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

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Gary Russell 1860-1929 & Amy Heard 1860-1949
Gray, Russell and Anny Heard
1860-1929
1860-1949
3/26/2020
Augustine Heard & Co.: Building a Family Business
HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL
HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS EXHIBIT
Related Sites: MORE EXHIBITS
A Chronicle of the China Trade
Introduction
Doing Business with China
Augustine Heard & Co.
The Canton Trade
Commodities & Currencies
Treaty Ports & Compradors
Clippers & Steamships
Exploring Trade Links
Chinese Competition
Expatriate Traders
Influence of the China Trade
Bibliography
Manuscript Collections
Related Collections
Site Credits
When the proposition was first made of my going to China with Uncle Augustine I jumped at it. I knew it
involved a question of years, but there was a romantic side to it which appealed to my imagination. I thought,
too, that under his protection I had a much greater chance of success than at home.
- John Heard reflecting on his first trip to China in 1841, from his diary, 1891 4
Augustine Heard & Co. : Building a Family
Business
Augustine Heard grew up in Ipswich, Massachusetts, surrounded by ships and sailors and the success of his
3/26/2020
Augustine Heard & Co.: Building a Family Business
Hampshire, but never graduated. At at young age Heard became captain of his own brig. He traveled to ports
as far-flung as Rio de Janeiro, Liverpool, and Canton, battling weather, disease, and pirates, and soon earned
a reputation as a skilled navigator and merchant. Augustine gave up his seafaring ways and joined Russell &
Co. when he was 45, and in 1840 he started his own concern with his partners Joseph Coolidge and George
Basil Dixwell.
In 1841, Augustine invited John Heard, his eldest nephew, to accompany him to China. Childless and never
married, Augustine remained devoted to his nephews, the four sons of his brother George Heard. John's
brothers-Augustine Heard II, Albert Farley Heard, and George Washington Heard (who eventually changed
his name to George Farley Heard)- would also serve respective terms in China. "American boys of college
age came to China to seek their fortunes, and they expected opportunities there to equal, if not surpass, those
available to the enterprising in a rapidly expanding America," historian Stephen Lockwood explains. 5 John
wrote that Augustine advised him, "I could make money enough to get away as quickly as possible, and that he
had no doubt that I could do better here. "6
"For all of [the trading companies] which became well established
the principle of continuity was invariably
kinship," Jacques Downs, a scholar on American trade in China, writes. "[A] firm had generally become
identified with a stem family or families and its
dynastic
alliances." "7 While Augustine Heard & Co. had many
partners over the years, these close familial relations were critical to the running of the company. John and his
brothers benefitted from the wisdom of their uncle and each other's counsel. John, for example, noted his uncle
Augustine's immediate attentiveness to him upon his arrival in China. "Uncle Augustine is very kind to me
When he is not busy he always seems very glad to converse with me
and manifested a mostly friendly
interest in my well doing. "8
Over the years John and his brothers quickly came to learn the family business. Arriving in Canton in 1855 after
graduating from Yale, Albert Heard described his own transformation in only a year: "Then a boy with anxious
and aspiring hopes now as it were a man, doing a man's part and a serious sober part, responsible too, then
looking forward to unknown duties & strange scenes, now those duties are familiar.
Then not even a clerk
now a merchant & a head man of a firm. Truly I am changed. "9
3/26/2020
Augustine Heard & Co.: Building a Family Business
4. John Heard, Diary, 1891. HC: FP-4, p. 21.
5. Lockwood, p. 51.
6 John Heard to Elizabeth Heard, November 6, 1841. EH.
7
Jacques M. Downs, The Golden Ghetto: The American Commercial Community at Canton and the
ILL
Shaping of American China Policy, 1784-1844. Bethlehem, PA: Lehigh University Press, 1997, p. 219.
8. John Heard to Elizabeth Heard, November 6, 1841. EH.
9. Albert Farley Heard, January 16, 1855. HC: HP-1, p. 31.
Contact
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Family: Russell Gray / Amy Heard (F19695)
Family Chart
Group Sheet
Suggest
Family Chart
PDF
Judge Horace Gray
Sarah Russell Gardner
d' (1806-1873)
F
(1807-1893)
John Chipman Gray
Amy Hea
07 (1839-1915)
(1860-1949 )
Horace Gray
Russell Gray
R
(1887-1965)
a
A
(1850-1929)
isle.us/genealogy/familychart.php?familylD=F19695&tree=stedman_mai
1/2
AUGUSTINE HEARD
AND
HIS FRIENDS -
Joseph Corpurell + Daniel Treadecell
non p4
By THOMAS FRANKLIN WATERS
AUGUSTINE HEARD
1785-1868
1916
From
a painting by William Morris Hunt
ih Ith ,
Published by
1823- pi-73
1815-
920
The Ihourch Hesterical driver
W331
allaes.
price $2.00
4/14/2020
39 Marlborough I Back Bay Houses
Back Bay Houses
Genealogies of Back Bay Houses
39 Marlborough
39 Ma
rlboro
ugh is
locate
d on
I
the
north
side of
Marlb
oroug
Lot 19' X 112' (2,128 s sf)
h,
between Arlington and Berkeley, with 37
Marlborough to the east and 301 Berkeley to
the west
39 Marlborough (2013)
39 Marlborough was built ca. 1869, one of
three contiguous houses (35-37-39 Marlborough) designed by Emerson and
Fehmer, architects, and built by I. & H. M. Harmon, masons, at about the same
time. 37 and 39 Marlborough are mirror opposite buildings, with a shared central
entrance porch which creates a symmetrical entryway.
Bainbridge Bunting's Houses of Boston's Back Bay does not attribute 35-37-39
Marlborough to a specific architect. However, a March 8, 1869, article on in the
Boston Traveller on "Real Estate Movements" included the following: "On
4/14/2020
39 Marlborough I Back Bay Houses
Marlboro" street, one each for H. C. Dodge, C. W. Freeland, and G.A. Newell. I &
H. M. Harmon are the builders. Emerson & Fehmer are the architects."
Photographs from about 1900 show that the bay of 37 Marlborough stopped at
the cornice line and there was a dormer in the mansard roof, whereas the bay of
39 Marlborough extended to the top floor. This may have been the original
design, or the top floor bay at 37 Marlborough may have been removed and
replaced by the dormer.
