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

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Gary (Tertus) William 1750-1825 Billy
THE WILLIAM GRAYS IN SALEM IN 1797.
BY EDWARD GRAY.
WILLIAM GRAY (Benjamin, Benjamin, Joseph, Robert of
Salem), was the son of Benjamin and Sarah (Cash); he
born at Salem, Oct. 26, 1727, and was a painter. His
marriage intention is recorded at Salem, Nov. 18, 1749,
to Sarah Mattoon of Newmarket, N. H. He lived in
Ward 2 in 1797 ; and died at Salem, Dec. 24, 1805, aged
seventy-eight years.2 In his will, dated May 8, 1801, and
proved Jan. 14, 1806, he mentions his two sons William
Jr.
Gray and John Gray, and three grandchildren, the chil-
dren of his son Richard Mattoon Gray, deceased ; sons
William and John, executors, who call themselves Wil-
liam Gray, jr., gentleman, and John Gray, schoolmaster,
on their bond.
WILLIAM GRAY, JR. (Abraham, William of Lynn), was
son of Abraham and Lydia (Calley) ; he was born at Lynn,
June 27, 1750, and moved to Salem, with his parents, in
1761. He was the Salem merchant familiarly known as
"Billy" Gray, and was known as William Gray, tertius,
until 1786,a when he became William Gray, jr. after
'Essex Institute Historical Collections, IV: 263; Essex County
Deeds, 115: 188.
Salem Gazette, Dec. 27, 1805.
'Essex County Deeds, 145: 219.
'William Gray, jr. and Margaret Cook, both of Salem, were mar-
ried March 16, 1760. (Rev. Dudley Leavitt's marriages in Vital
Records manuscripts, Essex Institute.) He may have been the son of
Robert, jr. and Ruth, baptized at Salem, Oct. 16, 1737, and probably
died in 1786 (cf. William Gray, jr. in the text), until which time he
was probably William Gray, jr. William Gray of Middleton, yeo-
man, who married Sarah Smith of Salem, and Samuel Gray, jr. of
Salem, cordwainer (1765-1850), who married Ruth Ropes, were
brothers (Wheatland papers, Essex Institute), and were probably
his sons, as the latter had a daughter named Margaret Cook Gray.
Samuel's son, Samuel, was killed by lightning, July 5, 1804, while
fishing in Salem bay. (Samuel Gray [sr.] of Salem, merchant (1760-
1816), was the son of Abraham and Lydia (Calley), and brother of
William Gray, jr., in the text. He married, first, Anna Orne, and
second, Mary Brooks.)
(145)
thete Historical Collection. 56
(April 1920).
Google
146
THE WILLIAM GRAYS IN SALEM IN 1797
the death of the above William Gray, in 1805, he be-
came William Gray. He married at Salem, March 28
or 29, 1782, Elizabeth Chipman, and lived in Ward 2 in
1797. He moved to Boston in 1809 was Lieutenant-
Governor of Massachusetts in 1810 and 1811 ; and died
at Boston, Nov. 3, 1825. After examining the Essex
County wills and deeds, the writer feels sure that this
Lynn Gray family was not connected with the Salem Gray
family.
WILLIAM GRAY 3RD (William, Benjamin, Benjamin,
Joseph, Robert of Salem), was the son of William and
Sarah (Mattoon); he was born at Salem, July 5, 1750, and
was a painter.1 He was known as William Gray, 4th, until
1786 (cf. the record of his first marriage also William
Gray, jr., above named), when he became William Grny,
3rd. After the death of his father, William Gray, in
1805, he became William Gray, jr. He was of Ports-
mouth, N. H., in 1800,2 and of Salem again in 1807.8 He
married first, at Salem, Nov. 5, 1772, Susannah Shepard,
who died April 25, 1796; and second, at Salem, Oct. 2,
1796, widow Hannah (Ashby) Young, and lived in Ward
1 in 1797. He died at Salem Nov. 16, 1819, aged sixty-
nine years.
WILLIAM GRAY, 4TH, married at Salem, Oct. 17, 1790,
Hannah Bushnell, and lived in Ward 2 in 1797. The
writer cannot find anything in the Essex County wills or
deeds which shows the identity of this William Gray.
WILLIAMGRaY,5TH(William,William, Benjamin, Ben-
jamin, Joseph, Robert of Salem), was the son of William,
3rd, and Susannah (Shepard); he was born at Salem, July
30, 1773, and changed his name by an act of Legislature,
William Gray (Jeremiah, William of Lynn), was the son of Jere-
miah and Theodate (Hood); he was born about 1745, and died in
1781. He married at Lynn, Jan. 23, 1771, Alice Breed; was a cord-
wainer, and lived in Boston and Salem. On April 10, 1781, William
Gray of Salem, cordwainer, sells to brother, Winthrop Gray of Bos-
ton, innholder, land bequeathed by father, Jeremiah Gray of Lynn.
Essex County Deeds, 138: 198.)
'Essex County Deeds, 148: 226.
'Essex County Deeds, 167: 81.
'Essex County Deeds, 181: 15.
Google
THE WILLIAM GRAYS IN SALEM IN 1797
147
in 1798, to William Shepard Gray.1 He lived in Ward 2,
Salem, in 1797, and married at Newburyport, Nov. 8,
1798, Ann Knight Morland. Later in life he was cashier
of the Essex Bank, Salem, and died at Cambridge, May
27, 1824.2
'Laws and Resolves of Massachusetts, Feb. 5, 1796, chap. 37.
"William Gay, the fifth, of Salem, in the county of Essex, son of
William Gray, the third, of said Salem, be empowered to take tho
name of William Shepard Gray."
Captain William Gray, of Salem, died Nov. 18, 1785, aged forty-
one years. (Salem Gazette, Nov. 22, 1785.)
Lydia Gray, widow of Captain William Gray, died;Sept. -, 1795.
Wheatland papers, Essex Institute.)
William Gray married at Salem, June 19, 1771, Lydia Croel.
Robert Gray and Benjamin Gray, both of Salem, mariners, chil-
dren of William Gray, late of Salem, mariner, sell land and dwell-
ing house of said William Gray, our late father, &c., to Caleb Cook
for $283.33, on April 19, 1805. This lot was on St. Peter St. (Essex
County Deeds, 175: 250.)
Captain William Gray, jr. of Salem, mariner, died intestate, and
John Watson was appointed administrator of his estate on Jan. 15,
1805. His mansion house and land on St. Peter St. were sold at
public auction for $1,700.
Google
7/15/2019
Full text of "William Gray, of Salem, merchant : a biographical sketch"
COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY EDWARD GRAY
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Published July 1Q14
FIVE HUNDRED COPIES PRINTED AT THE RIVERSIDE
PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A. NO.
.>>.
FOREWORD
WHEN I undertook to write a life of William
Gray, I knew that all his papers with the ex-
ception of one letter-book, from which many
of my ideas of his commercial transactions are taken, were
destroyed in the Boston fire of 1872, and that I should
have to rely on contemporary notices in the newspapers
and in diaries of individuals for facts ; but I little realized
what else was in store for me. In 1782 there were three
William Grays in Salem. The one here discussed was
known as William Gray, Tertius, and not to be confounded
with William Gray, the sea captain, who made a brilliant
record as captain of privateers during the Revolution. In
1798, at which date our William Gray was known as
William Gray, Jr., , the confusion is even worse. There
were then at least five William Grays in Salem. I find in
the Laws and Resolves of Massachusetts, February 5, 1798,
chapter 37, that "William Gray the fifth of Salem in the
county of Essex, son of William Gray the third of said
Salem, be empowered to take the name of William Shep-
ardGray"; also in 1802, June 23, chapter 14, "that William
Gray, a minor, son of William Gray Junior of Salem be
7/15/2019
Full text of "William Gray, of Salem, merchant : a biographical sketch"
allowed to take the name of William Rufus Gray." In
writing this sketch, I have tried to err always on the safe
side, and not credit my subject with anything which re-
fers to a William Gray about whose identity I am at all
doubtful.
The portrait of Mr. Gray reproduced here was painted
by
vi Foreword
by Gilbert Stuart in 1807, and his signature is taken from
a letter to Mr. John Quincy Adams dated August 4,
1 809, in the Adams Papers. My thanks are due to all who
have so kindly assisted me, and particularly to Mr. George
Francis Dow, of the Essex Institute, Mr. Worthington
C. Ford, of the Massachusetts Historical Society, and Mr.
John Chipman Gray.
E. G.
Groton, Massachusetts, 19 13.
ILLUSTRATIONS
William Gray Frontispiece
From a portrait by Gilbert Stuart, 1807. In possession of Miss Isa E.
Gray.
Mrs. William Gray (Elizabeth Chipman)
8
7/15/2019
Full text of "William Gray, of Salem, merchant : a biographical sketch"
From a portrait by Gilbert Stuart, i 807. In possession of John Chipman
Gray, Esq.
A Letter of William Gray
24
From the original in possession of the Peabody Academy of Science.
William Gray's House, Salem
30
Drawn by Ralph W. Gray, Esq., from a lithograph of it (Lafayette Coffee
House), and a photograph taken at a later date (Essex House). .
William Gray Homestead, Cambridge
48
The property of John Chipman Gray, Esq.
William Gray
80
From a bust by Dexter. In possession of the Peabody Academy of Science.
Ship Fanny, William Gray, owner; Captain Kinsman,
MASTER
q8
From the copy of the painting by M. Corne, 1801. In possession of the
Peabody Academy of Science.
Ship Ulysses, William Gray, owner; William Mug-
ford, MASTER IOO
From a water-color - by Anton Roux, painted at Marseilles, 1804, showing
the temporary rudder, by means of which the ship safely reached that port,
about to be put in place. In possession of the Peabody Academy of
Science.
viii Illustrations
7/15/2019
Full text of "William Gray, of Salem, merchant : a biographical sketch"
Letter of marque, Brig Grand Turk of 14 guns,
William Gray, owner; William Austin, com-
mander, saluting Marseilles
106
From a water-color by Anton Roux, painted at Marseilles, 1815. In
possession of the Peabody Academy of Science.
WILLIAM GRAY OF SALEM
MERCHANT
WILLIAM GRAY
of Salem, Merchant
CHAPTER I
1750- i 800
WILLIAM GRAY, or, as he was often called,
"Billy" Gray, was the oldest son of Abraham
Gray, of Lynn, Massachusetts, and Lydia Calley,
daughter of Francis Calley, of Marblehead. He was born
in Lynn on June 27, 1750, old style, equal to July 8, new
style, 1 in a gambrel-roofed wooden house which stood
until quite recently on Marion Street, near the Boston
Road. William Gray, his grandfather, for whom he was
named, I find mentioned in the Essex County deeds as
husbandman and cordwainer, and he is said to have ini-
tiated the manufacture of shoes by operatives in Lynn. 2
Our William's father, Abraham Gray, seems to have fol-
lowed along the same lines, being one of the first shoe
manufacturers in Lynn who employed journeymen and
apprentices. 3 When William was still a small boy,
1 I have the above dates in Mr. Gray's handwriting. - Author.
2 Lynn Weekly Reporter, July 2, 1864.
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Full text of "William Gray, of Salem, merchant : a biographical sketch"
3 Alonzo Lewis, History of Lynn (second edition), p. 243.
Abraham
William Gray
Abraham Gray moved to Salem ; he took this step some-
time between 1760 and 1763, as the Lynn records show
that his son, Samuel, was baptized in Lynn, August 10,
1 760, and the records of the First Church in Salem that
"Francis Cawley [Calley], infant son of Mr. Abraham
Gray," was baptized December 29, 1762. 1 After taking
up his residence in Salem, Abraham Gray continued for
many years to be Deacon of the First Church - until
his death in 1791. He was buried in the Charter Street
Burying-Ground, his tomb standing among those near
the entrance.
of William Gray's youth little is known, except that
he was apprenticed at an early age to Samuel Gardner,
Esq., of Salem, and later entered the counting-house of
Richard Derby, Esq. of the same port. He seems to have
stepped from the counting-house to mercantile life, as I
can find no record whatever of his going to sea, and he be-
gan business for himself when he was about twenty-eight
years old.
At this period, there were three William Grays in
V
Salem: Captain William Gray, who made a brilliant
record as master of letters of marque during the Revo-
Z
lution; William Gray, Jr. (of another family) and Wil-
3
liam Gray, Tertius, our William, who, though he was the
son of Abraham Gray, and only a distant relative, if any,
of the other two, seems to have been called "Tertius"
because he was the third in point of seniority. Any one
7/15/2019
Full text of "William Gray, of Salem, merchant : a biographical sketch"
1 Essex Institute Historical Collections, vol. vm, p. 212. In the
Essex County Deeds, 107 : 273, Abraham Gray is called " of Lynn " on
February 21, 1761, and "of Salem," February 26, 1762.
who
of Salem, Merchant
who wishes to compare the signatures of " Wm. Gray Ten,"
as bonder of letters of marque, 1 or as signed to the pe-
titions to the Governor of Massachusetts for the appoint- -
ment of masters to the said letters of marque, 2 with the
later signatures of our William Gray, can assure himself
of the fact that our William Gray was William Gray,
Tertius. He is also called "Tertius" in his marriage
notice in the Salem "Gazette," which I have printed in
full a few pages later on His grandson, William Gray, of
Boston, writes of him as follows: "He was rather below
the medium height, and his manners were singularly
simple and genial, his only peculiarity of dress being the
plaited queue much worn in his day." His portrait,
painted by Gilbert Stuart in 1807, when Mr. Gray was
fifty-seven years old, shows a pleasant-looking man, not
at all handsome, with sandy hair parted in the middle
and worn in a queue, a broad forehead and high cheek-
bones, deep-blue eyes, and a ruddy complexion. The gen-
eral effect of the face is determination of purpose and a
certain kindly sense of humor.
