 ler
mother Cohydia Gray 7. still alove. -
left in this family
ch
I need t secured dates and accest of data
m Leyded Gray
Ch,
The Friday Club.
Included Francis Calley Gray
Thomas When Ward
note : acc. to Mary Gray ward. accesting chart,
T.W. Ward's 6666 Grandfather was litele work
comefro Erith in Kent, few rule s.of London
deed in Verging March 2, 1650
Uiles
Joshua likes Ebevezer
William William Thomas When (Mary's dad).
8/24/49 letter for Groy Cabot Ward to "Sir, the
father T.W., affeining to commetinet
later into business. with brother Johns
return. George is not interested in an
alliance. Asho father's helpsbeat wants
tobe free f depending now oftho
educators corpleted.
MHS
T.W. Word Papers-6
T.W Ward letter to Deayn (9/27/39) detailing
"your balance" [inheritance] of 20, 400,
larning 1,505 annually Question Dnst
Late : 1929 or 1839.
T.W.Wad letter to John & Geogre (12/9/44),
gurig each stocks & cash valued at &20K;
George is 18.
how to manage there feed John is 22;
so too for "Some offers five advice on
T.W. Ward letter to steen Dogn (7/00/47)-age 25-
ri feminical affairs
John
G.Ward to T.W. ward (May, 1850) Age 28.
very condid account of has mistaken topium
habit inteopositions (including drinking in excess)
Refers to Sam is to confers to father. & make
self right.
T.W Ward to John (8/26/52) Me Johns letter
Vienna. Father's response takes the high load
(7/31/52) expressing desire tospend year year in
Refer to Life +Letters of Niebur(the Germae historion)
"
OCLC
to tork coming visit of Thomas Baring
who T.W. has not seen for 23 years, T.W.
will dis cass retirement c hin.
Refers to Sam as being "will suited to the
business he has choser.
MHS
T.W. WardPaper-7
T.W. Ward lettor to John (8/26/52): (continued)
Says "anna"is at Lynn. who is Anna? Tom in Conada.
T.W. offers an illuminating characterization
Shipping
of the era into which GBD will be born.
Use this as context! Admirable figure!
John Ward to T.W (10/26/53), two months
death. He begins by stating "I legret that
before GBD'S birth, one mouth before llastha's
Martha is no better "Reflects on life
+ death.
Sam bought a form GBD's note says they
ck. X was form at Conton formerly belonging to
ch
has friend tngersoll Bowditch, son of Nathaniel
days.
T.W. bought adjoining farm and the Dorr's
death . was them that my brother +
bought S.G. it ward's form after his father's
I pest our springs + autumn that therefter
until we grew up. More appreciation
of T.W.'s wife's appreciation for flower gardens
T.W. to John (1/15/54) discrety admonishes
John for not writing since Martha's death.
GBD's birth : "another fine boy. and
[Mary] is as happy as possible." John's mother
greeving TW speaks of his Library and the loss
of So many friends Dedicate self to make others happy.
MHS
T.W. Ward Papers-8
T.W. letter to John (7/18/54) opens by noting
that it is months since I have had letter
from you Pray write and let us know any your
Whereabouts, and what your plans are,"
gardens
of an is having a guerhouse built and a Carton). gaide
Mrs. She Ward "delighted c her farm (at
GBD
"Mary acre illr. prepared Dorr are for at Nahant," fruits to f lowers.
Hll
Describes life inform. mary still at Carton.
Sample next ours at Carton "is realf
beautiful of "hoth Anna and hermelf are
perfect satisfied. Both
business conditions.
are in five health.
ChapterHead T.W. to Jehn (7/13/55) begins with claim
Anchered
that you mother ad I are anchored
Canton
in
here in the country now. "San is
very busy in the agency." Lydian buog
garden
10 gardens. Refer to Friday Night Dining
Club photo (in 1855- survived ??).
ch
Chief Just ic Lemuel Shaw
John contracts consumption in Winter 1855
andhis death It spey 2856 notes GBD.
MHS
T. W. Ward Papers-9
Argot
tough draft
GBD essay on Barings [1/18/43)
This mg
he the
On the origin of Backing House of Baring Brothers.
fenal
his by
GBD
Monday evening, Mar. 13.
Somo fragments for use in text.
My grandfather kept the letters he received in his long
correspondence with the Barings and mter-press copies of those
he wrote, meaning to use them in writing a history of his
time when he was through, which would have at least, he wrote
"be true." But he unwisely mentioned it in a letter to one
of the Baring firm, written near the and, and they ,alarmed
lost things should come out they might not wish
to give
the public, asked my unole who succeed d in the agency, to burn
the whole, which he did, without even Examining the oononts
for historicol material, as his son, Thomas Wren Ward the
second, who is living still, in his early nineties, told me
a few years since, looking back through to his doing it at
his father's bidding, when he first
the
office.
Every generation sees such material in great quanitity
go to destruction but it would be a wonderful source offer
material of study not only for the study of the passing
times but, which go so quickly by, but for the study of
human life and character, which, far more than history in the
broader sense would furnish the material to make
better.
man
8. March 1213
But one ohest mong many which grandfather
loft fing Tilled will in more personal matter came into my mother's
hands and through her to me and I have found it full of interest.
Some day a porti in of this I hop
trust
may be given to the
public.
Monday October 31.
The bookcase in the library of Storm Beach
Cottage stood when I first
remember it in the late 1850's against the
wall of the library of my grandfather Ward's house
on Park Street, Boston.
I remember well climbing
up on a chair to look at the back of the books on the
yet
shelves, for I could not/read, and pulling out a
volume of Professor Lane's translation of the Arabian
Knights, for it gives emblazerment on a pale green
cloth cover, and finding delightful engravings in it,
strewn through the printed pages, of armies fighting
in the air, of giant Afrits, of Sinbad the Sailor,
and the like.
We had driven in -- whoever we
may
have
been
from my father's and mother's home
by Jamaica Pond and I carried the book back with me
when we returned.
IZYNT my kind old nurse,
Mrs. Hind, a Welsh woman, who received me in her arms,
the first of all, when I was born and was as devoted
to me as if her
own. I remember well sitting up on
a high chair in front of a glowing hard coal
fire in the nursery while she read to me from the book,
6A.
to which I added on another trip to Boston the other
two, equally fascinating, volumes of the set. I was
young enough still to have long, fair curls and not
to have graduated into trousers yet.
It was difficult
reading for my nurse with long verses from
the Koran interspersed in the set but I listened with
attention as I looked into the fire and delighted in
the tale.
My grandfather's library looked out back on the
Gronary Burial Ground over a back garden that my grand-
mother tended, while the front rooms on that floor, the
dining room and parlor, looked out delightfully over
the Common with the sunlight streaming in the afternoon
on the walls
and ******! throwing/colored light from X glass prisms
hanging from a great chandelier in the center of the
parlor, the colored light shifting constantly on the
wall as the afternoon sun descended.
After my grandfather died, not long afterward,
we lived for a winter in the house, which then was
sold by my grandfather's executors, while we built our-
selves a new home alongside my grandmother, being among
the first to build on the new-made land beyond the Public
13.