The land on which 39 Marlborough was built was part of a larger parcel of land
originally purchased from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on November 6,
1858, by George Goss. He and his partner, Norman Carmine Munson, were the
contractors responsible for filling the Commonwealth's Back Bay lands. The
original parcel ran from where 9 Marlborough would be built west to Berkeley
Street, comprising 17 lots with either 24 foot or 25 foot frontages. On the same
day he purchased the land, George Goss sold the lots to nine different buyers,
who then resold them to others.
Between July and October of 1865, Charles William Freeland made a series of
purchases from those who had bought land originally part of George Goss's
tract. He assembled a parcel with a frontage of 248 feet where 21-39
Marlborough would be built.
Charles Freeland was a merchant, cotton manufacturer, and real estate
developer. He and his wife, Sarah Ward (Harrington) Freeland, lived at 117
Beacon.
He built the houses at 21-23-25-27 Marlborough for sale to others, and sold the
land where 29-31-33-35 Marlborough would be built. In the case of 37-39
Marlborough, he sold the land for 39 Marlborough, but retained the land for 37
Marlborough until after the house had been built.
Click here for an index to the deeds for 39 Marlborough, and click here for
further information about the land on the north side of Marlborough from
Arlington to Berkeley, south of Alley 421.
4/14/2020
39 Marlborough I Back Bay Houses
On
October
13, 1868,
the land
for 39
Marlboro
ugh was
purchase
d from
Charles
Freeland
by Alice
Almia
(Almira)
(Lamb)
Dodge,
35-41 Marlborough and 301 Berkeley, detail from photograph looking north
on Berkeley (ca. 1900); courtesy of the Print Department, Boston Public
the wife
Library
of dry
goods merchant Henry Cleaves Dodge. They previously had lived at the Hotel
Pelham (southwest corner of Tremont and Boylston).
When 41 Marlborough was built in 1865 by Charles Minot and his wife, Maria
Josephine (Grafton) Minot, the party wall between 39 and 41 Marlborough had
not been built precisely on the boundary line between the two lots, with half the
wall on either side, but rather was fractionally further to the west. On March 1,
1869, Almira Dodge purchased a small strip of land from the Minots so that she
would own half of the party wall.
In the fall of 1871, the Dodges traveled to Europe. They appear to have divorced
sometime after mid-1877 and never resumed living at 39 Marlborough. By about
1880, Henry Dodge made his home in Europe, and in April of 1888 he remarried
in Nice, France, to Rosalie Cox. They continued to live there until their deaths, he
in August of 1913 and she in November of 1920.
39 Marlborough remained the property of Almira Dodge and, after her death,
He
died
in
4/14/2020
39 Marlborough I Back Bay Houses
October of 1936, and the property was inherited by his widow, Agnes Page
(Brown) Dodge, and his daughter, Alice Lamb Cleaves Dodge, who was by his first
marriage, to Margaret Riché (Adams) Dodge.
By 1872, 39 Marlborough was the home of James Haughton, a wholesale dry
goods dealer, and his wife, Eliza (Richards) Haughton. They previously had lived
in Brookline. By 1875, they had moved to 91 Boylston.
By November of 1873 (when their daughter Mabel was born), 39 Marlborough
was the home of James Dillon and his wife, Emma (Atkins) Dillon. He was a
commission merchant. They continued to live there in 1878, but had moved to
Dorchester by 1879 (when their daughter Ruth was born).
By 1879, 39 Marlborough was the home of Rev. William Wilberforce Newton and
his wife, Emily Stevenson (Cooke) Newton. They previously had lived in Newark,
New Jersey, where he was rector of Trinity Church (Episcopal) until October of
1876, when he resigned to accept the position of rector of St. Paul's Church in
Boston.
The Newtons continued to live at 39 Marlborough during the 1879-1880 winter
season, but moved thereafter. In 1882, he was named rector of St. Stephen's
Church in Pittsfield.
By the 1880-1881 winter season, 39 Marlborough was the home of paper
manufacturer Mortimer Blake Mason and his wife Mary Emma (Phillips) Mason.
They had married in October of 1880, and 39 Marlborough probably was their
first home together. They continued to live there during the 1882-1883 winter
season. By the 1883-1884 season, they had moved to 190 Commonwealth.
By the 1883-1884 winter season, 39 Marlborough was the home of Dr.
Buckminster Brown, an orthopedic surgeon, and his wife, Sarah Alvord
(Newcomb) Brown. He also maintained his medical office there. In 1883, they had
lived (and he had maintained his office) at 59 Bowdoin. They continued to live at
39 Marlborough during the 1885-1886 season, but moved thereafter to 19
Marlborough.
4/14/2020
39 Marlborough I Back Bay Houses
By the 1886-1887 winter season, 39
Marlborough was the home of
attorney Russell Gray and his wife,
Amy (Heard) Gray. They had
married in November of 1886, and
39 Marlborough probably was their
first home together. Prior to their
marriage, he had lived t 143
Beacon with his mother, Sarah
Russell (Gardner) Gray, the widow
of Horace Gray. Russell and
Amy Gray also maintained a home
in Nahant.
Their two sons, Horace Gray and
37-39 Marlborough (2013)
Augustine Heard Gray, lived with
them, Horace Gray married in October of 1915 to Katharine Meeker and they
moved to 290 Commonwealth. He was a physician.
Russell Gray died in 1929. Amy Gray continued to live at 39 Marlborough.
Augustine Gray, a career Naval officer, continued to live with her. He married in
about 1933 to Elizabeth DuBois Jordan. They lived at 39 Marlborough with his
mother until about 1936, when they moved to Long Beach, California.
39 Marlborough had remained the property of the Dodge family, and on
December 26, 1946, it was acquired by Amy Gray from Henry Percival Dodge's
widow, Agnes Page (Brown) Dodge, and his daughter, Alice Lamb Cleaves Dodge.
Amy Gray continued to live at 39 Marlborough until her death in 1949.
On September 30, 1949, 39 Marlborough was purchased from the estate of Amy
Gray by Dr. Francis Licata, a physician. He converted it into two apartments and a
medical office, leasing the apartments to others and using the office for his
medical practice. He and his wife, Angelina (Mirabella) Licata, lived in Revere. He
maintained his medical office at 39 Marlborough until his death in December of
OVER THE COUNTER
THE HEARD COLLECTION AND ITS STORY
ROBERT W. LOVETT
Curator of Manuscripts, Baker Library
Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration
This is the story of a collection of family business records, its assem-
bling, handling, and use by scholars.¹ As background, a summary account
of the business represented by the records and of the family members who
carried that business on will be helpful, but the emphasis will be on the
collection itself.