In the troublous times prior to the Revolution, William
Gray joined the militia in Salem. When hostilities broke
out, his company, under Colonel Timothy Pickering, made
a forced march to Lexington, arriving, however, only in
time to exchange a few shots with the retreating British. 3
After the battle, the Continental Congress deemed it wise
1 Papers of the Continental Congress, Library of Congress, no. 196, vol.
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Full text of "William Gray, of Salem, merchant : a biographical sketch"
3> PP- 7 X > 74 5 vol. 7, pp. 40, 53; vol. 8, p. 31 ; vol. 15, pp. 39,81,9
8.
2 Massachusetts Archives, vol. 172, pp. 63, 220, 229, 263, 270.
3 Lynn Weekly Reporter, July 2, 1864 ; also a letter written by Colonel
Samuel Swett, June 11, 1864.
to
William Gray
to send word of the engagement as well as of the general
state of affairs in this country to England, so that another
side of the question might be presented to the British pub-
lic than that shown in the official report sent from Boston.
As it was of utmost importance that their report should
reach England before the official report, the Quero, a
fast-sailing ship, belonging to Richard Derby, Esq., of
Salem, was selected to carry the news. In the bill rendered
to the Province of Massachusetts Bay, and paid August I,
1775,1 find that William Gray contributed ^ 10 sterling
toward the outfit of the vessel. 1 This ^"io from William
Gray and the pay of John Derby, as captain of the ex-
pedition, who, in the bill rendered, modestly estimated the
value of his time and services at " o," were the only con-
tributions made by individual citizens toward the expenses
of the voyage.
The following April (1776) the 3d Company of the
First Regiment of Essex Militia elected as officers : Rich-
ard Ward, captain; Miles Greenwood, 1st lieutenant;
William Gray, 3d, 2d lieutenant, 2 and I find in " Massa-
1 I have compared very carefully the signatures of William Gray, Ter-
tius, with the handwriting of the bill rendered for the Quero in 1775
(Massachusetts Archives, vol. 206, p. 94), and have come to the con-
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [gray@eemail.stanford.edu]
Sent:
Sunday, July 17, 2005 12:20 AM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Cc:
Robert Gray
Subject:
Re: Amy Heard & Dorr's
I slipped up, I am out of practice reading geneologies.
Mary was the granddaughter, not the daughter, of Samuel. Her mother
Lydia was the daughter of Samuel.
Samuel also had a daughter named Mary, but that is the wrong Mary.
Samuel (and Billy) also had a sister Mary.
Samuel also had a sister Lydia. They liked to recycle names.
From William Gray of Lynn, Massachusetts, and some of his descendants by Edward Gray
(Essex Institute, 1916) :
Samuel Gray was a brother of William (Old Billy) Gray of Salem. He
was baptized in Salem and moved to Medford in 1811 (Diary of William
Bently) His first wive was Anna Orne, who died in Salem 1797. One of
his children by his first wife was
Lydia, bapt. Aug. 4 1788. Lydia married
Thomas Wren Ward, son of William and Martha Anne (Proctor) Ward, in
1810.
(Information in the Ward and Pickering genologies.)
One of their children was
Mary Gray Ward, baptized June 24, 1821, married June 4, 1850, Charles
Hazen Dorr, son of Samuel and Susan (Brown) of Boston. Two children,
etc.
The had an earlier daughter of the same name who died as child.
So your information from the Ward geneologies is consistent. My
error, sorry.
Bob
1
Gray
Gray
son Edward in 1680 removed to Tiverton in
infancy. In the summer of 1806, while on a voy-
igram-
Rhode Island where Robert Gray was born. As
age to Charleston, S. C., Gray died of yellow
calling
a young man he took an active part in the naval
fever. It is believed that he was buried at sea.
During
service of the Revolutionary War and at its close
[House Report 456, 29 Cong., I Sess. House Report
aff on
was recognized as a competent navigator. A lit-
502, 30 Cong., I Sess. Senate Doc. 335, 32 Cong., I
J. B.
Sess. New England Mag., June 1892 F. W. Howay,
tle later six energetic citizens of Boston and vi-
"Captains Gray and Kendrick The Barrell Letters,"
writer;
cinity resolved to link the China trade with the
Wash. Hist. Quart., Oct. 1921 "John Boit's Log of the
Blade
Columbia" and "Remnant of Official Log of the Co-
nascent fur-trade of the Northwest coast of
lumbia," Quart. of the Ore. Hist. Soc., Dec. 1921;
; Wil-
America. In pursuance of this plan the ship Co-
"Letters Relating to the Second Voyage of the Colum-
pisco-
lumbia under Captain John Kendrick [q.v.], who
bia," Ibid., June 1923; S. E. Morison, The Maritime
umor-
Hist. of Mass., 1783-1860 (1921) M. D. Raymond,
also commanded the expedition, and the sloop
Gray Geneal. (1887). Manuscript sources include Robt.
ater a
Lady Washington under Robert Gray sailed
Haswell's logs of the first and second voyages of the
d art-
Columbia, in the Bancroft Library, Berkeley, Cal., and
from Boston in September 1787. Throughout the
John Hoskins's log of the second voyage of the Co-
lopted
voyage Gray was the driving force. By his en-
lumbia in the library of the Mass. Hist. Soc.]
ile on
F. W.H.
ergy, determination, and daring, the little nine-
ty-ton sloop gathered the cargo of sea-otter skins
GRAY, WILLIAM (June 27, 1750, .s.-Nov.
veland
with which the Columbia, to whose command he
3, 1825), merchant, lieutenant-governor of
sition
had been transferred, began her return voyage,
Massachusetts, father of Francis Calley Gray
efusal
July 30, 1789, from the Northwest coast by way
[q.v.], was born in Lynn, Mass., the oldest son of
1 1858
of China. On Aug. IO, 1790, with a salute of
Abraham and Lydia (Calley) Gray. When he
Demo-
thirteen guns, the ship dropped anchor in Boston
was a small boy, his father, a shoemaker in hum-
arles-
Harbor, having sailed almost forty-two thousand
ble circumstances, moved to Salem, where the
c par-
miles and carried the American flag for the first
lad was apprenticed to Samuel Gardner. Later
en A.
time around the world. She had shown to Bos-
he entered the counting-house of Richard Derby
presi-
ton a new source of wealth, even though her voy-
and at the age of twenty-eight started business
f the
age had not been remunerative.
for himself. At this period he signed his name
work
After being refitted, the Columbia left Boston
"William Gray, Tertius," to distinguish himself
rring
in September 1790 and arrived at Vancouver
from several other William Grays in Salem. In
litics,
Island in June 1791. Gray was in command and
1775, as a member of the Salem militia, he made
Civil
was also a part owner in the venture. After the
a forced march with his company to Lexington,
Doug-
season's trade to the northward he wintered in
arriving too late for the battle. On June 6 of the
He
Clayoquot Sound, where he built the Adventure,
following year he was commissioned second lieu-
f the
the second vessel launched on the Northwest
tenant, but there is no record that he had any
f the
coast. The following spring, while seeking trade
further Revolutionary service. His business
rican
to the southward, he made his discoveries of
ventures proved to be highly profitable, and he
ntro-
Gray's Harbor and the Columbia River. Prior
was the owner of a number of privateers during
tele-
to that time the so-called "River of the West" or
the Revolution. He was one of the first New
e in-
"River Oregan" of Jonathan Carver had been
England merchants to enter the trade with Rus-
o in
merely a name upon the maps. Spanish and Eng-
sia, India, and China. Timothy Pickering, writ-
nal-
lish navigators-Heceta, Meares, and Vancou-
ing on Nov. 29, 1799, said of him, "William Gray
1 his
ver-had/glanced at its "sortie" and passed on;
of Salem is a man of unspotted character and for
rine
but on May II, 1792, Gray sailed his vessel
mercantile talents and extent of business, the
ugh-
through the line of foaming water and seething
first merchant in the United States." From 1801
breakers that guarded the long-sought river. The
to 1807, when Salem's prosperity was at its
the
season's trading completed, he sailed for China,
height, he employed annually about 300 seamen,
ex-
homeward bound; and on July 20, 1793, after
and before 1815 he had owned at least II3 ves-
862,
Ohio
another world-encircling voyage, the Columbia
sels. When he moved to Boston in 1809, he was
The
anchored off Long Wharf, Boston, to a salute of
the owner of fifteen ships, seven barks, thirteen
II,
. Y.
eleven guns. Little did he realize that his dis-
brigs, and one schooner, and his estate was esti-
M.
covery would give to his country the foundation
mated at $3,000,000.
of a claim to Old Oregon and would make his
Like most of the able and well-to-do people of
avi-
ship, Columbia, as well known as the Constitu-
New England at that period, Gray had originally
ded
tion. On Feb. 3, 1794, Gray was married to Mar-
been a Federalist. For some years he was a
ssel
tha Atkins of Boston, and settled down to a
selectman and in 1788 he was a delegate to the
ably
quieter life as the master of coasting vessels op-
state convention held to consider the Federal
tled
erating out of that port. They had five children,
Constitution and voted for ratification. In 1792
e of
four daughters and one son; but the son died in
he was an unsuccessful candidate for state sena-
lose
523
Graydon
Graydon
tor, and in 1804, when the Jeffersonians were
chant and lawyer, and a figure in the coffee-
who
gaining strength, he was defeated as a candidate
houses. Young Alexander was first sent to the
con
for representative, but in 1807 he was chosen as
school conducted by David James Dove [q.v.]
the
a Federalist senator from Essex County and was
and at the age of eight entered the College and
Fol
reelected in the following year. In June 1808,
Academy of Philadelphia. In his youth he ac-
his
however, although the Embargo was vigorously
quired a veneration of truth and justice that af-
syla
opposed by the New England merchants, Gray
terwards "prevented his becoming a patriot, in
cas
came out openly in its favor, thus incurring the
the modern acceptation of the word" (Memoirs,
Ch
enmity of his associates and bringing upon him-
p. 29). For a time he sighed for the ladies and
Th
self social ostracism. He published a vindication
aspired with some success to be a rake. At the
wit
of his conduct in the Salem Gazette (Aug. 12,
age of sixteen he reluctantly began the study of
in
1808), but party spirit was running so high that
law, a profession for which he was unfitted by
yea
he felt it wise to move to Boston, where he re-
his indolence, his dislike for litigation, and his
Ph
sided during the remainder of his life.
indifference to worldly gain. Having dissipated
lish
Having deserted the Federalists, Gray was in-
himself in poetry, metaphysics, and wine, Gray-
Th
duced in 1810 to run for lieutenant-governor on
don went to York to recuperate. After six months
int
the Republican ticket, with Elbridge Gerry, and
he returned to Philadelphia improved in health
for
was elected by a small plurality. During the
though unaltered in disposition. He "still af-
ane
campaign "all the virulence of invective" was
fected the man of pleasure and dissipation and
opi
heaped upon him. He was reèlected in 1811 but
had a sovereign contempt for matrimony" (Ibid.,
ha
because of ill health declined a nomination in
p. 107). Although he became an accomplished
mo
1812. During the war with England he con-
fencer and a great frequenter of taverns, he in-
sistently supported the Madison administration,
dulged in no excesses of wine or debts.
er
ris
subscribing with extraordinary liberality to all
At the outbreak of the Revolution he joined
his
the government loans. He was defeated as Re-
the volunteers in Philadelphia, but was revolted
(P
publican candidate for lieutenant-governor in
by the persecution of the Loyalists, Doctor Kears-
Mo
(P
1814 and 1815 and declined a nomination for the
ley and Isaac Hunt [qq.v.] Congress commis-
governorship in 1816. He was also badly beaten
sioned him a captain on Jan. 6, 1776, and he spent
G
for senator from Suffolk County in 1818, 1819,
the winter recruiting and drilling his battalion.