The families fall all thishays attending Differences
School had summer homes to which they moved in spring,
returning in the fall, a custom then of recent origin
made possible by the railread. Some went to the North
Shore, others to Nahant, reached by steamboat; others
to the South Shore, where there was splendid opportunity
for small-boat sailing. The boys whose homes were by
the sea lived on the water through the summer. Edward
Burgeas, the famous yacht and cup-defender builder, was
one of the older boys at Dixwell's when I entered and
got his interest in boats and early training in this way
at Beverly. Charles Francis Adams, the recent Secretary
of the Havy and famous for his skill in sailing cup-
defenders, got his on the South Shore.
Others families moved into the country, to Chest-
nut Hill and Brookline, Milton and beyond, the boys
coming in by train to school, their fathers to business,
and Beacon Hill and the Back Bay were like a deserted
city through the summer.
We went to Canton, an old town on the Boston and
Providence Railroad a few miles beyond Milton and its
Blue Hills, in order to be near my grandmother, who had
14.
infamilies all tobays stending
a SUMSOT home there and a famous garden, taking many
prises at the Boston about. It came about because
my grandfather, told by his doctor to get himself a
country home, bought an old homestead there of the
Nichola family, relations of his friends the Bow-
ditches, one of whom, Ingersoll Bowditch, had built
himself a country home alongside the Nichola homestead,
which first my uncle, Samuel Gray Ward, on coming from
Lenox, bought and occupied, then we, when business took
him to New York to live.
There, in real country, with woods and a lake for
neighbors, dogs and horses for companions, my brother
and I grow up, springs and falls, till college days.
It was great country for us. My brother, a born
sailor by inheritance from my mother's family, rigged
up a row-boat with a sail, and sailed the lake; I
roamed the woods, meadows and pasture-lands about us,
gathering wild flowers and collecting birds' eggs in
the spring. But when the hot, dry summer came we went
to the seashore for my mother's sake, and it was on one
of these mid-summer trips that we first came to Mount
Desert.
[G.B.DoRR]
122
MEMOIR.
Dr. Bowditch generally enjoyed excellent health, the result,
beyond doubt, of his regular and temperate habits. At the age
of thirty-five years, however, his life was considered in danger
from the disease of which, at that precise time, (1808,) his two
sisters were dying. He, like them, was attacked with the
alarming symptom of bleeding from the lungs. Upon this
occasion, his friend Thomas W. Ward, Esq., relinquished all his
own engagements, and devoted himself to the invalid during a
journey of several weeks. As they were leaving an inn in
a
town about twenty miles from Salem, the landlord beckoned to
Mr. Ward, and asked him where his friend lived, and, on being
told, advised their return, in the apprehension that the latter could
not even live to reach the next stage in their intended route.
By
the invigorating effect, however, of the exercise thus taken in the
open air, his disorder was checked, and his health completely
reestablished. Until this time, he had never tasted wine. It was
then prescribed as a medicine. When a young man, - but at
what precise age is not known, - he had agreed to sit up with a
friend who was ill, and, being unwilling that SO much precious
upon this subject, once said, " There is a gentleman in this city, (naming him,) who possesses
such courtly manners, that he can utter a bitter sarcasm, or express profound contempt, in the
most mild and conciliatory language. Such, however, is not my case. If 1 am obliged
to
measure my words, or even to think the least about them, I lose the substance of what I
intended to say. When I feel that I cannot remain silent, I speak - and in such terms that
no one can mistake my meaning. But, my speech being ended, the whole affair is over.
I
pour out, indeed, the contents of my vial of wrath, but I then let it be seen that it is left
empty." And though it is certain that his was not that guarded demeanor, which, upon every
occasion of life, prevents the utterance of a word which it may be desirable to recall, it is
also certain that this was a source of more regret to himself than of pain to others.
MEMOIR,
123
time should be idly spent, he passed the whole night in
mathematical computations. He was much alarmed, the next
morning, to find his vision obstructed by little motes or specks
passing before him in grotesque variety and constant succession.
It was ascertained that he had taxed his eyes beyond their powers,
and it was two years before he was able again to use them freely.
Dr. Bowditch removed to Boston a few months before the
necessary arrangements could be made for his family to join
him in that city. Hardly had he been there two days, when,
under the influence of a disorder to which he had never till then
been subject, he fell senseless in the street. It happened that
the hospitable mansion of the same friend, to whom, as just
stated, he had before been SO much indebted, was now freely
offered him as a temporary home. Only once again did this
vertigo cause him to fall in a similar manner; and then great
indeed was the consternation excited in his family as they
perceived a crowd approaching bearing his apparently lifeless
body, while, from a wound in his head, blood was flowing
profusely. A tendency to this species of attack, however, always
continued. But, ascertaining that it was brought on by exercise
immediately after eating, and that it was always carried off by
sitting down and resting a few minutes, he avoided its exciting
cause, and thus never experienced any subsequent ill effect from
it.
It was rarely, however, after this, that he walked alone. And
often, when attended by one of his sons, has he stopped to look in
at the window of some shop which they were passing, or even
walked in, and asked for a seat, because he felt the sure indications
of approaching danger. He well knew the delicate organization
4/15/2021
files.usgwarchives.net/ny/newyork/bios/oldmerchants/goodhue-jonathan.txt
BIOGRAPHY: Jonathan Goodhue; New York CO., NY
surname: Goodhue
submitted by Elizabeth Burns (burns at asu.edu)
Copyright. All rights reserved.
http://www.usgwarchives.org/copyright.htm
http://www.usgwarchives.org/ny/nyfiles.htm
Submitted Date: June 3,2005
This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/nyfiles/
File size: 3.2 Kb
Author: Walter Barrett
Jonathan Goodhue
Page 111
Old Merchants,
Walter Barrett,
Thomas R. Knox, 1885
The founder of the firm of Goodhue and Company was Jonathan Goodhue. He
commenced business in this city in 1808 under the firm of Goodhue and Sweet,
at No. 34 Old Slip. The store was afterwards removed to No. 44 South Street.
This building belonged to Theophilacht Bache. Goodhue and Sweet did a very
heavy regular commission business for three or four years and sold largely of
foreign dry goods, and acted as agents of Salem ship owners. In 1811 the house
was dissolved, and J. Goodhue carried on business upon his individual account
until 1816. It was then Goodhue and Ward,* and the store was kept at 44 South
Street. In 1819 it became Goodhue and Company and Mr. Perit became a partner.
He had formerly been of the house of Perit and Lathrop. Goodhue and Company,
kept at 44 South Street until 1829 when they removed to 64 South Street where
the same large house is still located.
Mr. Goodhue was born in Salem. Mr. Perit was born in Norwich, Connecticut and
received a collegiate education at Yale College. This is not often the case
with merchants in this city.
In the first partnership of Mr. Perit with Mr. Lathrop, his brother-in-law, he
was not successful and during the war he was connected with an artillery
company and performed military service in the forts that protected the harbor.
After he went with Mr. Goodhue, his commercial good fortunes returned and
their house coined money. In 1833 or 1834 the health of Mr. Perit declined and
he conceived the idea that it was necessary to take more active exercise and
in order to insure that ,daily he purchased a piece of property on the North
River, lying between Burnham's and the Orphan Asylum. It may have cost him
perhaps $10,000. He sold it about two years ago. I suppose it is worth now
half a million of dollars. This is a comment on preserving mercantile life.
files.usgwarchives.net/ny/newyork/bios/oldmerchants/goodhue-jonathan.txt
*Thomas Wren Ward.