The Heard Collection, as it is called, is one of the largest in the Manu-
script Division of Baker Library at the Harvard Business School
It is
probably the most extensive collection of business records relating to the
China Trade of the nineteenth century now extant in this country The
records, as will be explained later, came to the Library in two parts;
together they number some 800 volumes, 272 boxes, and 103 cases.
Augustine Heard, who founded the business in China, to say nothing
of old John Heard, of Ipswich, Massachusetts, would have been surprised
to learn what steps have been taken to preserve these records and how
useful they have already proved to scholars. Thomas Franklin Waters,
who used the records now in Part I of the Collection, aptly characterized
them in his volume, Augustine Heard and His Friends:
It rarely happens that in a single family the account books, memoranda of
passing events, personal and business correspondence of a hundred years
are preserved, and it is yet more rare that such a long and continuous
record happens in the case of lives that are in themselves noteworthy.
1 This write-up is based on a talk delivered before the Ipswich Historical Society on
Jan. 26, 1961.
2 A box in this instance measures 11" X 15" X 21/4"; a case measures 12" X 15" X 12",
and holds about a third of a file drawer.
Business History Review 35,#4 (1961) 567-573.
I would begin by introducing the members of the family, at the same
time indicating the scope of the collection. The earliest records are those
of old John Heard (1744-1834); they date from before the Revolution.
There are accounts of John's business as a merchant, and especially of his
distillery business. There are records of ships in which he was in-
terested, including privateers during the Revolution. The earliest record
consists of accounts of the Schooner, Jolly Robin (1754-1757), of which
John's father-in-law, Daniel Staniford, was Master. There is material of
local interest, for he was a kind of Squire, concerned in the building of
Chebaceo/Bridge, with the Jeffries Neck Division, and with many Ips-
wich school and town affairs. There is even a Catalogue of Books in the
Ipswich Social Library of 1804, illustrating an early attachment of the
family to libraries, which was to come to fruition with Augustine's gift of
the town library in 1868.
It was John's son, Augustine (1785-1868), who founded the business
in China, and who is the hero, if we are looking for a hero, of this story.
he
(1805)
Frencis
Beginning as a supercargo for Ebenezer Francis when only twenty,
soon advanced to being a much sought-after ship captain in his own
right. His nephew, John, wrote of him later: "He was one of the most re-
markable men I ever knew. He had a strong physique and equally strong
temper and passions, but under the most perfect control.
I do not
think
he
knew the sensation of fear." 3 There are many stories about him
in Waters' book, already mentioned, and in R. B. Forbes' Personal Rem-
Rober
iniscences. In 1830, when forty-five years old, he went out to China as
Bennet
a partner in the firm of Russell and Company. This was in the early days
of the China Trade, when foreigners were confined to the Canton area
Forbes,
and required to deal with certain specified Chinese merchants. The term
Steed,
of service for an American merchant in China was generally three to five
years, and Augustine returned to Boston in 1834. But friction developed
1892.
in 1840 among the Russell and Company partners, and Mr. Heard
authorized Joseph Coolidge, who had been one of them, to start a new
firm, Augustine Heard and Company. A year later, in 1841, Augustine
went out to China again to make sure that the new firm got off to a suc-
cessful start. He took with him his nephew, John, the oldest son of his
brother, George Washington Heard. One by one, the other sons of
George - Augustine, Albert Farley, and George Washington (who
later changed his middle name to Farley) - were drawn into the busi-
ness, and it is appropriate to consider the contribution which each made.
We know rather more about John's experiences in China, since, in 1891,
he drew up an autobiography. When he went out with his Uncle Augus-
tine he was only seventeen. He remembered his first years in China
thus:
I
went to work and stuck to it for three years! And work there meant
work! There were no hours of relaxation - you were expected to be ready
night or day, whenever you were wanted, and it was rare that I left my
desk before 11 o'clock at night. Mr. Coolidge had a way of working in the
evening, and my uncle of getting up early in the morning, so that between
the two I got my full share.
3 Quotations from John Heard are from his autobiography, a typed copy of which is
numbered FP-4 in the collection.
568
BUSINESS HISTORY REVIEW
This was the time of the first English war with China, largely over
importation of opium, and there was danger and excitement enough for
the young man. He describes an attack made by a Chinese mob on their
offices and warehouse. His uncle led a small group in holding off the
mob until the buildings were on fire; the next day they were able to
salvage much of the firm's treasure. John was pleased with his uncle's
statement, in a letter home: "You will be glad to hear that John behaved
very well in a time of difficulty and some danger." After he had been
three years in China, his uncle called him in and announced that he was
admitting him to the firm, and also paying him $6,000, this being at the
rate of $2,000 a year. Together with a profit of some $3,000 for a small
"adventure," this gave the young man a capital of about $10,000, and
all before he was twenty-one.
Augustine, Senior, returned to America in 1844, and he never went out
to China again. But he looked after the American side of the business,
with the help of an agent in Boston. And he of course corresponded with
each of the nephews during their stints in China. This correspondence,
as well as that of the nephews with their parents in Ipswich, is one of
the significant parts of the first Heard Collection. In 1847 George B. Dix-
well, another partner, went home for a time, and John took over sole
charge of the firm in China. As he wrote of this period later, "I was fast
getting to be a man, and to feel myself such." But at this time also he
had the help of the first of his brothers to come out to China, for Augus-
tine, 2nd, arrived in March, 1847; he became a partner in 1850.
All was not work by now, for there were boating races on the river,
visits to Macao, and a trip to Bombay, which combined business and
pleasure. Young Augustine's health was not good, and he went home in
1850. But by 1852 he had improved sufficiently SO that he could return
to China as head of the firm there, allowing John to come home. The
latter, under whose guidance the firm was by this time making $50,000
a
year, felt that he had earned a leisurely tour of Europe.
Young Augustine did even better than John; or perhaps it was the
general advance in trade. While John was in Dresden, he received word
that the firm had made more than $200,000 in the past year. The treaty
of Nanking (1842), ending the war between England and China, had
opened up new ports to trade, and the Heards were beginning to branch
out. Albert Heard, who went out in 1853, was available to manage one
of the branch offices; he became a partner in 1856. That same year,
following further disorders in Canton, the head office was transferred to
Hong Kong. The following year (1857) it was decided that Augustine
should come home and John go out again. Visiting the branch offices in
Foochow and Shanghai with Augustine, John found things considerably
changed. He reminisced about this period later:
I found the work little less hard than it used to be, but the hours were
more regular, and there was little night work except at mail time. There
were two or three days in each fortnight when the work of the head of the
house was very severe. He had to read his letters, classify the orders in
his own mind, and then write his orders to the different ports; beside this,
he had to regulate the finances of the different ports. The men managing
there never had a care about this - they simply sat down on the head at
OVER THE COUNTER
569
Hong-Kong. It was his business to keep their accounts in his head and see
that they were supplied with money.
