Charles Apthorp

Charles Apthorp (1698–1758) was an English-born merchant and slave trader[1] in 18th-century Boston, in the colonial Province of Massachusetts Bay. He ran his import business from Merchants Row, and "in his day he was called the richest man in Boston."[2] He acted for the British government, and supported King's Chapel.

Portrait of Charles Apthorp, 1748 (by Robert Feke)

Early life

Charles Apthorp was baptised 28 March 1697 at St Botolph Bishopsgate, London, England, to East Apthorp and Susan Ward. [she was not connected to a Lord Bixle]

Career

Charles Apthorp emigrated with his parents to New England after 1698. In 1713 his father died in Boston. In Boston, Massachusetts he was a commissary and paymaster for the British military forces and established a mercantile business.[3][4][5] Apthorp was a successful, wealthy man,[3] with "imperial trading connections".[6]

Import merchant

Among the goods imported and/or sold through Apthorp on Merchants Row in Boston were "choice madera wines, ... a parcel of Russia duck and several sorts of European goods";[7] "British duck of all sorts";[8] "choice good sea coal, ... several second hand cables, little the worse for wear, and anchors suitable, with window glass of most sorts, and a parcel of lead and shot";[9] "a good new still and worm of about 600 gallons";[10] salt;[11] "a parcel of guns, 4-pounders, with carriages and shott, also a parcel of swivel-guns with shott suitable;"[12] a "well fitted" 50-ton sloop";[13] and "a brigantine about 90 tuns, and three years old, now lying at the Long Wharfe".[14]

Slave trade

Apthorp was a "venerable slave importer and one of the richest men in Boston" by 1746. At that time, "slave-for-sale" ads appeared in the weekly Boston Gazette. Between 1719 and 1781 there were about 2,300 slave notices for about 2,000 slaves.[15] In the 1730s and 1740s he repeatedly traded in slaves, for instance he posted an ad in the Boston Gazette:[16] "a parcel of likely negros just imported".[17]

In 1733 Apthorp acted as agent for a man seeking his servant, Hannah Smyth, who had run away with a stolen diamond "and has lately been seen here in Boston."[18] He performed a similar role in 1742, authorized to furnish "five pounds reward" for the return of a "negro man named Jack about 35 years old" to "his master Capt. Stephen Eastwick."[19] In 1756 Apthorp & Son served as agent for someone looking for an anchor lost on Cape Cod "with two iron clasps on one of the flukes, a solid pine buoy, and buoy-rope."[20]

British government representative

Along with Thomas Hancock, Apthorp represented the British government in its efforts to recruit personnel to Nova Scotia—ship pilots, bricklayers, carpenters, land settlers, etc.[21][22][23][24] He also served as "paymaster and commissary under the British Government of the land and naval forces quartered in Boston."[4]

Apthorp and Hancock together supplied many of the boats used to ethnically cleanse Nova Scotia of the Acadians in the Great Upheaval. The firm also lent money to finance the operation. The poor quality of the ships led to widespread malnutrition, disease, and death among the deported Acadians.[25]

Personal life

Marriage and children

Apthorp married Grizzel Eastwicke on 13 January 1726. She was born in Jamaica to Griselda Lloyd and John Eastwicke.[4][26][nb 1] A descendant of the couple, great-grandson Joseph Coolidge, stated that: "Her portrait, painted by Sir Peter Lely, and showing her to have been remarkably beautiful, remains in the family."[26] She was said to have "rare qualities of person and character."[3]

Portrait of Charles' daughter, Susan Apthorp, 1757

Apthorp and his wife had eighteen children, three whom died before him.[4] The children included:[nb 2]

  • Charles Ward Apthorp (later of Apthorp Farm).[28] Charles married Mary McEvers.[5]
  • Grizzel married Barlow Trecothick.[5]
  • Susan married Thomas Bulfinch on 8 October 1754. He was warden of the King's Chapel church after the Revolutionary War.[5] They were the parents of architect Charles Bulfinch.
  • John married 1st Alica Mann, sister of Horace Mann, 2nd Hannah Greenleaf daughter of Stephen Greenleaf, granddaughter of Thomas Loring. He was member of the house of Thomlinson and Trecothink. On a voyage to Charleston, South Carolina, they were lost at sea. Their children survived them, Colonel John T. Apthorp, Hannah who married Charles Bulfinch, and Frances who married Charles Vaughn.[5]
  • James was born 17 November 1731 and married Sarah Wentworth. Her family owned Wentworth Manor in Yorkshire.[5]
  • East, who became a minister.[5][28] East Apthorp built in 1761 a mansion designed by Peter Harrison; it is now part of the Harvard University campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[29]
  • Ann, born 18 January 1735 – 1736. She married Nathaniel Wheelwright.[5]
  • Henry (19 March 1736 – 1762)[5]
  • Stephen born 10 March 1737 – 1738[5]
  • Joseph (22 April 1739 – March 1749 – 1750)[5]
  • Elizabeth born 28 May 1740. She was married twice to men from New York: James McEvers and Robert Bayard.[5]
  • Thomas born 19 October 1741. After his father's death and until 1776, Thomas was made paymaster to British forces. He went to England, married in Lisbon and died in Ludlow, Wales.[5]
  • Rebecca born 20 June 1746. She married Robert Bayard from New York.[5]
  • William born 26 February 1749. He married Mary Thompson.[5]