17
and 1820, but was chosen as a delegate to the con-
In May he was sent with a sum of money in
Co
stitutional convention of I820. In 1816 he had
specie to General Schuyler at Lake George and
bo
been unanimously elected president of the Bos-
returned in time to join in the movement of the
Be
ton branch of the Bank of the United States and
army to New York His regiment assisted in
St
served for the six following years. His last pub-
covering the retreat of the army from Long
an
lic appearance was as chairman of a public din-
Island to New York. He was later stationed at
th
ner in Faneuil Hall, Mar. 4, 1825, to celebrate
Fort Washington and was taken prisoner at the
PI
the election of John Quincy Adams to the presi-
Battle of Harlem Heights. The British treated
va
dency. He died not long afterward, leaving an
him well and sent him to New York whence he
sit
estate of more than a million dollars. He was
was removed in January 1777 to Long Island.
do
married, Mar. 29, 1782, to Elizabeth Chipman,
After a captivity of eight months he was paroled
F
the daughter of Hon. John Chipman and Eliza-
and returned to Philadelphia. He was officially
88
beth (Brown) Chipman, of Marblehead. They
exchanged in the spring of 1778 and married a
th
had ten children of whom six survived their
Miss Wood/ of Berks County. Though he did not
R
parents. Gray was a man of simple tastes, in-
actively participate in politics, Graydon was
la
defatigably industrious, scrupulously honest, and
elected prothonotary of the newly formed coun-
CO
very generous. His portrait by Gilbert Stuart,
ty of Dauphin in 1785 and moved to Harrisburg.
ca
painted in 1807, shows a rugged, plain face,
He was one of the earliest and most conspicuous
J
marked by determination and good nature.
advocates in Pennsylvania of the adoption of the
Is
[Edward Gray, Wm. Gray, of Salem, Merchant
Federal Constitution and was elected a member
to
(1914) is the best account of Gray. See also S. E.
of the state convention. Graydon, to whom the
h
Morison, The Maritime Hist. of Mass. (1921).]
C.M.F.
principles of Gallic republicanism and the new
V
GRAYDON, ALEXANDER (Apr. IO, 1752-
democracy were repugnant, supported the Fed-
o
May 2, 1818), author, born at Bristol, Pa., was
eralists and was dismissed from office in the pro-
a
the son of Alexander Graydon by his second
scription that followed the election of Gov.
g
wife, Rachel Marks, of German and Scotch de-
Thomas McKean [q.v.].
n
scent. In 1730 his father had emigrated from
He then retired to his small farm near Harris-
Ireland to Philadelphia where he became a mer-
burg with his second wife, Theodosia Pettit,
524
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MASSACHUSETTS
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Search Request: Author = gray william
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MARC Format
Boston Bank papers,
Database: Massachusetts Historical Society
Format: Manuscripts
Call number(s): Ms. S-534 -
Creator: Boston Bank.
Title: Boston Bank papers, 1796-1826.
Description: 1 folder.
Scope: Correspondence and miscellaneous papers of the Boston Bank. Correspondents
include bank President John T. Apthorp, cashier Joseph Chapman, U.S. treasurers
Albert Gallatin and William Harris Crawford, William Gray of the U.S. Branch
Bank in Boston, and businessman Harrison Gray Otis.
Local notes: Formerly cataloged as "Boston Bank"
Subject(s): Banks and banking--Massachusetts--Boston
Other Author(s): Apthorp, John T.
Chapman, Joseph.
Crawford, William Harris, 1772-1834.
Gallatin Albert. 1761-1849.
Gray, William, 1750-1825
Otis, Harrison Gray, 1765-1848.
/Pwebrecon.cgi?vl=1&ti=1,1&Search_Arg=gray+william&Search_Code=NAME_&PID=5315/31/2004
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MASSACHUSETTS
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Frances Elizabeth Gray papers,
Database: Massachusetts Historical Society
Format: Manuscripts
Call number(s): F.E. Gray
Creator: Gray, Frances Elizabeth.
Title: Frances Elizabeth Gray papers, 1810-1868.
Description: 1 box.
Scope: Correspondence, diaries, and accounts of the family of William Gray (1750-
1825), Boston merchant, including papers relating to his estate, letters from
his son Henry to his children, chiefly Frances Elizabeth Gray, concerning
family matters and a claim of the Gray estate to lands in Texas, and diaries
of Miss Gray.
Finding aids available: Unpublished guide.
Notes: In part, photocopies of originals located in Harvard University, Graduate
School of Business Administration, Baker Library.
Subject(s): Merchants--Massachusetts--Boston.
Real property--Texas.
Other Author(s): Gray, Henry, 1816-1851.
Gray, William, 1750-1825.
/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=2&ti=1,2&Search_Arg=gray+william&Search_Code=NAME_&PID=53'5/31/2004
7/15/2019
William R. Gray (1750-1825) Papers :: Phillips Library Manuscript Finding Aids
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WILLIAM R. GRAY (1750-1825) PAPERS, 1781-1840
Con
Collection Summary
Repository:
The Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum 132 Essex Street Salem,
MA 01970 Phone: 978-745-9500 Fax: 978-531-1516
Creator:
Gray, William, 1750-1825
Title:
William R. Gray (1750-1825) Papers
Dates:
1781/1840
Quantity:
0.75 linear feet (1 box, 1 volume)
Abstract:
The William R. Gray papers contain one box of correspondence, legal,
financial, and shipping papers for the Salem, Massachusetts, and Boston
merchant.
Collection Number:
MSS 115
Object Description
Call Number
MSS 115
Title
William R. Gray (1750-1825) Papers
Creator
Gray, William, 1750-1825
Date
1781/1840
Restrictions
This collection is open for research use.
Publisher
The Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum
Description
The William R. Gray papers contain one box of correspondence, legal, financial, and shipping papers for
the Salem, Massachusetts, and Boston merchant.
Subject
Essex Bank (Salem, Mass.); Essex Fire & Marine Insurance Company (Salem, Mass.); American Hero
(Ship); Antelope (Vessel); Betsy (Vessel): Caspian (Brig); Charles (Brig); Choral (Ship); Commerce
(Brig); Commerce (Ship); Delphos (Ship); Eliza (Brigantine); Enterprize (Vessel); Fox (Brig); Laurel
(Ship); Mentor (Brigantine); Minerva (Vessel); Polly (Schooner): Salem (Brigantine); Serpent (Ship);
Trent (Ship): Ulysses (Ship): Vengeance (Brig); William (Ship); Boston (Mass.); Salem (Mass.); Barker,
George; Gray, Horace, 1800-1873; Gray, John Chipman, 1793-1881; Gray, Samuel Calley; Gray, William
Rufus, 1783-1831: Kinsman, Nathaniel, 1775-1808; Mugford, William: Silsbee, Nathaniel, 1773-1850;
Silsbee, William, 1779-1833; Merchants--Massachusetts--Boston; Merchants--Massachusetts--Salem;
Shinning.Furone
7/15/2019
William R. Gray (1750-1825) Papers :: Phillips Library Manuscript Finding Aids
Publication Rights
Requests for permission to publish material from the collection must be submitted in writing to the
Manuscript Librarian in the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum.
Type
Finding Aid
Description
Title
William R. Gray (1750-1825) Papers
Provenance
The William Gray Papers are an integration of miscellaneous manuscript folders the bulk of which are
from an unknown source. However, the Aurelia and Concord account book was a 1916 gift of Mrs. C.A.
Cooper and the William Rufus Gray letterbook was a 1954 gift of Hope Gray.
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12/19/2020
William Gray (Massachusetts politician) - Wikipedia
WIKIPEDIA
6BO + Gray Fairly
William Gray (Mass:
Henruitta Gry
politician)
daughter of Wm. Gray,
married Signatous
William Gray (June 27, 1750 (old style;
surgent, parents of
July 8, 1750 new style) - November 4, 1825)
Charles S. Sargent.
was a Massachusetts merchant and
politician. Born into a lower-class family in
Later years th Sat-Club
Lynn, Massachusetts, he managed to build
0.286
his own business and rise through the
state's political ranks, becoming the richest
man in New England, and in the eyes of
many the richest man in all of America.
Prior to the War of 1812, William Gray had
the largest private fleet in the United States
with 60 square-rigged vessels. [1]
Gray first served as a state senator, before
becoming the ninth Lieutenant Governor of
Massachusetts, serving from 1810 to 1812.
He married Elizabeth Chipman (May, 1756
- September 24, 1823) in 1782. Elizabeth
9th Lieutenant Governor of
was a pioneer in philanthropy, volunteering
Massachusetts
a significant portion of her time to helping
In office
the poorest citizens of Boston.
1810-1812
In 1820, he was elected a member of the
Governor
Elbridge Gerry
American Antiquarian Society{2]
Preceded by
David Cobb
He owned Gray's Wharf in Charlestown. [3]
Succeeded
by William Phillips, Jr.
In Boston "he lived on Summer Street, in
Member of the
the mansion previously occupied by
Massachusetts State Senate
Governor Sullivan. " [4]
for Suffolk County
In office
Elizabeth and William had three sons and
January 12, 1812 - March 1813
one daughter:
Preceded by Benjamin Gorham
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gray_(Massachusetts_politician)
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12/19/2020
William Gray (Massachusetts politician) - Wikipedia
William Rufus Gray (1783-1831), a
Member of the
merchant.
Massachusetts House of
Representatives
Henry Gray, a merchant. (1784-1854)
for Essex County
Lucia Gray Swett (1788-1844)
In office
Francis (1790-1856), a politician, writer,
1785-1785
orator, art collector.
Personal details
John Chipman Gray, (1793-1881) a
politician
Born
June 27, 1750 (old
Horace (1801-1873), father of Supreme
style; July 8, 1750
Court of the United States associate
new style)
justice, Horace Gray, and of Harvard
Lynn,
Law School professor, John Chipman
Massachusetts
Gray
[5]
Died
November 4, 1825
(aged 75)
References
Boston,
Massachusetts
1. Horace Gray: Father of the Boston
Public Garden (http://www.bahistory.or
Resting place
Mount Auburn
g/HoraceGray.html)
Cemetery
2. American Antiquarian Society Members
Political party
Democratic-
Directory (http://www.americanantiquari
Republican
an.org/memberlistg)
3. Timothy Thompson Sawyer. Old
Spouse(s)
Elizabeth Chipman
Charlestown: historical, biographical,
Profession
Merchant
reminiscent. J.H. West Co., 1902
Signature
4. Drake. Old landmarks and historic
Mongray
personages of Boston. 1872. ; p. .201
5. "Horace Gray" (https://www.findagrave.
com/memorial/136771321/horace-gray). findagrave.com Retrieved
December 31, 2018.
Further reading
Gray, Edward.: William Gray, of Salem, merchant: a biographical sketch
(.1914)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gray_(Massachusetts_politician)
2/3
12/19/2020
William Gray (Massachusetts politician) - Wikipedia
Political offices
Lieutenant Governor of
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Massachusetts
David Cobb
William Phillips, Jr.
1810-1812
Massachusetts State
Preceded by
Senator
Succeeded by
Benjamin Gorham
January 12, 1812-March 1813
Member of the
Massachusetts House of
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Representatives
1785-1785
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=William_Gray_(Massachusetts_politician)&oldid=989229840"
This page was last edited on 17 November 2020, at 20:00 (UTC).
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms
may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a
registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
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Pagelof.,3.
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2/detail
12/19/2020
Peabody Essex Museum - Explore Art
On View Barbara Weld Putnam Gallery.GALF.WALL
Gilbert Stuart (American, 1755-1828)
Portrait of Captain William Gray, about 1800
Oil on canvas
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
H: 41 in, W: 35 in
Museum purchase with partial funds donated in honor of Roland
Gray, Jr., 2010
2010.38.2
INSCRIPTION
Label on back reads, "G. Stuart; portrait B. Gray."
DESCRIPTION
This is a portrait of Captain William Gray in a 2/3 pose, wearing a
black jacket and high collared white ruffled shirt, holding a letter in
his hands. He is seated in a red-upholstered chair and looking
straight ahead with a closed smile. Further Remarks: The portrait
was painted by Stuart for Captain William Ward (1761-1827) of
Salem, captain of a number of William Gray's vessels, and also Mrs.
William Gray's brother-in-law. It was bequeathed to Ward's son,
Thomas Wren Ward, of Boston, Massachusetts in 1827. It was then
bequeathed to his widow in 1862 and bequeathed to her son,
Samuel Gray Ward, of New York and Washington in 1827. He
bequeathed to his son, Thomas Wren Ward, of New York, Boston
and Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts in 1908. It was then sold by
Thomas Wren Ward to Roland Gray, Esq., of Boston, great-
grandson of William Gray in 1921. The portrait is in it's original
frame, made by John Doggett (1780-1857), of Roxbury,
Massachusetts.
EXHIBITION HISTORY
Upcoming Exhibition, Peabody Essex Museum; 2015 through
Present
explore-art.pem.org/object/american-decorative-arts/2010_38_2/deta
3/4
12/19/2020
Peabody Essex Museum -Explore - Art
page 3 of 3
American Decorative Arts exhibition, Peabody Essex Museum;
June 03, 2003 through Present
Order and Elegance: Masterpieces of Federal Furniture from
Coastal Massachusetts, Peabody Essex Museum; January 04,
1997 through January 11, 1999
1
Home Themes Tour Search
© 2001-2013 All rights reserved. The Peabody Essex Museum, East India Square
(161 Essex St) Salem, Massachusetts 01970.
main website: www.pem.org | email: pem_collection@pem.org
explore-art.pem.org/object/american-decorative-arts/2010_38_2/deta
4/4
William Gray, tertius
Samuel Gray
Abraham Gray, Jr.
were sons of Abraham Gray of Lynn, Mass., and
Lydia Calley, daughter of Francis Calley of Marblehead.