At the end of the second English-Chinese war, in 1858 and 1859,
further ports were opened, especially on the Yangtze River, and the im-
portation of opium was made legal. John was one of the first to see that
a profit could be made by steamboats on the rivers, and he sent to America
for the Fire Dart. In 1861, while the Chinese rebels were still in the area,
he made a trial trip up the Yangtze to Nanking and Hankow. His
scheme was justified when the Fire Dart made a profit of $175,000 during
its first year. John was also the first American merchant to establish a
branch in Japan; he went to Yokohama to look over the ground in 1859,
accompanying Mr. Harris, American minister. He accepted an appoint-
ment as both Portuguese and Russian Consul at Hong Kong, but he
decided later that these jobs were more trouble than they were worth.
George, the youngest, who had come out in 1859, served as attaché for
which?
the American Ward, during the American negotiations at Peking.
John went home in December, 1862, leaving Albert in charge. He wrote
later that he "left the house firmly established, rich and second to no other
American house in China. Indeed, I doubt if many would not have
called it the first." He took over the Boston end of the business from
Augustine, Senior, who retired to Ipswich, where he died, much re-
spected, in 1868. He left a half-million dollars, to be divided among the
four nephews, and gave one half of the Ipswich house to John.
Albert's first term as head of the China house lasted from 1862 to
1867; George was in the Shanghai office. It was during this period that
the lucrative steamboat business on the rivers passed into the hands of
Russell and Company. The Heards, and other firms, such as Dent and
Jardine Matheson, were unable to raise enough capital to compete suc-
cessfully. In 1867 Albert went home, and Augustine came out again.
One outline of the firm's activity shows the period from 1857 to 1867 as
one of routine commission business, and the period from 1867 to the end
as one of a variety of activities. In addition to the usual commission
business in tea, china, silks, and similar items, the firm was still engaged
in importing opium into China. It was also still concerned with shipping,
though now along the coast rather than on the rivers. The Heards acted
as agent for a number of insurance companies, and were engaged in
various small businesses, such as a Machine Shop, the Novelty Iron
Works, and the Wanchi Steam Bakery. In 1867 Augustine replaced
Albert as head of the firm in China, serving until 1871. And that year
(1871) all four brothers got together in Paris, when it was agreed that
Albert would take over the reins again in China.
In the early 1870's, John noted some signs that all was not well. There
were more claims against the firm: one, a suit brought by Heinemann &
Payson for alleged nonexecution of orders sought damages of $80,000.
The Heards won, but the other party appealed, and finally the case was
compromised. More serious was John's discovery that P. L. Everett, the
Boston agent, had misappropriated the firm's bills of exchange in an
See articles by K. C. Liu on the Shanghai Steam Navigation Company, The Business
History Review, vol. XXVIII (June, 1954), pp. 154-181, and vol. XXIX (June, 1955),
pp. 157-188.
570
BUSINESS HISTORY REVIEW
amount that eventually reached $245,000 John tried for two years to
keep things afloat, but finally, on April 19, 1875, the China house col-
lapsed; the failure was for millions of dollars. One of the reasons for the
failure, John reported later, was the extravagant way of living in China;
the expenses of the house kept going up, and when the time came to
retrench it was difficult to do so. There were new factors in China too,
such as the rise of banks and the taking over of trade by the Chinese
themselves. The foreign firms no longer had things all their own way;
the Panic of 1873 in this country must also have been a factor. Some of
their friends in China advanced a small amount in an effort to re-establish
the business under the name Heard and Company. John and Augustine
went back to China, against John's better judgment. And when they
arrived there, it was only to find that nothing could be done. So John,
Augustine, and Albert set out for home by different routes; George, be-
coming ill, had left in 1875 and died on shipboard in the Red Sea. John
reported later that he was his favorite brother.
What sort of businessmen were the brothers; in what ways did they
differ from one another? It is of interest that, as to education, John went
only through English High School; Augustine graduated from Harvard
in 1847; Albert from Yale in 1853; while George attended Harvard but
did not graduate. Instead, he went to Europe and climbed Mont Blanc.
Someone has said that John was capable, but lacked daring; that Augus-
tine, 2nd, was the most imaginative and the most willing to run a risk;
and that Albert had the least business ability. George never was head
of the firm in China, but apparently he was more like John than like
Augustine. John himself says, in praising Augustine's achievement, "I
must say that I doubt if any of us could have done as well. I would not
because I am too cautious, and Albert would not because he would have
'bust' before he got there." Looking back, John felt that, when Augustine
first came out to China, perhaps they did not do well in putting all their
eggs in one basket; that is, that all four should not have been in the same
business. No one of them can be blamed for the failure; it was caused by
a combination of circumstances.
We may trace briefly the subsequent life of the three surviving brothers.
John writes with candor that he managed to salvage enough by means
Park.St
of sale of goods which he had bought in China and monies which he had
turned over to his wife to keep them going. But they had to sell the fine
house in Park Street, Boston, and would have lost the Ipswich house had
it not been for friends, who purchased it and gave it to John. They
turned to mining and real estate interests in this country, to sale of guns
in Russia, and to an investment business in New York City. Albert be-
came interested in the history of the Russian church, publishing a book
on the subject; he also served as private secretary to William C. Endi-
cott, Secretary of War, and later as librarian for the Army. He died in
Washington in 1890. Augustine served as United States Minister to
Korea in 1890; he died on shipboard off Gibraltar in 1905. John died in
1894, not long after composing his autobiography.
We should now return to the collection of records, which illustrates
SO well the business, and to some extent the personal, lives of these men.
Carefully preserved in the Ipswich home were all the letters to and
OVER THE COUNTER
571
from the brothers and their uncle and their parents, the diaries, and
other accounts to which Mr. Waters referred. In 1931 Baker Library
purchased all this material, for a nominal sum, from Miss Alice Heard
and the Estate of John Heard, son of the John of the autobiography. The
collection was added to the growing Division of Manuscripts, where the
records of many New England firms and businessmen were being accumu-
lated. The unbound material was carefully placed in boxes and a detailed
inventory or description drawn up. This lists many of the letter writers
by name, but no attempt has been made to index them all; it would be
a tremendous task. Brief accounts of the significance of the material
were written for the Business Historical Society Bulletin in 1936 and
1938,5 and the collection began to attract scholars.