There were also three children born between 1742 and 1745 who died as young children: Catherine, George, and Robert. A second daughter Catherine was born in 1750; She died on the date of her birth.[5]

The family had a home in Boston and another outside town in Quincy, Massachusetts.[3]

Religion

Apthorp tablet in King's Chapel, Boston

He helped to found Trinity Church, Boston[3] and was one of the first churchwardens of that church.[4]

He was a churchwarden at the King's Chapel in Boston,[4] starting in 1731 when he and other churchwardens met weekly and conducted affairs for the church, including hiring, assigning pews in the church, managing finances and interacting with members about church operations. Apthorp, "of the old tenor, contributed £200 towards the cost of a new church building; If sufficient funds were not raised within the church congregation, he agreed to pay an additional £1,000. He was elected to manage treasury of the new building funds.[4][30]

He was a leading, "noteworthy" member of the church who was: "Warden in 1731-1732, 1743-1744, treasurer of the Building Committee, and a generous subscriber to the new church.[26][31]

His large family filled two family pews in the church.[5]

Among the Apthorp's personal possessions were "a set of eight chairs ... probably purchased from the chairmaker and upholsterer Samuel Grant, [with] carving ... attributed to John Welch."[32]

Portraits

Portraits were made of Charles Apthorp by Joseph Blackburn;[33][nb 3] and John Singleton Copley.[33]

Family portraits at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston as of 1908 include works by Robert Feke and Hartwell:[34][35][36][nb 4]

  • Portrait of Charles Apthorp, by Robert Feke
  • Portrait of Griselda Eastwicke Apthorp, by Robert Feke
  • Portrait of Mrs. Barlow Trecothick, by Robert Feke
  • Portrait of Griselda Eastwicke, by Hartwell

The Fine Arts museum's collection now contains miniatures, a few portraits and silverware from the Apthorp family.[37]

Death

Apthorp died suddenly in November 1758; he complained "of a slight cold a few minutes before he expired."[4][5][38] A New England newspaper described him as "the greatest and most noble merchant on this continent." Twelve days after his death, his funeral was held at King's Chapel.[4] It was "attended by very many gentlemen of distinction and principal inhabitants of the town. The streets and windows of the houses, as the solemnity passed along, were thronged with spectators. ... [At King's Chapel] the Reverend Mr. Caner preached a suitable sermon to a crowded audience."[39]

A wall marker carved by Henry Cheere memorializes Apthorp inside King's Chapel; it "is crowned by a cherub weeping over a cinerary urn."[40][41]

In a book written in 1910, Apthorp left a fortune equal to $150,000.[3]

After her husband died Grizzel lived near the Central House on Brattle Square [Dock Square at Brattle Street].[3] She died at 88 years of age in 1796 in the home of her son, John in Quincy. A notice of her death described her as virtuous, amiable, charitable and well-regarded.[42]

Images

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gollark: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/index.html

See also

References

Notes

  1. Griselda's father was Sir John Lloyd of Somersetshire, England. After the Battle of Worcester, Lloyd was one of the men who escorted King Charles II of England to France.[4]
  2. Among his grandchildren were Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton.[27]
  3. Blackburn represented "Mr. and Mrs. Apthorp, in 1758, in the habit as they lived, -- an 'elderly gentleman, dressed in red broadcloth, with black silk stockings, sitting in his garden in Quincy, looking toward his house, and in the background a view of the old Adams mansion'." His wife was "a lady, dressed in a changeable salmon and green silk robe, cut square in the neck, the sleeves trimmed with lace."[5]
  4. The Hartwell mentioned was perhaps Alonzo Hartwell.