William Gray, the oldest son, was born in Lynn
on June 27, 1750, old style; July 8, new style. He was
named for his grandfather, William Gray, husbandman and
cordwainer, who is said (Alonzo Lewis' History of Lynn,
2nd Edition, page 243) to have initiated the manufac-
ture of shoes by operatives in Lynn. His son Abraham
Gray, father of William and Samuel "seems to have fol-
lowed along the same lines," being one of the first
shoe manufacturers in Lynn who employed journeymen
and took apprentices.
Abraham moved to Salem when William, the oldest
son, was still a young boy; his son Samuel, my great-
great grandfather, being baptized in Lynn on August 10th,
1760. A fourth son, Francis Calley Gray, named for his
maternal grandfather, was baptized in the First Church
in Salem, December 29, 1762.
(Note: Whether Francis Calley or Abraham was
the oldest is not stated).
2.
Abraham Gray, after taking up his residence in
Salem, was for many years Deacon of the First Church
there, so being when he died in 1791. He was buried
in the Charles Street Burying Ground, his tomb stand-
ing among those near the entrance.
William Gray was apprenticed at an early age
to Samuel Gardner, Esq. of Salem, and later entered
the Counting House of Richard Derby, Esq. He began
business for himself when about 28 years old, ie
about 1778.
Copy from William Gray book, page 7, what is
said concerning Letters of Marque.
COPY
Owing to our almost entire lack of a navy
during the Revolution, the Continental Congress
issued privateer licenses and "letters of marque' "
to individuals, in order to supply the deficiency
in fighting ships. A letter-of-Marque vessel carried
a cargo to a destined port or ports, taking prizes if
they came in her way, and defending herself against
the enemy as a regularly commissioned private ship
of war under heavy bonds to her government to obey
the rules of warfare, thus combining commerce and War.
1865
The Library Again Suffers
from Inadequate Book Funds
William Gray's $5,000 per year for five years, beginning in 1859,
was not spent evenly, SO it continued to affect the book budget up
through 1864-65. But by 1865-66, the Gray money was totally gone,
and the budget for books had dropped down to $1,134. This con-
trasted with the Boston Public Library, which spent in 1865 $13,030
for books, and with the Boston Athenaeum, which had nearly $7,000
for books. Harvard's library crisis was not over. Indeed, the Harvard
Advocate, plus such national journals as the Nation and Appleton's
Journal, began to point out the shortage of book funds. Appleton's
wrote in its 5 March 1870 issue that the Library could no longer
compete with the Library of Congress or the Astor Library and that
it was surpassed as well in excellence of management and service.
Again, individuals came forward, and by the end of the 1870s the
Library had received nearly $125,000 in new book funds; this time
they were endowed. The first of them, the bequest of $60,000 by
Charles Minot in 1870, was specifically for "new books." The fol-
lowing decade saw another increment of nearly $70,000. In addition,
endowed funds for the general purposes of the Library increased by
over $500,000 during the 1870s and 1880s.
The struggle for adequate book funds had been long. The first
general appeal resulted in the Donation Fund of 1842. Once spent,
fifteen years of dearth followed. The next general appeal, begun in
1857, resulted in $25,000 from William Gray and over $6,000 from
the alumni at large. Once Gray's gift was spent, five or six years of
relative dearth then followed. The struggle was ended by the estab-
lishment of permanent book funds, endowed by individuals who
recognized that the Library could effectively serve students and
scholars only if it could rely on a steady income for regular purchases.
98
350th Anacus. 1982-83 ?
Harvard University - Houghton Library / Harvard University. Harvard Library bulletin. Cambridge. Mass., Harvard University Library.
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Papers,
Benjamin Hitchings
1816-1821
English
Archival Material 28 items.
Chiefly papers relating to the last voyage of Hitchings who died at sea, including orders of
William Gray (1750-1825), of Boston and Salem, Mass., merchant and owner of ship Clay;
materials pertaining to dealings with port officials in England and Antwerp, Belgium, where
Hitchings picked up silver money for East Indian trade; record (1816) of accounts in Calcutta,
India; and information concerning the ship Union
GET THIS ITEM
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Title: Papers, 1816-1821.
Author(s): Hitchings, Benjamin, 1783-1822?
Year: 1816-1821
Description: 28 items.
Language: English
Standard No: LCCN: 92-797546
Abstract: Chiefly papers relating to the last voyage of Hitchings who died at sea, including orders
of William Gray (1750-1825), of Boston and Salem, Mass., merchant and owner of ship
denlings
officiale
in
England
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FirstSearch: WorldCat Detailed Record
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viay, pertaining utalinings WILL
Belgium, where Hitchings picked up silver money for East Indian trade; record (1816)
of
accounts in Calcutta, India; and information concerning the ship Union. Persons
represented include fellow ship captains, Enoch Baldwin and Eleazer Gray.
SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor:
International trade.
Shipping -- Massachusetts.
Ships -- Massachusetts.
Silver coins.
Named Person: Baldwin, Enoch.
Gray, Eleazer.
Gray, William, 1750-1825.
Named Corp: Union (Ship)
Clay (Ship)
Geographic: Massachusetts -- Business, industries, and trades -- Shipping.
Boston (Mass.) -- Business, industries, and trades -- Shipping.
Massachusetts -- Transportation -- Ships.
Boston (Mass.) -- Transportation -- Ships.
United States -- Commerce.
Great Britain -- Commerce -- United States.
East Indies -- Commerce -- United States.
Belgium -- Commerce -- United States.
Antwerp (Belgium) -- Commerce.
Salem (Mass.) -- Business, industries, and trades -- Shipping.
Note(s): Bio/History: Ship captain, sailing out of Boston, Mass.
General Info: Finding aid in the repository./ Source unknown./ Occupation: Ship captains/
Massachusetts.
Entry: 19920303
Update: 20020418
Document Type: Archival Material
Accession No: OCLC: 28413930
Database: WorldCat
WorldCat results for: (su= "Gray,
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Lynn Massachusetts, 1890
Page 1 of 4
Lynn Massachusetts, 1890
LYNN
is
a manufacturing town on the seaboard in the
extreme southern part of Essex County, 11 miles northeast of
Boston, with which it is connected by a street railway, and by
the Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn Railroad and by the Eastern
line of the Boston and Maine Railroad; the latter connecting it
directly with the railroad systems north, east and south.
Lynn harbor opens on Broad Sound, in Massachusetts Bay. It is
nearly half filled with flats, but through it run numerous
channels, some of which are 15 feet in depth, and wide enough
for easy towage.
Lynn is bounded on the north by Peabody and Salem, east by
Swampscott and its harbor, on the south by its own harbor, and
on the west by Saugus. The long peninsula of Nahant lies in the
sea eastward; forming the eastern side of Lynn harbor. There is a
considerable extent of beach on each side of the peninsula.
The assessed area of the city is 4,378 acres. The more densely
occupied portion is about four miles in length along the shore,
and some two miles in breadth from the shore to the hills. The
western half of this tract, resting on the Saugus River (which
forms the southwestern line of the township) is a rather low
plain, of which nearly one half toward the sea is salt marsh
covered at high water. The eastern half is of greater elevation.
The rear section of the township northward is a tract of rough
hills covered with wood. A large portion of this wild and
romantic tract has been acquired by the city for the purpose
primarily of a series of basins for an increase of the water-supply
of the city. The area of two small ponds has already been
increased to beautiful sheets of water, one of which is about two
miles in length, and very irregular in its outline. It has been
named "Walden Pond," in honor of the leader in the formation of
this noble park. The height recently named "Mount Gilead," in
this region, affords a magnificent view of forests, rocks, villages,
bays and beaches. The soil, except on the hills, is a gravelly
loam, approaching clay, with ample deposits of clear clay. The
rock, in the half nearest the sea is a dark, bluish felsite, passing
into a purple porphyry, and thought to be of Huronian origin.
http://capecodhistory.us/Mass1890/Lynn1890.htn
5/28/2004
Lynn Massachusetts, 1890
Page 2 of 4
North of the porphyry, the rock is a gray sienite, strongly
metamorphic in the east, but northerly becoming distinctly
hornblendic. On the west the porphyry becomes conglomerate.
Profitable quarrying has been done in some places.
Just east of the territorial centre lies Wennuchus Lake, covering
117 acres; Wyoma Lake, of 84 acres, lies near on the northwest;
and on the same line is Cedar Lake. Southwest of the centre lies
a group of ponds, partly artificial, which furnishes the city with
water. The drainage is by Strawberry, Mowers and Birch
brooks, affluents of the Saugus, and by Stacy's Brook, which
enters the ocean at Swampscott. An elevation called "Dungeon
Rock" lies northwest of the centre. Near it is Sunadon Rock,
770 feet in height, on the western line.
High Rock is a picturesque cliff in the city proper. This elevation
affords an excellent view of the city, of the neighboring towns,
and of the harbor and beaches. At the foot of this rock dwelt, a
generation ago, the famous fortune-teller, Moll Pitcher. The city
has many well-shaded streets, and beautiful private and public
buildings. Ocean Street and others in its vicinity have many fine
residences and command fine sea views.
The leading business is the manufacture of boots and shoes, for
which there were in 1885, 308 establishments, employing
upwards of 9,474 persons, producing goods to the value of
$23,573,319. More than 1,000 men are employed in tanning and
dressing the various kinds of leather. The artisans' tools made
amounted to nearly $1,000,000; and there are large
manufactures of food preparations, electrical apparatus, boxes
and other paper goods, textiles, bricks, carriages, polishes and
dressing for leather, lasts, furniture, glass, liquors, and others
common to villages. The aggregate value of goods made was
$31,100,906 The 36 farms yielded to value of $40,848, and
fisheries (mackerel) $3,600. The dwellings numbered 7,951.
There are five national banks in the city, having an aggregate
capital of $ 1,100,000; and two savings banks, carrying deposits
at the beginning of the present year of $5,189,519. The
valuation of the city in 1888 was $33,224,080, and the tax-rate
$18.60 on $1,000. The population in 1885 was 45,867;
including 11,949 legal voters. The only post-office is "Lynn,"
which has carrier delivery. The villages are Glenmere,
Highlands, Linwood, East Lynn, West Lynn, Lynnmere,
http://capecodhistory.us/Mass1890/Lynn1890.htm
5/28/2004
Lynn Massachusetts, 1890
Page 3 of 4
Stetsonville and Wyoma. In or near each of these are railway
stations of the Boston and Maine Railroad.
The city hall is a very handsome building, with ample lawns. The
schools are in four grades, and occupy 30 buildings, valued at
upwards of $530,000. There are also several private schools, -
consisting of an English and classical school, two mercantile
schools, an art academy, Ireson Academy, the Lincoln Hall
school and a Roman Catholic school. There are 30 libraries for
public use; the city library having about 35,000 volumes; and
four circulating libraries having about 5,000. The periodicals are
the daily "Bee" and the "Evening Item;" the weekly "Reporter,"
"Transcript," "City Item" and "Knights of Labor;" the monthly
"Agassiz Journal," Household Monthly" and the "Modern
Priscilla." Of the 22 churches in the city, 3 are Baptist, 4
Congregationalist, 1 Free Baptist, 1 Friends, 6 Methodist, 1
Protestant Episcopal, 2 Roman Catholic, 1 Unitarian, 2
Universalist and 1 African Methodist. Several of the edifices are
elegant buildings, that of St. Stephen's Memorial being especially
striking.
Lynn is with one exception the oldest settlement in Essex
County. It was admitted to the General Court under its original
(Indian) name of Saugus, in 1630, some 50 new settlers having
come in that year. The pioneers came in 1629, and consisted of
5 families -- about 20 persons, all told - who had recently
landed at Salem from England; and a certain plain about half a
mile in extent, in the eastern section, was the site of this
settlement. Saugus signifies "great" or "extended," and probably
referred to the long beach. Saugus River was called Abousett by
the Indians. The township in its original extent embraced the
present towns of Lynnfield (set off in 1682), Saugus (set off in
1815), Swampscott (set off in 1852) and Nahant (set off in
1853). The name was changed to Lynn in the records of the
General Court, November 20, 1637. It was incorporated as a
city, April 10, 1850. The name in the early period was variously
spelled, "Lin," "Linn" and "Lynne." The new name was given in
honor of the Rev. William Whiting, the first settled minister,
who had been a curate at Lynn Regis, in England.
It is believed that the first iron foundery in America was erected
in 1643 in this town on the west bank of the Saugus River,
making use of a deposit of bog-iron ore in its vicinity. Ten years
http://capecodhistory.us/Mass1890/Lynn1890.htm
5/28/2004
Lynn Massachusetts, 1890
Page 4 of 4
later Mr. Joseph Jencks, of these works, made by contract for
the town of Boston "an ingine to carry water in case of fire,"
which was the first constructed in this country. In 1652, the
coinage dies for the Boston mint were made here. As early as
1635 two shoemakers came from England and established
themselves at Lynn, and the business steadily increased from that
time; a great impulse coming to the business about 1750, when
John Adams Dagyr, a Welshman, produced shoes equal to the
best then made in England.
Early in the Revolution Lynn sent 168 men into the contest, and
56 of them never returned, - four being killed at Lexington.