Meanwhile, all the firm's records remaining in China had been stored
in a warehouse of Jardine, Matheson, the leading English firm there.
These included all the letters back and forth between the various Far
Eastern branch offices, detailed accounts of their business, prices current
(those printed sheets distributed to their customers), and circulars of
many kinds. Sometime in the 1930's, Professor D. E. Owen, then of Yale,
came on this material and arranged for its gift to that University. Later,
he reported: "The value of the collection lies chiefly in its mass. We
have found no single document or group of documents that seem to be
of great importance in themselves. But the collection, as a whole, throws
a good deal of light on the anatomy and physiology of a large Western
firm trading in China." It soon occurred to Arthur H. Cole, Librarian
of Baker Library, that a swap might be arranged, whereby Baker would
turn over to Yale some Connecticut material and receive in return the
Heard Collection. Since an institution cannot give away material, the
collection is on permanent loan here. It arrived in 1942 in 50 or SO large
wooden crates. The volumes were shelved, but much of the unbound
material had to be stored away until the end of the War. Then we went
to work on these; for a time we had the help of Miss Ruth Ho, a Chinese
girl who was studying in this country. We placed much of the material
in cardboard cases, each holding about a third of a file drawer; the
folders relating to ships alone fill 28 cases. Again, we could not hope to
index every name, but we have provided various lists to ships and key
correspondents. One interesting find was two partial sets of the Japan
Expedition Press, issued on board Perry's flagship; somehow these found
their way into A. Heard & Company's office files. One set was returned
to Yale; the other is in the Kress Room, or rare book library, at the Har-
vard Business School. 6
What sort of use has been made of this collection at Baker Library?
Since 1948 I have kept a record of the use of collections and can answer
the question. One of the heaviest users has been Mr. K. C. Liu, a Chinese
student now teaching history at Harvard. He has had two articles pub-
lished in the Business Historical Society Bulletin on the Shanghai Steam
Mary G. Mason, "Aspects of the Trade between China and America, 1840-1870,"
Bulletin of the Business Historical Society, vol. X (April, 1936), pp. 24-28. Elsie H. Bishop,
"The Business Man as a Business Historian," Bulletin of the Business Historical Society, vol.
XII (April, 1938), pp. 17-24.
R. W. Lovett, "The Japan Expedition Press," The Harvard Library Bulletin (Spring,
1958).
572
BUSINESS HISTORY REVIEW
Navigation Company, and is planning others, including one on Houqua,
the Chinese merchant. Professor E. K. Haviland, of Johns Hopkins, whose
hobby is steamboats, has studied the collection for information about the
use of steam on Chinese rivers. Some students have been interested from
the point of view of diplomatic history, among them C. J. Savage, of
the Fletcher school, and A. C. Cressy, of Oglethorpe University. Some
have been interested for personal reasons, such as Mrs. Walter M. White-
hill, whose ancestor was Joseph Coolidge; and some from the local point
of view, such as two members of the Ipswich Historical Society. One
interesting user was Dr. Lindsay Ride, Rector of Hong Kong University,
who was making a study of the Protestant Cemetery at Macao. Roland
Lambert, of Washington, D. C., and Peter W. Fay, of California, have
been studying the opium trade; and J. M. Downs, of Georgetown Uni-
versity, was interested in the Canton Community to 1842. It is evident
that a variety of interests are represented, and the value to research of a
collection such as this can never really be exhausted.
The collection is really too large to be encompassed by any one per-
son. It is better to study a segment, or to come with some inquiry in
mind, and that is what most of these persons have done. First of all, it
is an important source for American trade with China from 1840 to 1875.
But it is more than that, it is the well-nigh complete record of a most,in-
teresting nineteenth-century mercantile family. It is also a source of
in-
formation about other families, represented by the many persons who
worked for the Heards. Finally, it is a source of much local information;
in the area of business, for instance, there are records of the Ipswich
Manufacturing Company, the Dane Manufacturing Company, and the
Ipswich Cotton Mills.
One person, surveying the collection, concluded in somewhat flowery
terms: "And now they are all dead and gone! No, as long as the letters
in their own handwriting to each other - "Dear John," "Lal," "Gus,"
and "George," signed "yours ever"; their letters to their uncle Augustine
and his letters to them; their letters to their parents, remain, telling first-
hand stories of business, social and family life of bygone days in China,
Europe and America, they still live." 7 For all John Heard's disclaimers
in his autobiography, these men were involved in what must now appear
to us as significant and remarkable events; they were keen observers and
good reporters of what they saw. Though the business in China, on
which so many hopes were based, failed, the records of that business, SO
revealing of the character of the Heards themselves, will continue to
interest scholars for years to come.
7 Unsigned statement in folder in Manuscript Division.
OVER THE COUNTER
573
Amy Heard
Letters from the Gilded Age
Robert M. Gray. (1946-
).
See pgs 26, 62, 63, 65, 67-68,69-71.
www-ee stanford. edulogray/htmal/amy/
Max & Max -- Preface
Page 1 of 3
Preface
Preface
Augustine Heard served as the U.S. Minister/General Consul to Korea
from July 1890 through 1893. He was appointed to the position by
James G. Blaine, Benjamin Harrison's Secretary of State. In a letter in
1889 to Russell Gray, AH admits that the appointment almost certainly
resulted from Blaine's interest in Amy Heard Gray rather than Blaine's
interest in him. Amy's connection with the Blaines goes back at least to
1881, when Mrs. James G. Blaine mentions[1 hearing Amy's sister
Max
sing at the the Outreys, the family of the
French Minister Plenipotentiary (the
equivalent of an ambassador to a
backwater like the U.S.). The friendship
is likely much older, however, as the
parents of Mrs. Blaine, the former
Harriet Bailey Stanwood, lived in
Ipswich, Massachusetts, before moving
Augustine Heard
to Maine. Hence they likely knew the
Heards, one of the most prominent
families of Ipswich. Blaine himself was
one of the most famous politicians of
his day. After marrying Harriet, he
moved back to Maine with her and
began a career as a newspaper man and
politician. He was a founder of the
Republican party and served in congress
from 1863 through 1876, serving as
speaker for much of the time. In 1876
Helen Maxima Heard
he was appointed to the senate, where
he served until 1881. He sought the Republican presidential nomination in 1876, but lost to Rutherford
B. Hayes, largely due to the taint of a railroad graft scandal that was to haunt him throughout his career.
He tried again in 1880, but lost to James A. Garfield. He became Garfield's secretary of state, but
resigned in 1881 when Garfield was shot. Nominated for president in 1884, he lost to Grover
Cleaveland. In 1888 he refused candidacy and helped Benjamin Harrison get nominated. When Harrison
won, Blaine again became Secretary of State: 1889-1892.
