The Education of Henry Adams VOL.I
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Edward Sturgis of Yarmouth, Massachusetts 1613-1695
EDWARD STURGIS OF YARMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS 1613-1695 AND HIS DESCENDANTS ROGER FAXTON STURGIS, EDITOR PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION AT THE $tanbope preee BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 1914 (PlPase paste in your copy of Book) ADDENDA AND ERRATA. EDWARD STURGIS AND HIS DESCENDANTS. RocrnR FAXTON STURGIS, Editor. p. 22 In thinl line of third paragraph strike out "name m1kn0wn" brackets and substitute "Wendall." p. 22 In reference to Samuel Sturgis (D) strike 011t all after the date 1751 the third paragraph and substitute the following: - ''Fora third wife he marrh•d Abigail Otis a11d had a s011 J (E) born Ot:tuber l':I, 17::i7 aml a daughter l,ncretia CE) l November 11, 1758 (B. '.r. R. 2-275). Administration was grar upon his estate April 25, 1762, he being described as "of llarm:ta gentleman," to .Joseph Otis (his brother-in-law) and to his wi< .Abigail (B. 1'. C. vol. 10, p. 101). His estate was insolve11t am mention is made of children." p. 22 Strike out the reference to Prince Stnrgis (DJ aml sul.JstitutP following paragraph: - " Prince Sturgis (D), the fourth son, married October 12. 1 ElizalJelh Fayerweather and died at Dorchester, Massaeh11se 1779. There was one daughter of this marriage, ElizalJeth lJaptized February 7, 1740 and married December 2fl, liGl, Art Savage. They had five children. The eldest, Faith or Fidt married lkv. Hichard Munkhouse. Tlle others dir,d unmarrirc pp. 22 & 23. Strike out the reference to f-;anrnel (E) beginning at the foo µage 22 and substitute the following: - " Samnel (E), the other so11, married Lydia Crocker, daugl of Cornelius a11d Lydia (.J enkius) Crocker, aml had one child Sn (F) born November 8, 17G0 (4 B. -
Free Trade & Family Values: Kinship Networks and the Culture of Early
Free Trade & Family Values: Kinship Networks and the Culture of Early American Capitalism Rachel Tamar Van Submitted in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2011 © 2011 Rachel Tamar Van All Rights Reserved. ABSTRACT Free Trade & Family Values: Kinship Networks and the Culture of Early American Capitalism Rachel Tamar Van This study examines the international flow of ideas and goods in eighteenth and nineteenth century New England port towns through the experience of a Boston-based commercial network. It traces the evolution of the commercial network established by the intertwined Perkins, Forbes, and Sturgis families of Boston from its foundations in the Atlantic fur trade in the 1740s to the crises of succession in the early 1840s. The allied Perkins firms and families established one of the most successful American trading networks of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and as such it provides fertile ground for investigating mercantile strategies in early America. An analysis of the Perkins family’s commercial network yields three core insights. First, the Perkinses illuminate the ways in which American mercantile strategies shaped global capitalism. The strategies and practices of American merchants and mariners contributed to a growing international critique of mercantilist principles and chartered trading monopolies. While the Perkinses did not consider themselves “free traders,” British observers did. Their penchant for smuggling and seeking out niches of trade created by competing mercantilist trading companies meant that to critics of British mercantilist policies, American merchants had an unfair advantage that only the liberalization of trade policy could rectify. -
The Pickering Genealogy [Microform] : Being an Account of the First Three Generations of the Pickering Family of Salem, Mass. An
IT «t!«t! .w \^t i,?«fi& 1 THE PICKERING GENEALOGY: BEING AN ACCOUNT OP THE fix&tCijree (generations OF THE PICKERING FAMILY OF SALEM, MASS., AND OP THE DESCENDANTS OF JOHN AND SARAH (BURRILL) PICKERING, OF THE THIRD GENERATION. BY HARRISON ELLERY «\ AND CHARLES PICKERING BOWDITCH. Vol. n. Pages 288-772. PRIVATELY PRINTED. 1897. UU^Srt C/^ X Copyright, 1897, Chaklbb P. Bowditch. ONE HOTTDBBD COPIES PBHJTED. Uhivbbbitt Pbbss : John Wilson and Son, Cambeidgb, U.S. A. THE PICKERING GENEALOGY. SEVENTH GENERATION. SEVENTH GENERATION. 1. VII.2. Louisa Lee [Thomas 1. VI.I],probably born in Salem, baptized there Dec. 13, 1772, died inCambridge, Mass. Mrs. Waterhouse was tall, with a commanding presence. A long obituary notice published in the Christian Register of Saturday, Dec. 12, 1863, tells us more of her husband, Dr. Waterhouse, than of herself ;but itspeaks of her as being amiable and charitable. She was buried at Mount Auburn. Inher willshe made the following bequests : To Harvard College, the portraits of her husband and of her kinsman, Dr. Benjamin Colman. To the Boston Athenaeum, the picture of her kinsman, Sir Charles Hobby. To her kinsman Benjamin Colman Ward, the portraits of his and her great- grandfather and great-grandmother. To the Newport Public Library, R. 1., the painting of the head and bust of her late husband, Benjamin Waterhouse, inQuaker dress, and the painting of the head of Gilbert Stuart, both by Stuart. To John Fothergill Waterhouse Ware, Allston's picture of his uncle, Andrew Waterhouse, when a boy. 1. VII.£ Benjamin Waterhouse, the husband of Louisa Lee, born in Newport, R. -