For the war of the Rebellion the city furnished 3,270 men, -
230 more than its quota. In honor of the 289 who were lost, it
has erected a beautiful monument of marble.
Abraham Pierson (1641-1707), a president of Yale College;
William Gray (1750-1825), merchant and lieutenant-governor;
Isaac Newhall (1782-1858), merchant and author; Chandler
Robbins, D.D. (1810), an eminent clergyman; and Peter Thacher
Washburne (1814-1870), an eminent jurist, - are distinguished
sons of Lynn in past days.
pp. 430-432 in Nason and Varney's Massachusetts Gazetteer,
1890
Gazetteer
http://capecodhistory.us/Mass1890/Lynn1890.htm
5/28/2004
The Salem Houses of William "Old Billy" Gray
July 25, 2009
Robert M. Gray
1
Introduction
These notes were first put together in the carly 90s, motivated by my curiosity as
to whether William "Old Billy" Gray's house in Salem still stood. The eventual
resolution of the mystery proved a sad one, none of his houses still stood - but his
most famous house did still stand when I was a college student in Boston in the early
1960s. I could have seen it, albeit in much altered form, if I had known at the time. It
was torn down around 1975, after Historic Salem Incorporated "reluctantly" voted "to
support the razing of the Gray-Essex House on Essex Street." citing its "deteriorated
condition and years of alterations to the original structure." The house was torn down
to clear space for the East India Mall, another example of the relentless encroachment
of fast food and boring plastic shops on our vanishing architectural heritage. It turns
out that both Billy Gray's mansions occupied space now covered by the mall, but his
earlier residence was torn down long ago. It is ironic that the East India Mall itself is
no more, having been replaced by the Museum Place Mall following the combination
of the Peabody Museum of Salem and the Essex Institute. The combined museum
has greatly expanded, but the maritime emphasis has been lost in the process and
its original galleries in the old East India Society building have shrunk to only a hint
of the glory days of one of the great maritime museums of the world. I retain the
separate identity of the Essex Institute in these notes, as it was separate when I did
my research and it seems almost invisible now in the new PEM.
In tracking down the stories of some of Gray's Salem properties, I found several
interesting characters and a few historical confusions. I have tried to sort through
the differing versions and to provide some background information on the characters.
In the course of my reading I visited the Essex Institute of Salem, now incorporated
into the Peabody Essex Musem of Salem. and spent many enjoyable hours with
Irene Norton, the Research Librarian Emeritus of the James Duncan Phillips Library,
finding both information and pictures, some of which are included in this manuscript.
Most concern Gray's best known residence, the brick mansion he built that for many
years was to be the central hostelry of Salem, the Essex House. The house numbers
used here are those given in the Pickman account [1]. and used in the map of Salem in
1780 drawn by Henry Noyes Otis [2] and printed in Phillips [3], hereafter referred to
as the Otis map. Large copies of this beautiful map were available for purchase from
the Essex Institute, but I have not been able to find them at the Peabody Museum.
1
2
Early Residences
According to the Pickman Account, before acquiring his own house Billy Gray first
lived with Samuel Gardner Esq. and afterwards with richard Derby Jr. Esq. Edward
Gray mentions that Billy was an apprentice to Samuel Gardner [4]. Samuel Gardner
(1712/13-1769) was the son of one of the seemingly innumerable Capt. Gardners and
was one of the leading merchants of Salem. He was reputed to be the wealthiest man
in town when he died [5]. According to Phillips [3], Samuel Gardner's house was west
of Town House Square on the south side of Main (Essex) St. It seems probable that
Billy Gray lived with Gardner during the period of his apprenticeship, an unknown
period of time between his arrival in 1762/1763 at the age of 12 or 13 and the death
of Samuel Gardner in 1769.
This likely was the beginning of the long period of connections between the Gray
and Gardner families. Gray would later share ownership of the brigantine Ceres
with Weld Gardner, the son of Samuel and Esther (Orne) Gardner. The ship was
built in 1788 and registered in 1791 with Capt. Benjamin Ives as master. She was
lost at sea two or three years later. Weld Gardner was a merchant in Salem and
owned several ships. Weld Gardner lived in house #57 in Pickman (who misspelled
his first name as Wild), a house on School Street, north of Church St. and west
of the town jail. Gardner was a bachelor and in 1793 was sharing his house with
Capt. Thomas Lec. Samuel Gardner's brother John was the grandfather of Samuel
Pickering Gardner, who's two daughters Sara Russell and Elizabeth Pickering married
the Gray brothers, Horace and John Chipman. Samuel Gardner's sister elizabeth
married another Captain John Gardner (a distant cousin, also descended from the
founder of the family, Thomas Gardner) and their son (guess who) Captain John
Gardner married Sarah. the daughter of Richard Derby, the founder of the Derby
merchant house of Salem.
Billy Gray's next housemate was Richard Derby, Jr., the eldest son of Richard
Derby and the brother of Elias Haskett Derby (1732-1799), the most famous of the
Salem merchant kings and the first millionaire in America. This move was likely
commensurate with Billy Gray's taking a position in Richard Derby's counting house,
where he remained until setting up business for himself. Gray's early career would be
in the shadow of Elias Haskett Derby. but after Derby he was the most successful of
the young merchants of his generation. By 1780 he was paying the second largest tax
in town, and following Derby's death in 1799 he became unquestionably the wealthiest
and most influential merchant in Salem.
Richard Derby, Jr., was reknowned as a sea captain while Elias ran the business
following the death of Richard Sr. in 1783. Richard Jr. was a member of the Provincial
Congress in 1774 and 1775. He added to his fame by relaying a suggestion of Congress
to his father to send a fast ship to England following the battle of Lexington to present
the American side of the story to the Lord Mayor of London before the dispatches
of General Gage could arrive. Richard Sr.'s son Capt. John Derby commanded the
successful adventure. [6, 7]
Richard Jr. lived in a small house near his father's house, which was on the easterly
corner of Derby and Herbert Streets. The house of Richard Sr. was later called the
2
Miles Ward House.
3 The Court Street House
House # 80 in the Pickman Account. [1].
The property bearing William Gray's name on the Otis 1780 map is located on
the Highway to Marblehead, a continuation of School St. At the time it was called
Otis map of Salem around 1780
Location of Billy Gray houses: #80, #29, #36
Court St. because the original Court House was on the street. The property was
owned by Samuel Baron Esq., who sold it to Miles Ward. Jr., who built a house on
it. Barton did not like the property because of a slaughterhouse in front of it, but
he retained nearby property on which he built a house for his son. Ward later sold
the property to Nathaniel Sparhawk, a grandson of Sir William Pepperell. Sparhawk
sold the property to Billy Gray, who owned it in 1780. Gray later sold the property
to a Capt. Nichols
3
4
The Mansions
Both of Billy Gray's mansions were on what is now Essex Street. From 1694 through
1805 it was called ye Main Street and the name was changed in 1805, when Billy lived
in his second mansion. Before 1694 the street had been called the street from ye meet-
ing house to ye harbor (1653), the street that comes straight from the meeting house
(1659), and ye street that goeth from ye meeting house to the training place (1671).
The street was first paved in 1792, partly by the Town and partly by subscriptions,
the town contributing $1000 and the residents contributing a total of $600. Both of
Billy Gray's mansions were built on property owned for many years by the Browne
family of Salem. Their story is mixed in with that of both houses.
The First Essex St. Mansion
House #29 in the Pickman Account.
The house was first built by the Hon. William Browne Esq. (b. 1639) in 1698
to replace his previous house, which had been lost in the great fire. He died quite
wealthy in 1716 at the age of 76, leaving the house to his grandson William, the
husband of Governor Burnet's daughter, who died at age 54 in 1763. The house then
passed to his son, William Burnett Browne. Here a variety of stories exist. According
to Perley [8], when William Burnett Browne left Salem for Virginia, he conveyed the
house and lot to Catherine Sargent for four hundred pounds. As Perley's source is
the Essex Registry of deeds, I will follow his line first (although the other stories are
more colorful). Catherine Sargent sold the estate for three hundred pounds to Paul
Dudley Sargent on 16 September 1780. The property is listed as belonging to Paul
Dudley Sargent on the Otis map of 1780. Mr. Sargent sold the property and its house
an barn to Jesse Fearson, a Salem merchant, on 12 November 1781 for two thousand
pounds. Mr. Fearson conveyed the same estate to Billy Gray on 17 September 1783.
Other versions state that William Burnett Browne sold the house to his cousin,
Col. William Browne [6]. This Col. Browne is one of the most interesting people to
arise in connection with Billy Gray's houses. He was a tory loyalist who fled Salem
in 1774 to take refuge in Boston before leaving for England in 1776. The year is
interesting because in it took place one of the confrontations between colonists and
British soldiers that occurred before the battle of Lexington two years later, but which
did not explode into gunfire. General Gage had sent troops to break up the Salem
town meeting where seditious behavior was feared. First, however, Gage took time
to be lavishly entertained by Brownc. At the party, however, Gage was distracted
by clever townsfolk and got SO upset that he did not act in time to prevent the
meeting from concluding its business. In the meantime, troops had been called up
and bloodshed feared, but none occurred. The resulting anti-British feeling was SO
strong. howoever, that Browne and his family left all of their possessions and fled to
Boston.
Browne had been a pillar of the community, serving as a representative, superior
court judge. and colonel of the regiment. He followed a long line of five generations
of distinguished citizens of Salem. He had been born in 1737 and he graduated from
4
Harvard in 1755. He owned a large estate, including what is now Derby Square. As
a result of his departure, all of his property in Salem was confiscated in 1784. He
lost his mansion. gardens, wharfs, and stores as well as anothyer house and adjoining
land in Salem. He was the only resident of Salem to lose property by confiscation.
According to one story, this house was one of those confiscated and William Gray
bought it as an absentee estate at public vendue following the revolution [9, 10].
This story seems unlikely since Col. William Browne in fact had another mansion in
Salem (#4 in Pickman) which was indeed confiscated and which was bought by Elias
Haskett Derby (who was related to Browne) after Browne fled with his half-brother,
John Sargent. The remaining confiscated property does not fit the description of the
house.
Another, more probable, version states that Col. William Browne's mother, who
was then the wife of Col. Sargent, received the house in payment of a debt due her by
her son and subsequently sold it to Billy Gray on 17 September 1783. [1] This story
is consistent with Perley's since the sale of the house by William Burnett Browne to
Mrs. Sargent could have been arranged (and paid for ?) by Col. William Browne.
Col. William Browne was later (1781-1788) Governor of Bermuda and he died in
London in 1802.
When Gray bought the house. it was a large and stately mansion standing eighteen
feet back from the street. [9] He had the house beautified and lived in it until 1800,
when he moved to his second mansion at 176 Essex St.
Billy Gray sold the house to Union Marine Insurance for $13,500. On 25 June
1805 it became the Sun Tavern with Benjamin Webb as landlord (more later on the
Sun Tavern). The original Sun Tavern sign from this location is supposed to be in
the possession of the Danvers Historical Society [9].
On 15 November the house was sold to Mr. William Manning of Salem. He tore
it down and had William Roberts construct the Bowker Building there in 1830, one
of the "malls" of the time (later the location of the first Filene's store). The Bowker
Block was in turn torn down for construction of the East India Mall in the 1970s. The
Rogers store occupied the site when I visited in the early 90s, selling fancy clothes.
Just to the east of this house, opposite the head of Liberty St., stood the house
of Daniel Ropes, which he inherited from his father Joseph Ropes. To the west stood
another of the Browne's family houses, which was occupied by Colonel Newhall in
1780.
4.1 176 Essex St.
House #36 in the Pickman Account.
Billy Gray's best known house during his life in Salem was undoubtedly the man-
sion he constructed at 176 Essex St., a building famous of years as the Essex House
and which lasted, in much altered form. until torn down in the 1970s to make way for
the construction of the East India Mall. In addition to the Essex House, the property
housed many famous inns and taverns in its time. Immediately to the east in 1780
stood the house of Same Gale, the barber. To the west stood a house occupied in
1780 by Capt. Nathanial West, Elias Haskett Derby's son-in-law. The West house
5
and
1800
About
176
6
was built by John Turner Esq in 1748 and then sold to Judge Andrew Oliver, who
sold it to West. The house became a public house in 1833 on the occasion of a visit
by President Andrew Jackson and it was known as the Mansion-House until it was
destroyed by fire around 1857.
Before Turner built the house, the property had an illustrious history of taverns.
For a long time it was the location of the Ship Tavern, the most noted in Salem during
the seventeenth century. John Gedney was the proprietor before 1692, followed by
John Stacey, Francis Ellis, and Henry Sharpe. The vicinity had a reputation for
public houses from about 1675 on. The Billy Gray property and the site immediately
to the west were the locations of the above taverns as well as the King's Arm Tavern
(which became the Sun Tavern as the king's popularity faded), Pratt's Tavern (before
1730, it was supposed to have been the most famous tavern ever in Salem; it was torn
down in 1740), Goodhue's Tavern, Robinson's Tavern, Webb's Tavern, the Essex
Coffee House, the Lafayette Coffee House, and, finally, the Essex House. Before Pratt
occupied the tavern, the property was owned by the Curwens, of witchcraft hysteria
fame.