Citations

  1. MacQuarrie, Brian (6 March 2019). "At Faneuil Hall, a Move to Recognize Ties to Slavery". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  2. Bulfinch, E., ed. (1896). Life and letters of Charles Bulfinch, architect: with other family papers. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p. 32.
  3. Samuel Adams Drake (1879). History of Middlesex County, Massachusetts: Containing Carefully Prepared Histories of Every City and Town in the County. Estes and Lauriat. p. 335.
  4. James Henry Stark (1910). The Loyalists of Massachusetts and the Other Side of the American Revolution. Salem Press. pp. 351–352.
  5. Henry Wilder Foote; John Carroll Perkins; Winslow Warren (1896). Annals of King's chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day. Little, Brown. pp. 143–144.
  6. Janice E. McKenney (2012). Women of the Constitution: Wives of the Singers. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 188. ISBN 978-0-8108-8498-4.
  7. New England Weekly Journal, 10 January 1732 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  8. Boston Gazette, 13 December 1736 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  9. Boston Evening Post, 12 December 1737 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  10. New England Weekly Journal, 5 May 1741 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  11. Boston Evening Post, 28 February 1743 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  12. Boston Post-Boy, 16 October 1758 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  13. Boston Gazette, 28 November 1726 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  14. New England Weekly Journal, 14 February 1732 via America’s Historical Newspapers
  15. Vincent Carretta; Phillip L. Gould (2001). Genius in bondage: literature of the early Black Atlantic. University Press of Kentucky. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-8131-2203-8.
  16. Boston Gazette. From Monday 25 July, to Monday 1 August 1737
  17. Joseph Sylvester Clark; Henry Martyn Dexter; Alonzo Hall Quint; Isaac Pendleton Langworthy; Christopher Cushing; Samuel Burnham (1860). The Congregational Quarterly. s.n. p. 44.
  18. Boston Gazette; Date: From Monday 13 August, to Monday 20 August 1733
  19. Boston Post-Boy; Date: 18 January 1742
  20. Boston Evening Post.; Date: 7 June 1756
  21. Boston Evening Post, 25 May 1747
  22. Boston Post Boy.; Date: 27 March 1749
  23. Boston Gazette, 22 August 1749
  24. Boston Post Boy.; Date: 4 September 1749
  25. Centre d'tudes acadiennes, Universite de Moncton. 1755 Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 16 April 2010
  26. Henry Wilder Foote; John Carroll Perkins; Winslow Warren (1896). Annals of King's chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day. Little, Brown. p. 142.
  27. Paul S. Harris. Gilbert Stuart and a Portrait of Mrs. Sarah Apthorp Morton. Winterthur Portfolio, Vol. 1 (1964)
  28. Frank William Bayley (1915). The life and works of John Singleton Copley: founded on the work of Augustus Thorndike Perkins. Taylor Press.
  29. Douglass Shand-Tucci and Richard Cheek (2001). Harvard University: an architectural tour. Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 104 +.
  30. Henry Wilder Foote; John Carroll Perkins; Winslow Warren (1896). Annals of King's chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day. Little, Brown. pp. 18–19, 31–33, 43–46, 62, 66, 142, etc.
  31. Francis William Pitt Greenwood (1833). A History of King's Chapel in Boston, the First Episcopal Church in New England: Comprising Notices of the Introduction of Episcopacy Into the Northern Colonies. Carter. p. 214.
  32. Ann Smart Martin, Elvehjem Museum of Art. Makers and users: American decorative arts, 1630–1820, from the Chipstone collection. Chazen Museum of Art, 1999
  33. Annual report of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston. 1903.
  34. "Cleveland Museum of Art catalog". Retrieved 16 April 2010.
  35. "Portrait of Charles Apthorp by Robert Feke. Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art". 6 (5). June 1919. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  36. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1908). Annual Report of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston. Museum of Fine Arts. p. 88.
  37. "Collections search: Apthorp". Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  38. New-Hampshire Gazette, 17 November 1758
  39. Henry Wilder Foote; John Carroll Perkins; Winslow Warren (1896). Annals of King's chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day. Little, Brown. pp. 144–145.
  40. Henry Wilder Foote; John Carroll Perkins; Winslow Warren (1896). Annals of King's chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day. Little, Brown. p. 146.
  41. Fiske Kimball (May–June 1919). "Beginnings of sculpture in colonial America". Art and Archaeology. 8 (3).
  42. Henry Wilder Foote; John Carroll Perkins; Winslow Warren (1896). Annals of King's chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day. Little, Brown. p. 147.

Further reading

  • Henry Caner. The nature & necessity, of an habitual preparation for death & judgment. A sermon preach'd at King's-Chapel in Boston, 21 November. 1758. Upon occasion of the death of Charles Apthorp, esq. Boston: New-England: Printed by John Draper, 1758.
  • Foote. Annals of King's Chapel. Boston: Little, Brown, 1896. (Includes reproductions of portraits of Charles and Grizzell)
  • John A. Schutz. Succession Politics in Massachusetts, 1730–1741. William and Mary Quarterly, Third Series, Vol. 15, No. 4 (October 1958), pp. 508–520.
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