1/2
4/15/2021
files.usgwarchives.net/ny/newyork/bios/oldmerchants/goodhue-jonathan.txt
By a -mere accident Mr. . Perit buys a small lot of land and makes more money
than Goodhue and Co. ever made in fifty three years of work.
Mr. Goodhue died a few years ago and his funeral, at his own request, was
attended only by the members of his family and a few of his most intimate
friends.
Since Mr . Perit sold his property in New York, he has removed to New Haven,
Connecticut to a magnificent house on Hillhouse Avenue. He married Miss Coit,
a very lovely girl and still living, the ornament of the circle in which she
moves. They have no children. He has done more than most merchants do for the
benevolent enterprises of the day. He is unequalled as a merchant and has been
for many years honored with being President of the Chamber of Commerce.
files.usgwarchives.net/ny/newyork/bios/oldmerchants/goodhue-jonathan.txt
2/2
Journal of the Early fepublic 2, 3 3 (1982):284-299.
Daniel Webster, the
Boston Associates, and the
U. S. Government's Role in
the Industrializing Process,
1815-1830
Carl E. Prince and Seth Taylor
The relationship between government and industry in the
United States has never been a simple one, and the labels used in
categorizing these relationships at different times are often mis-
leading if not false. In the early nineteenth century, for example,
it is quite clear that the laissez faire label is an inappropriate one.
55°C
This essaytta empts to develop some insights into the emerging
close association between the federal government and America's
earliest and most formidable industrial entrepreneurs during this
See 294
period. It will do SO by examining in depth the Boston Associates'
connection with Daniel Webster: Between 1815 and 1830 Webster
provided the Associates with access to federal legislative and
banking influence, avenues of federal redress, and even federal fi-
nancial support> Two points in particular are worth singling out.
One has to do with existing perceptions of emerging Jeffersonian-
Jacksonian conceptions of laissez faire. The second touches on the
apparent conflict in economic interests between commerce and
manufactures, and the role the federal government played in
ameliorating that conflict.
Mr. Prince, editor of The Papers of William Livingston, is a member of the De-
partment of History at New York University. Mr. Taylor is a graduate student in
history at the same university.
*An earlier version of this essay was published in Essays from the Lowell Con-
ference on Industrial History, 1980 and 1981, ed. Robert Weible, Oliver Ford, and
Paul Marion (Lowell, Mass. 1981), 114-127. Mr. Prince presented the paper to the
conference on May 21, 1981. It is reprinted here with the kind permission of the
editors and the Lowell Conference on Industrial History in hopes of reaching a
larger, less specialized audience. Additional information concerning this collection
of essays appeared in the "Publication Notices" section of our previous issue.
JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC, 2 (Fall 1982). © 1982 Society for Historians of the Early American Republic.
This content downloaded from 137 49 on Mon. 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
284
JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC
With regard to the first, if the Associates are any indication,
there was in the new nation no real commitment to true laissez
faire either among investors or in government, as Jeffersonian Re-
publicanism gave way to the Age of Jackson. Historians today like-
wise differ on the subject. According to David Brody, one pre-
vailing assumption of the "new labor history" is that government
in the early nineteenth century was largely passive towards the rise
of industrial and commercial capitalism. This view is tempered by
other historians who perceive that state governments, at least,
were anything but laissez faire during the first third of the nine-
teenth century. 1 In reality, the Associates tapped a vein of con-
sensus political and governmental support for their industrializing
endeavors among both post-Jefferson Democractic Republicans
and Federalists, a consensus that grew stronger as the first party
system gave way to the second at the dawn of the Age of Jackson.
The second point that surfaces here is that the economic con-
flict existing between commerce and manufactures in the new
nation was more evident in the breach than in the observance. If it
is true that a growing commitment to industrialization worked in
some ways to undermine commerce - for example, protective
tariff legislation - nevertheless in Boston and the Merrimack
valley, at least, the men of commerce and the new industrialists
were often the same people. Even if they were not identically over-
lapping in their involvement in both economic spheres, Boston's
gentry were bound by ties of common commitment to both profit
and noblesse oblige, class interest and intermarriage, and joint in-
vestments in banking, insurance, and transportation. These social
and economic areas of mutuality bridged the gap between com-
merce and industry. Relatively superficial differences in attitude
toward developing government policies were more often than not
overridden by these common bonds, and by an indigenous unified
regional economic outlook as well.
By following one thread of the Associates' activities, the rela-
1 For some representative divergent views of laissez faire, see David Brody,
"The Old Labor History and the New: In Search of an American Working Class,"
Labor History, 20 (Winter 1979), 111-126; Lee Benson, The Concept of Jacksonian
Democracy: New York as a Test Case (Princeton 1961); George Rogers Taylor, The
Transportation Revolution, 1815-1860 (New York 1951); Oscar Handlin and Mary
Flug Handlin, Commonwealth: A Study of the Role of Government in the American
Economy: Massachusetts, 1774-1861 (New York 1947); Stanley I. Kutler, Privilege
and Creative Destruction: The Charles River Bridge Case (Philadelphia 1971).
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
285
tionship to the federal establishment that Daniel Webster's com-
mitment to the Associates engendered, it is possible to say some-
thing about both of the above points.
The Boston Associates were pioneers both in terms of their or-
ganizational cohesion and the range of their economic activities.
The men represented Boston's first families, and from 1813 to 1830
they made the transition from merchant house to manufactory.
Some did SO more quickly and deeply than others. As a group,
first, they pioneered in the concentrated application of venture
capital to manufacturing; second, they were forerunners in the ex-
ploitation of both the new technology and the new working class;
and, third, they were innovators in the assimilation and use,
under one coherent leadership, of the diverse economic forces of
transportation, banking, and insurance. The Associates also both
tapped into the resources of state government and, not least,
mined the power and largess of the developing federal establish-
ment. The names of the families involved reads like a pantheon of
Thn
those who became the Massachusetts great: Appleton, Cabot,
Gore Gorham, Jackson, Lee, Lowell, Thorndike, Ward, and
others
Of Webster himself, it may be noted at the outset that he was a
political sophisticate. He was an adept legislative tactician, a
charismatic and popular figure, and, above all for the Associates'
purposes, a man of great needs who constantly teetered on the
edge of financial disaster. The "godlike Daniel," moreover, was
(and remained almost until 1830) an unreconstructed Federalist,
thus sharing an ideology both Hamiltonian in essence and cer-
tainly consistent with the Boston Associates' endeavors. Webster's
standing at the bar, his central place first in the House of Repre-
sentatives and later the Senate, his stature before the Supreme
Court, his proximity to the top echelons of both the dying Fed-
eralist and emerging Whig parties, his entwinement with both the
Bank of the United States and its Boston branch, and his little
known but crucial influence with the United States government's
Spanish Claims Commission between 1820 and 1825 all combined
to make him the Associates' ideal emissary in Washington.