The first known owner of the property was Peter Palfry, one of the original "old
planters." His homestead occupied the arca between the West block, nearly opposite
Market (Central) St., and the head of St. Peter St. He owned the property from
before 1651 through 1664, when he sold it to William Browne Esq. William Browne
built a mansion on the grounds in 1652 which he occupied until his death in 1667
at age 79. This house was thereafter called the Browne mansion-house, leading to
some confusion with house #29 mentioned earlier. Both of the Billy Gray mansions
occupied sites on which mansions built by a William Browne had stood and on which
a Sun Tavern stood! This led to considerable confusion in disentangling the history
of the two houses.
The house was then occupied by William's son Benjamin Browne Esq., until his
death at age 60 in 1708. As he had no children, he left the house to his nephew,
John Browne Esq., who died in 1719 at age 46 and who left the house to his son,
another Benjamin Brown Esq.. who lived there until his death in 1750 at age 43.
This Benjamin Browne represented the town for many years in the General Court
and was Lieutenant Colonel of the Regiment. The house gained some reknown when
a "vast sum" of English shillings was found in one of the chimneys of the house during
Col. Browne's wedding in 1730. [6, 1]. The money was assumed to have been hidden
during the Dutch wars.
After Colonel Browne's death, his children inherited the house and his widow
lived there until she remarried in 1751 and moved to Boston. An interesting sidelight
on the Browne mansion is that apparently some of Hawthorne's descriptions in the
House of the Seven Gables came from this house rather than from the better known
Turner house now often called the House of the Seven Gables. In particular, a rough
ornament beneath the leaves was taken from the Browne mansion before it was razed
by Billy Gray and was likely seen by Hawthorne in the Essex Institute [12].
After the departure of the widow Brownc, the house was occupied in succession
by the Rev. John Sparhawk until his death in 1755 at age 43, Richard Lechmere Esq.,
Andrew Oliver Esq., John Turner Esq., and then William Goodhue, tavern-keeper.
7
Lechmere was the Salem Collector of Customs in 1759 and a nephew of Nicholas,
Lord Lechmere. of the reign of George I of England. He was reputedly one of the
best bred men in Salem. Goodhuc was occupying the building by about 1770 [6] and
he purchased the house on 29 November 1780. It was called the King's Arm Tavern
at the time, but the name was changed to the Sun Tavern at the beginning of the
revolution in 1776. The King's Arm Tavern was notorious in 1768 as a meeting place
for merchants and traders discussing a boycott of all imported British goods save
coal and salt. [6] Goodhue owned the house until 1796, but he regularly leased it to
others. notably Samuel Robinson, Capt. Benjamin Web, and then Capt. Webb's son
Jonathan Webb. Jonathan Webb also owned a tavern on School St. in 1780 (House
#55 in the Pickman Account [1]). Goodhue and Robinson had also managed public
houses on the South side of Essex Street to the east of the Billy Gray house, in a
house built by Mr. Hirst in 1700 and subsequently owned by Major Walter Price,
Ichabod Plaisted Esq., and a Scotsman named Somerville, who first kept a public
house at this address. Hence it is difficult to know if references just before 1770 to
Goodhue's or Robinson's Tavern are to this house or the Billy Gray house.
During much of this time it was called the Sun Tavern, but it was also known as
Goodhue's Tavern and Webb's Tavern and the names often crop up in Salem history
and guide books as local gathering places. The 1793 Pickman Account states that
the tavern, then run by Webb, was the most noted in town. Phillips [3] describes
Webb's Tavern as the most famous tavern in town in 1783.
Goodhue's Tavern is noted on the Otis map. At this time the property was on
the north side of Ye Main Street, between Ingall's Land and St. Peter St. In 1796
Goodhue sold the property to Jeremiah Allen of Boston, who in the same year sold
it to Billy Gray. According to the Pickman Account, the house was owned by the
Browne children until 1788, when the last, John Browne, died leaving it to his widow,
who was an Allen.
When Billy Gray purchased the property, the house was called the Sun Tav-
ern and it was roughly opposite the head of what was then Market Street and is
now Central Street, close to the Peabody Museum of Salem. According to [10],
Benjamin Webb was landlord when Billy
Gray bought the house and it was Webb
that moved into the house Gray had just
vacated and promptly hoisted the Sun
Tavern sign there. It is ironic that Billy
Gray effectively traded houses with the
Sun Tavern. The new house was some-
what farther in from the street and farther
eastward than its predecessor. He moved
into his new house in 1800 and remained
there until he left Salem in 1809.
176 Essex St., Salem, Mass.
After Gray left, virtually driven out
gift of Mrs. Mary C. Hart
of town because of his Republican senti-
Courtesy of the Essex Institute
ments in support of the Federal govern-
ment, President Jefferson, and the Em-
8
bargo Act of 1808, his house was enlarged and altered and became the Essex Coffee
House sometime before 1814. His stable was converted into the eastern wing of the
building. The garden was originally located near the corner of Essex and St. Peter
St. The house itslef was located between Market and Liberty Streets. The establish-
ment's name was changed to the Lafayette Coffee House in 1824 following Lafayette's
last visit to Salem. During this period there were a fine old fireplace and a mantel
in the office and a pictorial paper with scenes of the French Revolution covering the
walls of the parlor. The house was also called simply the Lafayette House for a while.
During 1842-1877 the inn was called the Essex House.
5
Gray's Wharf
Billy Gray's counting house and warehouse were located at 311 Derby St., which then
sat on the shore and had a wharf extending into the South River. The wharf seems to
be the same as that called Faben's wharf. which was at the end of Fish St., but I have
not been able to confirm this. The warehouse was later occupied by J.P. Langmain
and Sons.
9
Essex House (William Gray House) 176 Essex St., Salem, MA.
Essex Institute Negative Number 18941
Copied from the glass neg. 9310 in the library collection.
Courtesy, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass
10
Essex Essex House, 176 Essex St., Salem,
Copied from a photo in the library collection. 18943
Institute Negative Number MA.
Courtesy, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass
11
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12
ORIGINALLY
References
[1] George B. Loring, "Some account of houses and other buildings in Salem, from
a manuscript of the late Col. Benj. Pickman," Historical Collections of the Essex
Institute. vol. VI, pp. 98-109. June 1864.
[2] Map of Salem about 1780. Based on the researches of Sidney Perley and the
accounts of Col. Benjamin Pickman and Benjamin J.F. Browne with additional
information assembled by James Duncan Phillips and Henry Noyes Otis. Drawn
by Henry Noyes Otis. 1937. Published in Phillips [3].
[3] James Duncan Phillips, Salem in the Eighteenth Century, The Riverside Press,
Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston 1937.
[4] Edward Gray, William Gray of Salem, Merchant, Riverside Press, Houghton Mif-
flin, Cambridge, 1914.
[5] Frank Augustus Gardner, Gardner Memorial, Newcomb and Gauss, Salem, Mass,
1933.
[6] C.H. Webber and W.S. Nevins, Old Naumkeag, A.A. Smith & Co., Salem, Mass.,
1877.
[7] Robert E. Peabody, Merchant Adventurers of Old Salem, Riverside Press,
Houghton Mifflin, Cambridge, 1912.
[8] Sidney Perley, "Salem in 1700, No. 16," The Essex Antiquarian, Vol. VIII, 1904
pp. 113-116.
[9] Visitors Guide Salem, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. 1895.
[10] Essex Institute Historical Collections, Vol. IV, p,. 80.
[11] Salem and the Indies, Riverside Press, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1947.
[12] Frank Cousins and Phil M. Riley, The Colonial Architecture of Salem, Little
Brown & Co., 1919.
13
7/17/2019
Xfinity Connect Re Old Bfarmation, and George Dorr Printout
Session Timeout
Continue Session
Robert M Gray wrote:
Dear Bob,
This will be a test message to see if you can still be reached via
Stanford since I have determined that you have relocated to Rockport
ME.
Briefly, back in 2005-2006 we exchanged email regarding the Gray
family connection to George B. Dorr, the Founder of Acadia National
Park. I was preparing a biography which you may be pleased to learn
7/17/2019
Xfinity Connect Re Old Billy_Gray, Mary Gray Ward, and George Dorr Printout
was published in 2016 on the centennial of the park and the National
Park Service..
You visited me at my home in Merrimack NH at that time and I have
an ancestry charts in your handwriting.
There is much more to relate, but I'll wait and see if you respond to
this message.
Note new address and email,.
Ron
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
7 Peachtree Terrace
Farmington, CT 06032
717-272-0801
eppster2@comcast.net
Portraits
OF
Shipmasters and Merchants
IN THE
Peabody Museum of Salem
With an Introduction by
Walter Muir Whitehill
Salem
Peabody Museum
1939
capital brought to Salem car-
ce, hides, rattans, hemp, indigo and pepper,
Asiatic products. Early in 1885 he expressed
take up a less adventurous life, and arrange-
proposed for his removal with his family to
ere he hoped to enter upon a mercantile career
with his brother-in-law George D. Richard-
hopes were never realized, for Captain Gillis
ship Equator on his passage from Batavia,
l' 1835. Mrs. Gillis died in Salem in 1875.
x Co. Prob. Rec., Docket 10951; Salem Vit.
d), I, 356, III, 417, V, 280; E. I. H. C.,
), 162; Salem Ship Reg., 199 History E. I.
l'utnam, I, 111, II, 133; Gillis Papers at the
ute, II, 40; Duren, Three Generations of
Their Vessels, 15-30, 39; Vinton, Richard-
l, 631, 691, 692.]
M GRAY, 1750-1825. Oil after Gilbert
i.
Canvas, 331/4 in. X 26 in. Seated figure
towards right, head three-quarters to right,
ront, fair hair brushed loosely over forehead
ed in a queue. White stock, frilled shirt,
satin waistcoat, dark coat. Sits at table,
has red cover and papers on it. Right hand
open letter. Dark gray background. M 314.
390. Plate XVIII.
|ray, Salem merchant, familiarly called
was born at Lynn on Marion Street near
oad, 27 June 1750, but about 1760 he re-
em with his parents, Abraham and Lydia
i. He was apprenticed as a lad to Samuel
, but soon entered the counting house of
Y. Here he learned the first principles of
WILLIAM GRAY
igh the application of which he became one
No. 60
wealthiest merchants. Seafaring life evi-
tempt him, for he began business for him-
was about twenty-eight years of age. His
3 married 28 March 1782, was Elizabeth
at Marblehead 9 June 1756, the daughter
Elizabeth (Brown) Chipman. Always in-
PORTRAITS IN THE PEABODY MUSEUM
the brig Malay. Captain Gillis brought to Salem car-
goes of coffee, hides, rattans, hemp, indigo and pepper,
with other Asiatic products. Early in 1835 he expressed
a desire to take up a less adventurous life, and arrange-
ments were proposed for his removal with his family to
Portland where he hoped to enter upon a mercantile career
in company with his brother-in-law George D. Richard-
son. These hopes were never realized, for Captain Gillis
died on the ship Equator on his passage from Batavia,
10 December 1835. Mrs. Gillis died in Salem in 1875.
[See Essex Co. Prob. Rec., Docket 10951; Salem Vit.
Rec. (printed), I, 356, III, 417, V, 280; E. I. H. C.,
LVII (1921), 162; Salem Ship Reg., 199; History E. I.
M. S., 61; Putnam, I, 111, II, 133; Gillis Papers at the
Essex Institute, II, 40; Duren, Three Generations of
Silsbees and Their Vessels, 15-30, 39; Vinton, Richard-
son Memorial, 631, 691, 692.]
60. WILLIAM Gray, 1750-1825. Oil after Gilbert
Stuart. Canvas, 331/4 in. X 26 in. Seated figure
facing towards right, head three-quarters to right,
eyes front, fair hair brushed loosely over forehead
and tied in a queue. White stock, frilled shirt,
black satin waistcoat, dark coat. Sits at table,
which has red cover and papers on it. Right hand
holds open letter. Dark gray background. M 314.
Neg. 1390. Plate XVIII.
William Gray, Salem merchant, familiarly called
"Billy" Gray, was born at Lynn on Marion Street near
the Boston Road, 27 June 1750, but about 1760 he re-
moved to Salem with his parents, Abraham and Lydia
(Calley) Gray. He was apprenticed as a lad to Samuel
Gardner, Esq., but soon entered the counting house of
Richard Derby. Here he learned the first principles of
business, through the application of which he became one
of America's wealthiest merchants. Seafaring life evi-
dently did not tempt him, for he began business for him-
self when he was about twenty-eight years of age. His
wife, whom he married 28 March 1782, was Elizabeth
Chipman, born at Marblehead 9 June 1756, the daughter
of John and Elizabeth (Brown) Chipman. Always in-
54
PORTRAITS IN THE PEABODY MUSEUM
tensely patriotic, one of Mr. Gray's first acts was to con-
tribute to the outfitting of the Quero, Richard Derby's
ship which was rushed to England to carry the news of
the American victory at the Battle of Lexington. Simi-
larly several decades later he gave generously to the build-
ing of the frigate Essex. Although Mr. Gray was from
the first deeply absorbed in his business, yet he found
time to join the Salem Fire Club, the Salem and Danvers
Aqueduct Company, and was one of the incorporators
of the Essex Fire and Marine Insurance Company. He
also served as selectman and was President of the Essex
Bank. Mr. Gray owned solely or in part several private
armed vessels during the latter part of the Revolution.