Education of Henry Adams
1 1907 THE EDUCATION OF HENRY ADAMS AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY Henry Adams Adams, Henry (1838-1918) - An American historian who, despite his family’s political ties (his father was a diplomat and his grandfather and great- grandfather were American Presidents), dedicated his life to scholarship. The Education of Henry Adams, An Autobiography (1907) - Adams’ most enduring work states his pessimistic view that moral progress has not kept pace with the advance of technology. Incomplete as an autobiography, it nevertheless provides a complete and fascinating view of many of the facets of his life. 2 Table Of Contents PREFAE . 4 CHAPTER I Quincy (1838-1848) . 5 CHAPTER II Boston (1848-1854) . 21 CHAPTER III Washington (1850-1854) . 35 CHAPTER IV Harvard College (1854-1858) 47 CHAPTER V Berlin (1858-1859) . 60 CHAPTER VI Rome (1859-1860) . 70 CHAPTER VII Treason (1860-1861) . 83 CHAPTER VIII Diplomacy (1861) . 93 CHAPTER IX Foes or Friends (1862) . 108 CHAPTER X Political Morality (1862) . 122 CHAPTER XI The Battle of the Rams (1863) . 141 CHAPTER XII Eccentricity (1863) . 152 CHAPTER XIII The Perfection of Human Society (1864)164 CHAPTER XIV Dilettantism (1865-1866) . 176 CHAPTER XV Darwinism (1867-1868) . 189 CHAPTER XVI The Press (1868) . 200 CHAPTER XVII President Grant (1869) . 15 CHAPTER XVIII Free Fight (1869-1870) . 226 CHAPTER XIX Chaos (1870) . 239 CHAPTER XX Failure (1871) . 251 CHAPTER XXI Twenty Years After (1892) . 264 CHAPTER XXII Chicago (1893) . 278 CHAPTER XXIII Silence (1894-1898) . 290 CHAPTER XXIV Indian Summer (1898-1899) . 303 CHAPTER XXV The Dynamo and the Virgin (1900) . 317 CHAPTER XXVI Twilight (1901) . -
Slavery, Cotton and Atlantic Finance from the Louisiana Purchase to Reconstruction
The Common Thread: Slavery, Cotton and Atlantic Finance from the Louisiana Purchase to Reconstruction The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Boodry, Kathryn Susan. 2014. The Common Thread: Slavery, Cotton and Atlantic Finance from the Louisiana Purchase to Reconstruction. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11745720 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA The Common Thread: Slavery, Cotton and Atlantic Finance from the Louisiana Purchase to Reconstruction! A dissertation presented by Kathryn Susan Boodry to The Department of History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the subject of History Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts December!2013 ! © 2013 Kathryn Susan Boodry All rights reserved. ! Dissertation Advisor: Professor Sven Beckert Kathryn Susan Boodry The Common Thread: Slavery, Cotton and Atlantic Finance from the Louisiana Purchase to Reconstruction! Abstract This dissertation focuses on the relationship between cotton, slavery and finance. At its core is a consideration of the Atlantic credit networks that supported the cultivation of cotton across the antebellum South. Planters relied on credit to finance their operating costs from year to year. The credit they received from British merchant banking houses made slavery a tenable labor regime in the antebellum South and enabled the plantation complex to function. -
HC5 North America
THE BARING ARCHIVE SERIES HC5 NORTH AMERICA House Correspondence - North America - Boston HC5 5.1.1. 1824 Jun-Nov, Boston: Letters from John Richards 1. 1824 14 Jun: Explaining his mercantile losses which have resulted in his becoming heavily indebted to Barings; expressing confidence for the future 2. 1824 29 Oct: Suspicious circumstances of the loss of the brig Pacific on a voyage from Boston to Amsterdam: the insurance taken out at Boston was for a greater cargo that the ship carried and the underwriters had refused to pay 3. 1824 22 Nov: Insurance of cargo, brig Pacific: the real value was US$40,000; sworn on ship’s manifest US$19,000; Froding, of Gottenburg, the criminal; Barings stood to lose on money advanced to him; with details of another ship, Tordenskield, lost like the Pacific and overinsured 4. 1825 28 Feb, Rio de Janeiro: Reports on business houses; Naylor Brothers & Co (HC4.2.5), Birckhead & Co (HC4.2.1), Maxwell Wright & Co (HC2.158) 5.1.2. 1828-1832: Letters (500) from Thomas W Ward, of Boston, to Joshua Bates and to Barings Part I: 1828 Nov - 1830 Jun Part II: 1830 Jul - 1831 Jun Part III: 1831 Jul - 1832 Mar Part IV: 1832 Apr - 1832 Nov Part V: 1832 Nov - 1833 Dec Part VI: 1834 Aug - 1850 Nov Part VII: 1834 Jan - 1834 Jul Ward was appointed agent, with power of attorney to act for Barings in the United States on 29 Oct 1829. His correspondence during these years of rapidly expanding business in the United States includes the following main subjects: The status and prospects of the house of Baring; trade with Britain, Russia, India, the East Indies and China; reports on business houses in the United States (mainly New York); the Bank of United States; the Louisiana State Loan, 1832; and politics Specific letters relating to some of these subjects will be found in letters dated as follows:- Status and Prospects of Baring Brothers In 1829 many of Ward’s letters are addressed to Joshua Bates.