Webster's ideological heritage is clear: from his earliest political
involvement in 1800 at age eighteen, he was a Federalist who
embraced a traditional eighteenth century elitist notion that
rested on the assumption that the "rich and wellborn" were the
proper governors of society. These leaders, the familiar dogma ran,
This content downloaded from 137 49 125 110 on Mon. 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
287
(but not government-run) venture." Treasury Secretary Albert
Gallatin's brilliant 1806 Report on Manufactures was a worthy
successor to Hamilton's similar pioneering survey fifteen years
earlier. It anticipated closely the radical Jeffersonian reversal that
followed the Embargo of 1807. The embargo transformed
American policy from occasional resistance to industrialization to
energetic encouragement of manufactures in the national interest.
This new policy survived a decade of political indecisiveness and
culminated in Jeffersonian Republican support for the protec-
tionist Tariff of 1816.
Daniel Webster moved to Boston in that same year, although
he had not yet finished out his term as congressman from New
Hampshire By relocating, he confirmed his already developing tie
to the Boston Associates, founders of the Boston Manufacturing
Company in 1813. Francis C. Lowell, while in Washington in
1816 to represent the Associates' interests in the course of the tariff
debates, had made it a point to befriend the young congressman,
encouraging him at the same time to establish himself in Boston.
That the Associates played on Webster's continuous need for
money, even as they lionized him politically, is a pattern that
emerged early in the relationship. From 1815 on, Webster
appeared everywhere on behalf of the Associates and his own
bank account A superb advocate, he defended Associate interests,
as well as those of the Bank of the United States, before both the
Supreme Court and the Spanish Claims Commission. Webster,
moreover, became the attorney of record for many Associates in-
dividually, representing them and their banks, insurance com-
panies, and factories, including the Boston Manufacturing
Company. The new Bostonian, finally, was the frequent recipient
of "subscriptions," "gifts," and "sweeteners," as he once called
them, from individual Associates, Associate-influenced constitu-
encies, and the Bank of the United States, all to enable him to
continue to make the "financial sacrifice" his continued presence
in Congress required. From 1816 on, finally, his financial path is
3 Daniel J. Boorstin, The Americans: The National Experience (New York
1965), 33. For two views of Hamilton's role that differ from this standard inter-
pretation, see William Appleman Williams, "The Age of Mercantilism: An Inter-
pretation of the American Political Economy. 1763-1828." William and Mary
Quarterly, 15 (Oct. 1958), 419-437, and John R. Nelson, Jr., "Alexander Hamilton
and American Manufacturing: A Reexamination, "Journal of American History, 65
(Mar. 1979), 971-995.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
288
JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC
strewn with notes to his friends and clients neither deposited nor
discounted. 4
In return, Webster clearly did a great deal for the Associates.
Apart from his representation of the Bank of the United States, he
is best known in his early years as the Boston group's liaison to
Congress on tariff matters. Although in its outlines it is a familiar
story, its particulars remain obscure. Webster's relationship to the
Associates on this matter is more important for what it tells about
the sophistication with which the Bostonians wooed Washington
than for what it says about "Black Dan," for Webster was but one
of a host of politicians who understood that they represented
economic as well as political interests. The Associates sought
specific protective legislation for their growing woolens manufac-
turing capability, and this was one of Webster's tasks in Washing-
ton. Conversely, however, Webster and the Associates initially
soft-pedaled cotton protection, because high cotton levies abetted
their industrial competitors significantly more than their own well
established and more efficient cotton mills, particularly the
Waltham Manufacturing Company. Finally, many if not most
Associates were, into the 1830s at least, heavy investors in both
commerce and its ancillary insurance and banking enterprises.
This was true to the extent that it was necessary to balance tariff
support against the need to maintain New England commerce as a
continuously viable endeavor. The Bostonians thus fostered in
Washington a selective protection of manufactures. This was a
tightrope the Associates walked to perfection.
Tariff legislation, the Associates believed, could be SO arranged
as to meet all conflicting needs, and they proved remarkably adept
at inserting their requirements into government legislation
Virtually all Webster biographers over the last century concur in this inter-
pretation. See in particular the best of many biographies: Irving H. Bartlett,
Daniel Webster (New York 1978). With specific reference to the Associates, the fol-
lowing will provide a sampling of the documentation available: "Memorandum of
Professional Fees, August 14, 1816-August 14, 1818," The Microfilm Edition of the
Papers of Daniel Webster, ed. Charles M. Wiltse (41 reels, Hanover, N.H. 1973),
reel 3; The Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspondence, ed. Charles M. Wiltse and
Harold D Moser (5 vols. to date, Hanover, N.H. 1974- ), I, 203; S. Jandon to
Thomas Ward July 26, 1833, Edward Everett to Ward an. 16, 1834, Thomas H.
Perkins to Ward May 1, 1834, and passim, Thomas Wren Ward Collection
(Massachusetts Historical Society); New York Evening Post, Feb. 12-Apr. 6, 1827;
Caroline F. Ware, The Early New England Cotton Manufacture: A Study in Industrial
Beginnings (Boston 1931), 83n.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
289
between 1816 and 1828. This complex combination of economic
interests forced on the Associates an intricate political minuet:
high protection of woolens but not cotton; nurture of their manu-
factories via the tariff, but with rates not SO high as to cut into the
trade of the New England merchant. The ubiquitous nature of the
tariff question, in short, required that Webster be carefully
coached as he represented Associate interests in Washington.
Even an able attorney like Webster had a hard time sorting
out these tariff priorities, SO he was never alone in Washington
when passage of a tariff bill was imminent. In 1816, Francis Lowell
tutored the young New Hampshire congressman, who ended up
opposing the tariff legislation of that year. In the course of the
debates, Webster noted that he had been assured that the manu-
facturers would be content with thirty per cent duties on cotton
imports. To this a house member replied that the individual con-
sulted by Webster was Lowell, a wealthy manufacturer who could
better stand the lower excise than many others whose means were
limited.
6
In 1824, Webster wrote several Associates asking for advice as
he pondered a response to the rising demands for higher protective
duties. Thomas H. Perkins, more a merchant than a manufacturer
at this point, but very much an Associate, replied that he expected
someone would be dispatched from Boston to advise Webster on
how best to protect both Boston's "Merchant and Manufacturer."
Nathan Appleton arrived shortly thereafter to represent the
Associates. He reported back to Boston later that Webster's posi-
tion on the tariff "meets my own views."
5 Daniel Webster, "Autobiography," in Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of
Daniel Webster: Correspondence, I, 23.
6 Edward Stanwood, American Tariff Controversies in the Nineteenth Century
(Boston 1903), 145. See also the Boston Daily Advertiser, Mar. 30, 1816, and
Robert C. Winthrop, Memoir of the Hon. Nathan Appleton (Boston 1861), 22, 69,
for information on Webster's role as a representative of the Associates in the de-
bates on the Tariff of 1816.