Of these the most prominent were the Defence, Hind,
Venus, Iris, Hector and Union. Although he is not
recorded as taking any active part in the service of the
Revolutionary War, Mr. Gray held a lieutenant's com-
mission in Captain Richard Ward's Company of the First
Essex County Regiment of Militia. After the War a
large number of vessels were purchased by Mr. Gray for
merchant service in China, India and many other foreign
countries, and the records show that a great proportion
of his cargoes were consigned to himself. Among the
best known of his vessels were the Grand Turk, Romp,
Porcupine, Spitfire, Hawk, William and Henry, Active,
Rising States and Leopard. In 1783 William Gray lived
on Essex Street in Salem in a house purchased of William
Brown, but in 1800 he built a mansion on the opposite
side of the street, portions of which still form a part
of the Essex House of today. In 1809 he removed to
Boston, where he purchased the estate of Governor Sulli-
van and also a summer house in Cambridge. He was a
staunch Federalist in politics and a member of the Fed-
eralist Committee of Correspondence, Senator from Essex
County and Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts, 1810-
11. The business ventures which he continued during
his residence in Boston were very successful and he was
accounted one of the largest ship owners in the country.
Mrs. Gray died in Boston 29 September 1823 and Mr.
Gray on 3 November 1825. He was unostentatious and
affable in manner and scrupulously honest in his commer-
55
PORTRAITS IN THE PEABODY MUSEUM
until his resignation in 1897. He died at 163 Marlbor-
ough Street, Boston, 6 May 1900.
[See Salem Vit. Rec. (printed), I, 281; Endicott,
Memoir of Samuel Endicott; Adams, Memoir of William
C. Endicott, LL.D.; Information at Peabody Museum.]
167. WILLIAM GRAY, 1750-1825. White marble bust,
signed "Dexter." Extreme height, 28 in. Ex-
treme width, 19 in. Head and shoulders of eld-
erly man, long hair, smooth-shaven face, classical
drapery. M 1500.
Gift of John Chipman Gray. 1910.
For a biographical account of William Gray, also rep-
resented in the collection by an oil portrait (no. 60), see
pages 54-56 of this catalogue.
168. AUGUSTINE HEARD, 1785-1868. White marble bust
by unknown sculptor. Extreme height, 28 in.
Extreme width, 20 in. Head and shoulders of
elderly man with full curling beard and mous-
tache, classical drapery. M 3787.
Purchase, 1931.
For a biographical account of Augustine Heard, also
represented in the collection by an oil portrait (no. 63),
see page 59 of this catalogue.
169. GEORGE AUGUSTUS PEABODY, 1831-1929. White
marble bust by John Wilson, 1930, after a bust
modeled from life in 1909 at Roque Island,
Maine, by George Howard Monks, M.D. Ex-
treme height, 21 in. Extreme width, 141/2 in.
Extreme depth, 9 in. Head and shoulders of
elderly man with drooping moustache, wearing
an open coat, single-breasted waistcoat, standing
collar. M 3785.
Gift of George Peabody Gardner and William
Crowninshield Endicott, Executors of George
Augustus Peabody, 1930.
George Augustus Peabody was born in Salem 23 Au-
gust 1831. He was the son of George and Clarissa (En-
dicott) Peabody, and was christened Joseph Augustus,
but in 1845, by Act of the Legislature, his name was
157
SALEM MERCHANTS OF 1800 AND
THEIR VESSELS
By JAMES DUNCAN PHILLIPS
This list has been obtained by taking the names of all
vessels during the year 1800 entering or leaving Salem, or
reported as Salem vessels spoken at sea or in other ports,
and checking them back against the Salem ship registers.
Most of the vessels mentioned are found readily in the
registered list, a few are not and some of the numerous
Sallys, Pollys and Betseys have been difficult to identify.
Vessels not found in the registers have been excluded on
the assumption that they were erroneously called Salem
vessels or were small coasters enrolled but not registered.
The names of the captains are from the newspapers which
do not give initials. The owners names are taken from
the ship registers which give the last owners before 1800.
The tonnages are also from the ship registers. Undoubt-
edly there were many more coasting vessels and fishermen
which have not been included and it is possible that some
registered vessels which did not return to Salem during
the year and were not reported elsewhere may have been
overlooked. It is not safe to assume, without other proof,
that vessels registered in 1799 or before were still on the
list, because many vessels were lost, captured by privateers
or sold. The list herewith, however, does give a pretty
good picture of the size, tonnage and ownership of the
Salem fleet at the beginning of the century. Beverly was
part of the port of Salem and is included in the list. It
is
surprising how many different owners there were
In 1790 the amount of tonnage in Salem used in trading
was 13,726 tons, which comprised 5 ships, 41 brigs, 76
schooners and 2 sloops beside 19 coasting and fishing
schooners, and 8 coasting sloops of 953 tons. In 1800
this had grown to 34 ships, 45 brigs, barks, snows, and 59
schooners of 19,636 tons.
The computation for 1800 includes 42 ships of 10,112
tons, 37 brigs, barks and snows of 5,122 tons and 59
schooners of 4,405 tons. As stated earlier, these figures
(261)
Essex Institute Historical Collection 80 (1944).
262 SALEM MERCHANTS OF 1800 AND THEIR VESSELS
undoubtedly are subject to revision and cannot be taken as
accurate to the last vessel and the last ton, but they un-
doubtedly are nearly correct as to the overseas fleet. They
will be affected by frequent transfers from coastwise to
overseas trade and by errors or omissions due to the compli-
cated methods of computation.
1790 Ships, 5 ; Brigs, 41; Schooners, 76; Sloops, 2, 13, .726
18002 Ships, 34; Brigs, 45: Schooners, 59
19,636
A study of the ownership of the various merchants in
1800 in shipping gives a pretty clear idea of who the big
men were at that time, though the figures cannot be
claimed to be absolutely accurate. William Gray stands
clearly at the head. He was interested in eleven ships,
two brigs and three schooners with a total tonnage of
3,184 tons. Next came the group of Derby heirs includ-
ing Benjamin Pickman and Nathaniel West with ships
owned in groups or individually but which represented the
Derby family interests. This amounted to 2,071 tons in
six ships and three brigs. These two fleets of Gray and
the Derby heirs were considerably over a quarter of the
whole Salem fleet.
Next came a group of merchants owning an interest in
vessels that amounted to slightly over 1000 tons. The
most important of these was John Norris who owned part
of one ship, four brigs and three schooners comprising
1,100 tons. Joseph White owned the whole or parts of
two ships, three brigs, or barks, and one schooner which
added up to 1,018 tons. The Crowninshield family at this
moment appear to have had only three ships and a schooner.
Their tonnage would be far down the list if it were not
for the fact that they then owned the America which rated
654 tons and was nearly double the size of any other vessel
in the port. Joseph Peabody was in this over 1000 ton
class with two ships, three brigs and two schooners rating
1,204 tons in all, most of which he owned jointly with
Thomas Perkins.
The next group was William Orne and the partnership
of Benjamin Hodges and Ichabod Nichols, both of whom
owned interests in five vessels totaling over 800 tons and
1 From 2d Felt, ii. 298 for 1790.
2 J. D. Phillips' computation for 1800.
BY JAMES DUNCAN PHILLIPS
263
after them came Waitt and Pierce, Simon Forrester, Jesse
Richardson and William Ward who all owned a part in-
terest in vessels aggregating 400 or 500 tons. Most
of the merchants had one or more vessels which they owned
alone or with one regular partner and then fractional in-
terests in a number of others. Many of them owned more
ships at an earlier or later date.
The merchants were also shipping and receiving goods
not only on their own vessels but on those of many other
owners and a merchant might be doing a large business
even if he owned no ships at that particular moment. It is
especially surprising that Simon Forrester and the Crown-
inshields did not have more ships in that year.
The list of ships with owners and masters is as follows:
ESSEX INSTITUTE
HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS
VOL. LXXXIII
JANUARY, 1947
No. 1
WHO OWNED THE SALEM VESSELS IN 1810
By JAMES DUNCAN PHILLIPS
By 1810, Salem had reached the zenith of her commer-
cial prosperity as a port. Her merchants may later have
owned a larger tonnage and their vessels may have carried
more merchandise but they did less business actually on
the wharves of the town.
Apparently there is no list of the vessels in the Salem
fleet. Ships registered that year were presumably then
operating but vessels registered any time in the twenty
years or so previous might or might not still be in the
fleet. The embargo in 1808 reduced the number ma-
terially and whether the fleet in 1810 was larger than
the fleet of 1807 is very hard to estimate unless a compu-
tation like that on which these figures are based is also
made for 1807. It takes long hours of work to prepare
such a list and the chances are that there are minor errors
even in this careful computation.
found out a couple of interesting facts about Morris Gray
> (1856-1931) as well as one piece of data that appears incon
> with your ancestry information:
> Harvard graduate ('77), Progressive supporter of Teddy Roos
> who gave a luncheon at University Hall (Harvard) when the P
> visited Cambridge in 1902, he gave a gift of $42,000 (rough
> in today's currency) to Widener in 1929. Described in his N
> obituary (1.13.31) as "president of the Boston Museum of Fi
> Arts He was the son of Francis H. and H. Regina Shober
> Gray. " [This claim is the source of the inconsistency]. The
> continues to describe his legal career, publications, and
> memberships during his 75 years of life. There is no mentio
> spouse or children.
>
> Your thoughts, when convenient.
>
> Ron
>
>
>
>
"Robert M. Gray" wrote:
>
> I found a little information in the family book and genealo
> brother put together, and some more in some material my cou
> Gray sent me many years ago.
>
> It turns out that the Morris Gray born in 1856, one of the
> William Rufus Gray (Billy Gray's eldest son) and Mary Clay,
> Frank Gray's grandfather. His wife was Flora Grant. They we
> family tree that
> I sent you, but I don't think I sent you the next page. Mor
> and Flora Grant had three children, Morris Gray (b 1884), E
>
Clay Gray (b. 1886), and Francis Calley Gray (b. 1890), as
> mention. The latter is the father of my late cousin Frank G
> tell you Elizabeth's kids and Francis Cally's other kids.
>
> The clippings that Frank sent me were clipped by his grandf
> Morris clipped from a paper in 1901. They deal with the dea
>
Morris' uncle Horace Gray, the seventh son of William Rufus
> had died a bachelor banker in New York and left his conside
>
fortune of more than $1 million dollars to the five childre
> brother Francis Henry Gray, including Morris.
>
> Your Morris was a lawyer in Boston who lived in Chestnut Hi
> siblings were Francis C. Gray, Samuel S. Gray, Reginald Gra
> Mary C. Gray.
>
> Bob
>
>
>
> On Sep 8, 2006, at 7:42 AM, ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP wrote:
>
> > Dear Bob,
> >
> > I hope that you had a relaxing Summer and have wondered W
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=9078_0_67753_2245_2333_0_2460..3/1/2007
Verizon Yahoo! Mail-eppster2@verizon.net
Page 3 of 3
> > traveled here to New Hampshire recently.
> >
> > Briefly, a quick question. Are you familiar with any of t
>
> descendants of Boston born Morris Gray (1856-??), item #3
> > "William Gray of Lynn , Massachusetts" by Edward Gray (19
> > children are listed : Morris (1184- ), , Elizabeth (1886- )
> > Frances Calley (1890- ). .
> >
> > I ask because Morris Gray is designated as one of three
> > beneficiaries--should her only son predecease her-- in th
> > will of Mary Gray Dorr, George Dorr's mother who died fou
> > later. I've not been able to unearth any information abou
> > Gray that would suggest why she would favor him. Any sugg
> >
> > With best wishes,
> >
> >
> >
> > Ron Epp
> > 47 Pond View Drive
> > Merrimack, NH 03054
> > (603) 424-6149
> > eppster2@verizon.net
>
>
>
>
> Ron Epp
> 47 Pond View Drive
> Merrimack, NH 03054
> (603) 424-6149
> eppster2@verizon.net
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http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=9078_0_67753_2245_2333 _0_2460...1 3/1/2007
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Friday, July 15, 2005 10:14 AM
To:
'Robert M. Gray'
Subject:
RE: Amy Heard & Dorr's
Dear Bob,
Hope you are feeling better.
I've located a document that is at odds with your ancestry report, unless what I have is
inaccurate.
At the Massachustts Historical Society in the Thomas Wren Ward Papers ( B. 8, f. 3) is an
ancestral chart for Mary Gray Ward (author unknown) It is understandable preoccupied with
the Ward side of the family. However, it lists Mary as daughter of Thomas Wren Ward and
Lydia Gray (b. 7.30.1788), married 11.13.1810. Lydia is identified as daughter of Samuel
with no indication of his dates or his wife's dates; if this is correct it would make Mary
a grandaughter of Samuel, not a daughter.