In 1889 Amy wrote to her friend Mrs. Blaine asking her to urge her husband to "do something" for AH.
Blaine was disposed to help, but wished to know what sort of thing AH had in mind. AH traveled to
Washington to discuss the matter, and after being somewhat put off finally spoke with Blaine. What
transpired seems to be that AH requested the position of minister to China, but Blaine refused observing
that China was the most important position in all of Asia and required a seasoned diplomat. He offerred
instead a position as Consul in Hong Kong or China, but AH seemed to think a Consular position
beneath him. Given his financial hardship at the time, his failed business, and his complete lack of
experience outside the business world, this suggests that AH might not have been an easy personality to
deal with. His letters generally indicate constant depression and unhappiness. Blaine then asked AH if
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11/4/2007
Max & Max -- Preface
Page 2 of 3
he knew anything of "Corea," to which AH replied he did not. Blaine offerred him the position as
Minister and General Consul. AH was again reluctant, but after considering and discussing the matter
for a few days accepted. His letters thereafter give full and grateful credit for Amy's assistance in
gaining the post.
AH served in Korea from July 1890 through his resignation in March 1893 during the rule of King
Kojong during a time of much intrigue and political maneuvering among China, Japan, the European
states, Russia, and the U.S. for influence in Korea. Kojong, also called Li Hsi or Li Hi, came indirectly
to the throne at the age of twelve when in 1864 King Ch'olchong died without an heir and his widow
adopted the young boy with royal blood, and placed him on the throne. His father, Prince Yi Hungson,
became regent with the title "Taewongun" or Prince Parent. The Taewongun despised foreigners and
would continually cause trouble and foment revolution for the remainder of his life[5]. Kojong assumed
real power when he came of age in 1873. He remained King until 1897 when he became emperor until
his death in 1907.
Kojong proved to be weak and passive, but kind and courteous and
deeply religious. In contrast, his wife, Queen Min Myongsong, had a
strong personality and assisted her husband in escaping the influence of
the Taewongun. She, too, would cause great controversy during her
career and would finally die at the hands of Japanese assassins. Her
family, the Min, exerted strong influence in the Korean government
during Heard's tenure.
Korea was then officially newly independent of China, but China
viewed her as a "vassle state" while the Western nations tried to
encourage her to act independently. In the midst of all of this Japan was
preparing an invasion of Korea, which occurred after AH's departure
and the occupation lasted until the end of World War II. While in Korea
AH's daughter Max wrote Amy regularly, describing the difficulties of
life in Seoul. The mail was picked up and received roughly every ten
days, SO that many of the letters show the stress of last minute writing to
IL
Shanghai.
catch the mail before it left. Her father wrote the state department often
and he is quoted often in Balance of Intrigue: International Rivalry in
Maximilian von Brandt
Korea and Manchuria 1884-1899, by G. A. Lensen[5]. Max's letters
describe ordinary life among the European diplomatic community, as well as visits to meet the royal
family and a tour of China. Her romance with Maximillian August von Brandt, the German minister to
China, is described in some detail. Brandt was 32 years her senior, but he is transformed from an elegant
importunate old man to a gentle and passionate lover as time progresses. They married in Seoul against
the Kaiser's wishes, SO Brandt was sacked and recalled to Germany, whither Max went with him. In a
long letter in May 1893 from the Oldenburg in the Malacca straits Max described her marriage in detail
and lists her wedding presents. When they returned to Germany Brandt wrote books and the two became
the equivalent of local nobility. They had one child, Elizabeth,
who later married Alexander von
Shimpff, a journalist and reservist
in the German Army. He was
called up and sent to Africa with
Rommel, where he was eventually
captured and sent to a POW camp
in Virginia. I met his son, Peter
Alexander von Shimpff in
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11/4/2007
Max & Max -- Preface
Page 3 of 3
Max Heard in 1908 in Weimar Max, Max, and Elizabeth (age 15)
Frankfurt
in
1997.
The
photos
of
Max and Max were obtained from
in Weimar, 1913
him.
This is a work in progress, and that progress is slow. I hope to steadily transcribe and translate the letters
and provide background information for the intriguing romance portrayed in the letters.
Letters in French are transcribed directly, with only obvious (to me) faults corrected. Max's French was
not perfect, but it was generally pretty good SO I have usually left it alone. French words interlaced in the
English letters have been left alone, and French expressions that are common in English are left alone in
the translated French letters. Question marks denote words or phrases I was not able to decipher or about
which I had serious doubts.
Perhaps the most difficult aspect of this project has been to decipher the handwriting of my great
grandfather Augustine Heard, whose handwriting has to be the most illegible I have ever encountered.
He admits the problem and blames it on illness, but he seemed to do little to remedy it. Many words are
abbreviated and run together, i's are only occasionally dotted and t's crossed, and words are run together.
Punctuation is often lacking and entire phrases seem to be only undulating wiggles, with no
distinguishible letters within them. Perhaps this provides the primary connection with my profession,
which is strongly involved with pattern recognition. I think I can safely say that such transcriptions are
well beyond the capabilities of the most powerful modern computers, and that is unlikely to change in
the next few decades.
Acknowledgements
I am indebted to many individuals who have provided me with information, articles, and photographs
after they chanced on my Website and contacted me. In particular I gratefully acknowledge the many
historical tidbits and photos provided by Robert Neff, who is writing a book on Korean history in the
second half of the nineteenth century, John Shufelt, who is writing a book on General LeGendre and
who kindly brought to my attention the work of Harold Joyce Noble (1903-1953) and provided me a
copy of his own notes on Noble's papers, and Jean Brown, who provided me with information on
Clarence Greathouse and his mother Elizabeth. Such new contacts as these have added to the fun of
editing these letters and exploring their contents.
Preface
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11/4/2007
Max & Max -- References
Page 1 of 1
References
References
[1]
Mrs. James G. Blaine. The Letters of Mrs. James G. Blaine. Duffield, New York, 1908. Edited by
H.S.B. Beale.