7
Thomas H. Perkins to Webster, Jan. 26, 1824, Wiltse and Moser, eds.,
Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspondence, I, 348-350; Nathan Appleton to Samuel
Appleton, May. 1824, Nathan Appleton Papers (Massachusetts Historical
Society). See also Niles' Weekly Register, Nov. 22, 1823, Aug. 24, 1824; Daniel
Webster to Nathan Appleton, Mar. 29, 1824, Wiltse, ed., Microfilm Edition of the
Papers of Daniel Webster, reel 4; Webster to Appleton, Jan. 12, 1824, Webster to
Edward Everett, Feb. 13, 1824, Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel Webster:
Correspondence, I, 347-348, 352; and Edwin P. Whipple, ed., The Great Speeches and
Orations of Daniel Webster
(Boston 1897), 101-110.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.1 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
290
JOURNAL OF HE EARLY REPUBLIC
Four years later, in 1828, Abbott Lawrence was in Washing-
ton to advise the new Massachusetts senator regarding pending
tariff legislation. After much frenzied politicking and after ex-
tensive Webster-inspired amendments from the floor, Lawrence
blessed the bill as "now good enough" and urged Webster to press
its passage. If adopted as amended, Lawrence wrote, it will "keep
the South and West in debt to New England the next hundred
years.' "8 Commercial interests as well as a manufacturing empire
were represented in that generalization. Lawrence, for example,
urged on the senator one final amendment: that enforcement of
the new tariff be delayed sixty days from passage. This alteration
would allow goods arriving from England on his bottoms to land
without paying the new, prohibitive duties. This was the last
amendment tacked onto the Tariff of 1828, also known as the
Tariff of Abominations.
Webster had come into his own as a powerful spokesman for
New England textile interests a year earlier, in 1827, when he
guided the woolens bill through Congress. That legislation
corrected a weakness, as perceived by the Associates, that had
caused them and Webster to oppose the Tariff of 1824. The Harris-
burg Convention of 1827 had cued Congress on the need for a
supplementary excise law protecting wool manufacturers.
Following up on the convention's impetus, Webster was dis-
patched to Washington before the congressional session of that
year "very much in the attitude of a party leader" to line up
support for woolens excise revision "before Congress met." There-
after he lobbied intensively, guiding the woolens bill on the floor
and leading a propaganda campaign in the National Intelligencer in
support of the measure.9 The hostile New York Evening Post had
attacked Webster mercilessly during February and March 1827, ac-
cusing him of rank inconsistency in his tariff positions in 1824 and
1827: "There he stands, boldly staring himself directly in the face."
This was but one of an increasing number of criticisms and charges
that Webster (then still in the House of Representatives) was a
8 Abbott Lawrence to Daniel Webster, May 7, 1828, Wiltse and Moser, eds.,
Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspondence, II, 342-343. See also Webster to Joseph
Story, Jan. 14, 1828 and Webster to James W. Paige, Feb. 17, May 12, 1828, ibid.,
II, 278-279, 297-298, 336-338.
9 Headnote, ibid., II, 133.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
291
captive of the Associates, charges often paired with those de-
scribing him as a captive as well of the Bank of the United States.
In fact, protection of the Boston Associates' interests became a
congressional specialty of Daniel Webster in the 1820s. He labored
for years to pass two high priority Boston-instigated measures: a
uniform national bankruptcy law and more enforceable national
patent legislation. The latter need was obvious, more SO for the As-
sociates than for other industrialists in the nation. The Boston
Manufacturing Company held lucrative patent rights to several
key cotton production machines. In 1817, the company's net
income from patent licenses was $34,000; five years later it was
$345,000, a tenfold increase.
These figures provide explanation enough for Webster's zeal in
promulgating patent legislation from 1823 onward. As a member
of the Committee on the Judiciary he introduced in that year a bill
that would have more than trebled damages recoverable for patent
infringement. He also sought legislation granting concurrent juris-
diction between federal and state courts in cases involving litiga-
tion over rights of patentees. Obviously, the Associates exercised
enormous leverage over Massachusetts state courts. Increasingly in
the 1820s, however, they were involved in textile manufacturing in
more than one state, and thus needed badly to erase discrepancies
between state and federal regulations governing industrial patents.
Associates pressed Webster for more than a decade to promulgate
legislation that would align federal with Massachusetts patent
laws. The Massachusetts lawmaker did not succeed initially, but
he prepared the way for the much more stringent federal patent
legislation that finally became law in 1836. 11
Webster was simultaneously engaged in attempting to promote
10 New York Evening Post, Feb. 12, 1827. For other allegations that Webster
was controlled by the Associates, acted hypocritically, or used his position as a
developing party leader for essentially private purposes, see the headnote and
Webster to William Coleman, Feb. 23, 1827, and Isaac Parker to Webster, Feb. 12,
1826, Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspondence, II, 84-85,
159-163. See also Boston Daily Advertiser, Feb. 18, 1824; New York Evening Post,
Feb. and Mar. 1827; and United States' Telegraph, May 12, 1828.
11 For Webster's leadership in patent legislation, see his congressional bill
amending existing patent laws, Dec. 9, 1823, Wiltse, ed., Microfilm Edition of the
Papers of Daniel Webster, reel 30; Boston Daily Advertiser, Jan. 13, 1824; Thomas
C. Cochran and William Miller, The Age of Enterprise: A Social History of Industrial
America (New York 1942), 14; Hannah Josephson, The Golden Threads: New Eng-
land's Mill Girls and Magnates (New York 1949), 31ff.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
292
JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC
a uniform national system of bankruptcy, responding to the Asso-
ciates' urgings to "press it hard." Congress was not ready to ac-
quiesce in this legislation either. The issue was another of those
which found Boston's merchants and manufacturers aligned. The
Associates were intent on solidifying the concept of limited
liability for corporate stockholders. They were already protected
by Massachusetts statutes, but were increasingly apprehensive
about their constitutionality. Daniel Webster himself, wearing his
mantle as the Associates' attorney, questioned "whether the State
Bankrupt Laws are valid." He counseled the Associates that
sooner or later "there will be an opinion
against the State
Laws," more especially as the Associates' textile manufactories
crossed state borders in the early 1820s. Federal legislation which
he introduced in Congress would magnify and clarify the concept
of limited liability afforded by bankruptcy once and for all, even as
the Bostonians' geographic range increased. Given the economic
debacle of 1819 and its ensuing fallout, the trials of which the As-
sociates had largely escaped, it is not hard to understand their
motivation in seeking the potential protective shield corporate
bankruptcy afforded. 12
Webster's close and lucrative association with the Bank of the
United States, and eventually Nicholas Biddle, needs no elabora-
tion here. His legal fees for representing the bank before the
Supreme Court and his stipend as a director of the main bank
branch at Philadelphia were well known sources of income for
Webster. The role of the Boston branch in the Associates' scheme
of things, however, and Webster's pivotal position in that situa-
tion, needs investigation, and can only be touched upon. Daniel
Webster, given both his place among the directors of the national
bank and his proximity to Biddle, was in a position to dominate
the Boston branch by the mid-1820s. Charles M. Wiltse's edition
12 The quotations are from Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel Webster:
Correspondence, II, 99. For additional information on Webster's efforts in aid of
bankruptcy legislation, see his "Report from the Judiciary Committee [Dec.
1823]," and "Mr. Webster to Establish Uniform System of Bankruptcy," May 26,
1824, Wiltse, ed., Microfilm Edition of the Papers of Daniel Webster, reels 4, 30;
Boston Daily Advertiser, Jan. 6, 1824; Niles' Weekly Register, June 5, 1824, Jan. 7,
1826; Thomas H. Perkins to Webster, Dec. 23, 1823, Webster to Joseph Story,
Apr. 10, 1824, Webster to Jeremiah Mason, Mar. 27, 1826, Wiltse and Moser,
eds., Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspondence, I, 343-344, 356, II, 98-99; George S.