I've asked our ILL department to secure a copy of "William Gray of Lynn" to sort this out.
From the essay on William Gray (1750-1825) in the Dictionary of American Biography we see
the "Lydia" name reappear as William Gray's mother (father is Abraham)
Yesterday I spent in Portland at the Maine Historical Society looking through the "Yellow
House Papers," dozens of manuscript boxes of Laura and Henry Richards of Gardiner, Maine.
He was the architect who designed old Farm, the Bar Harbor Home of the Dorrs; Laura was
a
reknown author who was the first female to receive a Pulitzer prize. Anyway, it was a
"eureke" moment when I found an eight page essay focused on Mary Gray Ward Dorr, a
not
very flattering portrait. However, up until this point all I knew about her was
fragmentary and this essay allows me to better interpret her sons motivations, or lack
thereof until her death in 1901.
Looking forward to hearing about your reaction to this ancestry issue.
Ron
Original Message
From: Robert M. Gray mailto:gray@eemail.stanford.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, July 12, 2005 7:08 PM
To: Epp, Ronald
Cc: Robert Gray
Subject: Re: Amy Heard & Dorr's
I found her. I am recovering from a sore throat and cough so I found
my copy of "William Gray of Lynn and some of his descendants. Mary
was the daughter of Samuel Gray, who was a brother of my ancestor
William "Old Billy" Gray, and his first wife, Anne Orne. She married
Charles Hazen Dorr in Boston 27 August 1821. They had two children,
but you doubtless know about them.
This explains why Russell Gray knew Dorr, Dorr's wife was a cousin.
Russell Gray was half brother to Justice Horace Gray and the Harvard
Professor John Chipman Gray (of Ropes and Gray, a still existing law
firm) Russell's father was Horace Gray, Billy Gray's youngest son.
Horace's main claim to fame was that he founded the Boston public
gardens with a donation of 1500 tulips.
So I can add Dorr to my list of interesting marriages made by
relatives. Horace's nephew John "Jack" Gardner
married Isabella Gardner, and they do not come much more interesting
than she was.
1
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [gray@eemail.stanford.edu]
Sent:
Tuesday, July 12, 2005 7:08 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Cc:
Robert Gray
Subject:
Re: Amy Heard & Dorr's
I found her. I am recovering from a sore throat and cough so I found
my copy of "William Gray of Lynn and some of his descendants. Mary
was the daughter of Samuel Gray, who was a brother of my ancestor
William "Old Billy" Gray, and his first wife, Anne Orne. She married
Charles Hazen Dorr in Boston 27 August 1821. They had two children,
but you doubtless know about them.
This explains why Russell Gray knew Dorr, Dorr's wife was a cousin.
Russell Gray was half brother to Justice Horace Gray and the Harvard
Professor John Chipman Gray (of Ropes and Gray, a still existing law
firm). Russell's father was Horace Gray, Billy Gray's youngest son.
Horace's main claim to fame was that he founded the Boston public
gardens with a donation of 1500 tulips.
So I can add Dorr to my list of interesting marriages made by
relatives. Horace's nephew John "Jack" Gardner
married Isabella Gardner, and they do not come much more interesting
than she was.
Regards,
bob
1
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [gray@eemail.stanford.edu]
Sent:
Tuesday, July 12, 2005 6:49 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
Re: Amy Heard & Dorr's
I am surprised so few take advantage of such a priceless resource.
Windows into the past are hard to come by.
I have built up a fair collection of email correspondents of writers
and historians over the years who have also stumbled onto my stuff.
It has led to many mutually beneficial exchanges of informations,
documents, and occasionally photographs. I will check into the
Stanford library system, I would like it to be as available as
possible. It does well in many search engines on many of the names it
contains.
I will also try to check through some of my stuff during the next
week or so to see if I can find anything on the Dorr connection.
The main treasure trove of stuff relating to the Heard family is at
Harvard. It was in the Baker Library when I spent my sabbatical there
over a decade ago. There are many personal letters as well as
business records of Augustine Heard and Company.
I will be sure to let you know when next we are in the area. We
usually pass through once or twice each year. Our daughter was just
here, so it will not be before fall.
Regards,
bob
1
Message
Page 1 of 1
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Monday, July 11, 2005 1:52 PM
To:
"rmgray@stanford.edu"
Subject: Amy Heard & Dorr's
Dear Professor Gray,
I
was led to your "Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age" website because of my research on those who signed the Old
Farm guestbook now housed, as you know, in the Bar Harbor Historical Society. I appreciate your publication of
these
letters since I too am trying to detail a friend of Amy, George Bucknam Dorr.
Dissatisfied with the secondary and largely anecdotal literature on Mr. Dorr, I began an archival-based inquiry into the life
and times of Mr. Dorr, focusing attention on those four decades that preceded his joining forces with Harvard President
Eliot to establish the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations (1901) which led establishment of the National
Park (1916) that we today call Acadia. No one (literally) had asked about Mr. Dorr's early years (1853-1901) and tracing
these details has been a very illuminating but exhaustive process.
If you have any additional documentation regarding Amy Heard or friends that she shared in common with the Dorr's
I
would be very appreciative of any assistance--and would return the favor as well. I appreciate your use of the Reading
Room membership list since that is a linbe of inquiry that I had not persued and "curator" Deb Dyer at the BHHS had not
sduggested. When did you make use of the Old Farm Guest Book?
By the way, would you perhaps be related to Mr. Dorr's mother since she was Mary Gray Ward Dorr (1820-1901) of
Salem?
Thank you for your labors.
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
Director of University Library &
Associate Professor of Philosophy
Southern New Hampshire University
Manchester, NH 03106
603-668-2211 ext. 2164
603-645-9685 (fax)
7/11/2005
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [rmgray@stanford.edu]
Sent:
Tuesday, December 06, 2005 10:52 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Cc:
Robert M. Gray
Subject:
Mrs Craig Wadsworth
Dear Ron
We are finally back and somewhat recovered from the jetlag, cold, and fatigue. The Boston
and France trips were productive and fun when not tiring. Highlights of France were
finally visiting Carnac and the megaliths and walking through Montparnasse cemetery in the
snow.
I finally had a chance to see what I could dig up on Mrs. Craig Wadsworth, the former Miss
Peters. While I have not yet found anything in my letters, I did find quite a bit in my
favorite books.
From the letters of Mrs Henry Adams
Index entry:
Wadsworth, Mrs Craig Wharton (Evelyn Willing Peters) , 288, 296, 307, 350, 365, and n. ,
387f.
I had marked these when tracking her when I first found her in the letters. 288 seems to
be an error, she is not mentioned there. But this establishes her as a friend of Clover
Adams, a fascinating and tragic figure. Clover mentions that Mrs Wadsworth and Mrs Heard
took adjoining houses on Mass Ave (p. 307) She met at tea at Clover's along with my
father's uncle, Judge Gray (p. 365) (Horace Gray)
From the letters of Mrs James G. Blaine
Index entry:
Wadsworth, Mrs Craig, vol i, 282, 289, 311
Vol. ii, 5,6
p. 282 describes a long call Mrs Wadsworth made to Mrs Blaine, mentions her lunch on the
presidential yacht. p. 289 mentions her being the wife of James Wadsworth, member of
Congress from NY.
Unfortunately none say very much about her.
1
New England Quarterly: Vol. 73, No. 4, p. 603 Dec.
2000
Page 2013
1
of
Redefining the Economic Elite in Salem,
Massachusetts, 1759-1799:
A Tale of Evolution, Not Revolution
RICHARD J. MORRIS
C
onsider, if you will, three case studies. Born into an old and
prosperous agricultural family in northern Essex County,
Massachusetts, in 1724, George Dodge migrated to Salem
around 1750. Prior to the American Revolution, he became a
successful master mariner, and thereafter, having invested
heavily in privateers during the conflict, he prospered as a mer-
chant. When he died in 1806, his estate was valued at nearly
$200,000. The Reverend William Bentley tells us that Dodge
was "a man acute in business
allowing little intercourse at
his house, even to his children, who were permitted to pay
short visits.
He had no information at all upon any subject
but "business," and "Public opinion is that he was not indulgent
to his children, and nothing is known of him out of the walks of
business in which he had uncommon success."
Far less successful was Joseph Searle, better known as "the
Commodore." Searle was renowned as "a remarkable imitator
of Cocks" because he could "deceive the animal day or night."
Bentley found Searle "indolent" and "lecherous but never
drunk tho' not abstemious." On the eve of his death in 1805,
Searle insisted that he had always attended meeting, and, ad-
dressing Bentley, he claimed that "I have prayed for you in my
wav as well as T could." Bentlev remarked in turn that Searle
http://0-www.jstor.org.library.colgate.edu/view/00284866/ap020295/02a00060/0?current..
12/20/2006
JSTOR: New England Quarterly: Vol. 73, No. 4, p. 621
Page 2 of 3
SALEM'S ECONOMIC ELITE
621
Charlestown when he died in 1747. Joseph Sprague, a distiller
from Medford, arrived in town in 1767 and by 1768 was paying
a large tax. Last among the eight was Ichabod Nichols, who had
no direct connection to the elite. 45 A more thorough examina-
tion of the experience of Nichols and William Gray reveals the
way family connections could operate.
Salem's wealthiest man in 1799, with property assessed at
$503,520, was William Gray. According to local legend, his fa-
ther, Abraham, moved his family from Lynn during the 1760s
at the behest of Richard Derby, the wealthy Salem merchant,
who wanted a secure supply of shoes, but Gray's father-in-law,
who was a ninth decile currier in 1759 Salem, may have drawn
his daughter's family there. Shortly after his arrival in Salem,
the elder Gray seems to have dabbled in shipping, for he was
taxed for wharf footage and warehousing in 1769, the year in
which he ranked sixty-ninth in assessed worth. 46 Abraham Gray,
who also became a deacon in Salem's First Church, appren-
ticed his son William to Samuel Gardner, the richest man in
Salem in 1759, and then to Richard Derby, the town's wealthi-
est merchant in 1769. Both of these men attended the First
Church. During the Revolution, William invested in privateers
and made a most successful transition to the peacetime trade
after the war. In fact, nine of the ten wealthiest men in 1799
had secured an interest in privateers. William Gray's brother
Samuel was the only member of that group without such invest-
ments, and he was only eighteen years old when the war
ended. 47
Ranked twentieth among Salem's 1799 elite, with an assess-
ment of $30, 160, was Ichabod Nichols. Nichols's father David
The top twenty in 1799. in rank order, were: William Gray: Elias H. Derby:
http://0-www.jstor.org.library.colgate.edu/view/00284866/ap020295/02a00060/18?search.. 12/20/2006
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Date:
Sat, 09 Sep 2006 19:23:08 -0700
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Subject: Re: Gray Family & Ron Epp
Eliz messages
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"ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP"
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"Robert M. Gray"
Ron messages
I found a little information in the family book and genealogy
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brother put together, and some more in some material my cousi
Gray sent me many years ago.
My Photos
My Attachments
It turns out that the Morris Gray born in 1856, one of the SO
William Rufus Gray (Billy Gray's eldest son) and Mary Clay,
Frank Gray's grandfather. His wife was Flora Grant. They were
family tree that
I sent you, but I don't think I sent you the next page. Morri
and Flora Grant had three children, Morris Gray (b 1884), Eli
Clay Gray (b. 1886), and Francis Calley Gray (b. 1890), as yo
mention. The latter is the father of my late cousin Frank Gra
tell you Elizabeth's kids and Francis Cally's other kids.
The clippings that Frank sent me were clipped by his grandfat
Morris clipped from a paper in 1901. They deal with the death
Morris' uncle Horace Gray, the seventh son of William Rufus G
had died a bachelor banker in New York and left his considera
fortune of more than $1 million dollars to the five children
brother Francis Henry Gray, including Morris.
Your Morris was a lawyer in Boston who lived in Chestnut Hill
siblings were Francis C. Gray, Samuel S. Gray, Reginald Gray,
Mary C. Gray.
Bob
On Sep 8, 2006, at 7:42 AM, ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP wrote:
> Dear Bob,
http://us.f841.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=9186_17456671_94810_2292_123. 9/11/2006
Verizon Yahoo! Mail-eppster2@verizon.net
Page 2 of 2
>
> I hope that you had a relaxing Summer and have wondered whe
>
traveled here to New Hampshire recently.
>
>
Briefly, a quick question. Are you familiar with any of the
> descendants of Boston born Morris Gray (1856-??), , item #34
>
"William Gray of Lynn , Massachusetts" by Edward Gray (1916
>
children are listed : Morris (1184- ), Elizabeth (1886-
> Frances Calley (1890- ). .
>
> I ask because Morris Gray is designated as one of three
> beneficiaries-- - - should her only son predecease her-- in the
>
will of Mary Gray Dorr, George Dorr's mother who died four
> later. I've not been able to unearth any information about
> Gray that would suggest why she would favor him. Any sugges
>
> With best wishes,
>
>
>
> Ron Epp
> 47 Pond View Drive
> Merrimack, NH 03054
> (603) 424-6149
> eppster2@verizon.net
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http://us.f841.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=9186_17456671_94810_2292_123... 9/11/2006
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