[2]
Jean Brown. private communication. 2002.
[3]
Harold J.Noble. The former foreign settlements in korea. American Journal of International Law,
28(4), October 1929.
[4]
Allen Johnson, editor. Dictionary of American Biography, volume 3. Charles Scriner's Sons, New
York, 1931.
[5]
G.A. Lensen. Balance of Intrigue: International Rivalry in Korea and Manchuria 1884-1899,
volume I,II. University Presses of Florida, Tallahassee, 1982.
[6]
Robert Neff. Private communications. 2002.
[7]
Ameilia Ransome Neville. The Fantastic City: Memoirs of the Social and Romantic Life of Old
San Francisco. Houghton Mifflin Company, Riverside Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1932.
Edited by Virginia Brastow, http://www.zpub.com/sf50/sf/hbtfcidx.htm
[8]
Harold Joyce Noble. Korea and her relations with the united states before 1895. PhD Dissertation,
U.C. Berkeley, 1931.
[9]
Sterling Seagrave. Dragon Lady: The life and legend of the last empress of china. Vintage Books,
New York, 1992.
References
http://www-ee.stanford.edu/~gray/html/amykorea/amykorea_7.html
11/4/2007
Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age Introduction
Page 1 of 3
Introduction
Introduction
Amy Heard was born on 7 October 1860 in Paris, the month before the
election of Abraham Lincoln and the year before the outbreak of the
American Civil War. She was christened Amelia, but never used the
name. She was the second child of Augustine Heard, at the time a well
known China merchant, and Jane Leaps de Coninck, the daughter of a
Belgian Diplomat. Augustine went to China following his graduation
from Harvard in 1847 to serve with his uncle and namesake, Augustine
Heard, the founder of Augustine Heard and Co.
month
Amy Heard in 1862, Paris
Augustine Heard Jane Leaps Heard
Like his brothers John, Albert Farley, and George Farley, young Augustine was a senior partner of the
largely family controlled firm and was reputed to be the first American permitted to trade in Siam
(1855). Augustine took over leadership of the firm in 1852 from his older brother John, and directed the
company until John's return in 1855 or 1857, when Augustine moved to Paris as a representative of
AH& Co. He married Jane Leaps de Coninck in April 1858, and they had a reputation for living in grand
style. The family still traveled during this time and Amy's younger sister Helen Maxima (Max) was born
in 1868 in Hong Kong, then the headquarters of Augustine Heard and Company.
Jane's parents were François DeConinck and Amalia Williams Taylor. François served as the Belgian
Consul in Havana. Amalia was born in Baltimore in May 1806, the daughter of Lemuel Taylor and
Mary Wheatly Williams. Taylor was a Baltimore merchant who lost his fortune in 1816-1818 when he
lost several cargoes in his West Indies trade. In 1821 he started fresh and moved to Cuba, where
eventually he became owner of Sta Amelia, a sugar plantation in the Cilizo district between Matanzas
and Cárdenas. François and Amailia were married at the Sta Amelia plantation on 16 June 1831 and
subsequently had four children: François, Jane Leaps, who was born in Cuba in May 1832, Mary Taylor,
who was born in 1833 and died in Cuba in 1886, and Amalia, born in 1835 and died in October 1884.
http://www-ee.stanford.edu/~gray/html/amy/amy_3.htm
11/4/2007
Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age Introduction
Page 2 of 3
Mary Taylor de Coninck married Thomas Johnson of Baltimore in 1881, as described in the notes
herein. Amalia married Francois Pilletur. Amy spent most of her first ten years in Paris and moved with
her parents to the U.S. to live in Washington, DC, in 1870. Although
centered in Washington, DC, the family still traveled as she had
portraits in Brighton in 1876 and in Biarritz in 1877. As recession
turned to depression in the early 1870s, Augustine Heard and Company
went out of business in 1875 and the family had to learn to live on a
much reduced income. Augustine Heard apparently moved to
Washington with the hope of gaining a government diplomatic position
based on his extensive experience in China. As is told in these pages, he
eventually succeeded, but not in the way he wished. In the mean time,
the family travels to Europe and to the playgrounds of the wealthy in
the U.S. such as Newport and Bar Harbor seemed expressly designed to
find good matches for the daughters, Amy and Max.
Amy lived with her parents until November 1886, although she often
traveled to visit friends or spend summers with her friends. As told in
the letters and commentary, she found a husband and in 1886 she
married Russell Gray, from Boston, who was ten years her senior. Gray
was trained as a lawyer at Harvard, but never practiced law. He was the
son of Horace Gray, who founded the Boston Public Gardens with his
donation of tulips, and Sarah Russell Gardner, an aunt of John Lowell
Amy Heard in 1877, Biaritz
"Jack" Gardner, the husband of Isabella Stuart Gardner.
During her time in Washington, D.C., Amy was an active participant in the political and diplomatic
social scene. During her trips away from Washington and after her move to Boston she carried on an
active correspondence with friends and family.
Her parents remained in Washington, until 1890 when her father was appointed the U.S. minister (the
equivalent of a modern ambassador) to Korea, a story that will be told here. Amy and Russell lived in
Boston thereafter. Russell died in 1929 and Amy died in 1949.
The letters tell many related stories and form a window into another era. Perhaps the primary story is the
Murchison affair, which may have cost an American preisident his reelection and resulted in the British
Minister being recalled and a break in relations between the U.S. and Great Britain. The life of Victoria
Josephine Sackville-West, who would later become Lady Sackville, is illustrated during her Washington
days. She was the mother of the writer Victoria )Sackville-West and she was famous on her own,
both because of her fascinating life and her powerful personality. Less well known is her younger sister,
Amalia, who in these pages is more real than in any books I have found. Some of the most famous
diplomats and politicians of the time appear, including the Spanish novelist, poet, and diplomat Juan
Valera. When he announced his impending departure from Washington, Catharine Bayard, the daughter
of the US Secretary of State, committed suicide. The attraction of this 60 year old renaissanse man to
young women in their twenties is apparent in the letters.
Transcriptions of the original French were added in summer 2005 and as a result many errors of
translation were corrected. In the future I hope to start adding more letters from others of my
grandmother's correspondents who are mentioned here.
Robert M. Gray, September 23, 2005
The gentle
Americans (1965), PP. 144-150.
http://www-ee.stanford.edu/~gray/html/amy/amy_3.html
11/4/2007
4/14/2020
Amy Heard Gray (1860-1949) - Find A Grave Memorial
?