Hillard, ed., Memoir and Correspondence of Jeremiah Mason (Cambridge 1873), 210,
301.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
293
of The Papers of Daniel Webster notes that "Webster could claim as
close personal or professional friends or clients seven of the twelve
directors of the Boston office," including his brother-in-law James
W. Paige, and Associates Nathan and Samuel Appleton and
Thomas H. Perkins. 13
What did this control mean? A contemporary 1833 view, for
example, at the time the deposits were removed from the Boston
branch by Andrew Jackson, claimed that "heretofore scarcely
anyone received discounts from the Branch in this city [Boston]
but the great capitalists
the Appletons, the Lawrences, etc."
To what degree that was really true remains to be examined, but
preliminary evidence clearly suggests that Webster's grip on the
Boston branch was certainly a factor in allowing the Associates to
receive "kissing privileges," contemporary slang for advantageous
credit access and terms. At the same time the Associates were
significant shareholders in the parent bank. They reaped fairly
hefty dividends and used their bank stock as wholly inadequate,
almost cosmetic collateral to borrow from subsidiary Associate en-
terprises like the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance
Company. 15
Massachusetts Hospital Life was not the only Boston in-
surance company in which the Associates had an interest. Two
other Associate-related underwriters, the Boston Marine In-
surance Company and the Massachusetts Fire and Marine In-
surance Company, figured prominently in one of the Associates'
most\ambitious and profitable links to Washington in the early
1820s. Webster was the key middle man at this high point of the
Associates' exploitation of government beneficence. A little
noticed codicil of the Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819, in which Spain
ceded East Florida to the United States, provided for United
States assumption of claims of American citizens against Spain to a
13 Headnote, Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspon-
dence, II, 374.
14 Boston Morning Post, Sept. 28, 1833, quoted in Arthur B. Darling,
Political Changes in Massachusetts, 1824-1848: A Study of Liberal Movements in
Politics (New Haven, Conn. 1925), 137.
15 For the Associates' involvement with the Bank of the United States, see
Israel Thorndike to Webster and Nathaniel Silsbee, Apr. 28, 1828, Webster to
Nicholas Biddle, Oct. 30, 1828, Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel Webster:
Correspondence, II, 336-338, 374-378; and Gerald T. White, A History of the Massa-
chusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company (Cambridge 1955), 50.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
294
JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC
maximum limit of five million dollars. The claims, some extending
back to 1795, involved Spanish depredations on American
merchant shipping. The Spanish Claims Commission was created
and funded for five years by act of Congress in 1820. The possi-
bilities for compensation open to merchants and former merchants
of Boston were not lost on Webster. He moved quickly to secure
the right not only to represent those Boston Associates who had
individual claims, but also to act as legal agent for the two Boston
insurance companies mentioned earlier. These Boston corpora-
tions had underwritten and long since made good many local
merchant losses. In this instance, the confluence of interests
between merchant and manufacturer, with regard to the largess to
be tapped from the commission, was total.
To understand the dimensions of the political, economic, and
financial stakes involved, probably more than one million of the
five million dollars paid by the United States went to Bostonians,
with Webster, once again a congressman after 1823, representing
all of them before the commission for a fee of five percent. Among
the Bostonians making individual claims through Webster in his
role as attorney were Nathan Appleton, William Prescott, Henry
Cabot, Thomas W. Ward, Israel Thorndike, and Thomas H.
Perkins. Several of these men and most other Associates were also
stockholders in either or both the Massachusetts Fire and Marine
and the Boston Marine Insurance Company, Where losses to
Spanish depredations were insured, settlements had been made
years before. In 1821 the two insurance companies stood to be re-
imbursed by Washington for payouts factored from the beginning
of their operations into the year-by-year cost of doing business.
How much money did the American government transmit to
Boston? It is impossible to set a maximum figure at this distance,
but we can deal with some minimums. Webster's agreement with
Massachusetts Fire and Marine in 1820 allowed him a five percent
commission on all monies recovered from the government, up to a
maximum of $20,000. In April 1823, Webster having already
earned close to the $20,000 limit, the parties removed the cap on
his commission. Thus, for Congressman Webster to have reached
his first limit, Massachusetts Fire and Marine alone had been
awarded $400,000 by 1823. There were to follow another two years
of distributions for this company, and a second Boston insurance
company was also reimbursed during the five year period. In addi-
tion, a host of individual Associate and non-Associate claimants
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
295
received payments, but a projection is not difficult to make. One
million dollars is probably a conservative figure.
The two insurance companies, it should be noted, had reserve
interest-bearing accounts which every few years would make
special distributions to shareholders. These accounts held reserve
capital at a fixed, permanent level. Income from other than stock
investments and profits from policy sales that swelled the reserve
fund in one of the companies beyond the agreed figure triggered
special distributions to shareholders. Capital gains were dis-
tributed in this way, for example, and SO were windfalls like the
government largess deriving from the Spanish claims reimburse-
ments. Thus, between 1821 and 1825, shareholders in both
companies received additional lump sum returns on investment
over and above normal distributions deriving from annual profits.
Webster was in Washington for part of the year while Congress
was sitting, and it was at these times between 1821 and 1824 that
he pressed his claims before the three man government commis-
sion, a group he knew well. It is not hard to understand why,
when in 1824 the Spanish Claims Commission was about to order
its last validations of claims, Thomas H. Perkins urged Webster to
remain in Washington SO as to "be in at the death of the
Commission. "16
16 Perkins to Webster, May 12, 1824, Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel
Webster: Correspondence, I, 360. For background and terms of the Adams-Onís
Treaty, see Philip C. Brooks, Diplomacy and the Borderlands: The Adams-Onís
Treaty of 1819 (Berkeley 1939), and Samuel Flagg Bemis, John Quincy Adams and
the Foundations of American Foreign Policy (New York 1949). On Webster's efforts to
secure the right to serve as attorney for an organized group of Boston claimants
(including both Associates and insurance companies), the sums involved, and
Webster's success in representing this group, see "Agreement with Peter Chardon
Brooks, et al., Spanish Treaty Claimants," [Aug.?] 1821, "Waiver in Agreement
with Massachusetts Fire and Marine Insurance Company," Apr. 24, 1823, and
Peter C. Brooks to Webster, Oct. 10, 1823, Wiltse, ed., Microfilm Edition of the
Papers of Daniel Webster; reels 3, 4; Webster to
, Feb. 24, 1819, Webster
to Alexander Bliss, Jan. 16, Feb. 19, 1822, and Thomas H. Perkins to Webster,
May 12, 1824, Wiltse and Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspondence, I,
274ff., 303-304, 306-307, 360.