Find A GRaVE
Amy Heard Gray
BIRTH
7 Oct 1860
Boston, Suffolk County,
Massachusetts, USA
DEATH
18 May 1949 (aged 88)
Boston, Suffolk County,
Massachusetts, USA
BURIAL
Mount Auburn Cemetery
Photo added by Sharon Lavash Hawkins
Cambridge, Middlesex
County, Massachusetts, USA
PLOT
Hemlock Path, Lot 1087
MEMORIAL ID
137010798
Family Members
Parents
Spouse
?
Augustine
Russell
Heard
Gray
1827-1905
1860-1929
?
Jane Leep
Deconinck
Heard
Note: Amy dined c
unknown-
Charles and llary Dorr
Added by Sharon Lavash Hawkins
1899
and Dr. + Mamie Watson
and Mr. + Mrs. Barrett
Children
Wendell, 12/10/1886.
Horace
Gray
1887-1965
4/14/2020
Amy Heard Gray (1860-1949) - Find A Grave Memorial
Inscription
Russell Gray
Son of
& Ada
Gray
Born In Boston June 17, 1860
Died At Boston June 7, 1929
And His Wife
Amy Heard
Added by Sharon Lavash Hawkins
Born In Boston October 7, 1860
Died At Boston May 18, 1949
Gravesite Details Interred June 7, 1949
Created by: Sharon Lavash Hawkins
Added: 9 Oct 2014
Find a Grave Memorial 137010798
Find a Grave, database and images
(https://www.findagrave.com
:
accessed 14 April 2020), memorial
page for Amy Heard Gray (7 Oct 1860-
18 May 1949), Find a Grave Memorial
no. 137010798, citing Mount Auburn
Cemetery, Cambridge, Middlesex
County, Massachusetts, USA;
Maintained by Sharon Lavash
Hawkins (contributor 47124807)
Copyright © 2020 Find a Grave
12/7/2020
Xfinity Connect Re_Heard Family Printout
Robert M Gray
11/28/2020 5:38 PM
Re: Heard Family
To RONALD EPP Copy
Robert M Gray
Hi Ron
Very good to hear from you again.
I did score a copy of your book. It was not easy. It is in my queue. It looks great
I will look at the Heard Letters mention when I get it. I am familiar with several batches of
Heard letters, the
main collections being the Baker Library at Harvard and a smaller collection at the
Ipswich Museum. Sadly, their historian,
Pat Tyler, died a few years ago and no one at the Ipswich Museum really has a clue
about them anymore. I also have
a collection of a couple of hundred or so of a small part of the family, my grandmother
Amy Heard, her sister Max, and
their parents. So I think I have a good idea of the family if I need to track down any
names, my uncle did a thorough
genealogy and another descendent wrote a professional quality of the family a few
decades ago.
We are doing OK so far.
cheers,
bob
On Nov 28, 2020, at 5:01 PM, RONALD EPP < eppster2@comcast.net> wrote:
Hi Bob,
I ran across a few phrases regarding the Heard family that I cannot situate contextually.
The chief executor of the George B. Dorr estate heads a committee charged with
creating a Dorr Memorial and distributing Dorr's assets, a process that took Judge John
A. Peters of Ellsworth ME more than 3 years, dear friend that he was. I was part of a
team that discovered the Peters archive in 2008 in an abandoned attic above the offices
of his successors, where it still exists unaltered. We were permitted to copy what was
relevant to my biography of Dorr-by the way have you secured a copy of Creating
Acadia National Park, if not I will send.
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12/7/2020
Xfinity Connect Re_Heard Family Printout
You will see in the following email a 4-page letter from fellow Dorr executor Mary
Newbold Hale, wife of the Boston legal titan, references to Heard letters. Can you
decipher and contextualize for me? Is this something that you have seen before? This
issue I did not pursue more than a decade ago when other matters were more pressing.
Stay safe and cozy during the holidays. Hopefully we will be able to see one another in
the Spring!
Ron
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
7 Peachtree Terrace
Farmington, CT 06032
717-272-0801
eppster2@comcast.net
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2/2
12/7/2020
Xfinity Connect Followup _ Heard Family Printout
Robert M Gray
11/29/2020 6:54 PM
Followup Re: Heard Family
To RONALD EPP Copy
Robert M Gray
It finally sunk in why the Dorr name was familiar. After sending my earlier email I finally
did a search of my own writings on Amy Heard and realized she
had stayed at the Dorr household on Commonwealth Ave, and then with the Dorrs in Mt.
Desert, and it was there that Russell Gray wooed and then proposed to her
during a visit to Mt Desert (according to Amy's Journal) in September 1886. I saw them
both on the guest list when I visited the Historical Society. many years ago.
I also (re) discovered that Russell Gray was a distant cousin of GBD's mother via Billy
Gray, but I suspect we talked about that long ago. Interesting that both the Grays
and the Heards were connected to the Dorrs prior to the Gray-Heard marriage.
Mrs Endicott I see is also mentioned in the letters you sent me, and she was also a
friend of Amy's.
bob
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12/7/2020
Xfinity Connect Re_Heard photo Printout
Robert M Gray
11/29/2020 12:17 PM
Re: Heard photo
To
RONALD Copy Robert M Gray
Hi Ron
I printed the letters and spent some time calling on my skills for deciphering handwriting.
The
missing stuff on the right margins of the right-hand pages lowered my data a bit.
My conclusion is that the reference is to "Ward letters" not "Heard letters,"
Granted it looks a little like "He" in front of "ard" in both occurrences, but only "W"
makes sense (and if you stare at it a little you should see it) because
1) there was no "Martha Heard" at the time according to extensive Heard genealogies
(including Hanson's and the ones in my family), and, more importantly,
2) "Martha ?ard" is followed by "Mrs. Dorr's sister , G.B.D's aunt" which means it
must be Martha Ann Ward who married a guy named Dexter. Of course the latter
information came from your book.
Hope this helps.
Was the stuff you underlined in red stuff you were emphasizing or stuff you wanted
me to transcribe?
cheers,
bobb
On Nov 29, 2020, at 10:00 AM, RONALD wrote:
Bob,
The are the pages. Image 1 starts on right then page 2 follows on left. Image 2 is of
pages three and four.
R.
Sent from Xfinity ConnectApplication
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Gary Russell 1860-1929 & Amy Heard 1860-1949
Details
1860 - 1929