For a financial analysis of money moving from the federal government to
Boston between 1821 and 1825, its correlation with the investment of venture
capital used in the establishment of Lowell and the cotton mills on the Merrimack
River generally, and the Boston Associates' connections with insurance com-
panies and as individual claimants, see in addition to items cited above Frances
W. Gregory, Nathan Appleton: Merchant and Entrepreneur, 1779-1861 (Charlottes-
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
296
JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC
It is always difficult, sometimes impossible, for historians at a
distance to prove clear cause and effect relationships. Some in-
ferential evidence, however, is available about the significance and
use of that excessive government windfall to which many
Associates fell heir The Boston Associates' parent company, the
Boston Manufacturing Company, was founded in 1813. It was not
until 1821, after the ripples caused by the Panic of 1819 had sub-
sided, that the Boston Associates undertook a major expansion of
their manufacturing capability. Between 1821 and 1828, new
cotton mills were founded in the Merrimack valley, with the
company town of Lowell at the heart of the complex. The new
corporations included the Locks and Canals Company (1821), the
Merrimack Manufacturing Company (1822), the Hamilton Manu-
facturing Company (1825), and the Lowell Manufacturing
Company (1828).
While this growth coincided with the general resurgence of
textile manufacturing in America in the 1820s, it also meshed
nicely with the flow of Spanish claims settlements that reached
Boston. Looked at another way, Spanish Claims Commission
largess, for that in fact is what it was, was one factor in securing -
or at least underwriting - the venture capital the Associates
plowed into industrial expansion in the Merrimack valley in the
1820s.
It is possible, using the data in Frances Gregory's biography of
Nathan Appleton, to make the case from that direction as well. It
was in 1821 that Daniel Webster was permitted to buy four shares
in the Merrimack Manufacturing Company. At about this time
(1821-1822), Gregory notes, "other Boston merchants joined in the
[manufacturing] gamble." Webster, she concludes, was extended a
"strategic invitation to join the speculation."17 The money risked
at this point and for the ensuing several years, using Gregory's
figures, was at least equal to the amount produced by federal remit-
tances from the Spanish Claims Commission. By late 1822, costs
of land purchases in the Merrimack River area, rights of way, legal
ville, Va. 1975), 175-177, 179-181, 197; Webster to Joseph Hopkinson, Apr. 13,
1821, Webster to Jeremiah Mason, Sept. 12, 1821, Hopkinson to Webster, Oct.
14, 1821, Webster to Hopkinson, Oct. 28, 1821, Webster to Mason, Jan. 10, 1822,
Webster to Hopkinson, Feb. 1, 1822, Webster to Bliss, Feb. 19, 1822, Wiltse and
Moser, eds., Papers of Daniel Webster: Correspondence, I, 283, 291-295, 301,
303-307.
17 Gregory, Appleton, 180.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
297
expenses, and other capital costs apart, the Associates had bought
up 352 of 600 outstanding shares of the nearly bankrupt Locks and
Canals Company. Control of that entity was essential to gain its
monopoly rights to the power generated by the Merrimack River.
Reckoning this last expense in combination with the other Merri-
mack-centered costs mentioned earlier, investments per Associate,
if Appleton is representative, amounted to between $15,000 and
$40,000 between 1821 and 1828. The investment amounts
depended on the proportions of capital stock held by individual
Associates.
These figures are roughly analogous to the claims commission
reimbursements, either directly or through the two insurance com-
panies, to many of the Associates. This example of Daniel
Webster's involvement with the federal establishment on behalf of
the Associates, much more than even his familiar entanglement
with the tariff issue between 1816 and 1828, demonstrates his real
significance in forging a Hamiltonian partnership between govern-
ment and industry in the early national era. The congressman, by
means of his influence, contacts, and energy, helped to divert
public money in large sums to Associate-related coffers at a critical
time in the expansion of the Bostonians' industrial empire. We are
not claiming here that the infusion of government money paid
directly for the Boston Associates' industrial expansion into the
Merrimack valley, or even that it motivated that expansion. We
are suggesting, however, that United States money arrived at the
time that venture capital was being invested, and that it must have
been reassuring to replace capital ventured with capital found.
Virtually the same story was repeated a decade later. In 1831,
as a result of the Franco-American treaty of that year, a French
Claims Commission was established along the same lines as its
Spanish predecessor. Once again Associates, both as individual
claimants and stockholders of insurance companies, were on the
receiving end of approved government claims. And once again
Senator Daniel Webster was the attorney of record for both the
companies and many individual claimants. That he had learned
something from the first experience is evident. This time around
he required that claimants he represented take out life insurance
policies with Massachusetts Hospital Life, a new company funded
by Associate investors. These policies were payable to Webster on
the death of a claimant, should death precede government settle-
ment. The Boston attorney had apparently lost some income in
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
298
JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC
the 1820s from troubled estates of deceased claimants. After a
hiatus from 1828 to 1831, the Associates built five more mills in
the years during which French Claims Commission money was
distributed. Creation of the French Claims Commission,
incidently, roughly coincided with Jackson's assault on the Bank
of the United States as a government repository dedicated to
serving the "privileged" in American society. 18
It is appropriate, finally, to note that the funding of Spanish
and French "claims" marked unprecedented American under-
writings of private commercial losses, losses traditionally treated as
hazards of free enterprise in a world of competitive nations. In
large measure the bulk of the money paid out to Bostonians went
to insurance companies in such a way that Washington ultimately
underwrote the losses of the underwriters, thus providing capital
for the private sector via insurance company stockholders at the
top of American society. It is at least a probability that the money
surfaced as venture capital to fuel the area's industrial expansion.
This is not a comment on intent, for no evidence of government
intent exists. It is a statement of result only. Daniel Webster's role
as simultaneously a representative of government and an agent of
the Associates was crucial in effecting this passage of funds, and
fully justified the Associates' expectations of his value to them.
On a sustained and organized basis the Associates pioneered
in America as organizers of labor in the emerging factory system.
They generated and exploited the new technology that made these
factories viable; they marshaled the venture capital that made
their industrial complex a reality. Significantly, the Bostonians
were forerunners as well in drawing a sometimes unaware federal
establishment into their partnership. In sum, these Bostonians,
ostensibly vocal proponents of the new laissez faire doctrine of
early national America, nevertheless construed that doctrine in
very selective and advantageous ways.
They rejected, for example, any hint of govenment's right to
tax corporate profits, government's right to regulate factory condi-
tions, and the concept of federal court protection of the right of
18
For the Associates' interest in the possibilities opened by the French
Claims Commission, see Peter C. Brooks to Edward Everett, Feb. 1, 1830, Edward
Everett Papers (Massachusetts Historical Society). For Webster's insurance protec-
tion of French Commission claimants, see White, Massachusetts Hospital Life
Insurance Company, 202. On the expansion of the Boston Associates in the early
1830s, see Gregory, Appleton, 197.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon, 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
DANIEL WEBSTER
299
workers to organize. At the same time, for good and sufficient
Adam Smith-oriented reasons as they saw them, they applied suc-
cessfully to government for protection, literally and figuratively,
over a whole range of operations, not excluding, finally, direct
cash reimbursements from Washington, money that appears to
have been converted into the venture capital used to expand an in-
dustrial empire.
This content downloaded from 137.49.125.110 on Mon. 20 Apr 2020 14:26:15 UTC
H.U.P., 1955.
Gerold T.Whete A History of the
12
MASSACHUSETTS HOSPITAL LIFE INSURANCE
FOUNDING OF THE COMPANY
Boston Common Council. Prescott served the Hospital in its pur-
Co.
13
chase of land for construction of its first building and had been both
without exception these men were supporters of the Hospital either
an overseer and member of the Corporation of Harvard College.
through substantial contributions or active participation in the
management of its affairs.
He was also the father of the historian, William Hickling Prescott.
Daniel Webster was to say to Prescott at his death that "at the mo-
On February 6 Prescott, Lowell, and Francis were appointed to
distribute the remaining 2,400 shares. Since SO much of the stock had
ment of his retirement from the bar of Massachusetts [1828], he
stood at its head for legal learning and attainment." 18 It is indica-
already been sold to SO few holders, in only one instance were more
than 50 shares sold to an individual. Nathaniel Bowditch was al-
tive of the continuity of Boston families in positions of prominence,
and also in the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company,
lowed 65. These 2,400 shares were allotted among 56 shareholders
that the present chairman of its Board of Directors, Samuel H.
Two of the new stockholders, John C. Warren, 50 shares, and James
Wolcott, is a great-grandson of William Prescott.
Jackson, 30 shares, were the doctors who had led the campaign for
1818
Two other individuals also important in getting the company
the establishment of the Massachusetts General Hospital. 23 Nearly
under way were John Lowell, lawyer and celebrated Federalist pam-
all were residents of the Boston community, but a few were from the
phleteer, and Josiah Quincy. Both men were active in a wide variety
north shore of Massachusetts Bay Salem especially, but also Bev-
erly, Marblehead, and Newburyport.
of civic and philanthropic causes, including the Massachusetts Gen-
eral Hospital. Lowell, in fact, had been chairman of the Committee
Concurrent with the stock subscription campaign, another com-
of Trustees which in 1814 had gained from the legislature the right
mittee was at work drawing up regulations governing the transfer
of Massachusetts Hospital Life stock after its issue. The committee
to grant annuities. Both men, and especially Lowell, had been among
the most energetic of a group of philanthropically minded gentle-
sought to eliminate the possibility that some of the stock might
men in establishing the Provident Institution for Savings. 19 The
later be acquired by individuals interested in speculation, The
founders were particularly anxious that the confidence of the com-
experience gained in this latter activity seems to have influenced
certain of the patterns of organization and operation of the new
munity, SO necessary to a fiduciary institution, never be jeopardized.
insurance company.
The committee's report was adopted on February 3 Holders who
desired to sell their shares were obliged to offer them to the directors
These four men were the prime movers in meeting the problems
at the original cost to the holder plus accrued dividends. If on resale
which had to be solved in launching the company: At the meeting of
January 28 Ebenezer Francis and Josiah Quincy were appointed to
by the directors, the selling price was more than 6 per cent above
draw up a list of desirable persons for stockholders. 20 The list they
that paid the former holder, he was to be paid the excess above 6
presented shortly thereafter included 20 prospects for 2,400 shares.21
per cent. If the directors failed to buy the shares within 30 days, the
In addition, the trustees of the Hospital had authorized a subscrip-
holder was free to sell elsewhere. Similar provisions governed the
tion by the Hospital of 500 shares. 22 Of the prospects, four individ-
transfer of stock following the death of a stockholder. The only dif-
uals - Ebenezer Francis, William Phillips (former lieutenant gov-
Gardiner Greene, president of the branch of the Bank of the United States in
ernor of Massachusetts, president of the Massachusetts Bank and of
Boston; John Phillips, mayor of Boston; and Joseph Head, T. H. Perkins, Joseph
an astonishing number of civic and philanthropic enterprises, in-
Coolidge, David Scars, William Pratt, John Parker, Israel Thorndike, Thomas M.
Jones, Theodore Lyman, James Perkins, and William Gray, all merchants or of
cluding the Massachusetts General Hospital), Samuel Parkman,
mercantile families. Only William Gray refused to participate.
merchant, and Peter C. Brooks - were considered likely candidates
Many rivals in prominence to the larger stockholders were among this group:
T.W.
for 200 shares each, but the latter two accepted only half of this
C.K. Thomas Wren Ward, George Cabot, Amos Lawrence, William Sturgis, John
number. There were 16 candidates for 100 shares each.* Almost
Bryant, Thomas Motley, Thomas Wigglesworth, Harrison Gray Otis, Nathan
about
Appleton, Charles Jackson, Joseph May, Daniel Parker, Henry Codman, Patrick
These men were: William Prescott, Josiah Quincy, and John Lowell, lawyers;
Timey Jackson, William Appleton, Samuel P. Gardner, George Ticknor, John C.
Gray, Benjamin Guild, and Nathaniel Silsbee,
CLASS AND CULTURE IN
BOSTON:
THE ATHENAEUM, 1807-1860
RONALD STORY
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
RECENT STUDIES HAVE DEMONSTRATED THAT THE POST-REVOLUTIONARY
Boston elite handily survived in the face of the democratic capitalist forces
of ante-bellum America. In Boston, as in other cities, the elite actually in-
creased its control over the economic system and its share of total com-
munity wealth. Moreover, this elite seems to have achieved a unique cohe-
siveness and a singular cultural complexion, so much so that by the 1860s it
had acquired the distinctive title of "Brahmin Boston." It may in fact be
argued that the ante-bellum era witnessed the birth, rather than the death,
of a genuine Boston upper class.
Institution-building, particularly in the economic sphere, was integral to
the process of class evolution. By 1850 the Boston elite controlled a network
of commercial, financial and manufacturing enterprises which extended
their sway throughout New England and helped them to maintain their
prominence and identity in the decades to come.2 The evolution of a viable
social class, however, entails more than economic activity. It involves such
matters as the modification of individualistic or acquisitive behavior in the
interests of a larger group; the integration of potentially rival families, eco-
nomic interests and politico-religious groupings; the harmonization of
business and nonbusiness, particularly cultural, elements; the acculturation
'An upper class may be said to differ from an elite in the greater proportion of community
wealth it controls; in the greater cohesion of its occupational, familial and generational
components; and in its greater consciousness of its interests vis-à-vis antagonistic social do-
ments. This is the meaning of the terms as employed here, with clite being used in general for
the cra before the 1850s and upper class thereafter.
See, e.g., Robert K. Lamb, "The Entrepreneur and the Community," in William Miller,
ed., Men in Business (New York: Harper, 1962). pp. 94-98, 106-13, 119, 350; Vera Shlakman,
Economic History of a Factory Town: A Study of Chicopee. Massachusetts (Smith College
Studies in History, Vol. 20, nos. 1-4, Oct. 1934-July 1935). 39-42, 243-47.
AmericanQuarterly 27 (1975):178-199.
Note: T.W.Ward; s Treasurer of Athenaeum 1828-1836,
Nathan appleton (1816-1827).Josiah V.P.
succeeding quincy succeeded T.W.W. F.C. gray is
(1826-1832), President(883-1836).
Viewer Controls
Toggle Page Navigator
P
Toggle Hotspots
H
Toggle Readerview
V
Toggle Search Bar
S
Toggle Viewer Info
I
Toggle Metadata
M
Zoom-In
+
Zoom-Out
-
Re-Center Document
Previous Page
←
Next Page
→
Ward Thomas Wren (1786-1858) Ward Linda Gray (1788-1858) Pt 1 (1786-1819)
Details
1786 - 1858